Advancing Peacebuilding Through Promoting Human Rights and Inclusive Governance. North and East Syria as a Case Study

dc.contributor.advisor

Moriarty, Maureen

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Revkin, Mara

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Admay, Catherine

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Krupp, Corinne

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Alhajj, Imad

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2024-05-28T20:43:37Z

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2024-05-28T20:43:37Z

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2024-05-01

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The Sanford School of Public Policy

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Human rights violations, corruption, and weak rule of law are major conflict-driven factors threatening peace and the possibility of democratic governance in the North and East Syria (NES) region, mainly caused by the combined effects of weak political, legal, and technical institutions capacity and accountability mechanisms of the Kurdish-led Autonomous Administration in NES region, and exacerbated by instability and insecurity, economic woes, and a climate-conflict nexus impact.

A big part of the problem is the knowledge gap between theory and practice. As a result, the international community is missing the opportunity to advance peace and democratic governance.

This study seeks to address these problems in the post-conflict and fragile environment. The Kurdish-led Autonomous Administration in NES region as a case study. Particularly, this study asks what programming, lessons learned, and best practices are suggested by the experiences of local Syrian non-governmental organizations (LNGOs) and civil society to protect human rights and promote inclusive governance in the NES region. How can donors and major international NGOs better connect with and empower the work of the local Syrian NGOs and civil society efforts to advance peacebuilding in the NES region's fragile environment?

The introduction provides a concise overview of the link between inclusive governance, human rights, and peacebuilding, as well as the research question and the client. The Problem section provides an overview of Autonomous Administration in the NES region, which faces multifaceted governance and human rights challenges due to political, legal, technical, environmental, and social problems that cause a fragile environment and relapse into violent conflict in the NES region.

The methodology section is based on utilizing mixed methodology, literature review, and survey of local Syrian NGOs and civil society in the NES region, as well as conducting qualitative and quantitative methods analysis of primary data with heavy reliance on qualitative analysis. In the Search for Solution section, the study argues that human rights and inclusive governance are fundamental for peacebuilding, and international-led peacebuilding faces cultural and structural challenges and provides ‘alternative approaches’ to address the lack of ‘Political Will’ in peacebuilding and combating corruption.

The survey results and discussion section provide a platform for the local Syrian voices on issues of human rights and inclusive governance priorities and strategies to address partnership challenges, lack of long-term perspective, and undemocratic practices of the International NGOs and donors that are problematic to advancing inclusive, context-sensitive approach to support peacebuilding in the NES region.

The conclusion and recommendations section suggests an inclusive, holistic strategy that would bring all actors together to establish a clear path toward achieving an overarching strategic vision of preventing relapse of conflict, democratic governance, and building sustainable peace.

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/30740

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en_US

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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Human Rights, Democracy, Inclusive Governance, Peacebuilding, Democracy and Governance, Peace

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International Development, Humanitarian Policy and Practice, Localization, Triple Nexus, Peacebuilding Practice

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Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES), Post-Conflict Settlement, Fragile Environment, Civil Society, Local Non-Government Organizations (NGOs), INGO

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Advancing Peacebuilding Through Promoting Human Rights and Inclusive Governance. North and East Syria as a Case Study

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Master's project

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0

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