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Hungry for Peace

Hungry for Peace

Tuesday, November 1, 2005

 This revealing and challenging study of the impact of famine on North Korea not only significantly enlarges our understanding of that hermetic country but also urges us to reassess how we deal with it.

Type: Book

Oral Histories: The Iraq Experience Project

Thursday, October 27, 2005

The Iraq Experience Project is designed to collect, distill, and disseminate lessons learned from U.S. government officials, military officers, and contractors who served in the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq. Using a combination of tools from printed reports to interactive DVDs and interviews collected in 2004, the Iraq Experience Project seeks to help U.S. civilian and military personnel by providing the training and skills needed for Americans serving in Iraq and beyond.

Type: Oral History

Orphans of Conflict: Caring for the Internally Displaced

Orphans of Conflict: Caring for the Internally Displaced

Saturday, October 1, 2005

This report proposes five steps to improve the global response to internal displacement. If taken, these steps would build ownership of IDPs by host governments and foreign donors, implement rules and standards governing the response, reform the response of the United Nations and the United States, and create a permanent advocacy constituency for IDPs.

Type: Special Report

Strategies for Promoting Democracy in Iraq

Strategies for Promoting Democracy in Iraq

Saturday, October 1, 2005

The Education program at the United States Institute of Peace has since early 2004 been involved in a project to help rehabilitate the Iraqi higher education system and to introduce courses and materials in conflict resolution and peace education into university curricula throughout the country

Type: Special Report

Strategies for Promoting Democracy in Iraq (Arabic Edition)

Saturday, October 1, 2005

Summary Social justice and economic development are essential for democracy in Iraq to succeed. The idea of a democratic Iraq is not one imposed by foreign powers, but rather one that Iraqis themselves vigorously support. Iraq has a tradition and history of democracy that can help promote the successful establishment of a democratic form of government in post–Saddam Hussein Iraq.