Time: 6:30pmVenue: Skeel Lecture Theatre, People's Palace, Mile End Campus
A special seminar sponsored by the British Council’s Delphe-Iraq Programme, organised inassociation with Queen Mary’s Centre for Global Security and Development and History Department.Conflict in Iraq did not start with the 2003 invasion but has, in areas, been endemic since thefounding of the modern state. Using evidence both from Iraq and from comparable cases aroundthe world from Sri Lanka to Northern Ireland, this seminar explores why such conflicts occur, aresometimes so sustained, and the applicability of different approaches to peacebuilding both in Iraqand elsewhere.
The seminar will be chaired by Dr Rick Saull, Director of the Centre for Global Security andDevelopment and will feature presentations from:
Conflict in IraqDr Toby Dodge (author of Inventing Iraq and Iraq’s Future)Terrorism: Causes and ConsequencesDr Martyn Frampton (author of Talking to Terrorists: Making Peace in Northern Ireland and the Basque Country)Counter-Insurgency and InterventionDr Bryan Mabee (author of The Globalisation of Security)Complex Power-SharingDr Brendan O’Duffy (author of Self-Determination and Conflict Resolution in Northern Ireland, Sri Lanka and Beyond)
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This lecture may be recorded and published on the College website after the event