peace accords matrix

Working at the nexus between research and practice, the Peace Accords Matrix (PAM) program is comprised of researchers and practitioners seeking to promote and facilitate a higher order of integration between these domains. The PAM program is home to the largest existing collection of implementation data on intrastate peace agreements, and PAM team members regularly provide research support to ongoing peace processes on issues of peace agreement design and implementation.

The PAM project is a unique source of qualitative and quantitative longitudinal data on the implementation of 34 comprehensive peace agreements negotiated from 1989 to 2012. Drawing on this world class, peer-reviewed database, PAM researchers have developed a quantitative methodology to track the progress of peace accord implementation. The PAM database serves as a valuable tool for analysis, which the Kroc Institute uses to support the negotiation and implementation of peace accords. The PAM project develops evidence-based scholarly research and furthers policy-relevant analysis to end armed conflict and build sustainable peace.

While the PAM project has global reach, it has significant presence in Colombia through the PAM Barometer Initiative, for which John Paul was essential in helping to initiate and provides continuing support. The historic Colombia peace agreement signed on November 24, 2016 – celebrated as a major turning point in ending the country’s 52-year armed conflict – gives the University of Notre Dame’s Kroc Institute primary responsibility for technical verification and monitoring of implementation of the accord through the PAM Barometer Initiative. This is the first time a university-based research center has played such a direct role in supporting the implementation of a peace agreement, and the first time researchers have measured the implementation of a peace accord in real time. This initiative is developing significant innovations in peace accord monitoring and comparative analysis that are applicable to other peace processes around the world.

PAM was originally conceived of by John Darby at the University of Notre Dame Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies. John Paul was appointed Director of PAM in 2013 and currently serves as a Senior Advisor to the PAM Barometer Initiative in Colombia. The PAM database, the Barometer Initiative, and the latest research emergent from the initiative can be explored on the PAM website: https://peaceaccords.nd.edu/.

Forging Inclusive Peace

An article exploring challenges of inclusivity in peace processes and proposing a shift in metaphor to enhance inclusivity.

Estudio comparado del Acuerdo Final: retos y desafíos para su implementación

A presentation on the results of a comparative study of the Colombian peace agreement in an event organized by Función Pública and the Oficina del Alto Comisionado para la Paz held on February 16, 2017.

Los acuerdos no terminan los conflictos

A lecture delivered at the University of Cartagena in Colombia in contribution to the conference Diálogos de Paz.

Una mirada global de los procesos de paz

A lecture delivered on the occasion of the presentation of the Peace Accords Matrix in Bogotá, Colombia.

Desafíos para la construcción de paz en Colombia

Remarks shared at the conclusion of the Encuentro Nacional de Paz Territorial in Bogotá, Colombia, held in October 2015.

Entrevista a John Paul Lederach por Rolando Luque Mogrovejo

An interview by Rolando Luque Mogrovejo on the occasion of the XI Congreso Mundial de Mediación y I Congreso Nacional para la Construcción de la Paz held in Lima, Perú in September 2015.

The Moral Imagination

A video interview with Robert Wright for The Wright Show, a production of meaningoflife.tv.

After the Handshake

Reflections on the signing of the Colombian Peace Agreement, informed from practitioner experience and scholarly research.