The ResilienceBuilding project focuses on the causes and consequences of civilian agency for self-protection and violence prevention in contexts characterized by civil war, communal conflict, local peacebuilding, and international peacekeeping actors. We investigate how armed groups, civilian actions, and peacebuilding approaches interact on multiple levels of conflict and study the consequences for the vulnerability and resilience of local populations. One research stream analyses the gender dimensions of social resilience and peacebuilding. A second one engages with the climate change, conflict, and peacebuilding nexus to better understand vulnerability and building resilience. A third stream examines linkages between local and national peace processes and implications for variation in violence against civilians and peacebuilding success.
Given the modest record of international peacebuilding in countries affected by protracted crises, such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) or South Sudan, these questions are of high societal relevance. Whether social resilience is a durable or a temporal phenomenon and whether it may effectively increase vulnerability is, further, of prime conceptual and methodological concern for peacebuilding and development research. To harvest the promise of community resilience in peacebuilding and civilian protection, this project investigates resilience’s potentially harmful consequences and ways to mitigate them.
The research team conducts field research in Nigeria, Kenya, South Sudan, and the CAR. The team brings together researchers who together implement multi-method approaches, combining in-depth interviewing and ethnographic observation with event data analysis, survey research, statistical modelling, and archival work.
The ResilienceBuilding project pursues five empirical objectives:
1. Analyse the short- and long-term impacts and legacies of social resilience, vulnerability, and peacebuilding in conflict zones.
2. Analyse the linkages between communal conflicts and the national political process and state institutions and identify barriers to the resolution of communal conflicts in the context of protracted conflicts.
3. Analyse the impact of international efforts to support local peacebuilding and resolution of communal conflicts on the levels of armed violence and peacebuilding prospects.
4. Analyse the gender dimensions of social resilience and vulnerability and their implications for local peacebuilding.
5. Identify barriers to women’s sustained local and national political participation with regard to conflict resolution and decision-making.