Projects per year
Abstract
This report provides a short introduction to inform thinking on how social crisis ends, and the types of initiatives that help to bring it to conclusion. It begins by framing general considerations in how states respond to social unrest using peaceful responses, and moves to examine some of the most typical institutional responses: commissions of inquiry, national dialogues (or similar), amnesty, and indeed multi-pronged approaches which use more than one of these mechanisms. We touch on the issue of more fully fledged ‘transitions’ to a new political settlement, but do not engage in this in detail. Each type of response is dealt with in separate sections and is accompanied by some lessons learned from past attempts to respond to social unrest. The Appendices offer more detailed case study background on Northern Ireland, Lebanon, Mali, Bahrain, and Kenya.
Original language | English |
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Publisher | Political Settlements Research Programme |
Number of pages | 84 |
Publication status | Published - 22 Feb 2021 |
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'State Responses to Social Unrest: Pathways out of Crisis'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Transforming Political Settlements Towards Open and Inclusive Settlements
Marks, Z. (Principal Investigator), Kelly, T. (Co-investigator), Mackay, F. (Co-investigator) & Thaler, M. (Co-investigator)
UK central government bodies/local authorities, health and hospital authorities
1/03/15 → 28/02/19
Project: Research
Research output
- 1 Conference contribution
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Designing an interactive real-time web-mapped dashboard to visualise conflict ceasefires data over COVID-19 infection rates: Facilities and the way ahead
Bhattacharya, D., Badanjak, S., Bell, C., Knaussel, F., Wise, L., Allison, J. & Bach, B., 30 Nov 2021, (E-pub ahead of print) GHTC 2021 Proceedings. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, p. 200-207 (IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution
Open AccessFile