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Agreements and mechanisms to stop or manage violence remain an inescapable component of peace processes to end armed conflict. Ceasefires are often one of the first issues that belligerents seek to negotiate, and in civil wars can serve as a foundation for inclusive and comprehensive peace talks. In the places where comprehensive talks are not yet possible, partial, temporary, local or humanitarian ceasefires can help to de-escalate conflict and reduce violence. 

Since Security Council resolution 50 (1948) calling for a cessation of hostilities in Palestine to be monitored by the UN, the Organization has been involved in hundreds of ceasefires. Drawing upon this deep institutional experience, MSU provides operational support, strategic guidance and organizes capacity building initiatives on the negotiation or mediation of ceasefires to wide range of partners globally, including senior UN officials, Member States, Regional Organizations and other partners.

Operational support

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MSU responds to dozens of requests a year for targeted technical expertise, operational support and advice on ceasefires and security arrangements from UN and non-UN partners. This support is regularly provided to both UN and non-UN partners by the senior advisors of Mediation Support Unit and Standby Team of Senior Mediation Advisers mechanism (including part-time ceasefire specialists). 

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Such operational support could include, but is not limited to, the following activities:

  • Desk review, analysis or provision of technical advice with respect to a specific thematic area of a ceasefire. MSU regularly provides technical advice to UN missions with mandates to negotiation or assist with the implementation of ceasefires, including in Colombia, Libya and Yemen;
     
  • Remote or on site deployments to provide specific deliverables related to the design, negotiation or management of a ceasefire. In 2024, MSU supported proximity talks convened by the Personal Envoy of the Secretary-General for Sudan to explore measures and options to ensure the distribution of humanitarian assistance and protection of civilians across Sudan;
     
  • Support in the planning and delivery of tailored thematic workshops and engagement sessions with national stakeholders during a ceasefire process. In 2023, MSU assisted the United Nations Monitoring and Verification Mission in Colombia and Norway to organize separate workshops for the Government of Colombia and the Ejército de Liberación Nacional on global experience in the negotiation and management of ceasefires.
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United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia (UNOMIG) Military and Civilian Police jointly patrol in the Gali sector of Abkhazia region, Georgia.
UN Photo/Justyna Melnikiewicz

Strategic Guidance

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Ceasefires are as old as armed conflict. Each one is unique and pursued in a broader political, security, economic, social and humanitarian context. Careful analysis of this dynamic context – and particularly its political dimensions – can assist mediators in working with the parties to formulate a ceasefire whose scope is realistic.

MSU develops strategic guidance documents on ceasefires and security arrangements to United Nations senior leadership and staff, mediators, and facilitators as well as external partners. The flagship DPPA Guidance on Mediation of Ceasefires launched in 2022 was a first-of-its-kind globally and intended as a key reference guide for stakeholders seeking paths out of armed conflict.

Guidance on Mediation of Ceasefires

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While recognizing that ceasefires are inherently political in nature, the 2022 DPPA Guidance on Mediation of Ceasefires focuses on the technical considerations that affect ceasefire mediation and negotiation processes. Drawing upon the UN’s decades of experience in supporting ceasefires, the Guidance provides a framework of basic building blocks for ceasefires that can be adapted to any given context. 

It introduces planning considerations to help mediators and parties to prepare for ceasefire negotiations, implement ceasefire agreements, and suggests innovative options to strengthen inclusion and the meaningful participation of women. Using a diverse set of ceasefire examples from around the world, the Guidance also elaborates on some of the most common technical elements found in ceasefire agreements and provides advice on how to design credible and realistic monitoring and verification mechanisms.

The Guidance is available in Arabic, English, French, Russian and Spanish. 

Author
United Nations Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs

The Guidance is designed to support United Nations senior leader- ship and staff, mediators, and facilitators within and outside the UN, along with their teams, conflict parties, representatives of States and regional organizations, national and international non-governmental organizations, women’s groups and other stakeholders in peace processes.

Author
United Nations Department of Political Affairs, United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) and United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)

The United Nations requires its mediators to address conflict-related sexual violence. This guidance offers mediators and their teams principles and strategies for including this critical peacebuilding and security concern in ceasefire and peace agreements.

Guidance for Mediators: Addressing Conflict-Related Sexual Violence in Ceasefire and Peace Agreements

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Prepared in response to the request of the General Assembly and in conformity with the Charter of the United Nations, this Guidance document aims to inform the design and management of mediation processes. It is intended as a resource for mediators, States and other actors supporting mediation efforts but is also relevant for conflict parties, civil society and other stakeholders. It is available in all UN languages.

Capacity Building

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The negotiations or mediation of ceasefires and security arrangements involve discussions on a range of complex technical issues. Stakeholders must have the required technical knowledge of the concepts that enables them to present their vision and positions in a logical and coherent manner. Capacity building is also aimed at increasing their ability to create more realistic options and identify common areas of potential agreement. 

DPPA therefore complements its operational activities with an ambitious global approach to capacity building of UN staff, peacemaking partners and conflict parties. Starting in 2012, DPPA has co-delivered the annual UN Ceasefire Mediation Course with Norway and Switzerland. While open to UN staff, this course uniquely targets representatives of government and non-state parties to conflict. Recognizing that further targeted efforts are required to overcome obstacles to women’s participation in ceasefires, in 2021 DPPA launched an online Women in Ceasefire Negotiations Course (WiCC) that is focused on women from conflict settings. 

In collaboration with partners, MSU also develops tailored thematic workshops and engagement sessions with national stakeholders during a ceasefire process.

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Men hunged on a tableUN Photo/Agnieszka Mikulska

Annual UN Ceasefire Mediation Course – Oslo, Norway

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MSU conducts the United Nations Ceasefire Mediation Course on an annual basis. This training is conducted in partnership with the Norwegian Defense International Centre /Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs.

The training is attended by mid- and senior-level officials of the United Nations and its partners who currently work in an environment where a ceasefire arrangement is either being mediated or already in place and who are directly involved in developing, supporting or managing the ceasefire arrangement. In addition to field and headquarters-based UN staff, the training is also attended by selected representatives from member states, regional or sub-regional organizations and parties to conflict who bring realistic insights and rich experiences to the course.

Annual UN Women and Ceasefires Online Course

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Globally women continue to be largely underrepresented as direct participants in ceasefire negotiations and implementation. This extended online course seeks to increase the number of women with the technical skills to participate in ceasefire and security arrangements negotiations and implementation. It is conducted on an annual basis with approximately 30-35 women from a diverse set of global contexts. The course is being undertaken in furtherance of DPPA's commitment to the implementation of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda, in particular to support women’s full, equal and meaningful participation in peace efforts and strengthen the gender-responsiveness of security arrangements. For any inquiries, please contact women-in-ceasefires@un.org.

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Women attending a zoom-hosted online course