• How structural inequality and exclusion fuel hate

  • 2023/06/19
  • 再生時間: 10 分
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How structural inequality and exclusion fuel hate

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  • Vanessa Wyeth is UNICEF’s Global Lead for Conflict Prevention, Fragility and Peacebuilding. She brings to the role 20 years of policy experience working on conflict and fragility, most recently serving as Senior Policy Adviser at the Permanent Mission of Canada to the UN, where she led Canada’s 2020 chairmanship of the Peacebuilding Commission and was one of the lead negotiators for the 2016 and 2020 resolutions on peacebuilding and sustaining peace. Prior to joining the mission in 2015, she worked at the OECD Development Cooperation Directorate as lead advisor on conflict and fragility and head of the secretariat for the DAC International Network on Conflict and Fragility. Before that, she worked at NYU’s Center on International Cooperation and the International Peace Institute, where she led IPI’s research on peacebuilding and state fragility from 2004-2012, and served as a visiting fellow to USAID’s Center for Conflict Management in 2011. She started her career working for UNFPA in Kosovo in 2002, with additional field experience in Niger and Rwanda, and has published widely on conflict, development, and peacebuilding, including as co-editor, with Chuck Call, of Building States to Build Peace (Lynne Rienner, 2008). She holds a master’s degree in international affairs from Columbia University.

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あらすじ・解説

Vanessa Wyeth is UNICEF’s Global Lead for Conflict Prevention, Fragility and Peacebuilding. She brings to the role 20 years of policy experience working on conflict and fragility, most recently serving as Senior Policy Adviser at the Permanent Mission of Canada to the UN, where she led Canada’s 2020 chairmanship of the Peacebuilding Commission and was one of the lead negotiators for the 2016 and 2020 resolutions on peacebuilding and sustaining peace. Prior to joining the mission in 2015, she worked at the OECD Development Cooperation Directorate as lead advisor on conflict and fragility and head of the secretariat for the DAC International Network on Conflict and Fragility. Before that, she worked at NYU’s Center on International Cooperation and the International Peace Institute, where she led IPI’s research on peacebuilding and state fragility from 2004-2012, and served as a visiting fellow to USAID’s Center for Conflict Management in 2011. She started her career working for UNFPA in Kosovo in 2002, with additional field experience in Niger and Rwanda, and has published widely on conflict, development, and peacebuilding, including as co-editor, with Chuck Call, of Building States to Build Peace (Lynne Rienner, 2008). She holds a master’s degree in international affairs from Columbia University.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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