Burundi

Local Business Local Peace

The Peacebuilding Potential of the Domestic Private Sector
Jessica Banfield, Canan Gündüz, Nick Killick (eds.)
July, 2006
International Alert
584 pages
London, UK
1-898702-73-X

This publication makes the case that the local business community in conflict-affected countries can and should play a role in building peace. Linking up with other peacebuilding actors, and taking advantage of their own resources and skills, business communities should address socio-economic, security, political and reconciliation dimensions of peacebuilding. Section 1 is divided into 5 thematic chapters, and Section 2 contains 19 country case studies. Executive Summaries are also available in Spanish and French.

The local business community in conflict-affected countries can and should play a role in building peace by linking up with other peacebuilding actors, and taking advantage of their own resources and skills.

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Reform of the Coffee Sector in Burundi

Prospects for Participation, Prosperity and Peace
Jean-Paul Kimonyo and Damase Ntiranyibagira
May, 2007
International Alert and USAID
51 pages
London, UK
978-1-898702-89-4

Coffee farming plays a vital role in the Burundian economy. It is the main industry and export product of the country and provides important income for the roughly 600,000 families (about 40% of the population) who grow it. Reforms of the coffee sector have continued with greater deregulation and privatization, but this process takes places in a specific political and economic context: on the one hand there is a new democratically elected government and generalized poverty which has been aggravated by 10 years of civil war.

This report looks at coffee sector reform in Burundi and the prevention of conflicts that could arise in connection with the reforms.

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Women’s political participation in countries emerging from conflict in the Great Lakes Region of Africa

Report of the Consultation Workshop, Hotel Africana, Kampala, Uganda, 28-30 August 2007
International Alert
May, 2008
International Alert
60 pages
London, UK
978-1-898702-94-8

This is the report of a consultation workshop jointly organised by International Alert and the Eastern African Sub-Regional Support Initiative for the Advancement of Women (EASSI) in partnership with the Women and Gender Studies Department at Makerere University. The workshop is part of a regional research project aimed at assessing the impact of women’s political participation in countries emerging from conflict in the Great Lakes Region of Africa.

The report of a consultation workshop that is part of a regional research project aimed at assessing the impact of women’s political participation in countries emerging from conflict in the Great Lakes Region of Africa.

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Integrating women’s priorities into peacebuilding processes

Experiences of monitoring and advocacy in Burundi and Sierra Leone
International Alert
November, 2008
International Alert
24 pages
London, UK
978-1-906677-40-4

Women peacebuilders in various conflict-affected countries face very similar challenges as they attempt to integrate women’s interests in peacebuilding policy processes and civil society actors from different countries can potentially learn a lot from exchanging experiences with each other. This report outlines the findings and recommendations of a workshop with representatives from Burundian and Sierra Leonean civil society organisations working in the field of gender equality and women’s empowerment organised by International Alert on 25th to 29th February 2008.

This report outlines the findings and recommendations of a workshop with representatives from Burundian and Sierra Leonean civil society organisations working in the field of gender equality and women’s empowerment in February 2008.

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