#peacebuilding

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fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

The Commons: This Is What the End of the Liberal World Order Looks Like

I have studied Sudan all of my adult life. I lived there in 1980 and wrote my doctoral dissertation on Sudanese foreign policy. It's a country, I learned, that breaks the heart of anyone who loves it. In the years since, I have not found a single American article or book on Sudan that did not get some detail wrong. But Anne Applebaum's "This Is What the End of the Liberal World Order Looks Like," deeply depressing though it is, gets everything right. It even conveys, somehow, the feeling of Sudan. I had thought that I should write something about the utter depravity of the current civil war, but now I don't have to.
World politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 week ago

The illusion of Western peacemaking

Led by facilitators from Belgium and the United Kingdom, the workshop began with the story of Little Red Riding Hood, which the participants were asked to reimagine from the perspective of the wolf. In the reimagined version, massive deforestation had left the wolf increasingly isolated, so when he met the girl in the red hood, he had not eaten in weeks. Driven by hunger and fear that he might die, the wolf ate the grandmother and the girl.
Miscellaneous
US politics
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

A Vision for Gaza's Future

Sustainable peace in Gaza requires integrated demilitarization, deradicalization, democratization, and development to rebuild infrastructure, trust, and children's futures.
World news
fromwww.bbc.com
2 months ago

Jewish and Palestinian people gather for peace

Jewish and Palestinian people in central London gather monthly to share stories, songs and promote grassroots peace, rights and mutual understanding amid ongoing conflict.
World politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 months ago

Mozambique's Daniel Chapo: Forging peace at the negotiating table'

President Daniel Chapo launched a two-year inclusive national dialogue to foster peace, unity, and prosperity amid economic, humanitarian, and security challenges.
fromStreetsblog
2 months ago

Our Streets Look Like War Zones - But What if They Were 'Sites of Peacebuilding' Instead? - Streetsblog USA

Car culture has a higher body count than both World Wars combined. So why don't we think of automobility in the same way we think about the bloody and destructive global conflicts that dominate the news - and what would it take to transform our streets into a tool to make our whole society more peaceful, rather than more violent?
Environment
US politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
5 months ago

Under Trump, US strikes on Somalia have doubled since last year. Why?

US air strikes in Somalia have increased sharply under Trump, raising concerns about military strategy in the Horn of Africa.
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