Read More Best Political Violence Fiction of 2020January 29, 2021 By Emily Hencken Ritter and guest contributor Jessica Maves Braithwaite In December, PV@G editors and contributors shared their… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Who Counts in Conflicts During the Pandemic?January 5, 2021 Guest post by Sophia Dawkins When the WHO declared a pandemic last March, UN Secretary-General António Guterres appealed… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Good Reads 2020December 11, 2020 It’s that time of year again—when Political Violence @ A Glance publishes a list of the year’s best… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Why Healthy Skepticism About This Year’s Nobel Peace Prize is WarrantedDecember 10, 2020 Guest post by Ida Rudolfsen Today the World Food Program (WFP) receives this year’s Nobel Peace Prize. The… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Will Civil War in Ethiopia Spread?November 24, 2020 Guest post by Nils-Christian Bormann Do civil wars spread—and where? Political scientists have demonstrated sizable evidence of contagion… Read More 0 0 0
Read More The Big Lesson of Peacekeeping in Sudan: Beware of Host-Country ObstructionSeptember 3, 2020 By Allard Duursma Every student that takes a class on United Nations (UN) peace operations will be told… Read More 0 0 0
Read More The Global Impacts of COVID-19July 13, 2020 How has the COVID-19 pandemic affected prospects for peace or conflict; political participation; and civil liberties around the… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Abiy Ahmed Ali, The Nobel Prize, and the Future of Global DemocracyDecember 10, 2019 By Timothy Sisk Today, 43-year old Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed Ali was awarded the 2019 Nobel Peace… Read More 0 0 0
Read More The Case of the Missing DictatorsNovember 2, 2018 By Barbara F. Walter. Two weeks ago I asked why so many African dictators resigned in the short… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Why Have So Many African Dictators Suddenly Resigned?October 12, 2018 By Barbara F. Walter. Africa is known for its dictators and their uncanny ability to stay in power… Read More 0 0 0