Thania Paffenholz, born on 2 February 1965 in Cologne, Germany, is an academic and policy advisor working on peace processes. She is currently Director of the Inclusive Peace and Transition Initiative at the Graduate Institute Geneva. Thania Paffenholz has led comparative research of peace processes for over two decades and has been an advisor in peace processes in Mozambique, Angola, Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan, Mali, Afghanistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Yemen, Egypt, El Salvador, Syria and Colombia. She received the Wihuri International Prize in 2015 for her work as a peace researcher.
Broadening participation in political negotiations
Since 2011, Thania Paffenholz is leading a comparative analysis of over forty peace and political transition processes, looking at the role, modalities, and impact of various actors involved in negotiations, including civil society, women’s groups, minorities, political parties and armed groups. This work has informed United Nations policy initiatives, notably the United Nations Global Study on Women, Peace and Security and the work of the United Nations High Level independent panel on United Nations Peace Operations.
From 2005 to 2010, she led a research project on inclusion and peace processes, which resulted in the publication of the book Civil Society & Peacebuilding: A Critical Assessment .
Construire la paix sur le terrain; Mode d’emploi. Bruxelles: Groupe de recherche et d'information sur la paix et la sécurité, 2000.
Unpacking the 'Local Turn' in Peacebuilding: A Critical Assessment towards an Agenda for Further Research, Third World Quarterly, 2015, 36:5, 857-874.
Civil society and Peace Negotiations: Beyond the inclusion-exclusion dichotomy, Negotiation Journal 1, January 2014, 69-91.
International Peacebuilding Goes Local: Analysing Lederach’s Conflict Transformation Theory and its Ambivalent Encounter with 20 years of Practice, Peacebuilding, Taylor and Francis 1, January 2014, 11-27.
Civil Society and Peacebuilding: A Critical Assessment. Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2010.
Civil Society and Peacebuilding, CCDP Working Paper 4, Geneva: 2009
Aid for Peace: A Guide to Planning and Evaluation for Conflict Zones. Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2007.
Peacebuilding: A Field Guide. Avec Luc Reychler. Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2000.