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Introduction:
Mari Fitzduff talks about her organization's role in coordinating the peacemaking efforts of various agencies in Northern Ireland. She describes multi-track diplomacy as "putting all the pieces of the jigsaw in place" so that people can work together toward a common goal.
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This rough transcript provides a text alternative to audio. We apologize for occasional errors and unintelligible sections (which are marked with ???).
Coordinating the Pieces
Mari Fitzduff
Professor and Director of the MA Conflict and
Coexistence Programme at Brandeis University
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A: They set up two agencies, one within the government, which we'd
suggested, to look at issues of conflict resolution. The other was independent
of the government, which was the Community Relations Council, which was funded
by both British funds and European funds., but it was independent so we could make choices about what we wanted to fund and decisions, etc. I went through the usual processes and
became the first chief executive of that.
For seven years I worked on that, working with trade unions, local community
groups, working with public bodies, farmers, police, army, working with
politicians, looking at basically their responsibility in terms of their
contribution to conflict resolution. Putting all the pieces of the jigsaw in
place, so that what the army did in one area didn't create problems for the
bridge building, so that the bridge building began to lead into politics, so the
economic development was done taking into account how do you unite people rather
than divide them.
Q: A certain amount of coordination.
A: Yes, there was a lot. We had a list in our offices of all the groups we needed to affect change, whether it was the sports council, basically there's a lot of sectarianism in sport, whether it was the arts council, which had huge potential but weren't developing community drama, community art, etc. So yes, we worked with dozens and dozens of different agencies at different times.
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