Afghanistan’s Lesson: Strategic Costs of Civilian Harm

Afghanistan’s Lesson: Strategic Costs of Civilian Harm

Thursday, June 16, 2016

By: Fred Strasser

After 15 years of U.S. military operations in Afghanistan, the strategic importance of avoiding harm to civilians is an inescapable lesson that policymakers need to fully integrate in American doctrine, planning and training, say the authors of a new report. The report offers “practical, pragmatic, concrete recommendations” to strengthen U.S. military operations overseas by averting losses to civilians and their communities, said former Undersecretary of Defense Michèle Flournoy in a public d...

Type: Analysis

Justice, Security & Rule of LawHuman RightsCivilian-Military Relations

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

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

Thursday, June 16, 2016

By: Fred Strasser

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

Dalai Lama Urges Greater Compassion, Role for Youth

Dalai Lama Urges Greater Compassion, Role for Youth

Monday, June 13, 2016

By: USIP Staff

A day after the United States’ deadliest-ever mass shooting, the Dalai Lama led a Washington audience in a silent prayer for peace. But he said prayers will be ineffective without “serious action” to erode religious and other communal divisions. Building peace in and among nations requires improved education, leadership by youth and women, and “personal contact” among people of disparate groups, the Buddhist spiritual leader said. “We have to live on this small planet… with a sense of brother...

Type: Analysis

ReligionYouth

Humanitarian Aid: ‘Radical Change’ After Istanbul?

Humanitarian Aid: ‘Radical Change’ After Istanbul?

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

By: Fred Strasser

The two-day World Humanitarian Summit held recently in Istanbul drew criticism for the absence of top global leaders, but it actually broke ground in several ways, experts said in a discussion hosted by the U.S. Institute of Peace and Oxfam America. The summit spotlighted the need for “radical change” in a relief system built for the era after World War II rather than today’s small wars, insurgencies and fragmenting states that have unleashed the second-biggest flood of displaced people in hi...

Type: Analysis

Human RightsEnvironmentFragility & ResilienceEconomics

Lindborg Calls Humanitarian Summit a 'Wake-Up Call'

Lindborg Calls Humanitarian Summit a 'Wake-Up Call'

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

By: USIP Staff

The first-ever World Humanitarian Summit, held this week in Istanbul, should spur political leaders around the globe to recognize that “the world is on fire,” USIP President Nancy Lindborg said. The international community is failing to muster the political will to end the violent conflicts that have ignited the globe’s most dire humanitarian crisis since World War II, she said in interviews at the conference.

Type: Analysis

Fragility & ResilienceHuman Rights

For a Victory Amid Crisis, Offer Consistent, Smart Help to Tunisia

For a Victory Amid Crisis, Offer Consistent, Smart Help to Tunisia

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

By: Nancy Lindborg

As the United States and the international community grapple with interlocking crises in the Middle East and nearby parts of Africa and Asia, we must reserve a special priority for helping Tunisia achieve a strategic victory. Its success could model for the region how to build stability and prosperity through inclusive governance and nonviolence.

Type: Analysis

Violent ExtremismEnvironmentGlobal PolicyFragility & ResilienceEconomics

Q&A: Drone Strike's Impact on Afghanistan, Pakistan

Q&A: Drone Strike's Impact on Afghanistan, Pakistan

Monday, May 23, 2016

By: USIP Staff

The death of Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Akhtar Mansour, who reportedly was killed in a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan on May 21, raises a host of questions about the Taliban’s future, U.S. strategy in Afghanistan and American relations with Pakistan. The strike, which Pakistani officials have protested, was the first publicly-disclosed military action by the U.S. inside Pakistan’s southwestern Baluchistan province, and the first to directly target senior Taliban leaders sheltering o...

Type: Analysis

Violent ExtremismGlobal Policy

Lindborg Calls for New Approaches to Syrian Refugee Assistance

Lindborg Calls for New Approaches to Syrian Refugee Assistance

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

By: USIP Staff;  

The Syrian crisis has dramatically increased the urgency to reconsider fundamental approaches to humanitarian assistance, and American leadership and support is vital to developing smarter, more effective and more efficient policies, U.S. Institute of Peace President Nancy Lindborg said in testimony today before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Type: Analysis

Violent ExtremismYouthFragility & ResilienceHuman Rights