ppplogoThe Peace Academy is happy to announce our partnership as part of a three-year project (2023-2026) entitled Developing and Testing New Approaches to Peace Professionalism. The project will

  1. Establish a network or a community of practice to improve our understanding of peace work and related skills, competencies, and values;
  2. Develop and test a system of assessment that can be scaled at the local, national, and international levels to increase the effectiveness and efficiency of peace professionals; and
  3. Create a platform to increase knowledge co-production, translation, and sharing about peace professionalism.

Overall, the project seeks to improve the planning, implementation, and evaluation of peace programs, and to complement curricula in peace and conflict studies.

The project is led by primary investigator Professor Philip Oburu Onguny (the School of Conflict Studies, St. Paul University, Ottawa) and a team of scholars, practitioners, and policymakers. It is funded by a Partnership Development Grant by the Canadian government’s Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). The cross-sector and interdisciplinary team brings together partners and collaborators from Canada, USA, Kenya, Colombia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. In addition to the Peace Academy, the research partners include the Civilian Peace Service Canada, Conrad Grebel University College, PEGASUS Institute, and the Alliance for Peacebuilding. Collaborators in the project are Lauren Michelle Levesque (Saint Paul University), Jacinta Mwende Maweu (University of Nairobi), Louis Monroy Santander (BSOCIAL Colombia), Jobb Dixon Arnold (Menno Simons College), Richard Moore (MDR Associates Conflict Resolution Inc.), and Anna Snyder (Menno Simons College).


Essays

  • Family memories

    Course participant: Kaja Haelbich (Hamburg, Germany) In our course "Understanding Internal Dynamics of Societies in Conflict" we started to engage in the topic of Israel Palestine conflict by...

    Read more: Family memories

  • Which Way to Peace?

    Course Participant: Dubravka Kalac (Zadar, Croatia) Sometimes, when I walk the streets of my city, late in the evening, when there's only silence present, pictures of  not so distant past strike me,...

    Read more: Which Way to...

Videos

Ubleha for idiots

  • Corruption

    A phenomenon typical among the locals (See). The internationals tend to condemn it pointedly and are involved in it only sporadically and inadvertently but always with the best intentions.  Corruption differs from a project (See) in that  it has a functional infrastructure (See) and very tangible results (See) often decorated with so-called concrete (or plaster) accessories in the form of lions, swans, angels, pseudo-Doric-Ionic-Corinthian silver-plated columns, etc.

from Ubleha for Idiots – An Absolutely non useful Guide for Civil Society Building and Project management for Locals and Internationals in BiH and Beyond by Nebojša Šavija-Valha and Ranko Milanovic-Blank, ALBUM No. 20, 2004, Sarajevo, translated by Marina Vasilj.