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The growing presence of artificial intelligence in the military domain promises to impact aspects of international security ranging from strategic stability, peace promotion, international law, technology races, as well as fundamentally changing future operational environments.
The United Nations (UN) Secretary-General recently observed that “We have war reporters, but there are no peace reporters”.1 Building and sustaining peace is a long-term endeavour and does not create the headlines that war does.
The Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP) revealed on 30 May the winners of the 2023 GCSP Prize for Transformative Futures in Peace and Security.
There has long been a recognition of the linkages between natural resource degradation and conflict, and the exacerbating impact of climate change in driving resource scarcity, conflict, biodiversity loss, loss of livelihoods, inequality and poverty.
To officially launch the platform and discuss how the evidence and tools it provides can be linked to the HDP nexus policies, programming and investments.
A GCSP Alumni Regional Security Conversation
The information space can be defined in four simple words: “barriers and bridges, floods and deserts”.
How the need for a people-centred reconstruction approach translates into concrete projects in Ukraine
Local communities face devastating situations caused by conflicts and disasters. Wars fracture relationships within and between communities and undermine social cohesion.
The Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP) presents its 2022 Annual Report. For 28 years, the GCSP has been equipping policymakers and executives with the skills to develop forward-thinking and innovative solutions to deal with an ever-changing security landscape.