Toolkit for advocacy and action, Peace upport operations
Toolkit for advocacy and action, Peace negotiations and agreements section
Toolkit for advocacy and action, Conflict Prevention Section
The UN Peacebuilding Commission: A Chance to Build Peace More Effectively
The Case of Burundi
October 2006
Armenian-Azerbaijan Public Peace Forum (March, 2009) final document in Azeri.
Final document of the Armenian-Azerbaijan public peace forum (March, 2009). In Armenian.
Final focument of the 3rd Armenian-Azerbaijan public peace forum, March 2009. Russian version.
Final document of the 3rd Armenian-Azerbaijan public peace forum.
English version.
Press Release on Consortium Initiative, 26 November, 2008. Russian version.
Press Release
26th November 2008
NGOs ask for more transparency in the Karabakh Peace Process
and for more contact between governments and non state actors working on this issue.
Press Release on Nagorno Karabakh, 2 July 2009. In Russian.
This study examines the human, economic and socio-political costs of the war between the Government of Sri
Lanka and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Between 4th-6th February 2011, International Alert’s economy and conflict project partners, the Caucasus Business and Development Network (CBDN), organised a regional beekeepers’ meeting to discuss challenges and possibilities for regional cooperation in the beekeeping sector.
On 9th August 2010, Alert convened business leaders from Acholi and Lango sub-regions of Northern Uganda for a meeting titled “Business and Peace in Uganda: Lessons from Sri Lanka and Kenya” aimed at exploring the role of the private sector in ensuring a peaceful electoral process in the 2011 presidential and parliamentary election in Uganda.
Photo: Kate Holt/IRIN News, http://www.irinnews.org/
International Alert recently facilitated two discussion fora in Northern Uganda’s districts of Amuru and Kitgum, which brought together stakeholders from different sectors of Uganda’s society and local communities to promote peacebuilding as part of the economic recovery of Northern Uganda.
In Amuru, the discussion focused on creating an understanding between oil companies and local communities; while in Kitgum, participants discussed how local business leaders can be key stakeholders in building peace at the local level.