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Searching with a thematic focus on Peacebuilding, Conflict and security in Indonesia

Showing 1-10 of 13 results

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  • Document

    Recognising Women’s Participation in Sustainable and Lasting Peace

    2011
    It is a reality that community, local government, media and even some civil society groups remain unaware of United Nations Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1325 on women, peace and security.
  • Document

    ‘Promoting peace and democracy through security sector reform’, insights #79

    Eldis Gateway to Development and Environment Information, 2010
    Since the late 1990s, security sector reform (SSR) has emerged as a principal activity for promoting peace and stability, and a priority for donors in post-conflict countries. This issue of insights explores the concept of SSR as a coordinated, comprehensive approach to reforming the entire security system, to improve security governance and promote respect for human rights.
  • Document

    Negotiating justice: guidance for mediators

    The International Center for Transitional Justice, 2009
    Questions of justice and accountability for past crimes can be a central point of contention in peace negotiations.
  • Document

    Reconfiguring politics: the Indonesia - Aceh peace process

    Conciliation Resources, 2008
    This journal chronicles the roots of the Aceh conflict and the primary factors that facilitated the success of Aceh's peace initiative that culminated in the Memorandum of Understanding in Helsinki in 2005.  It notes that for the people of Aceh, the years of conflict in the province are synonymous with appalling human rights violations.
  • Document

    Peace without justice? The Helsinki peace process in Aceh

    Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, Switzerland, 2008
    Written in response to a series of general questions regarding the relationship between the peace process and justice issues in Aceh, this paper discusses the outcome of the Helsinki process. It seeks to explain the contextual factors and underlying political dynamics which gave rise to peace, as well as the details of negotiations and implementation which contributed to it.
  • Document

    Local conflict and development projects in Indonesia: part of the problem or part of a solution?

    Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 2007
    It is a common assumption that development projects can help reduce conflict by promoting economic progress and reducing inequality.
  • Document

    Decentralising inequality? center-periphery relations, local governance, and conflict in Aceh

    World Bank Publications, 2006
    This paper challenges the notion that addressing center-periphery inequality will in itself result in sustainable peace in Aceh. It particularly draws on data from the Aceh Public Expenditure Analysis (APEA) and fieldwork associated with the World Bank’s support to the current Aceh peace process.
  • Document

    Local conflict and development projects in Indonesia: part of the problem or part of a solution?

    World Bank Publications, 2007
    This document explores the dynamics of the development-conflict nexus in rural Indonesia. It highlights the specific role of development projects in shaping the nature, extent, and trajectories of conflicts.
  • Document

    Passing on the challenges or prescribing better management of diversity?: decentralisation, power sharing and conflict dynamics in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia

    Centre for Research on Inequality, Human Security and Ethnicity, CRISE, Oxford University, 2007
    This paper explores the linkages between decentralisation, conflict and power in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. It argues that decenralisation in Indonesia has to some extent addressed existing grievances in the regions, but that such change has LAO opened up spaces for new forms of local level elite. The paper finds that:
  • Document

    The Aceh peace process: nothing less than success

    United States Institute of Peace, 2007
    This report looks at the reasons for the successful outcome of the Aceh peace process of 2006. The author argues that the peace process has, and will have, a huge political impact on Indonesia. What the Aceh Monitoring Mission (AMM) has done in Aceh can be seen as a pilot project for the future of the country.

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