Peace makers
Peacemakers are individuals and organizations involved in peacemaking, often in countries affected by war, violent conflict, and political instability. They engage in processes such as negotiation, mediation, conciliation, and arbitration—drawing on international law and norms.
Peacemaking
The objective is to move a violent conflict into non-violent dialogue, where differences are settled through conflict transformation processes or through the work of representative political institutions.Peacemaking can occur at different levels, sometimes referred to as tracks. "High level" peacemaking, involving direct talks between the leaders of conflicting parties, is sometimes thus referred to as Track 1. Tracks 2 and 3 are said to involve dialogue at lower levels—often unofficially between groups, parties, and stakeholders to a violent conflict—as well as efforts to avoid violence by addressing its causes and deleterious results. Peacemakers may be active in all three tracks, or in what is sometimes called multi-track diplomacy.
Selected peacemaking organizations
Selected list of prominent inter-governmental and non-governmental peacemaking organizations:- Centre for Conflict Resolution
- Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue
- Center for Nonviolent Communication
- Christian Peacemaker Teams
- Community of Sant'Egidio
- Crisis Management Initiative
- Intergovernmental Authority on Development
- International Alert
- Initiatives of Change
- Organization of African Unity
- Responding to Conflict
- American Friends Service Committee, an arm of the Quakers
- Quaker Peace & Social Witness the corresponding Quaker department in Britain
- John Woolman College of Active Peace
- Reverend Sun Myung Moon of Universal Peace Federation
- Student Peacemakers
- Search for Common Ground
- swisspeace
- The United Nations
- Borderless World Foundation