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Patterns of Conflict Resolution

Patterns of Conflict Resolution: Sequences and Mechanisms in Peace-Making and Peace-Building. How to Draw Lessons from Northern Ireland

Project Description

The Northern Irish peace process and settlement of 1998 was a culmination of three intersecting processes of (i) international mediation (ii) equalisation of communal socio-economic resources and political participation and (iii) geo-political reconfiguration of British-Irish relationships. To what extent can this 'Irish' model be generalised? Do the same processes exist in other settlements, albeit in different sequences and combinations? Given the centrality of the Irish/Northern Irish case to Irish understandings of conflict resolution, it is essential to establish the range of applicability and the lessons that can be drawn from this case if an effective Irish contribution to international conflict resolution is to result.

This project builds on research conducted at IBIS on the succession of attempts at conflict resolution in Ireland and Northern Ireland. It uses the Northern Ireland case as a benchmark for comparative study. It builds on existing networks and collaborative partnerships in choosing four diverse cases - Macedonia, the African Great Lakes, the Cote d'Ivoire and the Mindanao region of the Philippines - comparing the succession of attempts at conflict resolution (failed and successful) within each case in order to show the processes which favoured success. It compares these processes between cases to identify the range of patterns of conflict resolution. Rather than applying an Irish model to these cases, the aim is to develop a repertoire of the mechanisms and processes which are combined in different sequences in different forms of conflict and conflict-resolution.

The results - briefing papers, working papers and international journal articles - at once define important new research directions and directly address the concerns of policy makers faced with problems of conflict management.

IBIS gratefully acknowledges funding from the Irish Research Council for the Humanities and Social Sciences and from the Conflict Resolution Unit of the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs for this research project.

People (Patterns of Conflict Resolution)

Researchers

  • Principal Investigator: Professor Jennifer Todd (UCD)
  • Associate Investigators
    • Dr Graham Brown (CRISE, Oxford University)
    • Professor John Coakley (UCD)
    • Dr Jos Elkink (UCD)
    • Professor Lidija Georgieva (Ss Cyril and Methodius University, Macedonia)
    • Ms Bronagh Hinds (DemocraShe)
    • Dr Arnim Langer (CRISE, Oxford University)
    • Mr Ardit Memeti (South East European University, Macedonia)
    • Dr Duncan Morrow (Community Relations Council)
    • Dr Ali Musliu (State University of Tetova, Macedonia)
    • Mr Lupa Ramadhani (University of Dar es Salaam)
    • Professor Joseph Ruane (UCC)
    • Professor Frances Stewart (Centre for Inequality, Human Security and Ethnicity (CRISE), Oxford University)
    • Dr Andy Storey (UCD)
    • Professor Patrick Paul Walsh (UCD)

Research Assistants

    • Michael Anderson
    • Mark Dunne
    • Melanie Hoewer
    • Jennifer Jackson
    • Cliona Kealy
    • Ronan Kennedy
    • Susan McDermott
    • Pascal Pragnere
    • Jodi Zaffino

Publications (John Hume and the Revision of Irish Nationalism)

Publications from the project

'Humespeak': the SDLP, political discourse , and the Northern Ireland peace process

'Dublin is just a Sunningdale away? The SDLP and the failure of Northern Ireland's Sunningdale experiment

Horowitz's theory of ethnic party competition and the case of the Northern Ireland Social Democratic and Labour Party, 1970-1979