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State Building in South Sudan

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

With its secession from Sudan on July 9, 2011, South Sudan not only gained its eagerly-awaited independence, but also embarked onto the long road of state building. Over the past several months, the new country has begun to confront the myriad challenges it faces in sustainable development, good governance, and capacity building. In addition, the world's newest state is also coping with cross-cutting issues of managing resources, constructing a sense of nationhood, and contending with problem...

Education & TrainingGenderReligionEnvironmentEconomics

A Troubled Palestinian Economy

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Palestinians have not yet been able to build “the foundations of a sustainable economy,” Mohammad Mustafa, chairman and CEO of The Palestine Investment Fund, told an audience at the “Twenty Years after Madrid” conference at the United States Institute of Peace on Nov 2.

Type: Analysis

EnvironmentEconomics

Reconstruction Zones in Afghanistan and Haiti

Reconstruction Zones in Afghanistan and Haiti

Friday, October 14, 2011

The record of countries coming out of war or chaos is dismal: roughly half of them fall back into crisis. Among the other half, most end up highly aid dependent. The author of this Special Report was invited to develop her proposal for reconstruction zones as a way to jump-start the economies of conflict- and disaster-affected countries in a dynamic and inclusive way, by improving aid effectiveness and accountability.

Type: Special Report

EnvironmentEconomics

The Economics of Peace

The Economics of Peace

Monday, September 19, 2011

Efforts to rebuild economies in postconflict zones around the world underscore a central lesson: development practices that work in peaceful countries often don’t apply to countries in transition.

Type: Special Report

EnvironmentEconomics

Haiti's Progress

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Robert Maguire, chairman of the USIP Haiti Working Group and professor at the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University, visited Haiti earlier this month to meet with government officials concerning Haiti’s current political impasse. He provides an update on the situation.

Type: Analysis

Conflict Analysis & PreventionEnvironmentEconomics