When Peace Kills Politics: International Intervention and Unending Wars in the Sudans
A withering analysis of the tragic susceptibility of interventionist peace deals to precipitate ongoing violence.
Violence, Conflict and Peacebuilding is one of the core areas of research interest at CGHR. The Centre serves as a meeting place for a multi-disciplinary group of researchers at Cambridge working on topics connected to this theme. For example, CGHR has hosted a variety of related seminars and events, including presentations on peace media in Uganda and Burundi, understanding the recent violence in South Sudan and assessing elections in Kenya. A strong area of core research deals with the politics of peace processes and negotiations.
This research asks: What kinds of ideas help inform the structure and process of peace negotiations and peacebuilding activities? Where do these ideas come from and how are they articulated and understood by participants in peace negotiations? CGHR is also committed to a close engagement with practitioners working in the fields of conflict and peacebuilding: we have started a dialogue with practitioners at DFID and the FCO on decision-making in times of crisis, and several practitioners have come to Cambridge discuss their work and their ideas with researchers and students.