Jacqueline H. Wilson

Senior Program Officer, Academy for International Conflict Management and Peacebuilding

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Contact

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Jacqueline H. Wilson is a senior program officer in the Institute’s Academy for International Conflict Management and Peacebuilding. She focuses on programming in Sudan, Iraq, and the greater Middle East and Africa as well as intermittently in other countries such as Colombia, Philippines, and Afghanistan. Wilson specializes in traditional mechanisms of conflict resolution and in applying conflict resolution skills and techniques to local problems and to building sustainable peace agreements. She led a cross-border grazing project involving southern Kordofan and northern Bahr el Ghazal in Sudan. She is writing about peace conferences and peace agreements involving communities who share livelihoods and trade across the Sudan/South Sudan border.

Wilson joined the Institute in 2004 following a 23-year active and reserve Air Force career, retiring at the rank of lieutenant colonel. From 2001 to 2003, she was the CENTCOM liaison officer to the U.S. embassy in Nairobi, supporting the defense attaché and Kenya-U.S. liaison offices. During this time, she contributed to the drafting of the Verification and Monitoring Mechanism in the Sudan Comprehensive Peace Agreement and served as an international observer for the 2002 Kenyan elections. She lived in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia from 1999 to 2001. Before living overseas, she served as a reserve faculty member of the Joint Military Intelligence Training Center at the Defense Intelligence Agency in Washington, DC. Previously, she worked as a special assistant on the Maryland governor’s staff as well as a lobbyist in Annapolis. She taught at Merced (CA) High School and earned a secondary science teaching credential at Chapman University, where she also served as an adjunct instructor.

Wilson holds a master of science degree in strategic intelligence with Middle East emphasis from the Joint Military Intelligence College and a master of arts degree in defense administration from Northern Michigan University. She is currently a doctoral candidate in Georgetown University's Liberal Studies program, studying traditional conflict resolution mechanisms and focusing on the reparation mechanism known as "diya."

Publications

Also available on usip.org

Multimedia

Publications & Tools

July 2012

South Sudan celebrates the first anniversary of its formal independence and nationhood on July 9. Though hopes for progress remain high, the young nation is struggling on several fronts—internal security, relations with Sudan, development, rule of law and statebuilding. The specialists at the U.S. Institute of Peace who work on conflict management and peacebuilding programs in South Sudan examine the gains made and the many challenges ahead.

Credit:  UN Photo
July 2012

As South Sudan celebrates the first anniversary of its independence, USIP offers a range of resources for examining the new country's first year and for beginning to discuss its trajectory in the coming years.

March 2012

USIP hosted a briefing for an American commander deploying to the Horn of Africa.

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July 2011

Experts from USIP are monitoring developments in the two Sudans following South Sudan's declaration of independence on July 9.

May 2011 | On the Issues by Jackie Wilson and Jon Temin

USIP’s Jon Temin and Jacki Wilson discuss the recent hostilities in Abyei, Sudan – and why it threatens the stability of the soon-to-be Republic of South Sudan and the overall region.

April 2011 | News Feature by Gordon Lubold

United States Institute of Peace trainers in March completed a five-day exercise in Nigeria for Nigerian Army peacekeepers who are preparing to deploy across the continent for a host of missions.

January 2011 | On the Issues by Jacqueline H. Wilson

Jacqueline Wilson, USIP senior program officer, talks about south Sudan's referendum and USIP's work on the ground.

Credit: File Photo
March 2009 | Peace Brief by Linda Bishai, Kelly Campbell and Jacki Wilson

Sudan’s upcoming elections in 2009 raise hopes and concerns for the country’s future. According to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), signed in 2005 between the ruling National Congress Party (NCP) and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), Sudan is scheduled to hold national and state level elections in 2009.

February 2008 | On the Issues by Dorina Bekoe and Jacki Wilson

Dorina Bekoe and Jacki Wilson discuss the renewed violence in Kenya, sparked by a flawed electoral process.

Events

December 11, 2009

In Muslim tribal cultures, such as in Somalia and Yemen, conflicts traditionally involve tribes, clans, and extended families and are perpetuated through violent revenge, sometimes over generations. Conflict resolution traditionally consists of blood payments, with religious leaders and elders playing the role of mediators.

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February 18, 2009
May 24, 2005