Reports

  • The Institutions for the Preservation of Civil Peace in Lebanon Today

    Sep 15, 2014
    Who threatens civil peace in Lebanon today? What to do? The Lebanese Foundation of Permanent Civil Peace, in collaboration with the Ramzi Youssef Assaf Foundation, held its annual meeting in Ebl El-Saki from September 13 to September 15, 2013 to answer to these questions in its 13th report of the Observatory of Civil Peace and Memory. Over forty participants, including politicians, academics, and social actors attended this conference.

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  • Retrieving the History of Lebanese Dialogue Throughout Twenty Five Years

    Oct 4, 2009
    National Dialogue has Ended… 
    There Remains Dialogue About General Policies 
    Growing Need for a Different Dialogue, More Straightforward, No Strings Attached 


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  • Programs and Works That Help Retrieve Normative Power and Republican Values

    Sep 16, 2008
    Within the Program ‘Civil Peace and Memory Monitor in Lebanon’, the Lebanese Foundation for Permanent Civil Peace has organized in cooperation with the Middle East Council of Churches – Department of Justice, Peace, and Human Rights, a seminar of the Program ‘Civil Peace and Memory Monitor in Lebanon’ about: ‘The Case of Social Defenses in Lebanon Today: Hurdles, Openings, the Moral of the Lebanese People, Levels of Immunity, the Republican Values, and Prospects.’

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  • Retrieving the Rule of Law to Strengthen Civil Peace

    Apr 14, 2008
    The Lebanese Foundation for Civil Peace has issued its annual report 2007-2008 on ‘Civil Peace and Memory Monitor in Lebanon’ in cooperation with Forum for Development, Culture and Dialogue-FDCD and The Middle East Association of Training and Retreat Center-MEATRC after three work meetings held at the Forum of Development and Dialogue. Hereafter is a summary of the report:

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  • Putting An End to Lebanon as a Playground

    Nov 20, 2006
    The yearly 2006 report of the ‘Civil Peace and Memory Monitor’ – Lebanese Foundation for Permanent Civil Peace – has just been published. It focuses on events, facts, changes, and achievements in relation with the pact-based culture and its implementation; it also puts forward proposals for the up-coming three years.

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  • Concept of Lebanon

    Mar 21, 2005
    The Lebanese Foundation for Permanent Civil Peace has just published its eighth annual Report of its “Civil Peace and Memory Monitor”.
    The Report includes two parts: a chronological analysis of the events in Lebanon in the light of a grid set up by the Foundation of more than one hundred ‘Indicators of the Lebanese coexistence Pact’; and concrete action proposals in order to strengthen the national pact and build a collective and shared memory.


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  • Report on Monitoring Civil Peace and Memory in Lebanon

    Sep 6, 2004
    The Lebanese Foundation for Permanent Civil Peace in cooperation with Ayia Napa Conferences Center (Cyprus) held its sixth annual seminar about the program “Monitoring Civil Peace and Memory in Lebanon” with thirty members from the program’s work team of researchers, university students and professors, media experts, from August 26 to September 1, 2004.

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  • The Declining State and Alert Citizenship

    Aug 11, 2003
    The programme “Monitoring Civil Peace in Lebanon” launched in 1999 by the Lebanese Foundation for Permanent Civil Peace has, in cooperation with Ayia Napa Conference Center (Cyprus), published for the fifth year in a now, its annual Report based on a “Grid of 120 indicators of the Lebanese coexistence pact”, documentary research and debate that gathered over twenty university students, researchers and social actors. 

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  • Denied Memories and Unbridled Governance

    Sep 6, 2002
    Monitoring Civil Peace, a Programme put forward by the Lebanese Foundation for Permanent Civil Peace has just published its fourth annual report in 2002 on the basis of more than 125 indicators of the Lebanese coexistence pact.

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  • Report of Civil Peace Observatory in Lebanon

    Sep 6, 2001
    The replacement of constitutional institutions by a state controlled para-military apparatus is the most dangerous threat to civil peace in Lebanon, according to the third annual report of the Lebanese Foundation for Permanent Civil Peace. The report also claims that the likelihood of another Lebanese civil war is greater than last year.

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