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Do No Harm: How Aid Can Support Peace--Or War
Mary B. Anderson
- 01 Apr 1999
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a framework for analyzing aid's impact on conflict through Implicict Ethical Messages Framework for Analyzing Aid's Impact on Conflict, which is based on Lessons from the Field.
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Abstract: Part 1 War and the Impact of Extenal Aid: Today's Wars and the Pursuit of Justice The Characteristics of Conflict Areas Aid's Impact on Conflict Through Resource Transfers Aid's Impact on Conflict Through Implicict Ethical Messages Framework for Analyzing Aid's Impact on Conflict. Part 2 Capacities for Peace - Case Studies: Food for Work Rebuilding Homes in Khatlon Province, Tajikistan Sawa/Education for Peace - Uniting Lebanon's Children and Youth During War Constructing Peace - A Case Study of Guatemala 1976 - 1996 Reconciliation within the Red Cross International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies in Bosnia and Herzegovina Two Programs in Somalia - Lower Shabelle and Gedo From Support of War to Support of Peace - NGOs Operating on Pakistan and Afghanistan. Conclusion: Lessons from the Field.
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Citations
The Conflict-Development Nexus in Africa: Insights from the Case Studies
William Ascher,Natalia Mirovitskaya +1 more
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a comparative analysis of interactions among development strategies, development patterns, and conflict in four countries in North Africa and in seven Sub-Saharan countries, including Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Tanzania, and Sudan.
A Critical Analysis of Civil-Military Cooperation in Post-Taliban Afghanistan
TL;DR: The debate on civil-military cooperation in post-Taliban Afghanistan dates from the introduction of Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) model in 2003, with the primary goal to assist the central government in providing security at the sub-national level, facilitating civil military cooperation and implementing small scale reconstruction projects as mentioned in this paper .
The Paradox of Survivor Leadership
Johanna Hornung
- 06 May 2022
TL;DR: The authors argue that survivors of sexual or gender violence bring their experience to the movement when this leadership and advocacy expose the individual to the male-centric social gaze that permeates wider society and which constantly generates narratives that reduce the agency of survivor-activists to the "gory details" of their past experiences.