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Published in: 50.50Burma may save its tigers and not its women
Cora Weiss reports on the International Tribunal on Crimes against Women of Burma - an overwhelming day of stories...
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Published in: 50.50Saying 'no' to Pinochet’s dictatorship through non-violence
There were many approaches to resisting dictatorship in Chile that contributed to its demise. One of them owed much...
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Published in: 50.50Reconceptualising war
What if defeating the enemy was the justification for war, but not its real goal? What if its goal was a certain...
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Published in: 50.50Gender, war and conflict transformation
As Shelley Anderson suggests, war and gender are intimately related. Gender lies at war’s heart and the conduct and...
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Published in: 50.50Vital peace constituencies
The last decade has seen much more detailed attention to the many, sometimes contradictory, roles women play in...
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Published in: 50.50War: justifiable or simply catastrophic?
The global phenomenon of war distorts our ongoing attempts to build peace in conflict after conflict and in many...
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Published in: 50.50Bosnia's error of othering
Bosnia is saddled with a peace settlement for a constitution, and that is getting in the way of building a functioning state
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Published in: 50.50Peace process in Mindanao
How does conflict transformation work? Peace advisers have a particular range of skills which must be adapted and...
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Published in: 50.50Beyond stalemate: replacing the vicious with the virtuous circle
What is conflict transformation? How do you begin to approach the mutual hurt of conflict embedded in systems and...
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Published in: 50.50The challenge of moving from war to peace
One of the challenges in this set of unseen and unsung practices is how to make it visible and strengthen its...
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Published in: 50.50Nuanced agency in local-international peacebuilding:
In attempting to secure nonviolent transformation as a bottom-up mechanism, ‘uncomfortable voices’ may be ignored in...
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Published in: 50.50A Welcome to Diana Francis’ reflections: Conflict Transformed
This new generation missed out on the US civil rights movement, where nonviolent direct action was employed...
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Published in: 50.50The human cost of war
Diana Francis finds in an exhibition of quilts and arpilleras made by women from Ireland to Chile, a rallying call...
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Published in: 50.50Conflict Transformed? The start of a debate
In the first article of her series, Diana Francis reviews the aspirations and achievements of conflict transformers...
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Published in: 50.50We are visible
Katana Gégé Bukuru spoke to Isabel Hilton at the Nobel Women's Initiative gathering in Antigua about her work for...
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Published in: 50.50Violence targets the weakest
We have found that the primary cause of all the violence and submission which women undergo is discrimination, and...
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Published in: 50.50Laureate Mairead Maguire: building 'deep democracy'
Laureate Mairead Maguire spoke to Jane Gabriel about a new politic she sees arising: one in which ‘deep democracy’...
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Published in: 50.50To know that we are not alone
Every woman at the NWI gathering in Antigua had a way of redefining democracy - from writing the new Ecuadorian...
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Published in: 50.50Laureate Jody Williams: telling it like it is
Jody Williams speaks frankly to Jane Gabriel about the impact that being a Nobel Peace Laureate has on her life -...
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Published in: 50.50Redefining peace
How can peace be built? In the second of three poDcasts from the Nobel Women's Initiative in Galway (2007), Isabel...