We are pleased to launch a new practice note in the Peacebuilding Essentials for Economic Development Practitioners series.
Alert recently convened a meeting of security experts to look at the likelihood of increased conflict arising from changes to our climate already underway. The newswire Reuters Foundation AlertNet has reported the story here, or you can read the article below:
Article: © AlertNet, Thomson Reuters Foundation
Photo: © International Alert/Niranjan Shrestha
International Alert is an independent peacebuilding organisation that has worked for over 20 years to lay the foundations for lasting peace and security in communities affected by violent conflict. Our multifaceted approach focuses both in and across various regions; aiming to shape policies and practices that affect peacebuilding; and helping build skills and capacity through training.
International Alert impact report 2008
One of the more controversial outcomes of the UN Small Arms conference was the failure of states to explicitly commit to more effective regulation of civilian possession and use of small arms and light weapons (SALW). Despite clear evidence of the opportunities for diversion of SALW from civilian possession to illicit trade and the serious impact of this on human security, opposition from some
International Alert's impact in 2009
International Alert's impact in 2009

Photo: © International Alert/Kashish Das Shrestha
International Alert and Transition International are offering a DDR advanced course on reintegration.
PLEASE NOTE: APPLICATIONS FOR THIS COURSE ARE NOW CLOSED.
Cost: the course is free of charge
Full board accommodation for the duration of the course is included in the cost. Participants have to be able to commit to attend the course in full.
Course description:

International Alert is pleased to invite you to attend the first in a series of Peace Talks:
on Tuesday 12th April at 18.00 at Hotel Wielemans, Brussels
Dan Smith, Alert Secretary-General, was interviewed in Washington DC at the Woodrow Wilson Centre last week about the nature of our work. You can watch his thoughts, which include some observations about the challenges and opportunities of peacebuilding, below:
Dan Smith
"All economic and development activities infrastructure, human and social sector development, economic management, private sector and agricultural recovery, etc. can potentially be selected or designed to contribute to peace-building goals." World Bank LICUS, Good Practice Note on Country Assistance Strategies in Fragile States, 2006
As a financier and as provider of often quite forceful policy and technical advice, the World Bank:
Moreover, despite recent ructions involving the Bank president, some argue that the Bank’s role and influence will increase further in the coming years. This is because influential voices in the donor development community are currently arguing the need to 'multilateralise' development assistance and Finance Ministers may push for this in order to reduce the high transaction costs of aid incurred by bilateral donors.
International Alert is currently deepening its analysis of the Bank’s engagement in fragile and conflict-affected countries. We are continuing to explore the structures and procedures in Washington DC and between HQ and country offices which affect decision-making. We are also looking at ground level impacts and partnerships in the context of new initiatives such as the Statebuilding and Peacebuilding Fund and the Governance and Anti-corruption Implementation Plan. The country cases for Alert are primarily Burundi, Nepal and Sri Lanka, where the Bank and other donors face very different governance and conflict challenges.
Our primary interest is in the institutional incentives and performance criteria for Bank staff and how they design and implement Bank programmes in-country (and across sub-regions). We aim to assist the process of adapting these to the acute development challenges in 40-50 countries worldwide dubbed ‘fragile’. The ultimate goal is to help improve the Bank’s ability to reduce state and societal fragility and prevent violent conflict.
The EU was established as a peacebuilding mechanism for Europe after the Second World War. Today, as a union of 27 Member States, it is a major international peacebuilding actor with a common commitment to build ‘a secure and peaceful world.’ Equal to the United States in economic strength, it is the world’s largest trading bloc, the biggest global humanitarian and development donor and is present in more than 120 countries, over a third of which are affected by conflict.
International Alert aims to improve the effectiveness of the EU’s effort to prevent violent conflict. The primary vehicle for this is the Initiative for Peacebuilding, a partnership which includes 10 European organizations that are expert in identifying the challenges and recommending ways forward.
The EU’s efforts to improve the effectiveness of its contribution to peacebuilding are manifested in a wide variety of statements, communications and other documents. Foremost among these is the Programme of Action for the Prevention of Violent Conflict set out in Gothenburg in 2001. This is being complemented by emerging institutional generic work on Fragile States and Situations as well as region-specific approaches such as the EU-Africa Strategy. Internal guidelines have also been circulated within the Commission to promote systematic attention to conflict prevention and crisis management and a check-list of root causes of conflict has been produced. However, greater political will, capacity building and technical expertise is needed to put existing policy commitments into practice and further improve the effectiveness of the EU’s contribution to peacebuilding.
By doing this we aim to ensure that the EU addresses the long-term root causes and evolving drivers of violent conflict and puts the goal of peacebuilding at the centre of its policy and institutional practices. This requires coherent structures and strategies across all EU policy and practice that are informed by the people who are affected by conflict.
International Alert also works within a number of networks and partnerships to promote peacebuilding within and amongst the EU:

We are a founding member of the European Peacebuilding Liaison Office (EPLO), a network of NGOs active in conflict prevention that seeks to promote peacebuilding policies among decision-makers in Europe. We work through EPLO to influence emerging EU policy papers, strategies and declarations. Following the finalisation of new Funding Instruments for 2007-2013 and with new programming plans being finalised by the Commission, International Alert worked with the EPLO, and with fellow member Saferworld, to produce the briefing paper Acting on commitments: How EU strategies and programming can better prevent violent conflict to highlight important areas of progress in the EU’s work during 2006 and to make specific recommendations on further improvements in the months ahead.

In 2006, Alert participated in a four-member consortium, the Conflict Prevention Partnership, that was led by International Crisis Group. Under this collaboration, we engaged with a range of officials and local stakeholders to advise on the EU’s peacebuilding role in the two geographic contexts, the Great Lakes and the South Caucasus, and on two thematic areas, the economic dimensions of peacebuilding and linking security and development in dealing with the challenges posed by ex-combatants.

Since late 2007, we have been leading a consortium of organisations in The Initiative for Peacebuilding (IfP). The IfP draws together the complementary geographic and thematic expertise of 10 civil society organisations (and their networks) with offices across the EU and in conflict-affected countries. IfP partners have joined together to develop and promote international knowledge and expertise in the field of conflict prevention and peacebuilding. IfP is a thematic project, exploring a number of cross-cutting issues in specific regions across four continents; emphasizing the inclusion of those affected by conflict in influencing national and international policy debates and ensuring a stronger link between policy and practice. The themes are: 1) Mediation; 2) Regional cooperation on environment, economy and natural resources; 3) Security; 4) Democratisation and transitional justice; 5) Gender; and 6) Capacity building and training.
With an important stock-taking conference coming up in a few weeks time - minds are being focused on just how far the world has come in achieving the millennium development goals. These were a set of targets adopted in the year two thousand to provide a framework for tackling extreme poverty and they're meant to be attained by twenty fifteen. There was broad agreement that this was a good thing. But now a group here in London is raising doubts about the value of this approach.
Our overall aim is to ensure international peacebuilding policies and practice contribute to non-violent and equitable gender relations within societies. International Alert understands that conflict affects and engages men, women, boys and girls in very different ways. Violent conflict impacts on the social construction of gender identities, in particular on the militarisation of masculinity and the victimisation of femininity.