Sort
Central African Republic: The Peace Effort That Went Awry

Central African Republic: The Peace Effort That Went Awry

Thursday, June 28, 2018

The renewed violence in CAR reflects the need for a consistent engagement by the international community to sustain a peacebuilding process in the country. Governments and international organizations too often have focused on the country sporadically, in short-term reactions to crises that offer only temporary solutions.

Type: Analysis

Peace Processes

Collaborative Design in Peacebuilding

Collaborative Design in Peacebuilding

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Despite clear evidence of the effectiveness of individual peacebuilding efforts, the field as a whole often struggles to have a meaningful collective impact on broader conflict dynamics. This report, drawing on a pilot initiative in the Central African Republic—IMPACT-CAR—to develop a shared measurement and reporting system aimed at improving collaboration and shared learning across peacebuilding implementers, reflects on the results, successes, and challenges of the initiative to offer a road map for future initiatives focused on collective impact in the peacebuilding field.

Type: Special Report

Peace Processes

The 2015–2016 Central African Republic Elections, A Look Back

The 2015–2016 Central African Republic Elections, A Look Back

Monday, May 15, 2017

Plagued by successive coups and waves of violent conflict since its independence in 1960, the Central African Republic managed to hold its first peaceful elections in late 2015 and early 2016. Fears of widespread violence proved unfounded. This report focuses on what went right in those elections and how those conditions have not held a year later, allowing violence to return to the country.

Type: Special Report

Global Elections & ConflictDemocracy & Governance

Q&A: Central African Republic Waiting for Peace

Q&A: Central African Republic Waiting for Peace

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Nine months after the Central African Republic (CAR) held free, peaceful and democratic elections for president and parliament, the country continues to struggle for stability and progress. Half of the country remains in need of humanitarian aid, and an increase in violent incidents since September threatens to destabilize any progress made to date. At the end of November, clashes between factions of the ex-Séléka, a formerly united alliance of primarily Muslim armed groups, left 85 dead, 76 injured and 11,000 newly displaced.

Type: Analysis

Human RightsDemocracy & GovernanceReligionGlobal Elections & ConflictFragility & Resilience

Risk to Central African Republic Lies in Avoiding Mistakes of the Past, Experts Say

Risk to Central African Republic Lies in Avoiding Mistakes of the Past, Experts Say

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

The future of the Central African Republic rests in part on whether the international community can avoid mistakes of the past by supporting its development for the long haul and building institutions and infrastructure rather than abandoning the country after elections later this month, a group of experts said at an event organized by the U.S. Institute of Peace.

Type: Analysis

Conflict Analysis & PreventionEnvironmentJustice, Security & Rule of LawEconomics

U.N. Peacekeeping in the Sahel: Overcoming New Challenges

U.N. Peacekeeping in the Sahel: Overcoming New Challenges

Friday, March 20, 2015

New U.N. operations in the Sahel present unprecedented challenges for U.N. peacekeeping. They involve the United Nations directly in the struggle against transnational Islamist terrorism, weapons proliferation, and illicit trafficking by international organized crime. The United Nations must operate in countries with harsh terrain, vast expanses, poor communications, and porous borders. In response, the Security Council adopted more robust mandates based on the peace enforcement provisions of...

Type: Special Report

Conflict Analysis & PreventionGlobal PolicyDemocracy & Governance

Central African Republic: Religious Leaders Call for Dialogue Backed by Grassroots

Central African Republic: Religious Leaders Call for Dialogue Backed by Grassroots

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Reconciliation and peacebuilding in the Central African Republic will require a national dialogue supported by a grassroots movement, according to the Catholic Archbishop of Bangui Dieudonné Nzapalainga. He spoke at USIP alongside a Muslim imam and Protestant minister about the trio’s efforts to end a brutal two-year-old conflict that reportedly has killed more than 5,000 and forced more than 830,000 people from their homes.

Type: Analysis

Religion