Taking stock: what have we learnt from the first six months?
Michelle Parlevliet reviews the first six months of our Justice and Peace blog series.
15 June 2016
Ordered by date
Michelle Parlevliet reviews the first six months of our Justice and Peace blog series.
15 June 2016The formation of a new Joint Integrated Police (JIP) unit – mandated by South Sudan’s August 2015 peace agreement – is now well under way.
1 June 2016People in Nepal rely on a wide range of formal and informal justice systems to resolve their disputes.
30 May 2016Osh, Kyrgyzstan is still working through some of the structural drivers of the 2010 conflict that destroyed 2,677 buildings, displaced 80,000 people, and left approximately 500 people dead.
30 March 2016It is vital that the measures we use to gauge progress on achieving the Sustainable Development Goals offer the best possible chance of genuinely contributing to improved access to justice, argues Lisa Denney.
7 March 2016Including women at every stage of a peace process is vital to avoid replicating the structural injustices that are often at the root of conflict during the process of building peace itself.
15 February 2016Dr. Wendy Pullan from the University of Cambridge examines the dimensions of justice and conflict in cities, arguing that public spaces must be preserved even in times of violence.
21 January 2016Shelagh Daley on the UK’s 2015 Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR).
18 December 2015Climate change itself is a form of violence, says Dr. Jason Hickel, but right now we don’t have a framework for thinking about it.
24 November 2015Alejandro Alvarez, leader of the Rule of Law, Justice, Security and Human Rights team at UNDP, writes in the first of our justice and peace blog series.
26 October 2015