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Phone: (202) 429-3832
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Erin Boeke Burke
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Latest Institute Resources

Focus on Iraq
A comprehensive collection of Institute resources on Iraq including reports, Newsbytes, library resources, events, and more.

August 26, 2004 - Promoting Values as Critical as Military Force in Combatting Terrorism, Rice Says
Institute Newsbyte explores highlights from August 19 address by National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice at the Institute.

July 19, 2004 - Serbia Takes a Step in the Right Direction
USIPBriefing analyzes the outcome of the recent presidential elections in Serbia and their likely impact.

June 8, 2004 - The Broader Middle East and North Africa: Major Challenges Ahead
Institute Newsbyte examines the latest iteration of the U.S. initiative to promote democracy in the Middle East.

June 2, 2004 - Kosovo and Serbia: Still in Need of a Plan
New USIPeace Briefing addresses the root causes of the violence and possible solutions.

May 21, 2004 - The U.S. Mission in Iraq After June 30: Views from State and Defense
Institute Newsbyte examines the challenges ahead for the June 30 transition in Iraq.

April 15, 2004 - Kosovo: Status with Standards
Institute Newsbyte examines steps the international community can take to address the recent riots in Kosovo and prepare for eventual final status negotiations.

March 12, 2004 - Serbia Needs a Push in the Right Direction
Institute Newsbyte explores the current political situation in Serbia and examines potential policy options for the international community to promote regional stability.

February 26, 2004 - Iraq and its Neighbors: A Regional Architecture is Needed
Institute Newsbyte examines how regime change in Iraq has affected regional politics and potential roles for regional actors in the reconstruction of Iraq.

News Release

First Prize in National Peace Essay Contest Awarded to New York High School Student

June 25, 2004

WASHINGTON—Vivek Viswanathan of New Hyde Park, N.Y. was awarded first prize in this year's National Peace Essay Contest (NPEC), sponsored by the U.S. Institute of Peace. A student at Herricks High School, Viswanathan received a $10,000 college scholarship for his essay titled "Establishing Peaceful and Stable Postwar Societies Through Effective Rebuilding Strategy." In announcing the winner at the Institute's annual NPEC awards banquet on June 23, Institute president Richard H. Solomon commented on the high caliber of all the essays, noting that their authors "are already extraordinary ambassadors of peace."

David Leimbach of Jenks High School in Tulsa, Oklahoma was awarded a $5,000 scholarship for his second-place essay on "Attempts at Sustainable Progress Following Conflict: East Timor and Cambodia." Kevin Schaeffer, a student at the Canterbury School in Fort Wayne, Indiana won the third-place award of $2,500 toward his post-secondary education for his essay on "Political Reconstruction: Planting Democracy and Stability for the Next Generation."

Vivek Viswanathan, 1st place winner from New York
Vivek Viswanathan (left), first-place winner from New York, is presented with his award from U.S. Institute of Peace president Richard H. Solomon (right) at the awards banquet in Washington, D.C.

More than 1,000 students from American high schools across the United States and in U.S. territories and abroad participated in this year's contest, writing on the topic of rebuilding societies after conflict. In his essay, Viswanathan drew upon the 1947 U.S. Marshall Plan for post-World War II Europe as a successful example of post-war reconstruction and Somalia of the early 1990s as an unsuccessful model. He argued that to be effective, reconstruction efforts should be tailored to the specific post-war situation, obtain a large commitment of resources and assistance from the international community, and involve "a nation's own people in a way that allows them to ultimately control their destiny and that eventually provides a clear exit strategy for international actors."

NPEC Winners
Learn more about the National Peace Essay Contest.

Viswanathan, Leimbach, and Schaeffer joined the other 49 state-level winners in Washington, D.C. from June 19 through June 24 for an Institute of Peace program that introduced them to senior U.S. government and foreign embassy officials, members of Congress, and other experts involved in the making of American foreign policy. They assumed the roles of diplomats, government officials, and members of the international community in a special three-day problem solving simulation focusing on the conflict in Sudan. The purpose of the exercise was to encourage the participants to closely examine the process of post-conflict reconstruction.

You can follow Viswanathan and the other winners on their unique learning adventure in Washington, D.C. on the Institute's web site at www.usip.org.


Additional Online Resources


Created by Congress in 1984, the U.S. Institute of Peace is an independent, non-partisan federal institution dedicated to research, education, professional training, and policy development on matters of international conflict prevention, management, and resolution.

 

 


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