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USIP Briefs Air Force LtGen. Richard Y. Newton III

Friday, April 6, 2012

USIP briefed Air Force Lieutenant General Richard Y. Newton III. The briefing outlined USIP’s efforts to promote dialogue between India and Pakistan and ease tensions in the volatile Kashmir region; to harness the power of technology for crisis mapping, humanitarian response, and interagency coordination; and USIP’s training programs.

Type: Analysis

Conflict Analysis & Prevention

Bombings in Mumbai

Thursday, July 14, 2011

USIP’s Moeed Yusuf discusses the tragic bombings in Mumbai, India – and why these sparked immediate international and regional concerns.

Type: Analysis

Bleak Outlook for 2011 Conference on Disarmament

Bleak Outlook for 2011 Conference on Disarmament

Friday, January 28, 2011

The 2011 Conference on Disarmament began contentiously when Pakistan’s representative criticized U.S. support for full Indian membership in export control organizations that would allow it to engage in nuclear trade. This Peace Brief seeks to capture some of the areas of contention, including the Pakistani block of a fissile material cutoff treaty, and place them in the context of Pakistan’s larger strategic and security concerns vis-à-vis India.

Type: Peace Brief

Conflict Analysis & PreventionGlobal Policy

Hydropolitics in Pakistan’s Indus Basin

Hydropolitics in Pakistan’s Indus Basin

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

This report, commissioned by the United States Institute of Peace, examines the Indus Waters Treaty and its role in contemporary international hydropolitics in the Indus basin, paying particular attention to the most recent river development projects on the Indian side of the Indus’s three western tributaries. Conflicts around contemporary large-scale water development projects in the Indian and Pakistani parts of the Indus basin are also reviewed.

Type: Special Report

Conflict Analysis & Prevention

Social Media Amplify Concerns in India’s Jammu and Kashmir State

Thursday, October 21, 2010

For now, violent clashes in Indian-controlled Kashmir between young Kashmiris and Indian security forces may appear to have died down. But these conflicts remain highly visible on the Internet, where youth are using social media to continue to air their grievances and advance their cause, according to panelists who spoke at the United States Institute of Peace on October 5th.

Type: Analysis