Our partners at the Charity and Security Network continue to monitor and work to reverse the closing regulatory space for humanitarian relief and peacebuilding organizations. They’ve just highlighted three new reports studying the impact on civil society of new counter-terrorism and money-laundering regulations, and the efforts of civil society coalitions to the improve the regulatory environment that impedes charitable organizations’ humanitarian work. The reports include a study released by Chatham House, the other by Bread for the World, and a third by UN Special Rapporteur Miana Kiai.
Recent Posts
- Opportunities Lost and Found: Challenges for Peacebuilding in Myanmar and Zimbabwe – Derek Brown
- A Letter, A Pardon and Hopes for Further Progress on Reconciliation in Rwanda
- Inside Israeli-Palestinian Worldview – A Conversation With Moritz Ehrmann and Jeff Seul
- Understanding Worldview Conflicts in the ‘Negotiation Journal’
- Welcoming Immigrants, Sharing Cultures – A Community Iftar in Central Virginia
- Peace Appeal Annual Review
- The Drama 4 Peace Platform
- Drama4Peace
- National Dialogues in Peacebuilding and Transitions: Lessons Learned from Six National Dialogues in Africa and the Middle East
- A Tale of Two Pauls: Examining the Limits of Reconciliation after the Rwandan Genocide