Psychology and peacemaking: The inner dynamics of peace negotiations
As violent conflicts escalate worldwide, there is a pressing need to strengthen peace negotiations that lead to lasting solutions. Supporting these efforts requires not only understanding what happens at the negotiation table, but also in the minds of those who sit around it.
When former adversaries come together in high-level peace negotiations, their encounter is not merely political or transactional – it is profoundly psychological. What kinds of mental and emotional shifts can take place once adversaries meet face to face? And what psychological factors do negotiators bring into the room?
Psychology and neuroscience provide powerful insights into the inner dynamics of peace negotiations, enabling us to understand the causes of deadlocks and the factors that can lead to breakthroughs.
This event brings together former peace negotiators with experts in psychology and neuroscience to explore how psychological insights can support more effective negotiation and mediation strategies.
The event also marks the launch of the Berghof Foundation’s new publication: The Role of Psychology in Peacemaking. Based on over 40 in-depth interviews with peace negotiators, mediators, and psychologists, the guide offers practical tools and evidence-based strategies to bridge the gap between psychological knowledge, neuroscientific research, and the real-world challenges of peacemaking.
19 June 2025
16:00 - 17:15 CEST
Online event via Zoom.
This event will be held in English
Welcome remarks:
- Chris Coulter, Executive Director, Berghof Foundation
- Marja Esveld, Head of Rule of Law and Peacebuilding, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands
Speakers:
- Retired Lieutenant Commander Juanita Millán, former negotiator in the Colombian peace process with the FARC-EP; member of the United Nations Standby Team of Senior Mediation Advisers
- Shadia Marhaban, former negotiator for the Free Aceh Movement, Indonesia; international mediator
- Professor Lasana Harris, Professor of Social Neuroscience, University College London
- Charlotte Hamm, Researcher and Project Manager, Berghof Foundation and King’s College London
Moderated by Beatrix Austin, Head of Department, Conflict Transformation Research, Berghof Foundation.