Sustaining peace: Operationalising conflict prevention using ‘triple nexus’ approaches
Date: Monday 4 November 2019, 13:30 – 15:00
Venue: UN Office of Geneva, Palais Room IX
This event, as part of Geneva Peace Week 2019, will bring together organisations with experience of simultaneously working to address humanitarian needs, provide development opportunities while simultaneously aiming to resolve conflict and promote sustainable peace; known in the international development sector as the ‘humanitarian-development-peace nexus’ or ‘triple nexus.’
Conflict and poverty go hand in hand
In today’s world, the impact conflict and fragility has on people’s lives and long-term prospects is far from diminishing. It is projected that by 2030, 80% of people living in extreme poverty worldwide will be in fragile contexts. Today, 90% of earmarked humanitarian aid goes to protracted crisis situations, demonstrating the complexity of the challenge to respond, prevent, and ultimately reduce the impact of these crises.
Organised and moderated by Islamic Relief Worldwide, the panel will include representatives from the International Rescue Committee (IRC) and Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC)—our partners in implementing programmes under the Swedish International Development Agency’s (SIDA) strategic peacebuilding programme—as well as representatives from the international organisation Mercy Corps reflecting their leading work in this field. The event will integrate the perspectives and insight of our teams working in the field and from headquarters.
Working together is key to making lasting change
Dr Paul Quinn, Programme Manager for Islamic Relief Worldwide’s peacebuilding and conflict prevention programme said, “We know that if we want to be truly effective in the way we help people affected by complex humanitarian crises, and to prevent relapses or escalations in conflict, we have to work much more closely at the international level and even more closely again with local communities.
“This event will share some of the insights and successes we’re seeing already through our ‘humanitarian-development-peace nexus’ work, as well as being honest about the significant challenges and opportunities it presents.”
An important discussion for more peaceful societies
We are in a global moment of renewed urgency to both respond to conflict and act to prevent it. The UN’s Sustaining Peace Agenda calls for greater investment across the peace continuum. Preventing and ending conflict is also a core commitment of the World Humanitarian Summit. Given that peace is both an outcome and a multiplier of sustainable development, it is widely recognised that progress on Sustainable Development Goal 16 (SDG16) reinforces progress on other goals. The notion of breaking silos has received considerable attention for several decades; however, issues related to conflict and fragility on the ground are now more complex, dynamic and protracted than ever before. In this event, we will introduce approaches to peacebuilding and conflict prevention which operationalise the humanitarian-peace-development nexus.
To focus on prevention, we must implement responses that address the root causes of conflict; lessen systemic and proximate drivers, ensuring a holistic conflict-sensitive approach from design to implementation. Contexts change because of both internal fluctuations and external shocks; therefore we must recognise and take advantage of opportunities to lay the groundwork for stability and peace across different types of interventions. The drivers of conflict are context dependent and effective responses must be grounded in common analysis, to help support well-functioning institutions, build social cohesion, correct marginalisation and tackle issues such as inequitable distribution of resources, amongst other targeted issues. Prevention can only be achieved when all segments of society are empowered and included; thus local ownership, inclusivity and sustainability are essential to success. Investing in approaches that integrate the nexus creates more comprehensive approaches to mitigating emerging risks and fragility, building support for peacebuilding efforts and contributing to more stable societies.
During the panel, practitioners and funding partners will share their experiences and lessons learned in linking and working across these three spheres in order to better advance peace. The session will explore complementarities, gaps, and the potential for coherence in humanitarian, peace and development approaches to build resilience and ultimately contribute to sustaining peace.
Objectives of the event:
• To enhance collaborative dialogue on sustaining peace, advocating for comprehensive, multi-sector approaches to peacebuilding, sharing the benefits and challenges of programming across thematic silos.
• To elaborate on the conditions and dynamics that affect operationalization of the triple nexus approaches to conflict prevention and discuss tools that support NGOs and civil society to achieve this.
• To present evidence from the field to inform future operations, facilitating inter-organisational learning to better respond to fragile contexts and integrate nexus approaches.
• To understand how donors can better support the advancement of more just and peaceful societies, and call for political support to achieve this.