Highlights

  New Publications:

The prospects for post-conflict stability in Gulu, Uganda are discussed in this new Working Paper by Adam Branch

Dar es Salaam and Kampala are compared in this new Working Paper by Debby Bryceson on cities, ethnicity and the formation of nation states.

Regional organisations: The Centre has published a series of papers on the effectiveness of regional organisations for managing conflict in different parts of the world. Papers in this series include:

The European Union

The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe

Comparing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation

The Organisation of American States

The Regionalist Project in Central Asia

The Southern African Development Community

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Analytical narratives on state-making: The Centre has begun to publish a series of narratives based on its core case studies. Available so far are:
Colombia
DR Congo (English & French versions)
Mozambique
Rwanda
Uganda

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War, State Collapse and Reconstruction:
Phase Two of the Crisis States Programme (2006-2010)

Although the Centre's work will continue to build on the findings from Phase 1, the Programme will now focus in a much more concentrated way on specific themes that are central to our understanding of state crisis, collapse, survival and reconstruction, doing so through a systematic comparative analysis of a number of key countries and cities. In Phase 2 the Centre's work will have a greater focus on sub-Saharan Africa whilst maintaining a comparative perspective with work on Latin America and Asia in order to understand differential outcomes in managing conflict.

Through rigorous comparative analysis of a carefully selected set of states and cities, and through systematic analysis of global and regional axes of conflict, current research seeks to identify the causes and symptoms of state collapse and to provide explanations as to why some fragile states collapse while others do not. By identifying the ways in which war and conflict affect the future possibilities for state building, by distilling the lessons learnt from past experiences of state reconstruction and by analysing the impact of key international interventions, Centre research seeks to build academic knowledge, contribute to the development of theory, and inform current and future policy making.

Our ongoing research is organized around three interrelated components:

Development as State-Making: Collapse, War and Reconstruction
Cities and Fragile States: Conflict, War and Reconstruction
Regional and Global Axes of Conflict

Click on any of the links above to find out more about that component. Below you can access our Phase 2 Research Overview (3 pages) and our more comprehensive Phase 2 Research Framework (30 pages).

Phase 2 Research Overview
Phase 2 Research Framework

To find out about the work we did in Phase 1, click here.