Civil Society leaders elaborate recommendations on peace-building

Print PDF

Civil Society leaders elaborate recommendations on peace-buildingOn 9 July 2010, Georgian NGO experts gathered at a round table to discuss civil society recommendations on peace building in Georgia.

Under the aegis of the European Union’s Instrument for Stability, the project “Strengthening European Partnerships for Crisis Prevention and Response” is organising civil society round table events to develop policy recommendations on how to utilise the peace-building functions of civil society organisations in Georgia. The second round table session, co-organised by the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Human Rights (Vienna) and the International Center on Conflict and Negotiation (Tbilisi), took place on 9 July 2010 in Tbilisi. During the event a core working group of civil society experts presented the set of draft recommendations developed on the basis of participant inputs from the project’s first round table event held in April 2010.

The violent conflicts of the 1990s over Abkhazia and South Ossetia are still the dominant theme of public discourses on crisis prevention, conflict transformation and peace-building in Georgia, all the more so following the August 2008 war between Georgia and Russia. However, in the almost 20 years since Georgia achieved its independence and the conflicts over Abkhazia and South Ossetia erupted, the country has embarked on a path towards democracy and integration into the European political, economic and cultural space. This development signifies that Georgia is dedicated to fostering and adhering to European and standards of liberal democracy, which comprise a commitment to the peaceful regulation and transformation of the conflicts that may break out along the various fault lines of society.

The European Union, in extending its Neighbourhood Policy and recently the Eastern Partnership to Georgia, has acknowledged its role in the country’s democratic transformation processes, including in the process of peaceful conflict resolution. In this effort, the EU has recognised the importance of strengthening and harnessing the potential of Georgian civil society to contribute to a peaceful reconciliation of society’s diverging interest, and is contributing towards these goals through advice and funding.

The participants of the July 2010 round table event discussed the draft recommendations and provided their expert input to improve and fine-tune the document. The draft now contains brief problem analyses of seven priority areas for action on peace-building as well as concrete recommendations towards civil society itself, the Georgian government and international donors on how to strengthen the third sector in confidence and peace-building, crisis prevention and reconciliation. The project will now continue to work with all interested civil society actors on further elaborating these recommendations, publishing them in printed form and disseminating them to a wide range of actors.