Professional Peacemakers in Ukraine: Mediators and Dialogue Facilitators Before and After 2014

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18523/kmlpj120119.2017-3.117-136

Keywords:

mediation, dialogue facilitation, civil society in peacebuilding, conflict resolution, Ukraine

Abstract

Based on the findings of qualitative empirical study, this article reveals that, in contrast to most violent conflicts in the world, the Ukrainian context is distinguished by the presence of a self-organized, self-aware and skilled local professional communities of mediators and dialogue facilitators. The article analyses each professional community and concludes that Ukrainian mediators and dialogue facilitators are capable to serve as independent actors in peacebuilding process, guiding their international colleagues and the government as for the best practices of mediation and dialogue. At the same time, both communities still experience pains of professional growth such as making choices between core methods and societal roles and they need external support. Additionally, the 2014 crisis has brought some opportunities concerning increased funding for mediation and dialogue, and the top-down pressure of the international community for greater use of these tools. These opportunities have, in turn, triggered some challenges such as an increased competition for funding and ideological tensions between “the peacemakers” and the other groups of Ukrainian civil society inspired by the military discourse.

Author Biography

Tatiana Kyselova, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy; Faculty of Law

Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law at Kyiv-Mohyla Academy in Kyiv, Ukraine and a visiting teaching fellow at Queen Mary, University of London. In 2015–2017 she was a Marie Curie/COFUND postdoctoral fellow at University of Turin, Italy. She received her LLM from the London School of Economics and Political Science, kandydat nauk from the Ukrainian National Academy of Science and a DPhil from University of Oxford. She specializes in socio-legal studies, conflict resolution, alternative dispute resolution, and post-Soviet transition

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How to Cite

Kyselova, T. (2017). Professional Peacemakers in Ukraine: Mediators and Dialogue Facilitators Before and After 2014. Kyiv-Mohyla Law and Politics Journal, (3), 117–136. https://doi.org/10.18523/kmlpj120119.2017-3.117-136