Posts

Compassionate Reasoning and Reconciliation

We are inviting you to the 18th Critical Dialogue on Reconciliation, where we’ll be exploring the place of compassionate reasoning in reconciliation processes.

Compassion, Conflict and Reconciliation

We invite you to the 15th Critical Dialogue on Reconciliation, where we’ll be thinking together about the role of compassion in conflict and reconciliation.

Urban Youth and School Life

In this seminar Diego Nieto presents his PhD thesis on the disjuncture between young people’s experiences of war and their school curricula

Embrace Dialogue Academia 7: A New Cycle of War in Colombia?

In this seminar Prof. Francisco Gutiérrez presents his latest book, “A New Cycle of War in Colombia?”, with comments from Prof. Jenny Pearce

Second Public Dialogue about peace with the ELN: Conflict Dynamics and Challenges for Peace with the ELN in 2021

Embrace Dialogue and the Winchester Centre of Religion, Reconciliation and Peace invite you to “Conflict Dynamics and Challenges for Peace with the ELN”, a public dialogue with Elizabeth Dickinson (Senior Analyst Colombia, International Crisis Group) and Kyle Johnson (Cofounder, Conflict Responses).
Chair: Andrei Gómez-Suárez (Winchester Centre of Religion, Reconciliation and Peace & Embrace Dialogue).

Embrace Dialogue Academia Seminar 6: Violent Nonstate Group Interactions in Colombia’s Conflict

In this seminar, based on an article published in World Politics, ‘The Logic of Illicit Flows in Armed Conflict’ (2020), Dr Annette Idler analyses why there is variation in how violent nonstate groups interact in armed conflict.

Embrace Dialogue Academia Seminar 3: Coca and Capitalism in Cauca

In this talk, Dr. Anthony Dest analyzes a relatively new phenomenon in northern Cauca: the massive expansion of coca cultivations.

Relatives of Missing Persons are the Key Actors for the Unit of the Search for the Disappeared

In Colombia, there is a long history of searching for the disappeared and records of forced disappearance date back to the 1950s. Several actors have focused on these searches. On the one hand, the Colombian state looks for those missing, through judicial institutions and the police. On the other hand, the families of disappeared persons, who suffer deeply from the absence of their loved ones and the injustice of it, lead their own initiatives for encountering them. In both cases, searches are founded on chasing down leads, and following clues and intuitions. For the state this means implementing a systematic search with logistical and technical support. In the case of relatives, searches are more erratic, marked by deep loneliness, uncertainty and risk, but families also have the ability to imagine new forms of encounters. This snapshot analyses the commitment of transitional institutions to putting family members at the centre of their work.

The ABC of the Unit for the Search of Disappeared Persons (UBPD)

The Unit for the Search of Disappeared Persons (UBPD) is responsible for searching those people who were disappeared in the context of the armed conflict. It is one of the three institutions of the Comprehensive System for Truth, Justice, Reparations, and Non-Repetition (CSTJRN) that arose from the Peace Agreement signed in 2016. The unit was developed in response to requests by relatives of disappeared persons, and civil society organizations that were part of the peace dialogues. In particular, they asked for the establishment of an institution in charge of searching for the disappeared without discrimination on the basis of their origin, age, gender, religion, militancy, or any other factor. 

The Challenges of Transitional Justice from an Afro-Colombian Perspective

Between August and September 2020, the Transitional Justice team of ReD organised two online dialogues that addressed the perspectives of Afro-Colombian social leaders on transitional justice. We discussed the three regional cases currently under the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP): Case 002 focused on Nariño, Case 004 on Urabá, and Case 005 on Cauca and Valle del Cauca; and what the leaders considered to be the JEP’s greatest challenges. This snapshot gathers some of the reflections, concerns, and proposals that arose during those events.