Locally Led Peacebuilding
Global Case Studies
Herausgeber: Connaughton, Stacey L.; Berns, Jessica
Locally Led Peacebuilding
Global Case Studies
Herausgeber: Connaughton, Stacey L.; Berns, Jessica
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Through case studies, this edited volume articulates why locally led peacebuilding matters, how it can prevent violence, and invites practitioners and scholars to critically examine the implications of locally led initiatives.
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Through case studies, this edited volume articulates why locally led peacebuilding matters, how it can prevent violence, and invites practitioners and scholars to critically examine the implications of locally led initiatives.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 460g
- ISBN-13: 9781538114100
- ISBN-10: 1538114100
- Artikelnr.: 56150562
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 460g
- ISBN-13: 9781538114100
- ISBN-10: 1538114100
- Artikelnr.: 56150562
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Stacey L. Connaughton is the Director of the Purdue Peace Project (PPP) and Associate Professor, former Associate Head of School, and former Director of Graduate Studies in the Brian Lamb School of Communication at Purdue University. Her research examines leadership and identification in geographically distributed contexts, particularly as these issues relate to virtual teams/organizations, political parties, and peacebuilding. She has written for journals such as Small Group Research, Journal of Communication, and Management Communication Quarterly, among others. She is the author of Inviting Latino Voters: Party Messages and Latino Party Identification. Jessica Berns has been involved with the Purdue Peace Project (PPP) since its founding in 2011. As a consultant, she serves as a sounding board on emerging projects, on current locally driven projects, and on PPP goal-setting and execution. With almost two decades of international experience in peacebuilding and governance, she helps to connect PPP to existing local, regional, and international organizations working for peace.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Locally Led Peacebuilding Matters by Stacey L. Connaughton &
Jessica Berns
Section 1: What is Local?
Chapter 1: Peace Drivers: Local Agency, Relational Responsibility, and the
Future of Peacebuilding by Bridget Moix
Chapter 2: Crossing Lines to Build Peace: Deescalating Gang Conflict in
Cite Soleil, Haiti by Louino Robillard and Sabina Carlson Robillard
Section 2: Locally Led Peacebuilding around the World
Chapter 3: Now we sleep without our shoes.The Story of the Laikipia Peace
Caravan by Gail M. Ervin
Chapter 4: Local Peacebuilding in East Africa: The Role of Customary Norms
and Institutions in Addressing Pastoralist Conflict in Kenya and Uganda by
Emily Welty, Matthew Bolton and William Kiptoo
Chapter 5: Magnanimity in Victory: Somaliland's peace building and DDR
through indigenous traditional system by Abdishakur Hassan-kayd
Chapter 6: Liberia at a Crossroads: How Local Peace Committees are Working
to Consolidate and Promote Peace in Liberia by Nat B. Walker
Chapter 7: Nigeria: Peace Drives Security by Michael Sodipo
Chapter 8: Peacebuilding in Guatemala: The Local Peace Network Methodology
by José David Pineda Ruano
Chapter 9: University to University Partnership: Building a Network of
Effective Peacebuilders in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq by Thomas Hill,
Alexander Munoz, and Katerina Siira
Chapter 10: Teaching and Learning Participatory Action Research as Approach
for Locally Led Peacebuilding in Kampala, Uganda by Felix Bivens, Illana
Lancaster, Nanfuka Zulaika & Ndugwa Hassan
Chapter 11: The Women Peace and Security Collective: An organic process of
empowerment by Kristian Herbolzheimer & Rosa Emilia Salamanca
Chapter 12: Encountering Faiths and Beliefs: Locally led peacebuilding in
the UK by Phil Champain
Chapter 13: The Cure Violence Model for Violence Prevention by Charles L.
Ransford, Karen Volker & Gary Slutkin
Section 3: Locally Led Peacebuilding: Understanding What Works
Chapter 14: Youth and Elections in Peacebuilding: Experience from Ghana and
Liberia by Robert Groelsema, Maureen Herman, Michelle Marland, and Muminu
Mutaru
Chapter 15: Participatory approaches to monitoring and evaluating locally
led peacebuilding in Ghana by Jasmine R. Linabary
Chapter 16: Community peacebuilding on a national scale: the work of the
CPBR in Sri Lanka by Nilanjana Premaratria & Ruairi Nolan
Chapter 17: Community Healing, from the inside-out - Systems lessons from
Fambul Tok in Sierra Leone by Libby Hoffman
Chapter 18: Madaris and Peace Education in Pakistan: A Case Study of Peace
and Education Foundation by Zahid Shahab Ahmed & Rashad Bukhari
Section 4: Reflections and Paths Forward
Chapter 19: Locally-driven 'Track 1¿ and Track 2' Diplomacy byPeter Dixon
Conclusion: Reflections and Paths Forward for Locally Led Peacebuilding
around the World by Stacey Connaughton & Jessica Berns
About the Authors
Introduction: Locally Led Peacebuilding Matters by Stacey L. Connaughton &
Jessica Berns
Section 1: What is Local?
Chapter 1: Peace Drivers: Local Agency, Relational Responsibility, and the
Future of Peacebuilding by Bridget Moix
Chapter 2: Crossing Lines to Build Peace: Deescalating Gang Conflict in
Cite Soleil, Haiti by Louino Robillard and Sabina Carlson Robillard
Section 2: Locally Led Peacebuilding around the World
Chapter 3: Now we sleep without our shoes.The Story of the Laikipia Peace
Caravan by Gail M. Ervin
Chapter 4: Local Peacebuilding in East Africa: The Role of Customary Norms
and Institutions in Addressing Pastoralist Conflict in Kenya and Uganda by
Emily Welty, Matthew Bolton and William Kiptoo
Chapter 5: Magnanimity in Victory: Somaliland's peace building and DDR
through indigenous traditional system by Abdishakur Hassan-kayd
Chapter 6: Liberia at a Crossroads: How Local Peace Committees are Working
to Consolidate and Promote Peace in Liberia by Nat B. Walker
Chapter 7: Nigeria: Peace Drives Security by Michael Sodipo
Chapter 8: Peacebuilding in Guatemala: The Local Peace Network Methodology
by José David Pineda Ruano
Chapter 9: University to University Partnership: Building a Network of
Effective Peacebuilders in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq by Thomas Hill,
Alexander Munoz, and Katerina Siira
Chapter 10: Teaching and Learning Participatory Action Research as Approach
for Locally Led Peacebuilding in Kampala, Uganda by Felix Bivens, Illana
Lancaster, Nanfuka Zulaika & Ndugwa Hassan
Chapter 11: The Women Peace and Security Collective: An organic process of
empowerment by Kristian Herbolzheimer & Rosa Emilia Salamanca
Chapter 12: Encountering Faiths and Beliefs: Locally led peacebuilding in
the UK by Phil Champain
Chapter 13: The Cure Violence Model for Violence Prevention by Charles L.
Ransford, Karen Volker & Gary Slutkin
Section 3: Locally Led Peacebuilding: Understanding What Works
Chapter 14: Youth and Elections in Peacebuilding: Experience from Ghana and
Liberia by Robert Groelsema, Maureen Herman, Michelle Marland, and Muminu
Mutaru
Chapter 15: Participatory approaches to monitoring and evaluating locally
led peacebuilding in Ghana by Jasmine R. Linabary
Chapter 16: Community peacebuilding on a national scale: the work of the
CPBR in Sri Lanka by Nilanjana Premaratria & Ruairi Nolan
Chapter 17: Community Healing, from the inside-out - Systems lessons from
Fambul Tok in Sierra Leone by Libby Hoffman
Chapter 18: Madaris and Peace Education in Pakistan: A Case Study of Peace
and Education Foundation by Zahid Shahab Ahmed & Rashad Bukhari
Section 4: Reflections and Paths Forward
Chapter 19: Locally-driven 'Track 1¿ and Track 2' Diplomacy byPeter Dixon
Conclusion: Reflections and Paths Forward for Locally Led Peacebuilding
around the World by Stacey Connaughton & Jessica Berns
About the Authors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Locally Led Peacebuilding Matters by Stacey L. Connaughton &
Jessica Berns
Section 1: What is Local?
Chapter 1: Peace Drivers: Local Agency, Relational Responsibility, and the
Future of Peacebuilding by Bridget Moix
Chapter 2: Crossing Lines to Build Peace: Deescalating Gang Conflict in
Cite Soleil, Haiti by Louino Robillard and Sabina Carlson Robillard
Section 2: Locally Led Peacebuilding around the World
Chapter 3: Now we sleep without our shoes.The Story of the Laikipia Peace
Caravan by Gail M. Ervin
Chapter 4: Local Peacebuilding in East Africa: The Role of Customary Norms
and Institutions in Addressing Pastoralist Conflict in Kenya and Uganda by
Emily Welty, Matthew Bolton and William Kiptoo
Chapter 5: Magnanimity in Victory: Somaliland's peace building and DDR
through indigenous traditional system by Abdishakur Hassan-kayd
Chapter 6: Liberia at a Crossroads: How Local Peace Committees are Working
to Consolidate and Promote Peace in Liberia by Nat B. Walker
Chapter 7: Nigeria: Peace Drives Security by Michael Sodipo
Chapter 8: Peacebuilding in Guatemala: The Local Peace Network Methodology
by José David Pineda Ruano
Chapter 9: University to University Partnership: Building a Network of
Effective Peacebuilders in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq by Thomas Hill,
Alexander Munoz, and Katerina Siira
Chapter 10: Teaching and Learning Participatory Action Research as Approach
for Locally Led Peacebuilding in Kampala, Uganda by Felix Bivens, Illana
Lancaster, Nanfuka Zulaika & Ndugwa Hassan
Chapter 11: The Women Peace and Security Collective: An organic process of
empowerment by Kristian Herbolzheimer & Rosa Emilia Salamanca
Chapter 12: Encountering Faiths and Beliefs: Locally led peacebuilding in
the UK by Phil Champain
Chapter 13: The Cure Violence Model for Violence Prevention by Charles L.
Ransford, Karen Volker & Gary Slutkin
Section 3: Locally Led Peacebuilding: Understanding What Works
Chapter 14: Youth and Elections in Peacebuilding: Experience from Ghana and
Liberia by Robert Groelsema, Maureen Herman, Michelle Marland, and Muminu
Mutaru
Chapter 15: Participatory approaches to monitoring and evaluating locally
led peacebuilding in Ghana by Jasmine R. Linabary
Chapter 16: Community peacebuilding on a national scale: the work of the
CPBR in Sri Lanka by Nilanjana Premaratria & Ruairi Nolan
Chapter 17: Community Healing, from the inside-out - Systems lessons from
Fambul Tok in Sierra Leone by Libby Hoffman
Chapter 18: Madaris and Peace Education in Pakistan: A Case Study of Peace
and Education Foundation by Zahid Shahab Ahmed & Rashad Bukhari
Section 4: Reflections and Paths Forward
Chapter 19: Locally-driven 'Track 1¿ and Track 2' Diplomacy byPeter Dixon
Conclusion: Reflections and Paths Forward for Locally Led Peacebuilding
around the World by Stacey Connaughton & Jessica Berns
About the Authors
Introduction: Locally Led Peacebuilding Matters by Stacey L. Connaughton &
Jessica Berns
Section 1: What is Local?
Chapter 1: Peace Drivers: Local Agency, Relational Responsibility, and the
Future of Peacebuilding by Bridget Moix
Chapter 2: Crossing Lines to Build Peace: Deescalating Gang Conflict in
Cite Soleil, Haiti by Louino Robillard and Sabina Carlson Robillard
Section 2: Locally Led Peacebuilding around the World
Chapter 3: Now we sleep without our shoes.The Story of the Laikipia Peace
Caravan by Gail M. Ervin
Chapter 4: Local Peacebuilding in East Africa: The Role of Customary Norms
and Institutions in Addressing Pastoralist Conflict in Kenya and Uganda by
Emily Welty, Matthew Bolton and William Kiptoo
Chapter 5: Magnanimity in Victory: Somaliland's peace building and DDR
through indigenous traditional system by Abdishakur Hassan-kayd
Chapter 6: Liberia at a Crossroads: How Local Peace Committees are Working
to Consolidate and Promote Peace in Liberia by Nat B. Walker
Chapter 7: Nigeria: Peace Drives Security by Michael Sodipo
Chapter 8: Peacebuilding in Guatemala: The Local Peace Network Methodology
by José David Pineda Ruano
Chapter 9: University to University Partnership: Building a Network of
Effective Peacebuilders in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq by Thomas Hill,
Alexander Munoz, and Katerina Siira
Chapter 10: Teaching and Learning Participatory Action Research as Approach
for Locally Led Peacebuilding in Kampala, Uganda by Felix Bivens, Illana
Lancaster, Nanfuka Zulaika & Ndugwa Hassan
Chapter 11: The Women Peace and Security Collective: An organic process of
empowerment by Kristian Herbolzheimer & Rosa Emilia Salamanca
Chapter 12: Encountering Faiths and Beliefs: Locally led peacebuilding in
the UK by Phil Champain
Chapter 13: The Cure Violence Model for Violence Prevention by Charles L.
Ransford, Karen Volker & Gary Slutkin
Section 3: Locally Led Peacebuilding: Understanding What Works
Chapter 14: Youth and Elections in Peacebuilding: Experience from Ghana and
Liberia by Robert Groelsema, Maureen Herman, Michelle Marland, and Muminu
Mutaru
Chapter 15: Participatory approaches to monitoring and evaluating locally
led peacebuilding in Ghana by Jasmine R. Linabary
Chapter 16: Community peacebuilding on a national scale: the work of the
CPBR in Sri Lanka by Nilanjana Premaratria & Ruairi Nolan
Chapter 17: Community Healing, from the inside-out - Systems lessons from
Fambul Tok in Sierra Leone by Libby Hoffman
Chapter 18: Madaris and Peace Education in Pakistan: A Case Study of Peace
and Education Foundation by Zahid Shahab Ahmed & Rashad Bukhari
Section 4: Reflections and Paths Forward
Chapter 19: Locally-driven 'Track 1¿ and Track 2' Diplomacy byPeter Dixon
Conclusion: Reflections and Paths Forward for Locally Led Peacebuilding
around the World by Stacey Connaughton & Jessica Berns
About the Authors







