There is no silver bullet to eradicate genocide and crimes against humanity. But there is a strategic one. With hard work, dedication, and help from other like-minded people and organizations, ENOUGH has examined the numerous successful cases of conflict resolution throughout Africa and found that there are almost always three essential ingredients to success.
We can stop mass atrocities where they are already happening, and prevent these crimes from happening in the future, through a framework called the "Three Ps":
Peace. Protection. Punishment.
Promote Peace
Building peace costs less – in lives and in dollars – than picking up the pieces after a humanitarian crisis. The best way to end genocide and mass atrocities right now is with persistent, high-level diplomacy aimed at creating sustainable peace and laying the groundwork for a more secure future. ENOUGH recommends concrete solutions for resolving conflicts and achieving peace. We will urge the United States and the international community to make real, substantial investments in these solutions.
Provide Protection
Even as we pursue peace, we must protect the innocent people persecuted by genocidal violence and destructive instability. ENOUGH identifies and pushes for actions that the United States and its partners must take to protect a country's citizens from crimes against humanity when their government cannot, or will not, save them.
Punishment for Perpetrators
We must hold the perpetrators of these horrific crimes accountable, both during and after the atrocities. To break the cycle of impunity, we must impose real, substantive consequences on those who commit these crimes and on those who provide the support that allows them to happen. Through the courts, sanctions, and public pressure, ENOUGH will lay out and advance a path to justice that will also deter future crimes.
>> Listen to John Norris and Colin Thomas-Jensen on this recording of the conference call with the Genocide Intervention Network concerning the recent call by the ICC prosecutor for an arrest warrant to be issued against Sudan president Omar al-Bashir.

Photo Credit: ENOUGH/ Center for American Progress
ENOUGH’s John Prendergast and Omer Ismail joined Betty Bigombe and actor Ryan Gosling in front of 1000 college students for the closing plenary of the 2008 Campus Progress National Conference.
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to the Don Cheadle & John Prendergast interview on Darfur and their book, Not on Our Watch.
RAISE Hope for Congo... Apply to host the Speakers' Tour and photo exhibit.
