Information on this page:
Overview | Curriculum | Themes | Special Opportunities | Student Organizations | Internships/Career Opportunities | Faculty
IPCR Program Web Site
International Peace & Conflict Resolution created its own Web Site in 2005. This interactive Web site is dedicated to connecting students, alumni, faculty, staff, and practitioners in an effort to maintain an vibrant online community. The site also includes information on IPCR departmental events, the Society for Peace & Conflict Resolution student organization, Creative Peace Initiatives student organization, and the Students for Ethics, Peace & Global Affairs student organization. Additionally, there are current job and internship postings on the site to give a sense of the types of sectors students might expect upon graduation. You can create your personal profile as a "Prospective Student" today. To apply to the IPCR program, go to the Graduate Admissions page.
The International Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR) program has a history that began with the students themselves. Students in the School of International Service called for peace and conflict resolution studies and in the 1980s faculty began to offer courses in peace and conflict resolution studies. It was not long before there was greater demand by students and faculty to have more course offerings in the field and by 1995 a full Master of Arts degree in International Peace and Conflict Resolution was inaugurated. With the beginning of the MA degree and later additional dual and joint degree programs, IPCR has grown steadily over the past years.
Now with seven tenure-track faculty identified as IPCR faculty as well as temporary and adjunct faculty who bring a wealth of diverse knowledge and experience of the field, IPCR is a dynamic and growing part of American University. The faculty, staff and students pride themselves on the international, inter-disciplinary, inter-linking aspects of the courses and degree programs now being offered.
With a strong emphasis on the blending of theory and practice, peace studies with conflict resolution students, and always with a search for alternatives to violence, IPCR stands apart as a reputable and unique academic and professional training program. In addition to the graduate degree programs, the undergraduate concentrations, the certificate program and the practical hands-on institutes, there are many related opportunities on and off campus including the Journal for Peacebuilding and Development and the American University Center for Global Peace.
Our master's degrees and other offerings in IPCR prepare our students to participate creatively in contributing to peacebuilding in conflict and post conflict societies. The analysis of systemic and overt violence and causes of war, of human rights and peacebuilding, and of conflict resolution alternatives leads students to a deeper understanding of the complexities of conflict situations, the social impact of nonviolent movements, conflict resolution practice and peace studies. Our students also learn what it takes to develop cooperative relationships.
Our students are challenged to probe philosophical thought and the cultural basis of belief systems and existing theories, be they psychological, social, political, religious, economic, or communication theories. The rigorous academic curriculum helps our students to develop critical thinking and analytical skills as well as alternative methodologies for research. The cutting-edge research and professional engagement of faculty members encourages our students to think about and develop new models for an unfolding society and link theory with practice. The curriculum also trains our students to shape policy and social structures.
Contending theories of conflict, the causes of war, organized violence and the condition of peace, their basic assumptions, and their relationship to present global policies, structures and events.
Alternative approaches to peacemaking, their basic assumptions and methodologies, and their application to current conflict situations.
The role of culture and cross cultural communication in conflict situations, conflict resolution, international negotiations, realization of human rights, and the role of identity labels such as gender, race, ethnicity and their role in conflict dynamics and conflict resolution. Development of skills in critical analysis and conflict resolution alternatives.
Values and ethics embedded in different religious traditions as well as ways of fostering reconciliation and coexistence.
IPCR also collaborates closely with a group of student organizations, through which students can represent themselves officially to the Washington DC and broader community. Students are afforded the opportunity to develop leadership skills in addition to gaining first-hand experience in organizing panel discussions, conferences, trainings, and other academic and practical events and initiatives. Their Web sites and contact information are provided below and students are encouraged to get involved as soon as they are accepted to the program.
IPCR students have interned at organizations such as:
Students have also interned at foreign embassies and many others offices and organizations in Washington. Our students are encouraged to take advantage of the rich offerings of the city, as well as to explore opportunities for international travel to complement their studies on campus.
The American University Career Center as well as IPCR staff is available to students and alumni who seek assistance in finding jobs in the field. Electronic notices, speakers and panels bring information to students at any point in their academic and professional careers in order to help keep them connected. IPCR attracts a diverse array of student's whit diverse career interests from advocacy to governance, training to research, grassroots to governmental, etc.
The study of peace and conflict resolution draws on a variety of academic disciplines. Our faulty are trained in political science, cross-cultural communication, sociology, international relations, social psychology, anthropology, international law, and counseling. They are deeply engaged in some of the most pressing issues of our times, promoting dialogue in the Middle East and Africa, improving the participation of women in peacebuilding in the Balkans and Northern Ireland, and transforming post-conflict societies in Latin America.
In their research and teaching of conflict and violence, they examine alternative paradigms and analyses of how domestic and international policies and systems work in relation to peace and conflict. Thus, IPCR can integrate the study of cultural and psych9logical factors contributing to violent conflicts; social, economic, and political factors; and systemic forces that drive social systems toward violence. A constructive approach is also offered in studying the processes that can lead to nonviolent conflict resolution and transformation.
Information on this page:
Overview | Curriculum | Themes | Special Opportunities | Internships/Career Opportunities | Faculty
Information elsewhere:
IPCR Home Page | SIS Graduate Admissions