This project brings together leading experts to establish a hub of expertise addressing how to promote resilient and sustainable peace in West Africa. In so doing, this network contributes to achieving
Sustainable Development Goal 16 (‘Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development’).
The insights from this project will contribute to a better understanding of the transformation of international peacebuilding initiatives towards more bottom-up and community-driven perspectives, in line with resilience approaches.
The project investigates why resilience approaches in peacebuilding either fail or succeed, notably by examining how such perspectives are received at the local level. Throughout its events and publications, this network aims to define concrete policy objectives for complying with, and exceeding the indicators of SDG 16 in the context of an increasingly uncertain global economy and political environment.
Throughout 2018, three workshops brought together academics and key stakeholders (local policy-makers and civil society actors) to proactively co-produce research objectives for future grant applications:
- May 2018: webinar in Perth, Australia, which will coincide with the WUN’s 2018 Annual Conference and AGM.
- 18 October 2018: workshop in Accra, Ghana, featuring key stakeholders and policy actors from West African states and organisations. Ghana Workshop agenda.pdf
- 23 November 2018: workshop in Bristol, UK, which will constitute Resilient Peace’s final conference, and as such will focus on the consolidation of findings by all Partners, and the design of future grant applications, led by the University of Bristol. Draft agenda for Resilient Peace Final Conference.pdf
- 30 November 2018, Bristol, UK: Resilient Peace Education in Emergencies Workshop (hosted by Resilient Peace’s Education Working Group). Resilient_Peace-Education_in_Emergencies-Workshop-20181130-Invitation.pdf
The project gathered, synthesised, further developed and disseminated knowledge and learning on resilience in conflict prevention and peacebuilding.
For more information about the research, and its outputs, see the project website and Video Archive.