crric.org
Future Studies – CRRIC
CRRIC Research Initiative

Future Studies: Peace, Conflict, and Resilience in a Changing World

Anticipating the Future of Conflict, Strengthening the Possibilities for Peace

A Forward-Looking Research and Dialogue Platform

How can societies better anticipate future risks while also identifying the pathways, institutions, technologies, and civic capacities that may prevent violence and sustain peace?

The Conflict and Resilience Research Institute Canada (CRRIC) is developing a forward-looking research and dialogue initiative on the future of conflict, peace, and resilience. Building on CRRIC's post-COVID reflections on emerging conflict dynamics, this initiative asks a central question about how societies can better anticipate future risks while identifying pathways to prevent violence and sustain peace.

The world is entering a period of accelerating uncertainty. Geopolitical rivalry, climate stress, democratic fragmentation, economic inequality, forced displacement, organized crime, cyber insecurity, and emerging technologies are reshaping the conditions under which conflict emerges and peace is pursued. These forces rarely operate in isolation — they interact, overlap, and compound one another, producing new forms of insecurity but also new opportunities for prevention, dialogue, resilience, and peacebuilding.

CRRIC's Future Studies initiative is designed as a platform for research, policy dialogue, public education, and partnership-building. It is not limited to the study of war. It also examines the future of peace: how communities, institutions, governments, civil society, and international actors can anticipate disruption, reduce violence, strengthen trust, and build practical alternatives to conflict.

A World of Accelerating Disruption

The post-COVID world has revealed how quickly social, political, technological, and economic systems can be disrupted. Conflicts today are no longer confined to battlefields — they unfold across borders, supply chains, migration routes, information ecosystems, digital platforms, climate-stressed communities, and fragile governance systems.

Future conflict may be shaped by military competition, but also by food insecurity, water stress, disinformation, identity polarization, refugee displacement, cyberattacks, resource extraction, corruption, organized crime, and the erosion of public trust.

The future cannot be predicted with certainty, but it can be studied, anticipated, and shaped. Future Studies allows researchers and practitioners to test assumptions, explore alternative scenarios, identify risks before they escalate, and develop policy-relevant responses that strengthen resilience.

Four Interconnected Research Areas

CRRIC's Future Studies initiative will explore several interconnected areas covering the full spectrum from conflict dynamics to peacebuilding, climate security, and geopolitics.

1

The Changing Nature of Conflict

Future conflicts are likely to be hybrid, networked, and multi-dimensional — involving states, non-state armed groups, digital actors, criminal networks, private military companies, extremist movements, and transnational influence operations.

  • How are armed conflicts changing in an age of drones, cyber operations, AI, and information warfare?
  • How do non-state actors and criminal networks adapt to new technologies?
  • How do economic grievances, inequality, and resource competition fuel instability?
  • How do conflicts persist when peace processes fail to address root causes?
2

The Future of Peacebuilding and Conflict Transformation

CRRIC's work is grounded in non-violent conflict transformation, dialogue, education, and resilience-building. Future Studies must examine not only how conflict evolves, but also how peacebuilding must adapt.

  • Track II diplomacy, mediation, and community-based peacebuilding
  • Peace education, restorative justice, and reconciliation
  • Refugee return and post-conflict reconstruction
  • Locally led resilience models and evidence-based approaches
3

Climate, Displacement, and Human Security

Climate change is increasingly connected to food insecurity, livelihood loss, displacement, resource pressure, and social instability. In fragile regions, climate stress can interact with weak governance, armed violence, ethnic tension, and economic exclusion.

  • Climate-related insecurity and vulnerable communities
  • Refugees, Indigenous peoples, migrants, and conflict-affected populations
  • Arctic sovereignty and climate security
  • Myanmar's long-running conflict and Rohingya protection
4

Geopolitics, Multipolarity, and Middle-Power Responsibility

The global order is becoming more fragmented and contested. Great-power rivalry, shifting alliances, regional blocs, and strategic competition are creating new challenges for diplomacy and international cooperation.

  • Canada's role in the Indo-Pacific and the Arctic
  • Global refugee protection and peacebuilding architecture
  • Democratic resilience and responsible AI governance
  • Middle-power peace diplomacy and human security

Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Conflict and Peace

Artificial intelligence is becoming one of the defining technologies of the twenty-first century. It is already reshaping economies, public services, education, defence, policing, humanitarian response, media ecosystems, and democratic institutions. Its implications for conflict and peace are profound.

Canada's new National Artificial Intelligence Strategy, AI for All, highlights the importance of trust, safety, sovereignty, democratic protection, responsible adoption, and trusted global partnerships. For CRRIC, these policy priorities open an important research and dialogue space: how can AI be governed in ways that reduce conflict risks, protect vulnerable communities, and strengthen peace rather than deepen insecurity?

Risk Side

AI can accelerate misinformation, disinformation, deepfakes, propaganda, foreign interference, online radicalization, surveillance, cyberattacks, fraud, and identity-based harm. It may also affect military decision-making, autonomous systems, battlefield intelligence, targeting, strategic escalation, and the speed of crisis response. In fragile societies, AI-enabled manipulation can deepen mistrust, inflame grievances, and undermine peace processes.

Opportunity Side

AI may support conflict analysis, early warning, humanitarian mapping, mediation preparation, stakeholder analysis, peace education, trauma-informed programming, and evidence-based policy design. Used responsibly, AI can help researchers and practitioners process complex information, identify risks earlier, and support human decision-making in peacebuilding and conflict prevention.

CRRIC's position is clear: AI should not replace human judgment, ethical responsibility, local knowledge, or relationship-based peacebuilding. Instead, AI should be studied critically as a tool that can either intensify conflict or strengthen resilience, depending on how it is designed, governed, deployed, and contested.
Possible Research Themes on AI, Conflict, and Peace
AI, Misinformation & Democratic Trust AI-Enabled Propaganda & Radicalization Deepfakes & Synthetic Media AI, Surveillance & Human Rights AI & Cyber Conflict Autonomous Weapons & Escalation AI-Supported Mediation & Diplomacy Early Warning & Conflict Mapping AI Literacy for Educators & Youth Responsible AI Governance

Interdisciplinary and Policy-Facing Methods

CRRIC's Future Studies initiative will bring together scholars, practitioners, students, policymakers, civil society actors, community leaders, and technical experts to examine plausible futures of conflict and peace.

Strategic foresight and scenario analysis
Policy roundtables and expert dialogues
Conflict mapping and risk analysis
Comparative case studies
Youth and community consultations
AI and digital literacy workshops
Public education and webinar programming
Policy briefs, working papers, and research reports

CRRIC will pay particular attention to the interaction between global trends and local realities. Future conflict is not only a matter of state strategy or military technology — it is also experienced in communities through fear, displacement, polarization, economic insecurity, digital manipulation, and loss of trust. Future peace must therefore be built from both policy insight and lived experience.

A Distinct Canadian Conversation on Peace, Conflict, and Resilience

CRRIC sees an opportunity to contribute to a distinct Canadian conversation on the future of peace, conflict, and resilience. Canada has important strengths in AI research, human rights, peacebuilding, refugee protection, Indigenous knowledge, democratic governance, and multilateral diplomacy. Yet these fields are often discussed separately.

CRRIC's Future Studies initiative aims to connect them — creating a space where future conflict analysis, peacebuilding practice, AI governance, climate security, displacement research, and community resilience can be studied together.

The initiative will support Canada's broader role as a middle power committed to peace, human security, democratic values, and responsible innovation.

Invitation to Collaborate

CRRIC welcomes collaboration with universities, think tanks, policymakers, civil society organizations, technology experts, educators, students, and community leaders interested in the future of conflict, peace, and resilience.

The future is uncertain, but it is not beyond our responsibility. Through research, dialogue, foresight, and collaboration, CRRIC seeks to contribute to a more peaceful, resilient, and humane future.

Get in Touch with CRRIC
Related Platforms

Related Global Initiatives & Knowledge Platforms

Curated reference ecosystem for peace, conflict foresight, AI & security, climate-security, resilience, mediation, and strategic futures.

27Platforms Listed
12Recommended
15+Countries & Regions
Purpose: This section lists comparable global organizations and knowledge platforms that CRRIC can reference for its Future Studies initiative. The emphasis is on peace/conflict foresight, AI and security, climate-security, resilience, mediation, and strategic futures.
Filter by
Showing 27 platforms

Atlantic Council – Scowcroft Center Foresight

United States / Global
Useful for strategic foresight, global trends, security threats, technology disruption, and long-range policy analysis.
Strategic ForesightTechnologySecurity
Visit

RAND – Global and Emerging Risks

United States / Global
Strong on global security, catastrophic risks, emerging technologies, AI, synthetic biology, and climate/energy futures.
Catastrophic RiskAIClimate
Visit

GPPi – Strategic Foresight

Germany / Global
Useful for scenario-based foresight, gaming, policy design, algorithmic forecasting, early warning, and simulation.
Scenario PlanningForecastingEarly Warning
Visit

Weathering Risk

Germany / Multilateral
Strong climate-security platform combining climate data, conflict analysis, foresight, peacebuilding, resilience, and policy tools.
Climate SecurityResiliencePeacebuilding
Visit

Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue – HD

Switzerland / Global
Relevant for mediation, discreet diplomacy, armed conflict prevention, dialogue, and practical peacemaking.
MediationDiplomacyDialogue
Visit

Berghof Foundation

Germany / Global
Strong conflict transformation, peace education, applied research, dialogue, and mediation support.
Conflict TransformationPeace EducationMediation
Visit

International Alert

United Kingdom / Global
Leading peacebuilding NGO focused on root causes of conflict, conflict analysis, climate shocks, economic instability, and local peacebuilding.
PeacebuildingConflict AnalysisClimate
Visit

Peace Direct

United Kingdom / Global
Useful for locally led peacebuilding, grassroots conflict resolution, and community resilience.
Local PeacebuildingCommunityResilience
Visit

ACCORD – African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes

South Africa / Africa
Useful Global South comparator for conflict resolution, dialogue, mediation, and African peacebuilding practice.
AfricaMediationGlobal South
Visit

Toda Peace Institute

Japan / Global
Strong policy-oriented peace research platform with themes on climate/conflict, democracy, social media, technology, and peacebuilding.
Peace ResearchClimateDemocracy
Visit

Institute for Economics & Peace

Australia / Global
Useful for data-driven peace, conflict, risk, Global Peace Index, and positive peace metrics.
Data-DrivenPeace IndexMetrics
Visit

Strategic Foresight Group

India / Global
Relevant Global South foresight think tank; useful for water diplomacy, peace, security, and future-oriented policy concepts.
Global SouthWater DiplomacyForesight
Visit

Carnegie Endowment – Technology and International Affairs Program

United States / Global
Useful for AI, cyber threats, influence operations, biotechnology risk, digital inclusion, and technology governance.
AICyberBiotech Risk
Visit

Harvard Belfer Center – AI and Conflict Resolution

United States
Useful academic reference for AI, mediation, negotiation, conflict resolution, and peacebuilding.
AcademicAINegotiation
Visit

UNU Centre for Policy Research

UN / Global
Useful for UN peace operations, global governance innovation, future challenges, and multilateral policy research.
UNGovernanceMultilateral
Visit

Recommended First 12 Links for the CRRIC Webpage

A balanced ecosystem across Europe, Canada, UN/Geneva, climate-security, AI-security, and peacebuilding.

The organizations listed here are thematically aligned with CRRIC's proposed Future Studies initiative. Some are direct analogues; others are adjacent platforms useful for benchmarking, partnership mapping, or citation on the webpage.