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Turkmenistan Tennis Champ, "Skategirl" from Peru Advance Women’s Influence

Turkmenistan Tennis Champ, "Skategirl" from Peru Advance Women’s Influence

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

A national tennis champion from Turkmenistan crafted a program to expose more girls to her sport. In Karachi, Pakistan, one of the city’s only female sports journalists aims to strengthen underprivileged girls with athletics. The skateboarding founder of Peru Skategirl developed a strategy for her South American country to prove that "skateboarding is not just a male sport."

Type: Analysis

Education & Training

Reflections of a West Point Cadet at USIP

Reflections of a West Point Cadet at USIP

Thursday, August 8, 2013

During the summer leave period at the United States Military Academy, cadets like myself have the opportunity to work with different corporations, institutions, and organizations in the U.S. and abroad. When I found out that I would be working at USIP this summer, I had no idea what I would be getting into or what exactly this organization was.

Type: Analysis

Conflict Analysis & PreventionEducation & TrainingJustice, Security & Rule of Law

How Pakistan Might Bring Madrassa Education into the Mainstream

How Pakistan Might Bring Madrassa Education into the Mainstream

Thursday, May 30, 2013

With an estimated 15,000 religious schools primarily teaching the Quran to more than 1 million students, Pakistan could reduce the risk of militancy by requiring madrassas to teach courses that might provide better alternatives for their students’ futures, according to a Pakistan police official doing a professional affiliation with USIP.

Type: Analysis

Education & TrainingReligionEnvironmentEconomics

Managing Conflict in a World Adrift

Managing Conflict in a World Adrift

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

In the midst of a political shift where power is moving from central institutions to smaller, more distributed units in the international system, the approaches to and methodologies for peacemaking are changing. "Managing Conflict in a World Adrift" provides a sobering panorama of contemporary conflict, along with innovative thinking about how to respond now that new forces and dynamics are at play.

Type: Book

Education & Training

Education and Attitudes in Pakistan

Education and Attitudes in Pakistan

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Why do Pakistanis continue to hold a skewed assessment of the Taliban threat to their country? What underlies their attitudes toward the Taliban, the United States, India, and religious minorities? This report draws on author interviews and fieldwork undertaken in Punjab in 2013 and 2014 as well as on a detailed curriculum and textbook study to identify and trace the roots of these attitudes and suggest ways out of the dilemma for Pakistan’s policymakers.

Type: Special Report

Conflict Analysis & PreventionViolent ExtremismEducation & Training

Measuring Collective Impact: Creating a Framework for Assessing Multiple Peacebuilding Projects in Colombia

Measuring Collective Impact: Creating a Framework for Assessing Multiple Peacebuilding Projects in Colombia

Thursday, July 30, 2020

USIP implemented its Initiative to Measure Peace and Conflict (IMPACT) program first in the Central African Republic and later in Colombia, where it worked directly with peacebuilding organizations to gauge their collective impact on fostering reconciliation in the wake of the 2016 peace accord between the government and FARC rebels. Drawing on the challenges encountered and lessons learned, this report provides suggestions for how future iterations of the IMPACT approach can help policymakers, donors, and practitioners achieve greater and more cost-effective results from the peacebuilding projects they support.

Type: Special Report

Education & Training