Iraq

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Featured Publications & Tools

Latest from USIP on Iraq

  • September 10, 2012   |   Publication

    The USIP Baghdad Office (BDO) earlier this month hosted a meeting between USIP President- select Jim Marshall, Senior Vice President of the Center for Conflict Management Abiodun Williams, and members from the Network of Iraqi Facilitators (NIF) and Alliance of Iraqi Minorities (AIM).

  • August 30, 2012   |   Publication

    The U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) has awarded a grant to The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health to support a pathbreaking effort to systematically track attacks on health care workers and facilities in Burma—creating an analytical tool that ultimately can be used globally and that should become a foundation for efforts to prevent such attacks and promote accountability for those perpetrating them.

  • August 6, 2012   |   In the Field

    USIP will draw on its innovative effort to sponsor dialogue between security agencies and civil society in Nepal and Iraq to develop a new "toolkit" to help practitioners in the field run similar programs in other transitional or post-conflict countries.

  • August 3, 2012   |   Publication

    The maturing field of religious peacebuilding faces challenges in integrating with secular peacebuilding efforts, engaging women and youth, and working more effectively with non-Abrahamic religious traditions.

USIP in Iraq

U.S. Institute of Peace staff have been at work on the ground in Iraq since 2003 with the mission of strengthening local capacities to prevent, manage and resolve conflicts peacefully. We work across the community, provincial and national levels, and above all seek to provide Iraqis with the tools to take active roles as citizens and peacebuilders. | The Past and the Future: A Look at USIP in Iraq [Timeline]

Our Programs

Latest Highlights

  • Lessons from Embedded Provincial Reconstruction Teams in Iraq
    Special Report by John K. Naland | October, 2011
    Between 2007 and 2010, the U.S. State Department fielded small teams in Iraq called embedded provincial reconstruction teams (ePRTs). This report examines how well the ePRTs accomplished their mission of advancing U.S. counterinsurgency efforts by helping local Iraqi communities pursue reconciliation, foster economic development, and improve public services to mitigate sources of instability. This report notes the strengths and shortcomings of the ePRT program, incorporating the firsthand insights of 22 ePRT team members and one hundred PRT members interviewed by the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training under a contract with the U.S. Institute of Peace.
  • Never too Young for Peace: The Next Generation of Iraqi Peacebuilders
    USIP Grant Highlight | September 12, 2011
    Recognizing the potential role of youth as catalysts of social change, USIP's Iraq Grant Program partners with a number of youth organizations to promote peacebuilding and conflict resolution, and strengthen tolerance and mutual understanding in Iraqi communities that continue to experience high levels of intergroup conflict.
  • USIP Update from Baghdad
    On the Issues by Sean Kane | July 2011
    A senior USIP team from Washington, D.C. and Baghdad in late June met with male and female Iraqi leaders from across the country's diverse political spectrum as well as with Iraqi youth, civil society and representatives of vulnerable minority groups. USIP’s Sean Kane reports from Baghdad on some of the main themes on the issues of the day which emerged from USIP’s conversations with a cross section of Iraqi leaders.
  • Women Peacemakers in Iraq
    On the Issues by Maria Jessop and Ayse Kadayifci-Orellana | June 2011
    Two USIP experts discuss the power of dialogue to bridge divides and the role of women peacemakers in Iraq in the context of a workshop for the women of USIP’s Network of Iraqi Facilitators (NIF) they conducted in May 2011.
  • The Coming Turkish-Iranian Competition In Iraq
    Special Report by Sean Kane | June 2011
    This report reviews the growing competition between Turkey and Iran for influence in Iraq as the U.S. troop withdrawal proceeds. In doing so, it finds an alignment of interests between Baghdad, Ankara, and Washington, D.C., in a strong and stable Iraq fueled by increased hydrocarbon production. Where possible, the United States should therefore encourage Turkish and Iraqi cooperation and economic integration as a key part of its post-2011 strategy for Iraq and the region. This analysis is based on the author’s experiences in Iraq and reviews of Turkish and Iranian press and foreign policy writing.
  • Making a Difference in Kirkuk: One Policeman at a Time
    USIP Grant Highlight | June 29, 2011

View other highlights

Multimedia

The Women's Toolkit for Collaborative Problem Solving


Watch the full 20 minute video

From USIP's Experts

December, 2011 | Sean Kane
An Iraqi flashpoint loses its American safety net
USIP's Senior Iraq Program Officer, Sean Kane, discusses the American drawdown in Iraq's disputed territories.

December 5, 2011 | Sean Kane
An Interview with Sean Kane at the United States Institute of Peace
USIP's Senior Iraq Program Officer, Sean Kane, discusses the American drawdown in Iraq.

August 4, 2011 | Sean Kane
Iraq's sideways drift
USIP's Senior Iraq Program Officer, Sean Kane, discusses the lagging pace of progress in Iraq.

June 29, 2011 | Sean Kane
Growing Shadows in an Unsettled Iraq
Council on Foreign Relations interviews USIP's Senior Iraq Program Officer, Sean Kane, about the current political climate in Iraq.

April 27, 2011 | Sean Kane
Don't repeat the mistakes of Iraq in Libya
USIP's Senior Iraq Program Officer, Sean Kane applies lessons from Iraq to Libya for Foreign Policy.

April 7, 2011 | Sean Kane
Kirkuk Tensions Highlight Concerns Over U.S. Troop Exit
The New York Times At War blog discusses Program Officer Sean Kane's Peaceworks "Iraq's Disputed Territories."

 

USIP in the News

September 22, 2011 برنامج "سلام شباب" يختتم نشاطاته بأربيل Source: Aswat al-Iraq Local coverage of USIP's Salam Shabab program in Iraq.


 

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