Côte d’Ivoire: Ensuring a Peaceful Political Transition

Côte d’Ivoire: Ensuring a Peaceful Political Transition

Saturday, December 1, 2007

By: Dorina Bekoe

A five-year uprising in Côte d’Ivoire ended in March 2007 with the signing of a peace accord. In the wake of this development, USIP and West Africa Network for Peacebuilding-Côte d’Ivoire recently organized a workshop on strategies to ensure a peaceful political transition and electoral process. This report details the meeting and the way forward to stabilize the country.

Type: Peace Brief

Political Progress in Iraq During the Surge

Political Progress in Iraq During the Surge

Saturday, December 1, 2007

By: Rend Al-Rahim Francke

Rend Al-Rahim Francke concludes that the military surge has bettered the security situation in Baghdad. However, political progress has faltered and not matched these improvements.

Type: Special Report

On the Issues: Burma

Thursday, November 8, 2007

By: Susan Hayward

Susan Hayward discusses how Burma's "saffron revolution" demonstrates the powerful capacity of the religious realm to assist in the creation of global peace.

Type: Analysis

Peacemaking in International Conflict

Peacemaking in International Conflict

Thursday, November 1, 2007

By: I. William Zartman;  editor

This updated and expanded edition of the highly popular volume originally published in 1997 describes the tools and skills of peacemaking that are currently available and critically assesses their usefulness and limitations.

Type: Book

Conflict Analysis & Prevention

Beyond the National Interest

Beyond the National Interest

Thursday, November 1, 2007

By: Jean-Marc Coicaud

Whatever happened to multilateral peacekeeping? This is the central question Jean-Marc Coicaud explores in this penetrating scholarly examination of the period of “robust” UN-mandated peacekeeping missions in humanitarian crises.

Type: Book

Afghanistan's Economy: On the Right Road, But Still a Long Way to Go

Thursday, November 1, 2007

By: Beth Ellen Cole

Although Afghanistan has now laid the foundation for a market-based economy, substantial challenges still linger. Many of the problems Afghanistan’s economy faces are typical for those rebuilding after war: high prices from an immature system that lacks adequate private sector competition; resistance to change from a state-controlled system; the dearth of human capital; corruption; insecurity; and inequalities created by the market system itself.

Type: Peace Brief

EnvironmentEconomics

Burma's Long Road to Democracy

Burma's Long Road to Democracy

Thursday, November 1, 2007

By: Priscilla Clapp

In this Special Report, the author establishes the historical context for the recent Saffron Revolution in Burma, explains the persistence of military rule, and speculates on the country’s prospects for political transition to democracy.

Type: Special Report

Some Assembly Required: Sudan's Comprehensive Peace Agreement

Some Assembly Required: Sudan's Comprehensive Peace Agreement

Thursday, November 1, 2007

By: Timothy Carney

While Sudan has recently reached a Comprehensive Peace Accord (CPA) between the northern and southern regions, tensions still smolder. As commonoly said, "The devil is in the details," in implementation of the accord. To identify lessons learned from the negotiation of the agreement from 2002 to 2005 and its implementation since then, USIP conducted a project, the conclusions of which are discussed in this special report.

Type: Special Report