Library


The library is a community-driven collection of analyses, guidance, policy, and other materials submitted by researchers and practitioners on peacebuilding and natural resources. It consists of assessments, case studies, policy briefs, reports, and multimedia content. This section is frequently updated with new materials.

There are 7918 resources in the library. If you would like to help build the library by contributing materials, please click here.

Unregulated Artisanal Mining and Threats to Environmental Peacebuilding in Mazowe District, Mashonaland Central Province, Zimbabwe

2026 | Journal of Peacebuilding & Development
David Makwerere, Vigai Maunganidze, and Kudakwashe Ignatius Mhuri

This study assessed the effects of unregulated artisanal gold mining on environmental security and environmental peacebuilding in the Mazowe District of Mashonaland Central Province, Zimbabwe.…


Mining, Conflict, and Environmental Action in Myanmar’s Borderlands

2026 | Stimson Center
Surachanee Sriyai, Brian Eyler, and Regan Kwan

Mining in Myanmar’s eastern borderlands is no longer only a local governance challenge; it is a transboundary environmental and security issue with growing regional consequences.…


Intersecting Futures: Global Trends Shaping and Shaped by Climate Change over the Next Century

2026 | Hague Centre for Strategic Studies
Thijs van Aken and Laura Birkman

Climate change is no longer a distant environmental challenge – it is rapidly reshaping global stability, economic resilience, and geopolitical competition. In Intersecting Futures, Thijs van…


EnPAx Icon Eyes at the Last Mile: Ethical Impact Storytelling for Environmental Peacebuilding [Video]

2026 | Environmental Peacebuilding Association

Environmental peacebuilding operates at the intersection of environmental stress, conflict, health, and resilience, yet the lived realities of communities at the last mile are often…


How Can Climate Change Help Us Build a More Peaceful World? [Video]

2026 | TEDxMidAtlantic
Florian Krampe

A cracked riverbed, a drought, people on the move — and the headline writes itself: climate change breeds war. Florian Krampe has spent his career…