On Memorial Day, Americans honor those in the military who have died in service to this country. This year Memorial Day – May 28 – is the day before the International Day of U.N. Peacekeepers on May 29. Today, men and women in uniform play significant roles in peacebuilding and peacekeeping operations in conflict zones around the world. USIP has made important and lasting contributions to training U.S. and international military in effective means of conflict management and thereby enhancing national security.

The Institute's efforts at supporting military operations currently include:

  • At the request of the U.S. State Department's Africa Contingency Operations and Training and Assistance Program (ACOTA), regularly training African military personnel deployed as peacekeepers by the United Nations and African Union
  • In partnership with the Defense Institute of International Legal Studies (DIILS), holding seminars for senior government officials and military officers of various countries. The seminars focus on conflict management skills useful in conducting international humanitarian and peace operations.
  • Enrolling U.S. and international military in USIP Academy courses designed to improve peacebuilding efforts and civilian- military operations in zones of conflict
  • As part of its Jennings Randolph Senior Scholar program, hosting an Army Fellow, who while at USIP focuses on exploring ways in which the U.S. military can improve conflict management outcomes. USIP's current Army Fellow is Lieutenant Colonel Brian J. Stokes.
  • Hosting an interagency professional-in-residence, a program open to officers from all the military services. U.S. Navy Lieutenant Commander Aaron R. Austin is currently at USIP.
  • Holding briefings for U.S. military from service academies, military bases, and officer training programs on the ways in which conflict management and peacebuilding can contribute to their efforts.

The Global Peacebuilding Center (GPC) works to better inform young people on contributions that the military – both U.S. and international - can make in peacebuilding. The GPC features five “Witnesses to Peacebuildng” which showcase individual stories of peacebuilders of various types from around the world. One story that the GPC features is the Marshall Legacy Institute's Mine Detection Dogs program. This effort trains dogs to search for anti-personnel mines, frequently a major issue after a war has ended. After training these dogs are partnered with military working to remove land mines so that children can used open space to play and farmers can use fields for planting.


Latest Publications

In Europe, Xi Looks to Boost Ties — and Sow Divisions

In Europe, Xi Looks to Boost Ties — and Sow Divisions

Thursday, May 16, 2024

Chinese leader Xi Jinping last week made his first trip to the European continent in five years, visiting France, Hungary and Serbia. In Paris, Xi faced tough questions over trade and China’s support for Russia and its war in Ukraine, but met a much friendlier reception in Budapest and Belgrade, both of which view China as a key economic and political partner. Still, the visit demonstrated the obstacles Beijing faces in fostering deeper ties across Europe, where resentment is simmering over China’s moral and materiel aid to Russia and what Europe views as unfair trade practices.

Type: Question and Answer

Global Policy

Traumatic Decarbonization in Fragile States

Traumatic Decarbonization in Fragile States

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

The process of decarbonization—that is, the replacement of fossil fuels with non-hydrocarbon-based forms of energy—is essential for meeting the climate goals articulated by international agreements. But in fragile, oil-dependent nations, where hydrocarbon revenues are often a key means of political control, decarbonization can spell the difference between peace and conflict. This report examines the consequences of the sudden loss of oil revenues for fragile, conflict-affected states and provides recommendations for policymakers on how to manage future decarbonization peacefully.

Type: Peaceworks

Conflict Analysis & PreventionEconomicsEnvironmentFragility & Resilience

China’s Edge in the Pacific Islands: Xi Jinping Makes Time for Leaders

China’s Edge in the Pacific Islands: Xi Jinping Makes Time for Leaders

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

If the U.S. government wants an edge over China in the Pacific Islands, it needs to facilitate more meetings between the president of the United States and regional leaders, preferably one-on-one. When Pacific Island leaders fly to Beijing, they often have a one-on-one meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, but such a meeting between the leader of a Pacific Island country and a sitting president of the United States has never taken place. The White House has only conducted joint meetings with Pacific Island leaders. Sometimes even joint meetings don’t make the cut.

Type: Analysis

Global Policy

At the Sahel’s Center, Tension Rises Over Chad’s Disputed Election

At the Sahel’s Center, Tension Rises Over Chad’s Disputed Election

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

A disputed presidential election in Chad last week is making few global headlines, but poses new risks to African and international efforts to reverse the Sahel region’s spreading instability, conflict and human displacement. Chad is centered in the world’s largest belt of military rule: six nations across Africa that have suffered armed coups since 2020. Among them, Chad is the first to hold elections to restore civilian rule. But a string of setbacks to a fully credible vote has yielded a contested result that risks further domestic conflict and a narrowing of popular legitimacy for the next government, led by the incumbent transitional president, Mahamat Idriss Deby.

Type: Analysis

Global Elections & Conflict

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