Natalia Mirimanova

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Natalia Mirimanova is a conflict resolution scholar- practitioner and has over 25 years of experience of mediation,  design and facilitation of dialogue processes, research and  advocacy in the South Caucasus, Central Asia, Russia, Moldova,  Ukraine, Western Balkans, Eastern Europe and Cyprus.  Natalia received her Ph.D. from the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University.

Mariam Abdel Baky

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Mariam Abdel Baky is a Project Manager at International Alert’s Tunisia office. She manages projects on inclusive and democratic governance on Tunisia’s borders with Algeria and Libya. Her areas of expertise include socio-economic rights, governance, youth and marginalisation, and gender.

Previously, Mariam was based in Cairo working on socio- economic projects in the south of Egypt. She holds an MSc in International Relations Theory from the London School of Economics and Political Science.

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Kalpana Jha

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Kalpana Jha is a researcher at Martin Chautari, Kathmandu.  She has worked extensively on Madhesi politics and is the  author of The Madhesi Upsurge and the Contested Idea of Nepal  (Springer, 2017). She has worked as a researcher on the  ‘Borderlands, Brokers and Peacebuilding’ project.

Patrick Meehan

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Patrick Meehan works in the Department of Development  Studies at SOAS, University of London. His research explores  the political economy of violence, conflict and development, and  engages specifically with the relationship between illicit drug  economies, statebuilding and peacebuilding, with a primary  focus on Myanmar’s borderlands with China and Thailand.

Jeremy Lind

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Jeremy Lind is a Research Fellow at the Institute of  Development Studies at Sussex University. A human  geographer by training, his work explores the governance  and politics of development in the Horn of Africa, with  a particular focus on pastoralist contexts.

Patrick Meehan

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Patrick Meehan works in the Department of Development  Studies at SOAS, University of London. His research explores  the political economy of violence, conflict and development,  and engages specifically with the relationship between  illicit drug economies, statebuilding and peacebuilding,  with a primary focus on Myanmar’s borderlands with China  and Thailand. He is a co-investigator on the GCRF-funded  ‘Drugs and (dis)order’ project.

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Jonathan Goodhand

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Jonathan Goodhand is Professor of Conflict and  Development Studies at SOAS. He has extensive experience  as a researcher and advisor in South and Central Asia for  a range of non-government organisations and aid agencies.  His research interests include borderlands, the political  economy of aid and conflict, NGOs and peacebuilding, and  ‘post conflict’ reconstruction.

Anwar Jaber

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Anwar Jaber is a PhD researcher in Architecture at the Centre for Urban Conflicts Research in the Department of Architecture, University of Cambridge. Her research focuses on current spatial developments in the Palestinian city of Ramallah under the Palestinian statebuilding project. She previously practised as an architect and urban planner in Jerusalem.

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Accord Insight Issue 4: Borderlands and peacebuilding

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