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Searching with a thematic focus on Peacebuilding, Conflict and security in Uganda
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Traditional justice and reconciliation after violent conflict
International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance / International IDEA, 2008This report seeks to assess the role and impact of traditional mechanisms in post-conflict settings. It examines the role played by traditional justice mechanisms in dealing with the legacy of violent conflict in five African countries—Rwanda, Mozambique, Uganda, Sierra Leone and Burundi.DocumentResponses to pastoral wars
Small Arms Survey, 2007This Issue Brief reviews the causes and consequences of, as well as the responses to, conflicts in pastoralist areas in the Sudan–Uganda–Kenya region. Pastoral violence has been transformed in recent years by a number of factors including:DocumentAngering Akujů: survival and suffering in Karamoja
Feinstein International Center, USA, 2007This paper details the underlying causes and effects of insecurity on civilians in the north-eastern Ugandan region of Karamajoa. Home to just under a million people, the region is the poorest in Uganda. Life in the region is harsh and defined by periodic and extended droughts, sporadic and often brutal violence, cyclical cattle raiding and chronic food insecurity.DocumentThe justice dilemma in Uganda
United States Institute of Peace, 2008The Ugandan government and the Lords Resistance Army (LRA) reached agreement on the practical implementation of the Accountability and Reconciliation accord on February 18 2008 but how should Uganda procede from here? Should the justice and reconciliation process be predicated on a national Truth commission which served South Africa so well? Or should the national courts be the main conduit?DocumentHumanitarian agenda 2015: principles, power, and perceptions
Feinstein International Center, USA, 2007This report summarises the findings of the first phase of a research project on the challenges and compromises that are likely to affect humanitarian action in the next decade. The analysis is based on six case studies from Afghanistan, Burundi, Colombia, Liberia, northern Uganda and the Sudan.DocumentResearch note about attitudes towards peace and justice in Northern Uganda
The International Center for Transitional Justice, 2007How can communities in Northern Uganda come to terms with over twenty years of conflict where civilians were deliberately targeted and severe human rights abuses were committed? The Juba peace talks five point agenda includes accountability, reconciliation, and reintegration.DocumentAddressing the economic dimensions of peacebuilding through trade and support to private enterprise
International Alert, 2006This paper explores how the European Union’s (EU) economic policies can enhance peace and development.DocumentThe role of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in peace processes: mutually reinforcing or mutually exclusive?
Institute of Public Policy Research, Namibia, 2006This article reviews the arguments for and against criminal prosecutions of the International Criminal Court (ICC) during ongoing conflict situations.DocumentBeyond victimhood: women’s peacebuilding in Sudan, Congo and Uganda
International Crisis Group, 2006This report addresses the importance of ensuring the inclusion of women in peacebuilding in Sudan, Congo (DRC), and Uganda. The report points out that one of the main hindrances to women’s inclusion is the discrimination and violence that women face in armed conflict.DocumentIDC inquiry on conflict and development: a Christian Aid submission to the International Development Committee
Christian Aid, 2006Conflicts across the world have killed hundreds of millions of people, and displaced, maimed and traumatised many millions more.Pages
