The Future of peace-making today

Failures in the present-day peace order and the importance of a Multi-Regional Decolonial Perspective

Registration

Registration takes place via RWTHonline and is possible from 15 March 2026 to 6 April 2026. Further information on the registration process can be found in the FAQs.

All students can register for one course. You can specify two preferences. To do so, please use the ‘high’ priority and the one directly below it. For instructions, please click here. If you have not been allocated a place at the end of the allocation process and are still interested in participating in a course, please contact sibel.yildirim@ipw.rwth-aachen.de.

(If you have any problems with registration, please contact Ms Sibel Yildirim (IPW) at sibel.yildirim@ipw.rwth-aachen.de, stating your matriculation number. If you have any general questions about the course, please contact the person listed below.)

We welcome your questions and comments. You can contact us here! (The ‘Leonardo’ project is also on Facebook and Instagram).

Academic Responsibility

Didaktik der Geschichts- und Politikwissenschaft

Chair of Society and Technology

Contact Person

Elena Maria Hörkens, M.A.

Schedulue

Start

07.05.2026 & 08.05.2026

Zeit

Thursday & Friday, 10:00 – 16:00 h

Ort

Leonardo-Room

Description

The UN Agenda for Democratization and Agenda for Peace presumes that because democratic governance is freely chosen by the citizen and held accountable through periodic and genuine elections and other mechanisms, democratic societies are more likely to promote and respect the rule of law, individual and minority rights and therefore are an important source of peace-building. This seminar comes at a critical time when liberal peacebuilding is currently threatened by the emergence of illiberalism and populist authoritarian regimes (age of the strongman) all over the world. The latter pokes holes into Fukuyama’s “The End of History Idea” that claimed that western liberal democracy is the final form of human governance, relying on the Democratic Peace Theory which states that most democratic countries are reluctant to engage in armed conflict with another republic or democratic country motivated by keeping the peace. This notion was largely sustained by the United Nations paradigm that lasted for over seventy years but later changed due to growing pessimism of a peaceful world brought about by events such as the 9/11 terrorist attack in the United States making the US more rigid and absolute in its foreign policy and domestic affairs. Today, liberal democracy is being challenged in all fronts by strongmen who seek a more controlled nationalistic governance from Europe, North America and Africa.

Against this backdrop, this course begins with a reversal of perspective. It looks at the changing world from a (pan-)African perspective. And this can bring a breath of fresh air to the question of what the future of peace might look like. For example, African scholars of peacebuilding have called for more contextualized and localized approaches to peacebuilding, with some highlighting the need to amplify and mainstream indigenous African approaches to peacebuilding, such as open assembly, oath or covenant making. The event will take the form of an interactive workshop, allowing participants to question and reorient their own ideas about peace work from the perspective mentioned above.

Please note that this course, including the examinations, will be taught entirely in English.

Learning Outcomes

At the end of the course, students will be able to …

  • to explain the function and interdependence of important international organizations and treaties with regard to issues of peace.

  • to assess the relevance and significance of African perspectives in addressing issues of peace and security.

  • to describe and evaluate the significance of a decolonial perspective for the sustainable development of a new global peace order.

  • to understand the dynamics and framework conditions of debates in public political spaces.

Program

07.05.2026

Crisis of Neoliberal Peace

  • Erosion of public trust is democratic institutions and global institutions such as the ICC, UN and autonomous bodies such IAEA

  • Need to change the unfair power structures in multilateral institutions, in the context of today’s reality, that were created after World War II (1945) and that were upheld after the cold war to distribute power for more solidarity, equality and sustainability

  • Global nuclear disarmament as a spectacle for the new cold war

  • New start treaty tool for peace or another lever for the global display of power and dominance

08.05.2026

The Future of Peacemaking today, a Multi-Regional Epistemic Perspective

  • What is the constitution of peacemaking today and who are the proverbial “blessed peacemakers?”

  • Peace and Social Justice: No justice no peace and the non-militarization of peace

  • Decolonizing the politics of nuclear disarmament in knowledge production

Procedure/Working method​

Depending on the course of studies, module and examination, credit points can be achieved through participation. If you would like to take an exam, please make sure beforehand how you can get credit for it in your degree program. Of course, you can also take exams without receiving curricular credit for them. Visit our FAQs for more information.

Certificate

– Attendance (0 CP, Certificate of attendance).
– Protocol with critical reflection (2 CP, ungraded)
– Written Exam / Essay 8-10 pages (4 CP,graded)

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