Conflict Studies and Management

Research Profile
Today more than ever, skilled peacebuilders capable of understanding how to navigate international and local dynamics to prevent and manage violent conflicts, as well as building pathways for sustainable peace, are urgently needed. The specialization is part of the German leading public policy institutions dedicated to studying conflict prevention, mediation, design, and evaluation of strategies for peacebuilding. Following an interdisciplinary and application-oriented perspective we go beyond the causes and effects of direct violence, and we further interrogate how public policy addresses structural violence in different latitudes. Thus, our Conflict Studies and Management specialization acknowledges the interdependences among different regions, and the importance of considering different levels of analysis such as the international, national, and subnational for the understanding and prevention of direct and indirect violence and issues like social justice, food security, cybersecurity, climate chance, migration, and development, among others. We also acknowledge the legacies of violent conflict, and the challenges that societies face even after direct conflict ends. Following the global pandemic and its impact on state surveillance, radicalization, populism, civil liberties, the proliferation of extremist ideologies, the increases of non-state armed actors, climate insecurity, and autocratisation, numerous challenges to peace, justice, and development around the globe are indicated. Against this backdrop, the master specialization in Conflict Studies and Management aims to promote institutions, attitudes, and social structures to create and sustain peaceful societies through building connections from evidence-based approaches in public policy in the global north and south.
At the Master’s level, these efforts are further sustained by our collaboration with the DAAD in the Helmut Schmidt Program (formerly the Public Policy and Good Governance Program) and collaborations with local NGOs.
Activities in this specialization include classes, workshops, and seminars with experts from around the world and encounter courses like:
- Forced Migration Policies in Comparative Perspective
- Race, Racism & Global International Relations
- Justice and Reconciliation in Post-Conflict Societies
- The Research Lens on Public Policy Intervention and Evaluation
- Gender, Peace, and Conflict
People
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Head of Conflict Studies and Management (Willy Brandt School of Public Policy)
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Jalale Getachew Birru
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Aline Mugisho
Output
Publications
- Anderson, V., Ortiz-Ayala, A., & Burgin, A. (2025). Ethical practice in research with refugee-background youth: a dialogic reflection using Mohja Kahf’s ‘the aunty poem.’ International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 1–14.
- Ortiz-Ayala, A. (2025). Willingness to protect civilians after peace accords: A survey experiment in a field setting among Colombian soldiers. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology. Advance online publication.
- Anderson, V., Ortiz-Ayala, A., & Mostolizadeh, S. (2023). Schools and teachers as brokers of belonging for refugee-background young people. International Journal of Inclusive Education, 28(14), 3487–3501.
- Anderson, V., Ortiz-Ayala, A., & Mostolizadeh, S. (2023). Refugee-background students in southern New Zealand: educational navigation and necessary self-sufficiency. In H. Pinson, N. Bunar, & D. Devine (Eds.), Research Handbook on Migration and Education (pp. 310–322). Edward Elgar Publishing.
- Ortiz-Ayala, A. (2022). The Madrigals Who Live on the Other Side of the Pacific: A review of Encanto. Journal of Refugee Studies 35(3), 1419-1422.
- Ugarriza, J. E., Trujillo, N., Hurtado, E., Ortiz-Ayala, A., Rodríguez-Calvache, M., & Quishpe, R. C. (2022). Imprints of war: An analysis of implicit prejudice among victims, ex-combatants, and communities in Colombia. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 28(1), 1–8.
- Ortiz-Ayala, A. (2021). They see us like the enemy: soldiers’ narratives of forced eradication of illegal crops in Colombia. Conflict, Security & Development, 21(5), 593–614.
- Ortiz-Ayala, A. (2021). How ISIS fights: military tactics in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Egypt. Critical Studies on Terrorism, 14(3), 386–388.
- Baez, S., Trujillo, N., Hurtado, E., Ortiz-Ayala, A., Calvache, M. R., Quishpe, R. C., & Ibanez, A. (2020). The Dynamics of Implicit Intergroup Biases of Victims and Ex-combatants in Post-conflict Scenarios. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 37(11-12), NP9295-NP9319.
- Birru, J. G., & Wolff, J. (2018). Negotiating international civil society support: the case of Ethiopia’s 2009 Charities and Societies Proclamation. Democratization, 26(5), 832–850.