Liberia

Project Liberia 2007 group learningIn its first five years, the Liberian Initiative supported the establishment of a mediation service for and by refugees in a refugee camp, enhanced the capacity for mediation among a wide range of Ghanaian officials, facilitated the safe re-integration of 75 ex-combatants in community following vocational training and psychosocial support; and brought together women of nine tribes to reweave the social fabric in their fractured society.
The team worked with local partners to increase the coping skills of at-risk youth – motorcycle taxi drivers known as Pen Pen boys. MBBI also worked toward increasing trust and cohesion among youth, the community, and the police—across the country and in regions spanning Liberia’s borders. 

2012 Liberia Team leadersBoard Liaison: Dave Joseph
Project Team Leaders: John Lewis Moore, Ginny Morrison, Prabha Sankaranarayan
Project Team: Arthur Finegold, Barbara Graettinger, Mary Jo Harwood, LaVerne Baker Hotep, Marc Jorgensen, Tracy Kern, Donnyen Kofa, Steve Lancken (with many thanks to the more than 35 previous team contributors)
Partners:

Executive Summary

2012 Liberia Tracey and LaverneThe Liberian Initiative began its work with Liberians in 2007 and was committed to rebuilding personal and systemic capacity to coexist peacefully. The Initiative established relationships in communities and with a wide range of local and international partners, from all sectors from governmental to grass roots levels. It coordinated activities to increase the capacity for skillful communication, cooperation, and collaboration among Liberians—as well as the NGOs and government agencies serving them.

2012 Liberia (2)The Initiative adjusted its work to the happy reality that Liberia had moved from emergency to development. The Initiative formulated plans to increase the conflict competencies of youth-centered NGOs, much-criticized youth who drive motorcycle taxis – many of whom were ex-combatants, college and secondary school youth, and women’s NGOs. The Initiative hoped to work with women’s NGOs to create alliances across country borders to reduce violence cycles in the region.

Prior to this, the Liberian Initiative and its consortium of Liberian partners worked with rural women of nine tribes and two religions. The Initiative offered a program combining:

  • training Liberian peacebuilders in dialogue methods, resiliency building, and trainingproject Liberia 2011 Woman working smaller techniques
  • a series of dialogues among the women participants
  • a series of dialogues in the community
  • a series of trainings in the community to increase understanding of trauma, its effect on conflict prevention/resolution, and ways of responding supportively
  • training in sustainable agriculture techniques and joint farming and marketing activity
  • mentoring

That women’s project grew out of initial work at the invitation of a resident of Ghana’s largest refugee camp. There, MBBI trained and advised residents in setting up a community and peer mediation service.

Project Liberia 2011 Jan Luara and WesleyMBBI then worked with former child soldiers alongside numerous Liberian, Ghanaian and international partners. Research by the UN, the US Institute of Peace, and others showed that one of the critical factors of post-conflict peace was the employment and reintegration of former combatants.

The program provided: mentoring, teambuilding and conflict resolution training, construction skills, and psychological counseling to begin healing and rebuilding participants’ identity as community members. The project worked with receiving communities to build acceptance, and the group has repatriated and safely reintegrated into society.

The invitations grew, as MBBI heard from community members and leaders, the largest university, government agencies, and local NGOs and churches. The MBBI team members made 13 assessment and intervention visits.

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