Talk:Geneva Centre for Security Policy
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The Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP) is an international foundation that was established in 1995 under Swiss law “for the primary purpose of promoting peace, security and stability through executive education, research and dialogue". The GCSP was founded by the Swiss Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport, in cooperation with the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, as a Swiss contribution to Partnership for Peace (PfP). The Centre’s three pillars of activities include:
The GCSP's governing body is the Foundation Council, which consists of representatives of 48 member states and the Canton of Geneva. The Chairman of the Foundation Council is Professor François Heisbourg. The Director of the GCSP is Ambassador Christian Dussey.
Albania Armenia Australia Austria Azerbaijan Republic of Belarus Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria China Czech Republic Denmark Egypt Estonia Finland France Georgia Germany Hungary India Ireland Italy Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Latvia Lithuania The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Mongolia Montenegro Morocco Netherlands Norway Philippines Poland Portugal Romania Russian Federation Senegal Serbia Slovak Republic Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland Turkey Ukraine United Kingdom United States of America Canton of Geneva
The Swiss government is the principal contributor to the GCSP's budget. Other Foundation Council members, partner states, and institutions also support the GCSP by seconding faculty, funding scholarships, and contributing to other aspects of the Centre's activities.
In January 2014, the GCSP moved into the fourth tower (“petal D”) of the Maison de la paix (House of Peace), a global hub which also houses the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, the Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces and the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining as well as Interpeace, the Small Arms Survey and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development.
The GCSP actively cooperates with various research and training institutions, as well as non-governmental and inter-governmental organisations located in Geneva and beyond. Common activities range from faculty exchanges, joint research, training programmes and conferences, to the sharing of resources.
GCSP's core activity is the provision of executive education in international peace and security for mid-career to senior-level diplomats, military officers, and civil servants from foreign, defence, and other relevant ministries, as well as from international organisations, and increasingly from the private sector. Participants in GCSP courses come from countries of the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council, NATO's Mediterranean Dialogue, the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative, and beyond, including South and East Asia and Africa. The GCSP offers more than 40 courses each year, including customised ones in Geneva, Bogotá, Dakar, Amman, Baku, Addis Ababa, Yerevan and Sarajevo. GCSP has more than 4000 alumni from over 140 countries. GCSP staff write extensively in GCSP publications, international peer-reviewed journals, and other publications. In addition, they contribute regularly to the policy and academic debates on current issues on the global security agenda. Moreover, the GCSP convenes conferences, workshops, and discussions on peace and security issues. Some of the latter activities aim to facilitate discreet dialogue in post-conflict situations.
The GCSP has four programmes, each conducting courses as well as dialogue and policy analysis activities: Leadership, Crisis and Conflict Management Programme
Emerging Security Challenges Programme
Regional Development Programme
Geopolitics and Global Futures Programme
In 2014, GCSP launched its Global Fellowship Initiative, which includes five categories of fellows: Associate Fellows, Government Fellows, Executives-in-Residence, Doctoral Fellows and Young Leaders in Foreign and Security Policy.
Cabinet, government members, diplomats and military
Academia
Heads of state
Cabinet, government members, diplomats and military
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212.203.64.130 (talk) 11:39, 5 February 2016 (UTC) Kayleigh - GCSP
- Kayleigh, thank you for using the edit request system and respecting our conflict of interest guidelines! I have made some of the changes you suggested, but unfortunately not all of them: much of the detail is too extensive (for example, Wikipedia generally does not provide long lists of an organization's staff members) and some of the tone is more appropriate for an organization's own website than Wikipedia, which aims to provide neutral, factual summaries of relevant information based on independent sources. Some of the text in the article already has this problem; I will try to fix that now.
- If you would like advice on making additional edit requests in the future, feel free to write on my talk page.—Neil P. Quinn (talk) 05:04, 26 August 2016 (UTC)
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