Grundlagen einer dauerhaften europäischen Friedensordnung: Internationales Symposion aus Anlaß des 350. Jahrestages der Unterzeichnung des Westfälischen Friedens
In: Studien zur Friedensforschung 14
13518 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Studien zur Friedensforschung 14
World Affairs Online
In: IFGK-Arbeitspapier, Band 23
Christine Schweitzer: Introduction - Civilian peacekeeping. A barely tapped ressource (7-16); Rolf Carrière: The world needs 'another peacekeeping' (17-24); Tim Wallis: Best practices for unarmed civilian peacekeeping (25-34); Rachel Julians: Peacekeeping with nonviolence: protection strategies for sustainable peace (35-42); Christine Schweitzer: Humanitarian protection as an additional function of humanitarian, development and peace projects - or rather a task requiring experts? (43-52); Christine Schweitzer: The responsibility to protect: towards an expanded role for global civil society (53-64).
In: Forschung DSF, Band 9
"While there is an increasing number of articles and studies identifying lessons from the record of UN peacebuilding operations, it is striking how little we know about the UN's very capacity for organizational learning on peacebuilding, and about learning in international organizations in general. This pilot study seeks to lay the foundations for an in-depth investigation of the UN's record on organizational learning. Our study is motivated by both, a research and a policy imperative. On the research front, studying organizational learning within the UN peacebuilding bureaucracy contributes to opening up the 'black box' of international organizations. So far, mainstream work in the discipline of International Relations (IR) has produced surprisingly few studies on the everyday workings of international organizations, let alone their ability to learn. Studying organizational learning calls for an interdisciplinary approach bringing together IR (including peace and conflict studies), public management and the sociology of organizations. This has the potential of advancing conceptual debates within the discipline of IR. The study proceeds in three steps. The first step surveys the relevant literature from different disciplines and concludes that peace research, IR and organization theory do not offer ready-made frameworks for the analysis of organizational learning in international organizations. Building on existing research, we identify key elements of a new framework starting with a definition of the key term, organizational learning: We define organizational learning "as a process of cognitive change through the questioning of the means and/or ends of addressing problems. The process manifests itself in the development and implementation of new rules and routines guiding the organization's actions." In a second step, we survey the evolution of the "infrastructure of learning" in the UN peacebuilding bureaucracy over the past 15 years. We hold that a number of factors (lack of will both within member states and the UN Secretariat as well as the lack of resources and appropriate incentive structures) contributed to the very slow recognition of the UN's learning needs. Major crises (such as the soul-searching after Rwanda and Srebrenica) plus the Brahimi Report in 2000 provided a certain momentum that brought the need to build up the UN's learning capacity higher on the agenda. Still, a lot of work remains to be done. In a third step, we present a list of variables that influence learning that need to be considered in a future in-depth study. This list of factors includes power, organizational culture, leadership, human capital, staff mobility, knowledge management systems, as well as access to external knowledge. Outlining an agenda for future research, we present a draft model of the learning process that includes 1) knowledge acquisition, 2) advocacy/ decision- making, and 3) institutionalization." (excerpt)
World Affairs Online
World Affairs Online
World Affairs Online
World Affairs Online
In: Agenda Frieden 33
In: Dialog Bd. 35 = 1998, H. 3/4
World Affairs Online
In: Studien der Hessischen Stiftung Friedens- und Konfliktforschung 30
World Affairs Online
Kriegsschauplätze in aller Welt stehen täglich im Mittelpunkt der medialen Aufmerksamkeit. Friedensarbeit hingegen ist unspektakulär, langwierig und wenig attraktiv. Was aber macht einen Ort, eine Initiative, eine künstlerische Arbeit zu einem Schauplatz des Friedens? Wie können den asymmetrischen Sichtbarkeits-verhältnissen alternative Perspektiven entgegen gestellt werden? Ist Frieden überhaupt sichtbar und darstellbar? Die Ausstellung versammelt künstlerische und aktivistische Strategien, die verdeckte Hintergründe an verschiedenen Krisenschauplätzen der Welt sichtbar machen, in öffentliche Diskurse intervenieren und sich der Kriegslogik widersetzen.
In: Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels, 2013
World Affairs Online
In: Hamburger Beiträge zur Friedensforschung und Sicherheitspolitik, Heft 152
World Affairs Online
In: Beiträge zur Friedensethik 40
World Affairs Online