Dialogue Series No 9 - Human Rights and Conflict Transformation

Author Title / Description Date
Véronique Dudouet & Beatrix Schmelzle (eds.)

Human Rights and Conflict Transformation. The Challenges of Just Peace

Contributors to this Dialogue aim to go beyond the divide and polarising language of "peace versus justice" in order to gain a clearer understanding of the potential – and limits – of bringing together human rights and conflict transformation in specific contexts. Drawing evidence from contexts such as Nepal, South Africa, Israel/Palestine, Uganda and Colombia, they argue that a more thorough emphasis on human rights – as causes and manifestation of conflicts, but also as normative and practical intervention tools – contributes to bringing conflict transformation closer to its aim of tackling conflicts at their deepest roots. The lead author and respondents engage in a rich dialogue on areas of tensions as well as complementarity between the two sets of practices: they encourage mutual learning and joint work, and stress the importance of locally-designed, timely and context-specific initiatives, as well as the hard-nosed analysis of political context and use of human rights and conflict transformation discourses.


2010

Single articles in this dialogue include:

Beatrix Schmelzle and Véronique Dudouet

Introduction: Towards Peace with Justice

Michelle Parlevliet

Rethinking Conflict Transformation from a Human Rights Perspective

Lead Article for Dialogue 9.
Thomas Diez and Emily Pia

Conflicts and the Politics of Human Rights Invocations

Alice Nderitu

Conflict Transformation and Human Rights: A Mutual Stalemate?

Eileen F. Babbitt

The New Constitutionalism: An Approach to Human Rights from a Conflict Transformation Perspective

Albert Gomes-Mugumya

Reflections on Rights and Conflict from Uganda

Marwan Darweish

Human Rights and the Imbalance of Power: The Palestinian-Israeli Conflict

Mauricio García-Durán

Interaction between Conflict Transformation and Human Rights in the Face of Ongoing Armed Conflict in Colombia

Michelle Parlevliet

Holding Concurrent Realities. Reflection on the Responses