Our research reaches the field through established networks. Hundreds of organisations are connected. We contribute the foundational research; they contribute the real-world experience that tests and improves it.
Each network serves a different function. Together they connect foundational research to the organisations doing the work.
Special consultative status with the UN Economic and Social Council. We hold side events to introduce our research to high-level advocacy professionals and national diplomats working in the human rights space. The implication: foundational peace theory reaches the people shaping global policy.
Most recently, we convened a side event at the 58th Session of the UN Human Rights Council (Geneva, March 2025) on defining a foundation for global peacecraft, with panellists Dr Cecilia Bailliet (UN Independent Expert on Human Rights and International Solidarity, University of Oslo) and Sean Conner (International Peace Bureau).
200+ organisations across 181 countries, coordinating peacebuilding practice globally. As consulting peace philosophers, we explore how the shared framework can add a theoretical dimension to their indicator work. The implication: practical metrics and foundational theory reinforce each other.
Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1910) with 400 member organisations across 100 countries. As consulting peace philosophers, we contribute theoretical frameworks that deepen campaign narratives. The implication: advocacy positions gain philosophical grounding alongside their moral urgency.
North America's leading association of peace philosophers, active for over four decades. We presented at their 2025 conference and collaborate on integrating normative philosophy with empirical methodology. The implication: foundational claims face the scrutiny they require.
600+ organisations are already part of these networks. Whether you want to explore how the framework applies to your context, bring the ideas to an event, or propose a research collaboration, the starting point is the same.