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Genocide Watch=== Genocide Watch was the first international organization dedicated solely to the prevention of genocide. Founded at the Hague Appeal for Peace in May 1999 by Dr. Gregory Stanton, Genocide Watch coordinates the
Alliance Against Genocide. Genocide Watch utilizes Stanton's Ten Stages of Genocide to analyze events that are early warning signs of genocide. It sponsors a website on genocide prevention. It issues genocide alerts about genocidal situations that it sends to public policy makers and recommends preventive actions.
The Alliance Against Genocide The Alliance Against Genocide was also founded by Gregory Stanton at the Hague Appeal for Peace in 1999 and was originally named The International Campaign to End Genocide. It was the first international coalition dedicated to the prevention of genocide. The Alliance includes over 70 international and national non-governmental anti-genocide organizations in 31 countries. The organizations include: 21 Wilberforce Initiative, Act for Sudan,
Aegis Trust,
Antiquities Coalition, Armenian National Committee, Brandeis Center, Burma Human Rights Network, Darfur Women Action Group, Cardozo Law Institute, CALDH, Cambodian Genocide Project, Center for Political Beauty, Combat Genocide Association, Christian Solidarity International, Documentation Center of Cambodia, EMMA, Fortify Rights, Free Rohingya Coalition, Genocide Watch, Hammurabi, Hudo, Human Security Centre, In Defense of Christians, INTERSOCIETY, International Alert, International Committee on Nigeria, International Crisis Group, Institute for Cultural Diplomacy, Institute for the Study of Genocide, Jewish World Watch, Johannesburg Holocaust and Genocide Center, Jubilee Campaign, Matabeleland Institute for Human Rights, Mediators Beyond Borders, Knights of Columbus,
Minority Rights Group International, Montreal Institute for Human Rights Studies, Never Again Association, North Korea Freedom Coalition, Operation Broken Silence, PROOF, Protection Approaches, Sentinel Project, Shlomo, STAND, Stimson Center, Survival International, TRIAL, Waging Peace, WARM, World Outside My Shoes, and World Without Genocide.
United Nations Office on Genocide Prevention and the Responsibility to Protect The Office on Genocide Prevention and the Responsibility to Protect (OGPRP) supports two
Special Advisers in conducting training for national governments on policies to prevent genocide, and advising the UN's
Secretary-General and the UN on genocide prevention and early warning. OGPRP was originally proposed by Gregory Stanton in 2000 and advocated at the UN by Stanton and Bernard Hamilton of the Leo Kuper Foundation, and by the Minority Rights Group and other member organizations in the Alliance Against Genocide. UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan (with key advisors like
Edward Mortimer and
Assistant Secretary-General Danilo Turk) created the office in 2004 to be led by a single Special Advisor. Annan's successor
Ban Ki-moon expanded this to its current dual configuration. The Special Adviser of the Secretary-General for the Prevention of Genocide, and its Office of the Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide (OSAPG), issues public warnings about situations at risk of genocide.
Chaloka Beyani is the current Special Adviser of the Secretary-General for the Prevention of Genocide.
Mô Bleeker is the current Special Adviser on the Responsibility to Protect (R2P). The R2P Special Adviser role was added to OGPRP in 2007, with the first appointed in 2008. In 2014, led by Special Advisers
Adama Dieng and
Jennifer Welsh, the OGPRP released the
Framework of Analysis for Atrocity Crimes, a document that identifies some of the main risk factors for genocide and other atrocity crimes.
Early warning project The Early Warning Project is an early warning tool developed by
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and
Dartmouth College. The Early Warning Project aids US policy makers by determining which states are the most likely to experience a genocide. From this, preventive steps can be taken concerning states that pose a risk of genocide.
Genocide task force The Genocide Task Force was created in 2007, with the purpose of developing a US strategy to prevent and stop future genocides. The task force was co chaired by former
US Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright, and former
US Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen. In 2008 the Genocide Task Force came out with a report for US policy makers on the prevention of genocide. This report claimed that a well rounded "comprehensive strategy" would be required to prevent genocide. This strategy would need to include early warning systems, preventive action before a crisis, preparation for military intervention, strengthening of international institutions and norms, and a willingness for world leaders to take decisive action. While the report states that military intervention should remain an available option, upstream preventive measures should be the focus of the
United States and the international community. The task force's report resulted in creation of the
Atrocities Prevention Board, a US interagency effort to assess risks of genocide and other atrocity crimes. ==See also==