Supporting Women in Peace Processes as Civic Space Shrinks
Laura Wise reflects on how external actors can support women in a shrinking civic space, emphasizing the importance of context.
Rethinking peace & transition processes in a changing conflict landscape
Seminars, discussions and more from PeaceRep consortium members.
Laura Wise reflects on how external actors can support women in a shrinking civic space, emphasizing the importance of context.
Nisar Majid and Abdirahman I. Adan discuss the implications of the Sahal checkpoint for travellers through Mogadishu airport.
Following the recent detection of the polio virus in Gaza, Laura Wise, Sanja Badanjak and Ian Russell share PeaceRep research on vaccination ceasefires and their efficacy.
With precarity more often discussed in relation to conflict, Aditya Sarkar considers how peace process are related to, entrench and create new forms of precarity.
Dr Johanna Amaya-Panche and Dr Rebecca Irons discuss Nicolás Maduro's controversial re-election in Venezuela.
PeaceRep shares recommendations with the UK government in relation to the fragmentation of conflict and peace processes.
PeaceRep is delighted to congratulate Professor Louise Mallinder on her well-deserved appointment to the Royal Irish Academy.
PeaceRep has released a new report on peace agreements signed in 2023, revealing insights into emerging global trends in the peace process landscape.
Dr Johanna Amaya-Panche, discusses the recent attempted coup in Bolivia, examining the underlying political and economic tensions that contributed to the crisis.
In this blog, Robert Wilson reflects on the challenges facing the youth population aspiring to further education under the current political leadership in South Sudan.
Jared Miller examines how electoral reforms and civic movements intersect with and are shaped by political marketplace competition.
Jared Miller introduces his two new papers, which explore how political competition in Nigeria intertwines with violent conflict, corruption, and identity politics.