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Article Summary of "Bringing Croats and Muslims Together" by United States Institute of Peace
Citation: "Bringing Croats and Muslims Together". Peace Watch. United States Institute of Peace. Vol. II, No. 2. February 1996. P. 4.
This Article Summary written by: Mariya Yevsyukova, Conflict Research Consortium
The Croatian Democratic Project (CDP) in Washington, D.C. opened two Centers for Ethnic
Reconciliation in Bosnia in the towns of Livno and Travnik. The goal of the project is to
bring Croatian and Muslim communities together to work on a shared future. The two towns
historically were populated by both Muslim and Croats, and the two communities still
co-exist there. These centers will establish and support local civic organizations which
will work toward strengthening of the Croat-Muslim federation at the grass-roots level.
They also will help to integrate resettled refugees into the community. Dudley Weeks,
director of the Conflict Resolution Workshop and Global FutureLinks of Washington, D.C.,
has conducted workshops among the staff and local leaders in "cooperative planning,
prejudice reduction, and conflict resolution" (p. 4). Local leaders will be working
on creating joint projects, the fulfillment of which will demand involvement from both
communities. Another direction of the centers' work is to organize programs "in civic
education, human rights, legal and property issues, micro-enterprise development, public
administration, and youth issues" (p. 4). The centers are autonomous from the CDP and
local governments. The creation of the centers was not an easy task, since the idea of
building civil society through non-governmental organizations is new to the region. One of
the organizers shared a concern that although the Dayton agreement created conditions for
this type of work, the international community is responding too slowly. He said that
lasting peace can come only with the development of democratic institutions and civil
society. For foreign assistance to be effective, civic infrastructure should be
established. Reconciliation centers are an example of how this might be achieved.
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| If it's natural to kill, how come men have to go into training to learn how? -- Joan Baez |
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Featured Links Organizations Making Noteworthy Contributions to Conflict Resolution and Peace:
 Anti-Trafficking in Persons in Asia (TipInAsia) Portal
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Partner Projects CRInfo mini-grant recipients, gateway partners, and affiliated projects:
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 John Hume Former leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party in the United Kingdom, and 1998 Nobel Peace Laureate |
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