Documenting the resilience of Liberians in the face of threats to peace and the 2014 Ebola Crisis

L' Platform for Dialogue and Peace (P4DP), in partnership with Interpeace, has produced an extensive report which documents the ways in which individuals, families, communities, institutions as well as the government, are coping with, adapting to, or in some instances even transforming the challenges to peace into creative and innovative opportunities. In order to do so, P4DP consulted over 1,100 Liberians across all fifteen counties of Liberia through focus group discussions and interviews. This research took place against the backdrop of the 2014 Ebola crisis in West Africa and as such explores the ways in which such a humanitarian catastrophe interacted with longer-term drivers of conflict that persist despite over a decade of official peace since the end of the civil war.

The report is part of Interpeace’s Frameworks for Assessing Resilience (FAR), a SIDA funded project that is exploring approaches to assessing resilience for peace through participatory research in three pilot countries: Liberia, Guatemala and Timor-Leste. In addition to the consultation, P4DP facilitated a 5 month long stakeholder dialogue process convening representatives from different sectors of society in order to develop policy recommendations for strengthening resilience for peace in Liberia. These recommendations will be presented at a stakeholder forum in Monrovia on November 27th 2015.

The full report can be found ici, and the executive summary of the report is also available.

FAR Country Note Liberia

This study reviews the most pressing challenges to peace in Liberia today and documents the ways in which individuals, families, communities, institutions as well as the government, are coping with, adapting to, or in some instances even transforming these challenges into creative and innovative opportunities.

Announcing a new edition of the Journal of Peacebuilding

The latest edition of the Journal of Peacebuilding is out and freely available online. This special issue, produced by the Interpeace Regional Office in Latin America, examines the concept of resilience and how a focus on society’s strengths might contribute to more effective peacebuilding.

The latest edition of the Journal of Peacebuilding is available ici.

Piloting a resilience approach to peacebuilding

This opening article discusses preliminary findings and insights from Interpeace’s Frameworks for Assessing Resilience (FAR) programme which is conducting participatory research to identify existing capacities for peace in Guatemala, Liberia and Timor-Leste.

Read the full article ici.

Resilience and Peacebuilding: The project in Guatemala

Mariel Aguilar, who coordinates Interpeace’s FAR project in Guatemala, provides an update, noting that the multisectoral national group that guides the work was also able to make a policy contribution in the wake of the country’s April 2015 political crisis.

The article is available ici.

Four Perspectives on Resilience in Guatemala

Interpeace staff members Otto Argueta and Arnoldo Gálvez sat down with four members of the FAR Guatemala project’s national group, which includes experts and people from government and civil society. They interviewed Ivanova Ancheta, a lawyer and former deputy minister of the Ministry for Sustainable Development; Carlos Arenas, Relatives and Friends against Crime and Kidnapping; María del Carmen Aceña, of the Centre for National Economic Research and former Minister of Education; and Sergio Funes of the Research Centre for Development and Peace.

Read the article ici.

Four perspectives on resilience in Guatemala

This section presents a series of conversations with members of the national group on the contribution of a resilience approach and the perspectives for transformation that the group has identified over the past months.

Resilience and peacebuilding: The project in Guatemala

This article looks at the project currently being piloted by Interpeace, on the role of resilience in the Guatemalan peacebuilding process.

Piloting a resilience approach to peacebuilding: Insights from Interpeace's Frameworks for Assessing Resilience (FAR) project

This assessment of resilience draws attention to capacities and strengths in society, whether as individual personality traits, solidarity networks of communities or alternative livelihood strategies, which can inform more context-specific and nationally-owned peacebuilding processes.