In 1945, Christian Aid was born out of the need to respond to the effects of violence and conflict of this time.
In the following 70 years we have worked in many conflict-affected countries and settings, often working directly on issues of violence and peace. While we are not a specialist peace building organisation, tackling violence and building peace is a strategic priority.
We are seeking:
- increased protection for those most vulnerable to violence – and equipping them to address the causes of violence, to tackle impunity and resolve conflict peacefully
- the development of peaceful and effective alternatives to violence and armed conflict
- to support broad social movements for change with women at the centre that successfully address root causes of violence and act to transform them with justice.
Explore our latest review and case studies - Keeping hope alive
Find out how we work with our partners to protect communities, reduce violence and transform the root causes of conflict to bring lasting and resilient peace.
Our partners work to:
- protect communities
- reduce violence
- transform conflict.
We believe that the key elements to creating sustainable peace are:
- understanding the power and the politics of change in any context
- a context-specific approach
- a commitment to gender.
We work in hard-to-reach places and have the potential to reach the most excluded in any situation, to create social cohesion, strengthen local capacity and support empowerment.
In many places where there is conflict, violence and state fragility, our partners have the ability to act as a relationship broker. Christian Aid supports our partners to access response mechanisms, donors, the media, advocacy platforms and other actors.
Violence reduction and peace building connected to development interventions
This work aims to build peace by directly targeting drivers of violence and working on root causes. Our work includes an Irish Aid funded programme in Angola, Zimbabwe, Sierra Leone, Central America, Colombia, Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory (IoPt), and programmes in Myanmar, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Egypt.
Humanitarian interventions designed to be sensitive to conflict
This approach involves using specific tools to:
- conduct a conflict-aware context analysis
- monitor and evaluate development and humanitarian programmes in the context of endemic violence and conflict
- take into consideration the conflict dynamics that a particular context presents during the whole project/programme cycle.
We've been responding to humanitarian emergencies and disasters around the world since 1945, providing urgently needed immediate relief and long-term support.
Gender sensitive work and gender-based violence
Gender greatly influences the extent to which people are impacted by conflict and violence. We work to challenge and transform unequal gender norms and exclusionary practices and achieve justice for survivors and more gender-equitable power relations.
Our work in this area includes projects in Malawi, Kenya, DRC and Zimbabwe, and a regional programme in Latin America.