With reconstruction efforts already under way, Ukraine and its international partners are uniting around an agenda of “building back better”. To do so successfully will require systematic attention to the needs of Ukrainian communities and citizens.
Sometimes, the best way to succeed is to be prepared to fail. This is particularly true in the world of diplomacy, and even more so of arms control.
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.
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.
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 present international system has been vulnerable since 24 February 2022 and is currently experiencing a transformation as countries scramble to adapt to the new environment that the Russian invasion of Ukraine has brought into being.
Co-organised by the Geneva Graduate Institute and the Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP), this event was part of the Science and Diplomacy Week 2023.
This event was in cooperation with Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) Geneva office.
During the Geneva Security Debate, titled "China's role in multilateral arms control",