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Sudan’s 2009 Elections: Critical Issues and Timelines

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Sudan’s elections, scheduled to take place by July 2009, are a major milestone of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA). Domestic and international institutions are already planning for the elections, although many legal and logistical issues must be resolved before they take place.

Type: Peace Brief

The U.S., Iraq and the Middle East

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

The United States faces a set of unparalleled challenges in the Middle East at a moment when its capacity to respond is circumscribed and the regional and global situations are deteriorating. It is far more likely that things will get worse before they get better, though there are ways of trying to improve the odds.

Type: Peace Brief

Child Soldiers: New Evidence, New Advocacy Approaches

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

In over 30 conflict zones today there are estimated to be upwards of 300,000 children used to support military activities as porters, sentries, sex slaves, spies, and combatants. What are the factors that might hinder attempts to curb the use of child soldiers, to prevent their recruitment, and to successfully reintegrate ex-combatants into their communities?

Type: Peace Brief

Constituent Assembly Elections and Security in Nepal

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

What are the security challenges Nepal faces in the run up to the November 2007 constituent assembly elections? Lack of resources, the need for training and retraining, violence in the Terai (plains), and increased crime and lawlessness are only a few of the challenges identified through a series of meetings and group dialogue sessions held by USIP.

Type: Peace Brief

U.S. Police in Peace and Stability Operations

U.S. Police in Peace and Stability Operations

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

The first obligation of an international intervention force in a peace or stability operation is to provide security for the civilian population. Inevitably the arrival of foreign military forces is followed by a breakdown of public order. The United States should carry through plans to create a federal-level police reserve for international police and stability operations.

Type: Special Report

Iraq and the Gulf States: The Balance of Fear

Iraq and the Gulf States: The Balance of Fear

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Iraq’s Persian Gulf neighbors supported the U.S. invasion of Iraq in order to preserve the status quo--a weak and self-absorbed Iraq--rather than to impose a new one. However, the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and its aftermath have not brought stability to the Gulf States as much as they have shifted the most serious challenges from external threats (of a hostile Baghdad) to internal threats (the threat of conflict spillover from Iraq).

Type: Special Report

Unity in Diversity

Unity in Diversity

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Nowhere are the stakes of sectarian conflict as high as in the Middle East, and nowhere is the practice of interfaith dialogue (IFD) more fraught with difficulty. The questions, then, naturally arise: What sort of person tries something as audacious as interfaith dialogue in such a polarized climate? And what do they hope to gain? The answers to both questions are surprisingly diverse.

Type: Book

Conflict Analysis & PreventionReligion