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Iraqi Foreign Minister Appeals for Post-ISIS Aid

Iraqi Foreign Minister Appeals for Post-ISIS Aid

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari and U.S. envoy Brett McGurk today emphasized the urgency of planning and financing Iraq’s recovery from the ISIS onslaught as areas the extremist group had controlled are recaptured more quickly than expected. The two spoke at the U.S. Institute of Peace in advance of an international conference of donors to Iraq convening in Washington tomorrow and a meeting the following day of the global coalition backing the fight.

Type: Analysis

Global PolicyViolent ExtremismReconciliation

To Build Peace, Take Action: Peace Day Challenge 2016

To Build Peace, Take Action: Peace Day Challenge 2016

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

His Holiness the Dalai Lama made a powerful point during a visit to USIP last month, a day after the Orlando nightclub shooting that killed 49 people and wounded 53. After leading the audience in a moment of silence for the victims and survivors, he noted his own skepticism about the power of prayer alone. “The real effect,” he said, “comes through … serious action.”  

Type: Analysis

Conflict Analysis & PreventionViolent ExtremismYouthFragility & Resilience

Nationalistic Narratives in Pakistani Textbooks

Nationalistic Narratives in Pakistani Textbooks

Thursday, July 7, 2016

History textbooks capture a state’s official narratives regarding particular events, territory, groups, or phenomena. These narratives reflect and constitute a state’s national identity and can generate the potential for conflict because of their divisiveness. This brief summarizes initial baseline research on Pakistani textbooks, revealing the importance of bureaucratic politics, and highlights several implications for education reform and national and international stability.

Type: Peace Brief

Violent ExtremismEducation & TrainingYouth

For Iraq’s ISIS Targets, Urgent Need for Aid and Security

For Iraq’s ISIS Targets, Urgent Need for Aid and Security

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

The recent U.S. designation of genocide to describe the ISIS extremist group’s killings and persecution of minorities as well as Shia Muslims in Iraq and Syria highlighted the long history of oppression of religious and ethnic groups and the questions looming about whether religious minorities especially can survive in the region, according to USIP Senior Program Officer Sarhang Hamasaeed.

Type: Analysis

Violent ExtremismReconciliationHuman Rights

Q&A: Obama’s Troop Decision and Afghanistan’s Stability

Q&A: Obama’s Troop Decision and Afghanistan’s Stability

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Today, President Obama announced that he would extend the presence of roughly 8,400 U.S. troops in Afghanistan through the end of his term in January 2017, revising previous plans to cut force levels to around 5,500 soldiers at the end of the year. Afghanistan will be among the top issues for the NATO Summit of leaders in Warsaw, taking place later this week on July 8-9. USIP Vice President for Asia Programs Andrew Wilder, who recently returned from Afghanistan, discusses the issue of troop n...

Type: Analysis

Violent ExtremismEnvironmentGlobal PolicyEconomics

Refugee Crisis Threatens Global Stability, Power Says

Refugee Crisis Threatens Global Stability, Power Says

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

United Nations Ambassador Samantha Power called on the international community—including the American public—to step up its response to the greatest refugee crisis since World War II, saying that failure to act may destabilize fragile states, strengthen organized crime and bolster the arguments of violent extremists that the West is at war with Islam.

Type: Analysis

Fragility & ResilienceViolent ExtremismReligionGlobal Policy

USIP Iftar: Don’t Just Tolerate Diversity, Embrace It

USIP Iftar: Don’t Just Tolerate Diversity, Embrace It

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

The traditional Muslim call to prayer echoed across USIP’s atrium yesterday evening as the institute ushered in its third annual Iftar, marking the breaking of the daily fast during the holy month of Ramadan. But it wasn’t just one imam’s voice. Instead, five Muslim clerics and a poetry reader from six traditions—Senegalese, Syrian, Pakistani, Iranian, Turkish and Moroccan—represented the theme of the event: The Islamic Mosaic.

Type: Analysis

Violent ExtremismReligion

U.N. Youth-and-Peace Resolution: The Hard Work Begins

U.N. Youth-and-Peace Resolution: The Hard Work Begins

Thursday, June 16, 2016

The United Nations Security Council recently addressed a force quietly shaping the world: a generation of young people that, numbering 1.8 billion between the ages of 10 to 24, is the largest in history, and has enormous potential to build peace amid the violence that so often rocks their world. The council’s resolution on youth, peace and security was the first to deal with the role of young people on these issues. The hard work now is to turn the resolution’s words into reality, H.E. Ahmad ...

Type: Analysis

Violent ExtremismYouthGlobal Policy