CGPACS was founded in 1983 by a diverse group of faculty who came together out of concern about the nuclear weapons stand-off between the United States and the former Soviet Union. Although the Soviet Union no longer exists and the Cold War of the 1980s is a thing of the past, the core vision of the founders of CGPACS—the imperative that as citizens and as scholars we pursue the goal of global peace and ward off the dangers of global conflict—continues to animate our work today.

Throughout our 40 years of work, we have fostered diverse and outstanding contributions from the UCI community as scholars, students, and citizens, to the promotion of global peace and to innovative and rigorous analysis of the factors shaping global conflict.
 

 


 

 

In memoriam: Paula Garb

 
Paula GarbPaula Garb, University of California, Irvine anthropology and international studies lecturer emeritus and cofounder of the Center for Citizen Peacebuilding, passed away on August 22 following a brief illness. She was 76 years old.

“Paula was a beautiful soul, a rare person who planted peace wherever she went,” says Daniel Brunstetter, UCI political science professor and current director of the Center for Citizen Peacebuilding. “As I grieve her passing, I think first of her students and the legacy that she leaves in them. I think of all the projects she was involved in which stand as a testimony to her dedication to make the world a better place. And I think of how meeting her early in my career, when I first arrived at UCI, opened new pathways that I had never imagined.”

Garb earned her bachelor's and master's in history at Moscow State University in 1980 and 1982, respectively, and went on to earn a Ph.D. in anthropology at the Russian Academy of Sciences Institute of Anthropology in 1990. She joined the UCI School of Social Sciences in 1991 as a lecturer in both the Department of Anthropology and the Program in International Studies, which would later become the Department of Global and International Studies.

 
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Director's Message

 
Kamal SadiqTo say that the world is changing rapidly is an understatement. Fundamental shifts are occurring in geopolitics: Europe is engaged in a brutal war of attrition reigniting threats of nuclear war just as China’s economic and technological rise is challenging the global world order. The US is pivoting to Asia with closer ties to regional giants in South and East Asia. Democratic backsliding and nuclear proliferation are on the rise even as global arms control is in decline. A mass migration of people continues unabated. Refugees, asylum seekers, migrants, and internally displaced populations are challenging states in new ways. The looming specter of the climate crisis threatens to intensify inequality and conflict further driving emigration and threatening agricultural and natural resources in unforeseen ways. Both state and human security are being challenged across multiple fronts and on various scales leading to complex entanglements that often result in simple brutalities.

 
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