Training Cameroon’s Educators to be Peacemakers
Key words: peacebuilding skills, peace education, Cameroon school system, conflict resolution, conflict management, mututal understanding and tolerance, pedagogy.
Time flies, things change, and learning is life-long
Time flies, things change, and learning is life-long Author: Mohit Mukherjee Originally Published at Peace and Conflict Monitor on: 05/03/2010 I finished my graduate program in international education in the summer of 2002. One key take-away that ‘stuck’ with me is that schooling in most countries had been modelled on an industrial-age factory. They […]
Brazil, the U.N. and multilateralism
In this keynote address at the Opening Ceremony of University for Peace Model United Nations Conference, Ambassador Tadeu Valadares discusses the pressing issues of UN reform, globalization, poverty, and human rights, emphasizing the need for stronger collaboration and multilateralism in the international system in order to promote peace and sustainable development.
Beyond sandbox environmentalism
Beyond sandbox environmentalism Author: Wiktor Zaremba Originally Published at Peace and Conflict Monitor on: 03/01/2011 The recent toxic stain on the Gulf of Mexico and BP’s reputation and President Obama’s repeated calls for a renewable energy push stand as perfect examples of the tremendous disparity between our technological and social opportunities and the sad […]
Balkanization and Subjugation of Somalia
Somalia’s Special Envoy to the United States, Abukar Arman, provides first-hand commentary on Somalia’s hard-hit reality. Rejecting conventional confines proposed by the interest groups within international community and the “political vultures of the 21st Century”, he calls on Somalia’s Traditional Federal Parliament to assert itself against the limiting aspects of the Kampala Accord and, instead, stand strong to support the will of the Somali nation.
Are Human Rights Universal?
Dipo Djungdjungan Summa argues that human rights be treated as a universal value, despite their link to “western” culture, because of their emphasis on non-discrimination and multiculturalism, as well as their ability to curb the power of states and other organizations over individuals.
A Silly Dream?
David Krieger responds to the question of many skeptics of nuclear abolition (as well as the peace movement more generally): is it all a “silly dream”?
Development in Reverse: The True Effects of Armed Conflict
University for Peace graduate student Andres Jimenez comments on the true costs of war through the lens of Paul Collier’s concept of “development in reverse”. Looking at conflict from a socioeconomic standpoint and recognizing the realities of armed conflict, Jimenez analyzes both the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and peacekeeping operations as part of what he deems necessary interventions to prevent widespread violence and civil war.
Dealing with the International Saracens
Oduesp Eman comments on a controversial deal between the Somali Transitional Government and Saracen International, a private security contractors with a dubious record.
Costa Rica moves towards militarism
Monica Paniagua comments on the current debate in Costa Rica about increasing the scope and weapons of the national police force as a response to the ongoing border dispute with Nicaragua. Paniagua argues that Costa Rica should stay true to its tradition of diplomacy and avoid the slippery slope to militarism.