Our Methodology
Our methodology rests on three pillars:
Conflict Analysis
Conflict analysis before, during and after our time of intervention, informing the design of our projects, providing information and insight, aiding all who are helping to transform conflict. If peace processes are to be effective, it is vital that participants are well-informed. They need to be informed about one another’s positions, they need to be informed about the views of the entire population, not just the most vocal, and external actors must have a proper understanding of the history and nuance of the conflict. Only then will any agreement address the root causes of the conflict and create the conditions necessary for lasting peace. Research is therefore a key component in Concordis’ work. We engage acknowledged experts to do this research for us. Much of this work is published.
Facilitating Dialogue
We facilitate dialogue between groups affected by conflict, building trust and confidence, creating a shared vision for the future and laying foundations for the restoration of peace. Dialogue is at the heart of what we do and the way we work. We use dialogue to build trust and foster relationships. Building trust in us as an impartial third party is an essential first stage in any peacebuilding process. This involves working with individuals and communities on each side of the conflict.
Building Resilience
We build resilience beyond our time of intervention by equipping local people with skills needed for peacebuilding, giving a voice to people who aren’t normally heard (including women and youth), communicating and advocating recommendations from dialogue processes to policy makers, and sharing our lessons learned with others.
We seek to build resilience in the societies we work in, so that peace may last long after our projects come to an end. We do this in two ways: equipping local people to develop their own peace-building solutions and mechanisms and communicating recommendations at the policy-making level.
We believe that informed dialogue between people on different sides of conflict :
Builds trust across lines of conflict and social divisions
Facilitates consensus-building on the basis of shared interests
Contributes positively to negotiation processes
Creates the climate for more generally peaceful relations.