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Genocide Prevention Blog

Get our latest reports and analysis on communities experiencing or at risk of mass atrocities, information on Center programs, and other resources for policy, academic, and public audiences.

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Topic:Lessons Learned

Displaying 1-7 of 7 Blog Posts

  • How Peace Operations Can Help Prevent Genocide and Mass Atrocities

    We interviewed leading peacekeeping practitioners about how peace operations can most effectively prevent genocide and mass atrocities. Explore key findings from our report, the latest addition to our "Lessons Learned in Preventing and Responding to Mass Atrocities" project.

  • New Report: Improving the Use of Lessons Learned and Other Evidence for Atrocity Prevention

    Atrocity prevention practitioners have long called for greater investment in lessons learned efforts. The Simon-Skjodt Center’s new report outlines the challenges to the use of lessons learned and other evidence in atrocity prevention policy making at the US Department of State. It offers specific recommendations to advance priority goals given the strong legal and policy mandates already in place.

  • Atrocity Prevention Lessons Learned: Common Theme in New US Strategy and Simon-Skjodt Center Project

    One strong theme in the new US government’s United States Strategy to Anticipate, Prevent, and Respond to Atrocities is the importance of evaluation, learning, and adaptation. These elements of the strategy reflect the same basic tenets that motivated the Simon-Skjodt Center to conduct the project, “Lessons Learned in Preventing and Responding to Mass Atrocities”—namely, that atrocity prevention efforts should be informed by what has been learned about how to accomplish this goal, and that continued learning is crucial to help address gaps in our current knowledge.

  • Visiting Fellow’s Report Analyzes Atrocity Prevention and US Policy Toward South Sudan

    In a new report, From Independence to Civil War: Atrocity Prevention and US Policy Toward South Sudan, Jon Temin, a Visiting Fellow at the Museum’s Simon-Skjodt Center, explores how the US might have been more effective in helping prevent or mitigate the civil war and atrocities against civilians.