Publikationen
Gaps and Overlaps: Navigating through contested German-Russian-Ukrainian narratives (Ukrainian version)
Results of the trilateral dialogue.
Konzept Friedensmediation in die außenpolitische Praxis umsetzen!
Stellungnahme der IMSD
Unterausschuss "Zivile Krisenprävention, Konfliktbearbeitung & vernetztes Handeln" Sitzung 9.3.2020 "Friedensmediation: Wie kann Deutschland seine Fähigkeiten weiter ausbauen?"
Dialogue-Faciliation Training Manual in Tamil: From shared narratives to joint responsibility (sha:re)
Dialogue-Faciliation Training Manual in Tamil: From shared narratives to joint responsibility (sha:re)
In the framework of our dialogue support project in Sri Lanka 2018-2020, a condensed version of the sha:re-training manual (english version) has been published in Sinhala and in Tamil in cooperation with our partners Rainbow Resources Lanka (Colombo) and the Robert Bosch Foundation.
Dialogue-Faciliation Training Manual in Sinhala: From shared narratives to joint responsibility (sha:re)
Dialogue-Faciliation Training Manual in Sinhala: From shared narratives to joint responsibility (sha:re)
In the framework of our dialogue support project in Sri Lanka 2018-2020 a condensed version of sha:re-training manual (english version) has been published in Sinhala and in Tamil in cooperation with our partners Rainbow Resources Lanka (Colombo) and the Robert Bosch Foundation.
Fact Sheet: Methodology and Communication Tools in Peace Mediation
- Basics of mediation: concepts and definitions
- The role and contributions of states in peace mediation
- The role and contributions of multilateral and non-state actors in peace mediation
- Conflict analysis and mediation entry points
- The normative framework and the international legal basis of peace mediation
- Methodology and communication tools in peace mediation
Blind Spots in Russian-Western Narratives on European Security
How can we get from contested narratives on the evolution of European Security after 1989 to improved understanding within the OSCE? A Russian-German dialogue project discussed this difficult question at two workshops in Moscow and Berlin. The 20 participants managed to find consensus on a jointly drafted report. Innovatively, the project focused on so-called „blind spots”– events that figure prominently in the narrative of one side, but are overlooked or neglected in the narrative of the other side.
Russian-Western Blind Spots: From Dialogue on Contested Narratives to Improved Understanding
Results of the Dialogue Group's work in the German-Russian Project 'Russia and ‘the West’: Towards a better understanding of what went wrong since the end of the cold war: Joint Analysis of Conflict Narratives and Exploration of Metanarratives' which was funded by the Federal Foreign Office and implemented in 2018.