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Lisa Denney and Sarah JenkinsCommunity policing has gained popularity amongst donors, governments, police departments and communities as a mechanism for achieving a diverse range of goals – from crime reduction to improved state-society relations. Yet while community policing initiatives are widespread across the globe, there is little consensus on its definition, objectives or models. Given the ambiguity surrounding its precise meaning, this paper maps the ‘what’ and the ‘how’ of community policing, setting out what it means and hopes to achieve, and how it manifests and is shaped by factors such as histories of state-society relations.
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Clearing the rubble from destroyed building in Syria
Clearing the rubble from the ruins of a residential building destroyed in the fighting in Syria
License: Creative Commons
Credit: ICRC / T. Voeten
Source: FlickrMonitoring protection: asking the impossible?
In today's armed conflicts, civilians bear the brunt of hostilities. Humanitarian agencies strive to improve the protection afforded to civilians, but how can they better monitor and evaluate protection programming to ensure that they best serve those in need? This event, co-hosted by the Humanitarian Policy Group and the International Committee of the Red Cross aims to understand the challenges of monitoring protecting work, and promote discussion on ways forward.
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Peace and conflict in Myanmar
This roundtable aims to facilitate a high-level policy dialogue on three pressing interrelated issues: the ethnic peace process; the crisis in Rakhine State; and the Buddhist-Muslim violence in Myanmar and the wider ASEAN region.
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Protecting civilians in armed conflict
The conference brought together humanitarians, diplomats, soldiers, experts, journalists and others for a frank discussion about these issues affecting the protection of civilians and produced some recommendations for the future.
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What have we learned about stabilization in Afghanistan? Not much.
As of this year, Afghanistan has experienced ten years of stabilization intervention, but what is there to show for it? Marked by massive expenditure with little to no accountability, and often marred by waste, stabilization in Afghanistan started out with arguably honorable aims. However, as troops prepare to leave in 2014, what legacy will be left behind?
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The search for common ground: civil–military relations in Afghanistan, 2002–13 - Policy Brief
This policy brief summarises research on civil-military dialogue between aid agencies and military forces in Afghanistan from 2002 through 2012. It aims to contribute to the understanding of the challenges of civil-military dialogue in the context of international and national military forces pursuing stabilisation activities. -
Darfur which way? The Sudanese Government point of view
A closed roundtable meeting. Darfur which way? The Sudanese Government point of view.
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Getting where needed: overcoming aid access obstacles
Knocking on the front door doesn't always get you in. That's been the hard lesson over decades for humanitarians seeking to bring assistance to those in need. This event will address the practical challenges organisations face in reaching those in need, and the strategies adopted to overcome them.
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Civil-military relations in Afghanistan: lessons learned from a ten year engagement
The U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) hosted a panel discussion on the newly published report “Search for Common Ground: Civil-Military Relations in Afghanistan, 2002-12”, presented by Ashley Jackson, a co-author of the report. The event also provided an opportunity to reflect on lessons learned over the past 10 years in Afghanistan with a roundtable of experts stemming from the research, military and NGO communities.









