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Author Archives: Jelke Boesten

Of Ruptures and Continuities: Sexual Violence in Conflict

March 29, 2016by Jelke Boesten

In February 2016, two former military officers of the Guatemalan army were convicted of crimes against humanity based on cases of sexual and domestic slavery, perpetrated in the 1980s during […]

Read Article →
Inclusive Security, Marginalisation

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  • Rod Thornton
    • The Kurds as Proxies in Iraq and Syria: A Problematic Relationship for Western Powers
  • Andrew Noakes
    • Boko Haram: Can a Peace Deal be Negotiated?
  • Doug Weir
    • The Environment and Conflict in 2016: A Year in Review
  • Ben Zala
    • The ‘High Politics’ of Sustainable Security
  • Matt Budd
    • Belize: challenges and contradictions in gang policy
  • Rob Forsyth
    • Trident – Why I Changed My Mind About the UK’s Nuclear Weapons
  • Stephen Hopkins
    • Brexit and the Irish Nationalist Reaction
  • Florian Krampe and Ashok Swain
    • Carefully Managing Water Resources to Build Sustainable Peace
  • Sarah Hewitt
    • Intersecting Commitments: the Responsibility to Protect and the Women, Peace and Security Agenda
  • Iain R. Edgar
    • Islamic State and Dream Warfare
  • Roos Haer
    • Lost Generations? Consequences of and Responses to Child Soldier Recruitment
  • Doris H. Gray
    • Islamic Feminisms – A Challenge to Patriarchy and Traditional Religious Authority
  • Greg Simons
    • Fatal Attraction: The Lure of Islamic State
  • David T. Burbach
    • The Coming Peace: Africa’s Declining Conflicts
  • Richard Reeve
    • Too Quiet on the Western Front? The Sahel-Sahara between Arab Spring and Black Spring
  • Haroro J. Ingram
    • How ISIS Survives Defeat: Propaganda and Decisive Minorities
  • Mahmood Monshipouri
    • Europe’s Borders, Refugees, and the Islamic State
  • Conor Keane
    • US Foreign Policy Bureaucracy in Afghanistan
  • Timothy Aistrope
    • Muslim Paranoia? Ideology and the Limits of Engagement
  • Jürgen Scheffran
    • Governing the Anthropocene: Complex Crises and Transitions to Sustainable Peace
  • Yelena Biberman
    • When the Strong Weaponize the Weak: States and Guerrilla Warfare
  • Foeke Postma
    • Swarms Over the Savannas: How Drones Are Gaining More Traction in Africa
  • Alpaslan Ozerdem
    • The Role of Youth in Peacebuilding: Challenges and Opportunities
  • Sofia Vasilopoulou and Daphne Halikiopoulou
    • Rising Golden Dawn: Inside Greece’s Neo-Nazi Party
  • Sukanya Podder
    • Post-UNMIL Adaptation and Security in Liberia
  • Rachel Staley
    • The Threat of Nuclear Disconnect: Engaging the Next Generation
  • Metin Gürcan
    • Arming Civilians for Counter-Terrorism: Turkey’s Village Guard System
  • Outi Keranen
    • Libyan Lessons: Bring back the Responsibility to Rebuild
  • Nils-Christian Bormann, Manuel Vogt and Lars-Erik Cederman
    • Language, Religion, and Ethnic Civil Wars
  • Rachel Julian
    • Unarmed Civilian Peacekeeping
  • Philipp Pattberg
    • The Anthropocene and Global Environmental Governance
  • Tore Wig
    • Pre-Colonial Institutions, Conflict and Peace in Africa
  • Sunaina Maira
    • The 9/11 Generation: Life in the Surveillance State
  • Bettina Renz
    • Russia’s Military Revival: Why Now and Towards What End?
  • Mahmood Monshipouri and Manochehr Dorraj
    • The Trump Presidency and Iran’s Nuclear Deal
  • Paul Rogers
    • Sustainable Security in the Trump Era
  • Wilfrid Greaves
    • Climate Change, Security, and Indigenous Peoples: Inuit in Northern Canada
  • Vanessa Newby
    • Walking the Blue Line: Lebanon’s Security Sector Reform
  • Oscar Gakuo Mwangi
    • Countering Al-Shabaab in Somalia
  • Magnus Lundgren
    • Mission Impossible: The Elusive Search for Peace in Syria
  • Esther Meininghaus
    • Syria’s Uneven Aid Distribution Threatens Future Peace
  • Kathrin Keil
    • The Arctic: Hot or Not?
  • Roy Licklider
    • The Missing Link(s) Between Military Integration and Civil War Resumption
  • Larissa Begley
    • Rwanda’s Gacaca Courts: Vengeance Through Law
  • David Cliff
    • Chemical Weapons Use in Syria: a Test of the Norm
  • Fabian Virchow
    • PEGIDA: Germany’s Anti-Islamic Street Movement
  • Marcel Lewandowsky
    • Alternative for Germany and the Rise of Right-Wing Populism
  • Clare Henley
    • The Political and Emotional Power of Chemical Weapons
  • Mehmet Gurses
    • Religion, Civil War and Peace
  • Njord Wegge, Maxime Geoffroy and Jørgen Berge
    • Conflicts or Cooperation in Arctic Waters?
  • Hakeem Onapajo
    • Time to Talk to Boko Haram?
  • Srdjan Vucetic
    • A Faustian Special Relationship
  • Isabella Flisi
    • The Reintegration of Former Combatants in Colombia
  • Zorzeta Bakaki
    • NATO’s Mediation During The Cod Wars: The Lessons Learned
  • Paul Dorosh
    • Food Security in South Sudan
  • Jenny Nielsen
    • Reviewing the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty at 20
  • Redie Bereketeab
    • The Eritrean Refugee Crisis and the Role of the International Community
  • Nils-Christian Bormann and Jesse Hammond
    • A Slippery Slope? Armed Conflict Diffusion within States
  • Eirikur Bergmann
    • The Surge of the Finns Party: A Brief History
  • Martin Binder
    • Why Does UN Humanitarian Intervention Remain Selective?
  • Farid Hafez
    • Pegida in Austrian Politics: Invisible, But There
  • John Karlsrud
    • UN Peacekeeping and Counter-Terrorism
  • Aziz Huq
    • The Case for Community-Led Counterterrorism
  • Charles Wratto
    • The Indigenous Healing of Former Child Soldiers
  • Christopher Weidacher Hsiung
    • The Energy Dimension in China’s Arctic Interests
  • İlke Dağlı
    • The Cyprus Problem: Why Solve a “Comfortable” Conflict?
  • Mabel González Bustelo
    • Honduras, the Perfect Storm?
  • Ahmed Salah Hashim
    • State and Non-State Hybrid Warfare
  • Bernard Harborne
    • The Costs of Security Sector Reform: Questions of Affordability and Purpose
  • Sonja Wolf
    • Mexico’s Conflicting Migration Policy Goals: National Security and Human Rights
  • Edward Rackley
    • Security Sector Roles in Sexual and Gender-based Violence
  • Anna Alissa Hitzemann
    • Mali: Another Long War? (Part 2)
  • Caroline Donnellan
    • 10 years of US Drone Strikes in Pakistan – What Impact Has it Had?
  • Janani Vivekananda
    • Deforestation: REDD-y for peace or fuelling conflict?
  • Isabelle Geuskens
    • Shrinking space: The impact of counter-terrorism measures on the Women, Peace and Security agenda
  • Isabel Hilton
    • In Deep Water: China tests its neighbours’ patience
  • Kathryn Hofstra
    • From The Great War to Drone Wars: The imperative to record casualties
  • Wim Zwijnenburg
    • DU-turn? The changing political environment around toxic munitions
  • Esther Kersley
    • Beyond Privacy: The Costs and Consequences of Mass Surveillance
  • Betsy Barkas
    • The UK’s foreign fighters in Syria: rethinking the threat
  • Phillip Bruner
    • ‘Petropolitics’ and the price of freedom
  • RESDAL
    • A long road ahead: integrating gender perspectives into peacekeeping operations
  • Omega Research Foundation
    • Floating liabilities? Maritime armouries, risks and solutions
  • Steve Trent
    • Climate refugees: Human insecurity in a warming world
  • Rebecca Sharkey
    • Momentum towards a nuclear weapons ban treaty: what does it mean for the UK?
  • Elizabeth Minor
    • Losing control over the use of force: fully autonomous weapons systems and the international movement to ban them
  • Zoï
    • The Ukraine conflict’s legacy of environmental damage and pollutants
  • Marianne Hanson
    • 2015: Towards a brave new nuclear world?
  • Lene Grimstad
    • The UN’s Meetings on Autonomous Weapons: Biting the Bullet, or Lost in Abstraction?
  • Crofton Black
    • Expanding Contracting: The Private Sector’s Role in Drone Surveillance and Targeting
  • Finbar Anderson
    • A Sharper Edge: QME, the Iran Deal and the Gulf Arms Race
  • Lisa Dittmar
    • Nitrogen: a driver of global food insecurity?
  • Tim Street
    • Thinking beyond the bomb: how can the UK help create a nuclear weapons-free world?
  • Gerrit Kurtz
    • “Guerrilla Diplomats”: Conflict Prevention Through Frontline Diplomacy
  • Tor A. Benjaminsen
    • Does Climate Change Cause Conflicts in the Sahel?
  • Antoine Perret
    • Privatising the War on Drugs: PMSCs in Colombia and Mexico
  • Murray Carroll
    • Trump and the Prospects of an Illiberal International Order
  • Alejandro Sanchez
    • From Surveillance to Smuggling: Drones in the War on Drugs
  • Vanda Felbab-Brown
    • Drugs and Drones: The Crime Empire Strikes Back
  • Andrew Holland
    • National Security, Climate Change and the Philippine Typhoon
  • Alise Coen
    • The Responsibility to Protect and the Refugee Crisis
  • Laurence Menhinick
    • What the Environmental Legacy of the Gulf War Should Teach us
  • Duncan Depledge
    • Sustainable Security in the Arctic
  • Jelke Boesten
    • Of Ruptures and Continuities: Sexual Violence in Conflict
  • Hans De Marie Heungoup
    • Q&A: Boko Haram in Cameroon
  • Andrew Smith
    • The Legal Case Against the Saudi-Led Intervention in Yemen
  • Gabriel Weimann
    • Terrorists Turn Social Media into Antisocial Media
  • Hammad Sheikh
    • Sustainable Security and Sacred Values
  • Bill Durodié
    • After Brussels – It’s Time to Challenge Our Authorities and Move Beyond Prevent
  • Cameron Harrington
    • Water Security in South Africa: The need to build social and ecological resilience
  • Benedetta Berti
    • Did Operation Unified Protector in Libya Strengthen R2P?
  • Andrew Smith and Vyara Gylsen
    • Challenging UK Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia in the Courts
  • Gëzim Visoka and John Doyle
    • The European Union and Conflict Resolution
  • Malte Brosig
    • Peacekeeping within African Regime Complexity
  • Lindy Heinecken
    • Challenges Facing Women in Peacekeeping
  • Jane Freedman
    • Understanding Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Deane-Peter Baker
    • Privatised Peacekeeping?
  • Jonas Wolff
    • Inspirations for Post-liberal Peacebuilding from Latin America
  • Richard Milburn
    • Conservation as a Tool for Post-War Recovery
  • Jairo Munive
    • Beyond Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration of Ex-combatants
  • Andrew Garwood-Gowers
    • China and the Responsibility to Protect
  • Amanda J. Reinke
    • Gender-Relational Peacebuilding in Uganda
  • Maya Eichler
    • Gender and Private Security
  • Kai Michael Kenkel
    • Brazil and the “Responsibility While Protecting” Initiative
  • Jérémie Gilbert
    • Nomadism, Land Disputes and Security
  • Chris Abbott
    • US Drone Strikes in Pakistan: ineffective and illegitimate
  • Julian Bergmann
    • The European Union as a Peace Mediator
  • Jennifer Curtis
    • Human Rights as Conflict Resolution in Northern Ireland
  • Rosaleen Duffy
    • Militarising Conservation: A Triple ‘Fail’ for Security, People and Wildlife
  • Gordon Clubb
    • Can Former Combatants Assist in Preventing Violence?
  • Kathleen Jennings
    • ‘Blue Helmet Havens’ – Separation and Segregation in Peacekeeping
  • Anthony Rinna
    • Sino-Russian Border Security
  • Linnéa Gelot
    • Prevention and Militarization in Africa’s Security Governance: Mirror Images?
  • Yvonne M. Dutton
    • Fighting Maritime Piracy with Private Armed Guards
  • Meredith Loken and Anna Zelenz
    • Why Do Western Women Join Daesh?
  • Sarah Kinosian
    • Self-Defense? Mexico Gambles on Vigilante Security
  • Tara Lai Quinlan
    • The NYPD’s Post-9/11 Counterterrorism Programme
  • Abigail Watson
    • Russia’s Strike Against Special Forces and the UK’s ‘No Comment’ Policy
  • Lisa DeLance
    • Women and Combat: The Case of the British Military
  • Christiane Fröhlich
    • Climate Change – Migration – Conflict. What’s the Connection?
  • David A. Shirk
    • Crime, Violence, and State Responses in Mexico
  • Christopher Rossi
    • No Joy in Juba: South Sudan and R2P
  • Anne Bartlett
    • Markets, Minerals and Mayhem in Darfur
  • Han Dorussen
    • More than Taxi-drivers? Pitfalls and Prospects of Local Peacekeeping
  • Mari Fitzduff
    • What Does Neuroscience Have to Offer Peacebuilders?
  • Mahmood Monshipouri and William V. Dunlap
    • Drone Strikes and Never-Ending Wars
  • Vassilis Petsinis
    • Introducing Jobbik: Hungary’s Second Largest Party
  • Maria Elisabetta Lanzone
    • The French Front National: Between the Old and the New
  • Chris Abbott and Matthew Clarke
    • How to Respond to the Threat from Hostile Drones in the UK
  • Mohammed Abu-Nimer
    • Interreligious Peacebuilding: An Emerging Field of Research and Practice
  • SusSec Team
    • The Syrian War and the Foreign Fighters from the Muslim World
  • Tim Oliver
    • Brexit or Bremain for British Security?
  • Zoë Pelter
    • Quiet Legacies and Long Shadows: The Obama era of counterterrorism in the Sahel-Sahara

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  • Rod Thornton
    • The Kurds as Proxies in Iraq and Syria: A Problematic Relationship for Western Powers
  • Andrew Noakes
    • Boko Haram: Can a Peace Deal be Negotiated?
  • Doug Weir
    • The Environment and Conflict in 2016: A Year in Review
  • Ben Zala
    • The ‘High Politics’ of Sustainable Security
  • Matt Budd
    • Belize: challenges and contradictions in gang policy
  • Rob Forsyth
    • Trident – Why I Changed My Mind About the UK’s Nuclear Weapons
  • Stephen Hopkins
    • Brexit and the Irish Nationalist Reaction
  • Florian Krampe and Ashok Swain
    • Carefully Managing Water Resources to Build Sustainable Peace
  • Sarah Hewitt
    • Intersecting Commitments: the Responsibility to Protect and the Women, Peace and Security Agenda
  • Iain R. Edgar
    • Islamic State and Dream Warfare
  • Roos Haer
    • Lost Generations? Consequences of and Responses to Child Soldier Recruitment
  • Doris H. Gray
    • Islamic Feminisms – A Challenge to Patriarchy and Traditional Religious Authority
  • Greg Simons
    • Fatal Attraction: The Lure of Islamic State
  • David T. Burbach
    • The Coming Peace: Africa’s Declining Conflicts
  • Richard Reeve
    • Too Quiet on the Western Front? The Sahel-Sahara between Arab Spring and Black Spring
  • Haroro J. Ingram
    • How ISIS Survives Defeat: Propaganda and Decisive Minorities
  • Mahmood Monshipouri
    • Europe’s Borders, Refugees, and the Islamic State
  • Conor Keane
    • US Foreign Policy Bureaucracy in Afghanistan
  • Timothy Aistrope
    • Muslim Paranoia? Ideology and the Limits of Engagement
  • Jürgen Scheffran
    • Governing the Anthropocene: Complex Crises and Transitions to Sustainable Peace
  • Yelena Biberman
    • When the Strong Weaponize the Weak: States and Guerrilla Warfare
  • Foeke Postma
    • Swarms Over the Savannas: How Drones Are Gaining More Traction in Africa
  • Alpaslan Ozerdem
    • The Role of Youth in Peacebuilding: Challenges and Opportunities
  • Sofia Vasilopoulou and Daphne Halikiopoulou
    • Rising Golden Dawn: Inside Greece’s Neo-Nazi Party
  • Sukanya Podder
    • Post-UNMIL Adaptation and Security in Liberia
  • Rachel Staley
    • The Threat of Nuclear Disconnect: Engaging the Next Generation
  • Metin Gürcan
    • Arming Civilians for Counter-Terrorism: Turkey’s Village Guard System
  • Outi Keranen
    • Libyan Lessons: Bring back the Responsibility to Rebuild
  • Nils-Christian Bormann, Manuel Vogt and Lars-Erik Cederman
    • Language, Religion, and Ethnic Civil Wars
  • Rachel Julian
    • Unarmed Civilian Peacekeeping
  • Philipp Pattberg
    • The Anthropocene and Global Environmental Governance
  • Tore Wig
    • Pre-Colonial Institutions, Conflict and Peace in Africa
  • Sunaina Maira
    • The 9/11 Generation: Life in the Surveillance State
  • Bettina Renz
    • Russia’s Military Revival: Why Now and Towards What End?
  • Mahmood Monshipouri and Manochehr Dorraj
    • The Trump Presidency and Iran’s Nuclear Deal
  • Paul Rogers
    • Sustainable Security in the Trump Era
  • Wilfrid Greaves
    • Climate Change, Security, and Indigenous Peoples: Inuit in Northern Canada
  • Vanessa Newby
    • Walking the Blue Line: Lebanon’s Security Sector Reform
  • Oscar Gakuo Mwangi
    • Countering Al-Shabaab in Somalia
  • Magnus Lundgren
    • Mission Impossible: The Elusive Search for Peace in Syria
  • Esther Meininghaus
    • Syria’s Uneven Aid Distribution Threatens Future Peace
  • Kathrin Keil
    • The Arctic: Hot or Not?
  • Roy Licklider
    • The Missing Link(s) Between Military Integration and Civil War Resumption
  • Larissa Begley
    • Rwanda’s Gacaca Courts: Vengeance Through Law
  • David Cliff
    • Chemical Weapons Use in Syria: a Test of the Norm
  • Fabian Virchow
    • PEGIDA: Germany’s Anti-Islamic Street Movement
  • Marcel Lewandowsky
    • Alternative for Germany and the Rise of Right-Wing Populism
  • Clare Henley
    • The Political and Emotional Power of Chemical Weapons
  • Mehmet Gurses
    • Religion, Civil War and Peace
  • Njord Wegge, Maxime Geoffroy and Jørgen Berge
    • Conflicts or Cooperation in Arctic Waters?
  • Hakeem Onapajo
    • Time to Talk to Boko Haram?
  • Srdjan Vucetic
    • A Faustian Special Relationship
  • Isabella Flisi
    • The Reintegration of Former Combatants in Colombia
  • Zorzeta Bakaki
    • NATO’s Mediation During The Cod Wars: The Lessons Learned
  • Paul Dorosh
    • Food Security in South Sudan
  • Jenny Nielsen
    • Reviewing the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty at 20
  • Redie Bereketeab
    • The Eritrean Refugee Crisis and the Role of the International Community
  • Nils-Christian Bormann and Jesse Hammond
    • A Slippery Slope? Armed Conflict Diffusion within States
  • Eirikur Bergmann
    • The Surge of the Finns Party: A Brief History
  • Martin Binder
    • Why Does UN Humanitarian Intervention Remain Selective?
  • Farid Hafez
    • Pegida in Austrian Politics: Invisible, But There
  • John Karlsrud
    • UN Peacekeeping and Counter-Terrorism
  • Aziz Huq
    • The Case for Community-Led Counterterrorism
  • Charles Wratto
    • The Indigenous Healing of Former Child Soldiers
  • Christopher Weidacher Hsiung
    • The Energy Dimension in China’s Arctic Interests
  • İlke Dağlı
    • The Cyprus Problem: Why Solve a “Comfortable” Conflict?
  • Mabel González Bustelo
    • Honduras, the Perfect Storm?
  • Ahmed Salah Hashim
    • State and Non-State Hybrid Warfare
  • Bernard Harborne
    • The Costs of Security Sector Reform: Questions of Affordability and Purpose
  • Sonja Wolf
    • Mexico’s Conflicting Migration Policy Goals: National Security and Human Rights
  • Edward Rackley
    • Security Sector Roles in Sexual and Gender-based Violence
  • Anna Alissa Hitzemann
    • Mali: Another Long War? (Part 2)
  • Caroline Donnellan
    • 10 years of US Drone Strikes in Pakistan – What Impact Has it Had?
  • Janani Vivekananda
    • Deforestation: REDD-y for peace or fuelling conflict?
  • Isabelle Geuskens
    • Shrinking space: The impact of counter-terrorism measures on the Women, Peace and Security agenda
  • Isabel Hilton
    • In Deep Water: China tests its neighbours’ patience
  • Kathryn Hofstra
    • From The Great War to Drone Wars: The imperative to record casualties
  • Wim Zwijnenburg
    • DU-turn? The changing political environment around toxic munitions
  • Esther Kersley
    • Beyond Privacy: The Costs and Consequences of Mass Surveillance
  • Betsy Barkas
    • The UK’s foreign fighters in Syria: rethinking the threat
  • Phillip Bruner
    • ‘Petropolitics’ and the price of freedom
  • RESDAL
    • A long road ahead: integrating gender perspectives into peacekeeping operations
  • Omega Research Foundation
    • Floating liabilities? Maritime armouries, risks and solutions
  • Steve Trent
    • Climate refugees: Human insecurity in a warming world
  • Rebecca Sharkey
    • Momentum towards a nuclear weapons ban treaty: what does it mean for the UK?
  • Elizabeth Minor
    • Losing control over the use of force: fully autonomous weapons systems and the international movement to ban them
  • Zoï
    • The Ukraine conflict’s legacy of environmental damage and pollutants
  • Marianne Hanson
    • 2015: Towards a brave new nuclear world?
  • Lene Grimstad
    • The UN’s Meetings on Autonomous Weapons: Biting the Bullet, or Lost in Abstraction?
  • Crofton Black
    • Expanding Contracting: The Private Sector’s Role in Drone Surveillance and Targeting
  • Finbar Anderson
    • A Sharper Edge: QME, the Iran Deal and the Gulf Arms Race
  • Lisa Dittmar
    • Nitrogen: a driver of global food insecurity?
  • Tim Street
    • Thinking beyond the bomb: how can the UK help create a nuclear weapons-free world?
  • Gerrit Kurtz
    • “Guerrilla Diplomats”: Conflict Prevention Through Frontline Diplomacy
  • Tor A. Benjaminsen
    • Does Climate Change Cause Conflicts in the Sahel?
  • Antoine Perret
    • Privatising the War on Drugs: PMSCs in Colombia and Mexico
  • Murray Carroll
    • Trump and the Prospects of an Illiberal International Order
  • Alejandro Sanchez
    • From Surveillance to Smuggling: Drones in the War on Drugs
  • Vanda Felbab-Brown
    • Drugs and Drones: The Crime Empire Strikes Back
  • Andrew Holland
    • National Security, Climate Change and the Philippine Typhoon
  • Alise Coen
    • The Responsibility to Protect and the Refugee Crisis
  • Laurence Menhinick
    • What the Environmental Legacy of the Gulf War Should Teach us
  • Duncan Depledge
    • Sustainable Security in the Arctic
  • Jelke Boesten
    • Of Ruptures and Continuities: Sexual Violence in Conflict
  • Hans De Marie Heungoup
    • Q&A: Boko Haram in Cameroon
  • Andrew Smith
    • The Legal Case Against the Saudi-Led Intervention in Yemen
  • Gabriel Weimann
    • Terrorists Turn Social Media into Antisocial Media
  • Hammad Sheikh
    • Sustainable Security and Sacred Values
  • Bill Durodié
    • After Brussels – It’s Time to Challenge Our Authorities and Move Beyond Prevent
  • Cameron Harrington
    • Water Security in South Africa: The need to build social and ecological resilience
  • Benedetta Berti
    • Did Operation Unified Protector in Libya Strengthen R2P?
  • Andrew Smith and Vyara Gylsen
    • Challenging UK Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia in the Courts
  • Gëzim Visoka and John Doyle
    • The European Union and Conflict Resolution
  • Malte Brosig
    • Peacekeeping within African Regime Complexity
  • Lindy Heinecken
    • Challenges Facing Women in Peacekeeping
  • Jane Freedman
    • Understanding Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Deane-Peter Baker
    • Privatised Peacekeeping?
  • Jonas Wolff
    • Inspirations for Post-liberal Peacebuilding from Latin America
  • Richard Milburn
    • Conservation as a Tool for Post-War Recovery
  • Jairo Munive
    • Beyond Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration of Ex-combatants
  • Andrew Garwood-Gowers
    • China and the Responsibility to Protect
  • Amanda J. Reinke
    • Gender-Relational Peacebuilding in Uganda
  • Maya Eichler
    • Gender and Private Security
  • Kai Michael Kenkel
    • Brazil and the “Responsibility While Protecting” Initiative
  • Jérémie Gilbert
    • Nomadism, Land Disputes and Security
  • Chris Abbott
    • US Drone Strikes in Pakistan: ineffective and illegitimate
  • Julian Bergmann
    • The European Union as a Peace Mediator
  • Jennifer Curtis
    • Human Rights as Conflict Resolution in Northern Ireland
  • Rosaleen Duffy
    • Militarising Conservation: A Triple ‘Fail’ for Security, People and Wildlife
  • Gordon Clubb
    • Can Former Combatants Assist in Preventing Violence?
  • Kathleen Jennings
    • ‘Blue Helmet Havens’ – Separation and Segregation in Peacekeeping
  • Anthony Rinna
    • Sino-Russian Border Security
  • Linnéa Gelot
    • Prevention and Militarization in Africa’s Security Governance: Mirror Images?
  • Yvonne M. Dutton
    • Fighting Maritime Piracy with Private Armed Guards
  • Meredith Loken and Anna Zelenz
    • Why Do Western Women Join Daesh?
  • Sarah Kinosian
    • Self-Defense? Mexico Gambles on Vigilante Security
  • Tara Lai Quinlan
    • The NYPD’s Post-9/11 Counterterrorism Programme
  • Abigail Watson
    • Russia’s Strike Against Special Forces and the UK’s ‘No Comment’ Policy
  • Lisa DeLance
    • Women and Combat: The Case of the British Military
  • Christiane Fröhlich
    • Climate Change – Migration – Conflict. What’s the Connection?
  • David A. Shirk
    • Crime, Violence, and State Responses in Mexico
  • Christopher Rossi
    • No Joy in Juba: South Sudan and R2P
  • Anne Bartlett
    • Markets, Minerals and Mayhem in Darfur
  • Han Dorussen
    • More than Taxi-drivers? Pitfalls and Prospects of Local Peacekeeping
  • Mari Fitzduff
    • What Does Neuroscience Have to Offer Peacebuilders?
  • Mahmood Monshipouri and William V. Dunlap
    • Drone Strikes and Never-Ending Wars
  • Vassilis Petsinis
    • Introducing Jobbik: Hungary’s Second Largest Party
  • Maria Elisabetta Lanzone
    • The French Front National: Between the Old and the New
  • Chris Abbott and Matthew Clarke
    • How to Respond to the Threat from Hostile Drones in the UK
  • Mohammed Abu-Nimer
    • Interreligious Peacebuilding: An Emerging Field of Research and Practice
  • SusSec Team
    • The Syrian War and the Foreign Fighters from the Muslim World
  • Tim Oliver
    • Brexit or Bremain for British Security?
  • Zoë Pelter
    • Quiet Legacies and Long Shadows: The Obama era of counterterrorism in the Sahel-Sahara

Blogs We Follow

  • Center for Climate and Security
  • China Dialogue
  • Environmental Peacebuilding
  • Every Casualty
  • Insights: World Resources Institute
  • New Security Beat
  • openSecurity
  • Post2015.org
  • Remote Control Project
  • Southern Voice
  • Tom Dispatch

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  • Projects
    • Militarised Public Security in Latin America
    • Rethinking the Nuclear Security Regime
    • Inclusive Security
    • Remote Control Warfare
    • Securitisation of the Sahel-Sahara
    • Human Security in a Changing Climate
    • Peacekeeping Challenges and the Responsibility to Protect (R2P)
    • Populism and Sustainable Security
  • Interviews
  • Briefings

Latest Articles

  • The Syrian War and the Foreign Fighters from the Muslim World
  • The Cyprus Problem: Why Solve a “Comfortable” Conflict?
  • Sustainable Security in the Trump Era
  • State and Non-State Hybrid Warfare
  • The Energy Dimension in China’s Arctic Interests
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