Staff Writer, DL Mullan
Treason / House of Representatives
Treason / House of Representatives
___________________________________
Read HR 1111.
H.R. 1111 (115th): Department of Peacebuilding Act of 2017
115th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 1111
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
February 16, 2017
Ms. Lee (for herself, Ms. Moore, Ms. Norton, Mr. DeFazio, Mr. Lewis of Georgia, Mr. Grijalva, Mr. Conyers, Ms. Maxine Waters of California, Mr. Hastings, Mr. Cárdenas, Mr. Ellison, Mr. Ted Lieu of California, Mrs. Davis of California, Ms. Eddie Bernice Johnson of Texas, Mr. Rush, Mr. McGovern, Mr. Soto, Mr. Al Green of Texas, Ms. Judy Chu of California, Mr. DeSaulnier, Ms. Schakowsky, Mr. Payne, Ms. Pingree, Mr. Polis, Mr. Danny K. Davis of Illinois, Mr. Scott of Virginia, Mrs. Watson Coleman, and Ms. Kaptur) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
A BILL
To establish a Department of Peacebuilding, and for other purposes.
Short title; table of contents
Short title
This Act may be cited as the
Department of Peacebuilding Act of 2017.
Table of contents
The table of contents for this Act is as follows:
Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents.
Sec. 2. Findings.
Title I—ESTABLISHMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF PEACEBUILDING
Sec. 101. Establishment of Department of Peacebuilding.
Sec. 102. Responsibilities and powers.
Sec. 103. Principal officers.
Sec. 104. Office of Peace Education and Training.
Sec. 105. Office of Domestic Peacebuilding Activities.
Sec. 106. Office of International Peacebuilding Activities.
Sec. 107. Office of Technology for Peace.
Sec. 108. Office of Arms Control and Disarmament.
Sec. 109. Office of Peacebuilding Information and Research.
Sec. 110. Office of Human Rights and Economic Rights.
Sec. 111. Intergovernmental Advisory Council on Peace.
Sec. 112. Federal Interagency Committee on Peace.
Sec. 113. Staff.
Sec. 114. Consultation required.
Sec. 115. Collaboration.
Title II—OTHER MATTERS
Sec. 201. Legislative recommendations of the Secretary.
Sec. 202. Peace Days.
Sec. 203. Definitions.
Sec. 204. Authorization of appropriations.
Findings
Congress finds the following:
On
July 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress unanimously declared the
independence of the 13 colonies, and the achievement of peace was
recognized as one of the highest duties of the new organization of free
and independent States by declaring,
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness..
The
Constitution of the United States of America, in its preamble, further
sets forth the insurance of the cause of peace in stating,
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.
The
United States has been at peace for only 21 entire years since its
birth during the Revolutionary War. During the course of the 20th
century, more than 100,000,000 people perished in wars. Many of our
citizens today have never known a peaceful year in their lifetimes.
Thus
far in the 21st century, nearly 1,000,000 people have died in conflict
and war. In 2015 alone, 65.3 million people, or one person in 113, were
displaced from their homes by conflict and persecution. The United
States has been at war over 15 years, with more than 6,800 members of
the Armed Forces and hundreds of thousands of civilians estimated to
have been killed in the conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, and territories
occupied by ISIL.
Every
year 300,000 people are killed by gun violence around the world. In the
United States, 100,000 people are shot each year in murders, assaults,
suicides and suicide attempts, accidents, and police actions.
Approximately 20 veterans a day commit suicide nationwide. Over 33,000
people die each year of gunshot wounds, 12,000 of whom are murdered.
Every day, 50 children are shot, eight of whom are fatally shot, and
each gun injury and fatality results in trauma to family members and
loved ones. More people have died from guns in the United States since
1968 than on battlefields of all the wars in United States history.
A
World Health Organization report estimates that interpersonal violence
within the United States costs approximately $300 billion annually, not
including war-related costs. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention states that an average of 34 people age 10 to 24 were
murdered each day in the United States in 2014. The Pew Charitable Trust
calculates that child abuse and neglect in the United States cost
$103.8 billion in 2007.
On
April 4, 2012, the Institute for Economics and Peace released the
United States Peace Index, which assesses peacefulness at the State and
city levels and analyzes the costs associated with violence and the
socio-economic measures associated with peace. While violence within the
United States has declined since the year 2015, violence and violence
containment still cost the average taxpayer $6,417 per year. The total
cost of violence to the United States—including lost productivity from
violence—is conservatively calculated to be over $460 billion.
A
2015 study by the Institute for Economics and Peace reports
conservative estimates that 12 percent of the gross domestic product of
the United States was spent on containing violence. The study included
government, corporate, and individual expenditures, regardless of
whether the expenditure was related to international affairs such as
offshore military activities, or domestic spending such as dealing with
crime and the consequences of crime.
Violence
prevention is cost effective. For every dollar spent on violence
prevention and peacebuilding, thousands of lives and dollars are saved.
Research indicates that investing early to prevent conflicts from
escalating into violent crises is, on average, 60 times more cost
effective than intervening after violence erupts. The philosophy and
techniques of nonviolence and the science of peacebuilding provide tools
and techniques that can be applied not only at the levels of individual
and community growth, but also within the Federal Government and at
national and international levels.
The
United Nations recognizes that promotion of peace is vital for the full
enjoyment of all human rights and the United Nations Declaration on the
Right of Peoples to Peace mandates that preservation of the right to
peace is a fundamental obligation of each country. In 1999, the United
Nations adopted a Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace, stating
that a culture of peace is an integral approach to preventing violence
and violent conflicts, an alternative to the culture of war and
violence, and is based on education for peace, the promotion of
sustainable economic and social development, respect for human rights,
equality between women and men, democratic participation, tolerance, and
the free flow of information and disarmament. The United Nations
declared the years 2001 through 2010 an International Decade for a
Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for the Children of the World, and the
United Nations supports a culture of peace. In 2015, the UN adopted 17
sustainable development goals, including promotion of peaceful and
inclusive societies.
Peacebuilding
is defined by the United Nations as a range of measures targeted to
reduce the risk of lapsing or relapsing into conflict by strengthening
national capacities at all levels for conflict management and to lay the
foundations for sustainable peace and development. Peacebuilding is
built upon research into the root causes of violence in the United
States and the world, through promotion and promulgation of effective
policies and programs that ameliorate those root causes of violence, and
through providing all citizens, organizations, and governmental bodies
with opportunities to learn about and practice the essential tools of
nonviolent conflict resolution and peacebuilding.
In
2000, the Earth Charter Commission released the Earth Charter, an
international declaration of fundamental values and principles created
to build a just, sustainable, and peaceful global society. The preamble
of the Earth Charter provides,
To move forward we must recognize that in the midst of a magnificent diversity of cultures and life forms we are one human family and one Earth community with a common destiny. We must join together to bring forth a sustainable global society founded on respect for nature, universal human rights, economic justice, and a culture of peace.. Peacebuilding is working together with all countries to protect both life and land and hold the Earth in balance.
ESTABLISHMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF PEACEBUILDING
Establishment of Department of Peacebuilding
Establishment
There is hereby established a Department of Peacebuilding, which shall—
be within the executive branch of the Federal Government; and
be
dedicated to peacebuilding, peacemaking, and the study and promotion of
conditions conducive to both domestic and international peace and a
culture of peace.
Secretary of Peacebuilding
There
shall be at the head of the Department a Secretary of Peacebuilding,
who shall be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and
consent of the Senate.
Mission
The Department shall—
cultivate peace and peacebuilding as a strategic national policy objective;
reduce
and prevent violence in the United States and internationally through
peacebuilding and effective nonviolent conflict resolution;
strengthen nonmilitary means of peacemaking;
take
a proactive, strategic approach in the development of field-tested,
best practices and policies that promote national and international
conflict prevention, nonviolent intervention, mediation, peaceful
resolution of conflict, and structured mediation of conflict;
address matters both domestic and international in scope;
provide
an institutional platform for the growing wealth of expertise in
peacebuilding to dramatically reduce the national and global epidemic of
violence;
support local communities in finding, funding, replicating, and expanding programs to reduce and prevent violence;
invest
in nongovernmental organizations that have implemented successful
initiatives to reduce and prevent violence, both internationally and
domestically; and
consult
with other Federal agencies to apply and practice the science of
peacebuilding in their respective fields of responsibility.
Responsibilities and powers
In general
The Secretary shall—
work
proactively and interactively with each branch of the Federal
Government on all policy matters relating to conditions of peace;
call
on the experience and expertise of individuals and seek participation
in the development of policy from private, public, and nongovernmental
organizations;
monitor
and analyze causative principles of conflict and make policy
recommendations for developing and maintaining peaceful conduct;
research effective violence reduction programs and promote and promulgate such programs within Government and society; and
consult
with private, public, and nongovernmental organizations to develop a
metric model that provides the means to measure and report progress
toward peace in the United States to the President, Congress, and the
public, and issue reports on such progress annually.
Domestic responsibilities
The
Secretary shall collaborate with governmental and nongovernmental
organizations and individuals to promote personal and community security
and peace by—
developing
new policies and supporting existing policies that effectively address
personal and family violence, including suicide, domestic violence,
spousal abuse, child abuse, and mistreatment of the elderly;
creating new policies and programs and expanding existing policies and programs that effectively reduce drug and alcohol abuse;
developing
new policies and programs and expanding existing policies and programs
that effectively address crime, punishment, and rehabilitation,
including—
working to reduce prison recidivism rates;
supporting
the implementation of nonviolent conflict resolution education and
training for victims, perpetrators, and those who work with them; and
supporting effective police and community relations;
analyzing
existing policies, employing successful, field-tested programs, and
developing new approaches for dealing with the tools of violence,
including handguns and assault weapons, especially among youth;
developing
new and expanding effective programs that address and ameliorate
societal challenges such as school violence, gangs, hate crimes,
economic injustice, human trafficking, racial or ethnic violence,
violence against LGBTQ+ individuals, and police-community relations
disputes;
making policy recommendations to the Attorney General regarding civil rights and labor law;
assisting
in the establishment and funding of community-based violence prevention
programs, including violence prevention counseling and peer mediation
in schools and unarmed civilian peacekeeping at a local level;
providing counseling and advocacy on behalf of individuals victimized by violence;
providing
for public education programs and counseling strategies that promote
tolerance and respect for the diversity of all individuals in the United
States with regard to race, religion, creed, gender and gender
identification, sexual orientation, age, ethnicity, and other perceived
differences; and
supporting
local community initiatives that draw on neighborhood resources to
create peace projects that facilitate the development of conflict
resolution and healing of societal wounds such as patriarchy, racism,
war, manifest destiny, and economic injustice to thereby inform and
inspire national policy.
International responsibilities
The Secretary shall—
advise
the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State on matters relating
to national security, including the protection of human rights and the
prevention of, amelioration of, and de-escalation of unarmed and armed
international conflict;
contribute
to and participate in the development of training of all United States
personnel who administer post-conflict reconstruction and demobilization
in war-torn societies;
sponsor
national and regional conflict-prevention and dispute-resolution
initiatives, create special task forces, and draw on local, regional,
and national expertise to develop plans and programs for addressing the
root sources of conflict in troubled areas;
counsel
and advocate on behalf of women victimized by violence, including rape,
situations leading up to conflict, conflicts, and post-conflict
situations;
counsel
and advocate on behalf of victims of human trafficking both
domestically and internationally and work to end the trafficking of
human beings;
provide
for exchanges between the United States and other countries that
endeavor to develop domestic and international peace-based initiatives;
encourage
the development of international sister city programs, pairing United
States cities with cities around the world for artistic, cultural,
economic, educational, and faith-based exchanges;
establish
and administer a budget designated for the training and deployment of
unarmed civilian peacekeepers to participate in multinational nonviolent
peacekeeping forces that may be conducted by civilian, governmental, or
multilateral organizations;
jointly
with the Secretary of the Treasury, strengthen peace enforcement
through hiring and training monitors and investigators to help with the
enforcement of international arms embargoes;
in
consultation with the Secretary of State, bring together all
stakeholders who are impacted by a conflict by facilitating peace
summits where such stakeholders may gather under carefully prepared
conditions to promote nonviolent communication and mutually beneficial
solutions;
submit
to the President recommendations for reductions in weapons of mass
destruction, and make annual reports to the President on the sale of
arms from the United States to other countries, with an analysis of the
impact of such sales on the defense of the United States and how such
sales affect peace;
in
consultation with the Secretary of State, develop strategies for
sustainability and management of the distribution of international
funds;
advise
the Permanent Representative of the United States to the United Nations
on matters pertaining to the United Nations Security Council; and
support
the implementation of international peacebuilding strategies through a
balanced use of peacebuilding, diplomacy, development, and defense.
Membership of the Secretary of Peacebuilding on the National Security Council
Section 101(a) of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3021(a)) is amended—
in paragraph (5), by striking
and;
by redesignating paragraph (6) as paragraph (7); and
by inserting after paragraph (5) the following:
the Secretary of Peacebuilding; and
.
Human security responsibilities
The
Secretary shall address and offer nonviolent conflict resolution
strategies and suggest resources for unarmed civilian peacekeepers to
the appropriate relevant parties on issues of human security if such
security is threatened by conflict, whether such conflict is geographic,
religious, ethnic, racial, or class-based in its origin, derives from
economic concerns, or is initiated through disputes concerning scarcity
of natural resources (such as water and energy resources), food, trade,
or climate and environmental concerns.
Media-Related responsibilities
Respecting
the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America
and the requirement for free and independent media, the Secretary
shall—
seek assistance in the design and implementation of nonviolent policies from media professionals;
study
the role of the media in the escalation and de-escalation of conflict
at domestic and international levels, including the role of
fear-inducing and hate-inducing speech and actions, and making the
findings of such study public; and
make
recommendations to professional media organizations in order to provide
opportunities to increase media awareness of peacebuilding initiatives.
Educational responsibilities
The Secretary shall—
with
the support of, and in consultation with, the United States Institute
of Peace, develop a peace education curriculum that includes studies of—
the
civil rights movement in the United States and throughout the world,
with special emphasis on the role of nonviolence and how individual
endeavor and involvement have contributed to advancements in peace and
justice;
peace agreements and circumstances in which peaceful intervention has worked to stop conflict; and
the
patriarchal structure of society and the inherent violence of such
structure in the shaping of relationships and institutions;
in consultation with the Secretary of Education—
commission
the development of such curriculum and make such curriculum available
to local school districts to enable the use of peace education
objectives at pre-kindergarten schools, elementary schools, and
secondary schools in the United States;
support
in early childhood, pre-kindergarten schools, elementary schools,
secondary schools, and institutions of higher education a
well-resourced, balanced education that includes math, science, English,
history, ethnic studies, social studies, health, physical education,
foreign languages, the arts, and music that will prepare students for
success in a globally interconnected world; and
offer
incentives in the form of grants and training to encourage the
development of State peace curricula and assist schools in applying for
such grants and training;
work
with educators to equip students to become skilled in achieving peace
through reflection, and facilitate instruction in the ways of peaceful
conflict resolution;
ensure that schools are nonviolence zones that provide a peaceful educational environment;
create
school and community cultures where students and staff do not feel
threatened and are free from bullying and harassment by developing and
implementing curricula in nonviolent conflict resolution education for
teachers, students, parents, the school community, and the community at
large;
maintain
a public website to solicit and receive ideas for the development of
peace from the wealth of the politically, socially, and culturally
diverse public;
proactively
engage the critical thinking capabilities of students and teachers of
pre-kindergarten schools, elementary schools, secondary schools, and
institutions of higher education through the Internet and other media
and issue periodic reports concerning any submissions from such students
and teachers;
create and establish a Peace Academy that shall—
be modeled after the military service academies; and
provide
a 4-year course of instruction in peace education, after which
graduates will be required to serve 5 years in public service in
programs dedicated to domestic or international nonviolent conflict
resolution; and
provide grants for peace studies departments in institutions of higher education throughout the United States.
Principal officers
Under Secretary of Peacebuilding
The
President shall appoint an Under Secretary of Peacebuilding in the
Department, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. During the
absence or disability of the Secretary, or in the event of a vacancy in
the office of the Secretary, the Under Secretary shall act as
Secretary. The Secretary shall designate the order in which other
officials of the Department shall act and perform the functions of the
Secretary during the absence or disability of both the Secretary and
Under Secretary or in the event of vacancies in both offices.
Additional positions
In general
The President shall appoint in the Department, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate—
an Assistant Secretary for Peace Education and Training;
an Assistant Secretary for Domestic Peacebuilding Activities;
an Assistant Secretary for International Peacebuilding Activities;
an Assistant Secretary for Technology for Peace;
an Assistant Secretary for Arms Control and Disarmament;
an Assistant Secretary for Peacebuilding Information and Research;
an Assistant Secretary for Human and Economic Rights; and
a General Counsel.
Establishment of Inspector General of the Department of Peacebuilding
Section 12 of the Inspector General Act of 1978 (5 U.S.C. App.) is amended—
in paragraph (1), by inserting
Peacebuilding,after
Homeland Security,; and
in paragraph (2), by inserting
Peacebuilding,after
Homeland Security,.
Additional officers
The
President shall appoint 4 additional officers in the Department, by and
with the advice and consent of the Senate. The officers appointed under
this paragraph shall perform such functions as the Secretary shall
prescribe, including—
congressional relations functions;
public
information functions, including providing, through the use of the
latest technologies, useful information about peace and the work of the
Department;
management and budget functions; and
planning,
evaluation, and policy development functions, including development of
policies to promote the efficient and coordinated administration of the
Department and its programs and encourage improvements in conflict
resolution and violence prevention.
Description of functions
In
any case in which the President submits the name of an individual to
the Senate for confirmation as an officer of the Department under this
subsection, the President shall state the particular functions such
individual will exercise upon taking office.
Authority of Secretary
Each
officer described in this section shall report directly to the
Secretary and shall, in addition to any functions vested in or required
to be delegated to such officer, perform such additional functions as
the Secretary may prescribe.
Office of Peace Education and Training
In general
There
shall be in the Department an Office of Peace Education and Training,
the head of which shall be the Assistant Secretary for Peace Education
and Training. The Assistant Secretary for Peace Education and Training
shall carry out those functions of the Department relating to the
creation, encouragement, and impact of peace education and training at
the pre-kindergarten, elementary, secondary, university, and
postgraduate levels, and disseminate applicable policies and research in
consultation with entities of the Department of Health and Human
Services, including—
the Administration for Children and Families;
the Administration on Aging;
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; and
the National Institutes of Health.
Peace curriculum
The
Assistant Secretary of Peace Education and Training, in consultation
with the Secretary of Education, the United States Institute of Peace,
nongovernmental organizations, public institutions, peace and conflict
studies programs of institutions of higher education, and Federal
agencies that provide effective peace training materials and curricula,
shall support the development and dissemination of effective peace
curricula and supporting materials for distribution to the State
educational agency in each State and territory of the United States.
Each peace curriculum shall include—
building communicative peace skills and nonviolent conflict resolution skills;
teaching and fostering compassion, empathy, tolerance, respect, inclusion, and forgiveness; and
promoting other objectives to increase the knowledge of peace processes.
Grants
The Assistant Secretary of Peace Education and Training shall—
provide
peace education grants to institutions of higher education for the
creation and expansion of peace studies departments and the education
and training of teachers in peace studies; and
establish
a grant program to be known as the Community Peace Block Grant program
under which the Secretary shall make grants to nonprofit organizations
and nongovernmental organizations for the purposes of developing
innovative neighborhood programs for nonviolent conflict resolution and
creating local peacebuilding initiatives.
Office of Domestic Peacebuilding Activities
In general
There
shall be in the Department an Office of Domestic Peacebuilding
Activities, the head of which shall be the Assistant Secretary for
Domestic Peacebuilding Activities. The Assistant Secretary for Domestic
Peacebuilding Activities shall carry out those functions in the
Department affecting domestic peace activities, including the
development of policies that increase awareness about intervention and
counseling on domestic violence and conflict.
Responsibilities
The Assistant Secretary for Domestic Peacebuilding Activities shall—
develop policy and disseminate best practices from the field for the treatment of drug and alcohol abuse;
develop community-based strategies for celebrating diversity and promoting tolerance;
develop
new policies and build upon existing proven programs to prevent the
school-to-prison pipeline by promoting restorative and conflict
resolution practices at pre-kindergarten, elementary, secondary,
university, and post graduate levels and in police academies, with
funding for teacher training in nonviolence, restorative practices, and
conflict resolution;
develop new policies and build on existing proven programs—
to
assist in the prevention of crime, including the development of
community policing strategies, mindfulness and conflict de-escalation
training, and other peaceful settlement skills among police and other
public safety officers;
to
assist in the re-entry into the community by individuals who have been
incarcerated, including training in anger management, conflict
resolution, peacebuilding skills, life skills, and educational and job
skills;
to
assist in creating strong and healthy families, including supporting
mental health services, domestic violence prevention, gang prevention,
anti-bullying programs, substance abuse prevention, and the development
of parenting skills;
to
provide restorative justice programs at all levels of the criminal
justice system that bring together offenders, victims, and community
members in an effort to repair the damage caused by criminal activity
through accountability and rehabilitation;
to
provide for training and deployment into neighborhoods of nonmilitary
domestic conflict prevention and peacemaking personnel, including
violence interrupters and civilian community peacekeepers;
to
implement community-based policing to break down barriers between law
enforcement officers and the people such officers serve; and
to
encourage and facilitate formation of locally run and administered
citizen’s boards to recommend any appropriate training as needed for
working compassionately and effectively with local populations and to
review and hold accountable actions of all local police departments in
the United States;
promote
informal and cultural exchanges between individuals and groups of
proximate neighborhoods and regions to encourage understanding and
acceptance; and
disseminate applicable policies and research in consultation with appropriate entities of—
the Department of Justice;
the Department of Health and Human Services;
the Department of State; and
the Department of Education.
Grants
The
Assistant Secretary for Domestic Peacebuilding Activities shall create a
grant program to be known as the Cultural Diplomacy for Peace grant
program under which the Secretary shall make grants to pre-kindergarten
schools, elementary schools, secondary schools, institutions of higher
education, nonprofit organizations, and nongovernmental organizations
for the purpose of developing domestic cultural exchanges, including
exchanges relating to the arts and sports, that promote diplomacy and
cultural understanding between neighborhoods and members of such
neighborhoods.
Office of International Peacebuilding Activities
In general
There
shall be in the Department an Office of International Peacebuilding
Activities, the head of which shall be the Assistant Secretary for
International Peacebuilding Activities. The Assistant Secretary for
International Peacebuilding Activities shall carry out those functions
in the Department affecting international peace activities.
Responsibilities
The Assistant Secretary for International Peacebuilding Activities shall—
develop new programs and promote existing proven programs to—
provide
for the training and deployment of graduates of the Peace Academy
established under section 102(g) and other nonmilitary conflict
prevention and peacemaking personnel;
support
national and regional conflict-prevention and dispute-resolution
initiatives in countries experiencing social, political, or economic
strife;
provide training for the administration of post-conflict reconstruction and demobilization in war-torn societies;
address root causes of violence;
eradicate extreme hunger and poverty;
achieve universal primary education; and
empower women and girls;
support the creation of a multinational nonviolent peace force;
provide
for exchanges between individuals of the United States and other
countries that are endeavoring to develop domestic and international
peace-based initiatives; and
disseminate applicable policies and research in consultation with appropriate entities of—
the Department of State;
the Department of Labor;
the Peace Corps; and
the United States Institute of Peace.
Grants
The
Assistant Secretary for International Peacebuilding Activities shall
create a grant program to be known as the International Cultural
Diplomacy for Peace grant program under which the Secretary shall make
grants to pre-kindergarten schools, elementary schools, secondary
schools, institutions of higher education, nonprofit organizations, and
nongovernmental organizations for the purpose of developing
international cultural exchanges, including exchanges related to the
arts and sports, that promote diplomacy and cultural understanding
between the United States and other countries.
Office of Technology for Peace
In general
There
shall be in the Department an Office of Technology for Peace, the head
of which shall be the Assistant Secretary for Technology for Peace. The
Assistant Secretary for Technology for Peace shall carry out those
functions in the Department affecting the awareness, study, and impact
of developing new technologies on the creation and maintenance of
domestic and international peace, and disseminate applicable policies
and research in consultation with appropriate entities of the Department
of State.
Grants
The
Assistant Secretary for Technology for Peace shall make grants for the
research and development of technologies in transportation,
communications, agriculture, and energy that—
are nonviolent in application; and
encourage
the conservation and sustainability of natural resources in order to
prevent future conflicts regarding scarce resources.
Office of Arms Control and Disarmament
In general
There
shall be in the Department an Office of Arms Control and Disarmament,
the head of which shall be the Assistant Secretary for Arms Control and
Disarmament. The Assistant Secretary for Arms Control and Disarmament
shall carry out those functions in the Department affecting arms control
programs and arms limitation agreements.
Responsibilities
The Assistant Secretary for Arms Control and Disarmament shall—
advise
the Secretary on interagency discussions and international
negotiations, including discussions involving the Secretary of State,
the Atomic Energy Commission, and the Secretary of Defense, regarding
the reduction and elimination of weapons of mass destruction throughout
the world, including the dismantling of such weapons and the safe and
secure storage of materials related thereto;
assist
countries, international agencies, and nongovernmental organizations in
assessing the locations of the buildup of nuclear arms and other
weapons of mass destruction;
develop
nonviolent strategies to deter testing or use of offensive or defensive
nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction, whether based on
land, air, sea, or in space;
serve
as a depository for copies of all contracts, agreements, and treaties
that address the reduction and elimination of nuclear weapons and other
weapons of mass destruction, or the protection of space from
militarization;
provide technical support and legal assistance for the implementation of such contracts, agreements, and treaties;
disseminate
applicable policies and research in consultation with appropriate
entities of the Department of State and the Department of Commerce; and
address
and support nuclear waste cleanup at Superfund Sites of former and
present military bases in the United States and abroad.
Office of Peacebuilding Information and Research
In general
There
shall be in the Department an Office of Peacebuilding Information and
Research, the head of which shall be the Assistant Secretary for
Peacebuilding Information and Research. The Assistant Secretary for
Peacebuilding Information and Research shall carry out those functions
in the Department affecting research and analysis relating to creating,
initiating, and modeling approaches to peaceful coexistence and
nonviolent conflict resolution.
Responsibilities
The Assistant Secretary for Peacebuilding Information and Research shall—
commission
or compile studies on the impact of war and other types of violence,
especially on the physical and mental condition of children (using the
10-point anti-war agenda in the United Nations Children’s Fund report,
State of the World’s Children 1996, as a guide) that shall include the
study of the effect of war on the environment and public health;
compile
information on effective community peacebuilding activities and
disseminate such information to local governments and nongovernmental
organizations in the United States and abroad;
commission or compile research on the effect of violence in the media and make such reports available to Congress annually;
commission
or compile research on the effects of gun violence in the United
States, and make such reports available to Congress annually;
publish a monthly journal of the activities of the Department and encourage scholarly participation;
sponsor conferences throughout the United States to create awareness of the work of the Department; and
where
applicable, work to carry out the responsibilities under this
subsection in consultation with the United States Institute of Peace and
other governmental and nongovernmental organizations, including—
the Department of Health and Human Services;
the Department of Justice; and
the Department of State.
Office of Human Rights and Economic Rights
In general
There
shall be in the Department an Office of Human Rights and Economic
Rights, the head of which shall be the Assistant Secretary for Human
Rights and Economic Rights. The Assistant Secretary for Human Rights and
Economic Rights shall carry out those functions in the Department that
support the principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on December 10,
1948.
Responsibilities
The Assistant Secretary for Human Rights and Economic Rights shall—
assist
the Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of State, in
furthering the incorporation of the principles of human rights, as
enunciated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, into all
agreements between the United States and other countries to help reduce
the causes of violence;
consult
with the Secretary of State, the Atrocities Prevention Board of the
White House, and other similarly concerned governmental and
nongovernmental organizations to gather information on and document
domestic and international human rights abuses, including genocide,
torture, human trafficking, child soldiers, and child labor, and
recommend to the Secretary nonviolent responses to promote awareness,
understanding, and correction of abuses;
make
such information available to other governmental and nongovernmental
organizations in order to facilitate nonviolent conflict resolution;
provide
trained observers to work with nongovernmental organizations for
purposes of creating a climate conducive to the respect for human
rights;
conduct
economic analyses of the scarcity of human and natural resources as a
source of conflict and make recommendations to the Secretary for
nonviolent prevention of such scarcity, nonviolent intervention in case
of such scarcity, and the development of programs to assist people
facing such scarcity, whether due to armed conflict, misdistribution of
resources, or natural causes;
assist
the Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of State and the
Secretary of the Treasury, in developing strategies regarding the
sustainability and the management of the distribution of funds from
international agencies, the conditions regarding the receipt of such
funds, and the impact of those conditions on the peace and stability of
the recipient countries;
assist
the Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of State and the
Secretary of Labor, in developing strategies to promote full compliance
with domestic and international labor rights law;
conduct
policy analysis to ensure that the international development
investments of the United States positively impact the peace and
stability of the recipient country; and
disseminate policies and research in consultation with appropriate entities of the Department of State.
Intergovernmental Advisory Council on Peace
In general
There
shall be in the Department an advisory committee known as the
Intergovernmental Advisory Council on Peace (in this section referred to
as the
Council). The Council shall provide assistance and make recommendations to the President and the Secretary concerning intergovernmental policies relating to peace and nonviolent conflict resolution.
Responsibilities
The Council shall—
provide a forum for representatives of the Federal Government and of State and local governments to discuss peace issues;
promote
better intergovernmental relations and offer professional mediation
services to ameliorate and resolve intergovernmental and
intragovernmental conflict as needed, including elimination of
inflammatory rhetoric; and
submit
biennially, or more frequently if determined necessary by the Council, a
report to the President, the Secretary, and Congress reviewing the
impact of Federal peace activities on the Federal Government and on
State and local governments.
Membership
The Secretary shall appoint the members of the Council.
Federal Interagency Committee on Peace
Establishment
There is established a Federal Interagency Committee on Peace (in this section referred to as the
Committee). The Committee shall—
assist
the Secretary in providing a mechanism to assure that the procedures
and actions of the Department and other Federal agencies are fully
coordinated; and
study
and make recommendations for assuring effective coordination of Federal
programs, policies, and administrative practices affecting peace.
Membership
The Secretary shall appoint the members of the Committee.
Staff
The
Secretary may appoint and fix the compensation of such employees as may
be necessary to carry out the functions of the Secretary and the
Department. Except as otherwise provided by law, such employees shall be
appointed in accordance with applicable laws and the compensation of
such employees fixed in accordance with title 5, United States Code.
Consultation required
Consultation in cases of conflict and violence prevention
In general
In
any case in which a conflict between the United States and any other
government or entity is foreseeable, imminent, or occurring, the
Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State shall consult with the
Secretary of Peacebuilding concerning violence prevention, nonviolent
means of conflict resolution, and peacebuilding.
Diplomatic initiatives
In
any case in which a conflict described in paragraph (1) is ongoing or
recently concluded, the Secretary shall conduct an independent study of
diplomatic initiatives undertaken by the United States and other parties
to such conflict.
Initiative assessment
In
any case in which a conflict described in paragraph (1) has recently
concluded, the Secretary shall assess the effectiveness of any
initiatives in ending such conflict.
Consultation process
The
Secretary shall establish a formal process of consultation in a timely
manner with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, and the
National Security Council—
prior to the initiation of any armed conflict between the United States and any other country; and
for any matter involving the use of Department of Defense personnel within the United States.
Consultation in drafting treaties and agreements
The head of each appropriate Federal agency shall consult with the Secretary in drafting treaties and peace agreements.
Collaboration
The
Secretary shall, for the greatest effectiveness in promoting peace and
peacebuilding, collaborate with all related programs in all Federal
agencies.
OTHER MATTERS
Legislative recommendations of the Secretary
Not
later than 1 year after the date of the appointment of the first
Secretary, the Secretary shall prepare and submit to Congress proposed
legislation containing any necessary and appropriate amendments to the
laws of the United States to carry out the purposes of this Act.
Peace Days
The
Secretary shall encourage citizens to observe and celebrate the
blessings of peace and endeavor to create peace on Peace Days. Such days
shall include discussions of the professional activities and the
achievements in the lives of peacemakers.
Definitions
In this Act:
Department
The term
Departmentmeans the Department of Peacebuilding established under section 101(a).
ESEA terms
The terms
elementary school,
secondary school, and
State educational agencyhave the meaning given those terms in section 8101 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7801).
Federal agency
The term
Federal agencyhas the meaning given the term
agencyin section 551(1) of title 5, United States Code.
Institution of higher education
The term
institution of higher educationhas the meaning given that term in section 101 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1001).
Nonprofit organization
The term
nonprofit organizationmeans an entity that—
is described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986; and
is exempt from tax under section 501(a) of such Code.
Secretary
The term
Secretarymeans the Secretary of Peacebuilding appointed under section 101(b).
Authorization of appropriations
In general
There is authorized to be appropriated to carry out this Act such sums as may be necessary.
Limitation on use of funds
Of
the amounts appropriated pursuant to subsection (a), at least 85
percent shall be used for domestic peace programs, including
administrative costs associated with such programs.
Source: GovTrack