View allAll Photos Tagged ConflictResolution

Children and volunteers acting during a movie making workshop

Joseph, a Pokot farmer, and his son Francis, a warrior, are CPI beneficiaries. Joseph shares a heifer with his Samburu friend, Peter Lemoti, who keeps the cow. Joseph is pateintly waiting to receive the calf.

SH-2 Seasprite onboard USS Midway (CV-41).

 

A child playing one of the activities during a picnic in Gornji Vakuf Uskoplje

Four Samburu women whose children went to Peace Camp in 2013 and are now eligible to receive shared Heifers for Peace

Poster for Conflict Resolution Workshop of Beyond Borders.

Depending on the season and the health of the animals, a goat can be sold for up to $50 USD, a sheep for up to $35 USD, and a heifer for up to $320 USD

Children taking portraits with pinhole cameras in front of Ompladinski Centar in Gornji Vakuf Uskoplje

Waves of peace and harmony - Iraq. Art Excel course for children

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

In the months leading up to the March and April 2015 elections in Nigeria, HD facilitated in the establishment of a high-level dispute resolution mechanism, meant to deal with any crisis that might emerge during, or in the aftermath, of the General Elections.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here:https://www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

 

Related publications:

 

Post-election assessment of conflict prevention and resolution mechanisms in Nigeria, 10.03.2016, by Babatunde Afolabi and Sabina Avasiloae. Read here: www.hdcentre.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/Post-election...

Dr. Martin Luther King believed that only nonviolent action can ultimately build peace and justice. But how? On April 4, the somber anniversary of Dr. King’s assassination,USIP hosted a forum on ways to reclaim and re-frame nonviolent action against 21st-century global conflicts, extremisms, and injustices that fuel them. Researchers and activists discussed their recent or forthcoming books on nonviolent action and join an audience-wide conversation and poll.

Read more at: www.usip.org/events/dr-martin-luther-king-s-path-peace

Photos taken during a mission to Aweil and Nyamlel (South Sudan). This album contains photos of the Dinka Malual and Reizigat Pre-migration Peace Conference in Nyamlel, South Sudan, under the auspices of FAO, UNMISS and UNDP. Photo credit ©FAO/Mattia Romano. Editorial use only. FAO Project Code OSRO/SSD/703/EC

 

San Francisco Community Boards Co Instructors Developing a Thriving Mediation practice 01-11-2010 JAMS Office

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

Photo: High Table - Senior dignitaries

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

Peace Fellow Talley examines the carcass of a cow, the main source of pastoralists' livelihoods.

Photo: Community group - South South

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

Children and volunteer in the park built by young people in 2011

Photo: Community group - Fulani

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

Picture taken by Melisa Demirovic during the digital photography workshop

In this image taken in 1996, a UN conex box sits starkly in front of the richly detailed façade of what is now the Sarajevo Olympic Museum—once a mansion built in 1903 for politician Nikola Mandić, and later a cultural icon honoring the 1984 Winter Olympic Games. At the time this photo was captured, the museum building had only narrowly survived the siege of Sarajevo (1992–1996), a brutal conflict that devastated the city’s civic and cultural infrastructure. The juxtaposition of the temporary, utilitarian United Nations shelter with the ornate Austro-Hungarian architecture behind it speaks volumes about the contrast between war’s disruption and Sarajevo’s storied past.

 

The conex box—stenciled with the letters “UN” and marked BH-UNE/6340—would have served as a field office, checkpoint post, or temporary housing for UN peacekeepers involved in the earliest implementation stages of the Dayton Peace Accords. Barbed wire, stacked barricades, and snow-dusted streets evoke the daily tension that persisted even after open hostilities ceased. Peace had been signed on paper, but Sarajevo was still fragile, heavily monitored, and quietly rebuilding amid trauma.

 

Behind the conex is the museum itself—damaged during the war, and not fully restored until decades later. Today, the building once again hosts exhibits dedicated to Olympic history, Sarajevo’s cultural heritage, and the enduring spirit of international sportsmanship. But in 1996, the site was scarred and empty, a shell of its former self, guarded by foreign troops and overshadowed by the memory of snipers and artillery fire.

 

This photograph captures a rare moment in time—postwar liminality. The war is over, but the peace is raw. The museum stands as a symbol of endurance, the UN conex as a marker of intervention and transition. The quiet snowfall and empty street are deceptive; behind the calm, an entire city was reorienting itself after the longest siege in modern European history.

Her beautiful beads indicate that she has not attended school.

Photo: High Table - Senior dignitaries

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

Photo: Des éléments de la milice GATIA sécurisent la rencontre intercommunautaire de Djebock

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

La rencontre inter communautaire pour le renforcement de la cohésion sociale dans le cercle de Gao plus précisément l’ancien arrondissement de Djebock, tenue à Djebock chef lieu de la commune rurale de Anchawadj les 22 et 23 Décembre 2015 sur financement HD.

 

Cette rencontre a regroupé environ une centaine de participants composés des représentants des communautés kel Tamacheq de l’arrondissement de Djebock (Commune de Anchawadj, Tilemsi) mais aussi les communautés arabes, peulhs, sonrai des communes voisines de l’arrondissement de Djebock ( Gabero, Gounzoureye, Soni Ali Ber et Tarkint).

 

En savoir plus sur le travail de HD cliquez ici: www.hdcentre.org/

Photo: Community group - Igbo

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

From our conflict resolution and development simulation, incorporating over 75 conference participants.

Photo from the 2008 Innovations in Student Leadership Conference, held February 23, 2008 at the Elliott School of International Affairs. For more information, please visit onestudentry.org and islc.onestudentry.org.

Photo: Speech - HD Senior consultant Dr. Phil Ostien

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

An A4-F onboard USS Midway (CV-41)

#NSLCHEAL students participate in a conflict resolution exercise with Mr. A'ric Jackson. In this exercise, students paired up and practiced different types of listening.

#NSLCHEAL students participate in a conflict resolution exercise with Mr. A'ric Jackson. In this exercise, students paired up and practiced different types of listening.

A-1 Skyraider onboard USS Midway (CV-41).

Seen while conducting research in Baragoi

CPhoto: ommunity group - Hausa

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

Children and volunteers building pinhole cameras at Omladinski Centar

Krista Auchenbach, conference coordinator of OneStudentry.

Photo from the 2008 Innovations in Student Leadership Conference, held February 23, 2008 at the Elliott School of International Affairs. For more information, please visit onestudentry.org and islc.onestudentry.org.

Members of the Rollins College CAC (Cultural advisory Committee) were learning Help Increase the Peace, a nonviolence, leadership and youth empowerment program created by the American Friends Service Committee. It includes discussions, games, role plays and arts activities.

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The annual global gathering of conflict mediation practitioners in Oslo is the centre piece of the Oslo Forum series. Each year in June, this global retreat convenes senior conflict mediators, high-level decision makers and other major actors in peace processes. The annual global retreat offers an opportunity to draw on comparative and innovative approaches across regions and institutions for a comprehensive overview of mediation experiences, challenges and opportunities.

 

Read more about the Oslo Forum 2013 here: www.osloforum.org/

 

Read about the Oslo Forum on HD's website here:

www.hdcentre.org/what-we-do/oslo-forum/

Photo: Community group - Berom

 

Source: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue (HD)

 

The Inter-Communal Dialogue and Conflict Mediation project in Jos started in January 2013. From January to July 2013, HD has held consultative meetings with five community groups namely the Afizere, Anaguta, Berom, Hausa and Fulani; Religious leaders; Federal and State Government and women and youth groups on the proposed project, as well as sought buy in for the proposed process.

 

The project, supported by the Canadian Government, has been geared towards achieving an agreement between the communities to end the dispute in Jos, and foster inter-communal co-operation leading to fewer incidents of violence. The Inter-communal dialogue and conflict mediation process itself, ‘The Jos Forum’, was launched in August 2013, with a formal opening ceremony attended by numerous members of the five communities, Federal and State Government officials, Religious leaders, women and youth groups, as well as civil society representatives.

 

HD successfully hosted seven dialogue sessions on various issues, including interim sessions to deal with the emerging tensions in Jos countryside.

 

Read more about HD's work in Jos Plateau State, Nigeria, here: www.hdcentre.org/activities/jos-plateau-state-nigeria/

Peace Fellow Talley recording profiles of CPI beneficiaries

Healing The Divide On Climate Change

Peace it Together 2011 dialogue sessions in Pemberton, BC.

 

Photos by Rasha Amer

 

Peace it Together 2011 dialogue sessions in Pemberton, BC.

 

Photos by Rasha Amer

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