While indigenous civil society organisations (CSOs) are important actors in post-conflict peacebuilding, they have traditionally played a somewhat secondary role by carrying out unofficial Track II (T2) peacebuilding activities, such as peace education programs and problem-solving workshops. They are often absent from the negotiating table, with official mediation instead led by international actors and diplomats. This does not mean indigenous organisations are ineffective, but that their peacebuilding influence has tended to be more focused on community relations than determining a conflictâs future. However, in recent times, indigenous CSOs have increasingly assumed a more central role in peacebuilding operations. As international actors, most notably the United States, continue to roll back the amount of humanitarian funding and support given to peacebuilding, a space has opened for indigenous CSOs to more explicitly shape the future trajectory of their conflict and associated peacebuilding efforts.
By focusing on the Cypriot conflict, this short article will demonstrate how several peacebuilding CSOs have recently assumed greater responsibility and agency, notably by influencing the countryâs peacebuilding priorities. As external actors continue to reduce their support, indigenous CSOs will likely play a central peacebuilding role in the future. We should no longer view them as secondary or peripheral actors, but as integral peacebuilders with an unmatched understanding and attachment to conflict and related peacebuilding efforts.Â
Civil Societyâs Peacebuilding Role
In recent decades, researchers and policymakers have increasingly argued that indigenous civil society organisations (CSOs) â here defined as organisations comprising of shared interests, purposes and values, distinct from the state, market and family, such as religious associations, womenâs organisations and human rights groups â play a critical role in post-conflict peacebuilding (Barrow 2023, 1). As they are ingrained into disputant communities, they understand their âcultural context and nuanced dynamicsâ (Jewett 2019, 119) and can thereby develop effective, working relationships with conflicting parties, who commonly perceive them as legitimate and well-meaning actors.
While there is wide recognition that indigenous CSOs should be involved in peace efforts, the specific means by which they contribute to peacebuilding continues to attract scholarly debate. Some scholars focus on the merits and drawbacks of including CSOs in official peace negotiations â Track 1 (T1) efforts â a practice often referred to as âdirect participationâ in peace processes (Kew & Wanis-St. John 2008,17). The arguments put forward for including CSOs at this high level include their ability to ensure greater public representation in negotiations, while engendering societal and community ownership of an eventual peace agreement (Paffenholz 2014; Lorentzen 2020).
However, there have traditionally been few cases of CSOs directly influencing peace talks at the negotiating table, with Paffenholz noting that ânegotiators have tended to favour the exclusion of CSOs from peace negotiationsâ (Paffenholz 2014, 73). There are notable exceptions to this trend. For example, the 2003 peace settlement in Liberia was signed by the government and two rebel groups, besides several CSOs, such as the Inter-Religious Council for Liberia (Nilsson 2012, 244). However, other official peace negotiations, such as in Northern Ireland and Bosnia, were âexclusiveâ given that those directly involved in the negotiations were âpolitical leaders and diplomatic envoysâ (Kmec & Ganiel 2019, 151).
In these cases of exclusion, CSOs have historically embarked on unofficial forms of peacebuilding, which take place away from the negotiating table. In practice, CSOs typically become facilitators of unofficial Track 2 (T2) interventions. T2 is a term often attributed to Joseph Montville, who defined it as âunofficial, informal interaction between members of adversary groups or nations that aim to develop strategies, influence public opinion, organise human and material sources in ways that might help resolve their conflictâ (Montville and Davidson 1981, 192). T2 interventions are largely welcomed by officials and policymakers, as they typically supplement T1 diplomacy by creating peaceful conditions where official negotiations are more likely to succeed. Specific T2 interventions include dialogue forums, where parties are brought together by a facilitator to improve interpersonal relationships and understanding; problem-solving workshops, consisting of controlled communication where disputants are encouraged to discuss potential peacebuilding strategies; and peace education programs, designed to promote peaceful coexistence by countering divisive narratives (Burgess and Burgess 2010; Ăuhadar & Dayton 2012).
Cypriot Peacebuilding and Civil Society
Cyprus has been divided between the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) and the southern Republic of Cyprus (RoC) since Turkeyâs 1974 invasion culminated in the separation of the islandâs two largest ethnic communities, the Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots. Official peace talks have taken place periodically over the past 50 years, but have repeatedly failed to appease both communities and resolve their points of contention.
The most recent attempts to resolve the conflict were the 2017 peace talks held at the Swiss resort of Crans-Montana. The talks were convened by the United Nationsâ (UNâs) Special Adviser on Cyprus, Espen Barth Eide, and included representatives from Cyprusâ guarantor powers (Britain, Greece and Turkey), in addition to the EU and leaders of both the RoC and TRNC (Coufoudakis 2018). The talks lasted for ten days, beginning on 28th June 2017, before collapsing âamid anger and recriminationsâ on 7th July (Smith 2017). One of the main points of contention was Turkeyâs refusal to withdraw its troops from the island, which is a condition insisted upon by the Greek Cypriot (GC) community.
As has been the case with previous peace talks, the Crans-Montana negotiations were âexclusiveâ, with little opportunity for civil society inclusion. As such, the islandâs civil society has traditionally relied on alternative means of peacebuilding, principally the facilitation of unofficial T2 interventions. This has been the case since the number of Cypriot peacebuilding CSOs proliferated after 2003, when restrictions preventing Turkish and Greek Cypriots from crossing the divide were relaxed. Womenâs groups, youth-based organisations, educational associations and religious groups developed in the years that followed, such as the Association of Historical Dialogue and Research (AHDR) and Hands Across the Divide (HAD). While the CSOs have different interests, they facilitate similar types of peacebuilding activity. They include dialogue forums where Greek and Turkish Cypriots (TCs) can discuss and propose solutions to different aspects of conflict, and educational programs where young GCs and TCs learn about each otherâs community away from the nationalist education curricula they are exposed to in school.
One CSO that has received considerable scholarly attention â owing to its somewhat unique contribution within the Cypriot context â is the Home for Cooperation (HFC), a community hub within Nicosiaâs buffer zone. Officially opened in 2011, it describes itself as âthe embodiment of intercommunal cooperation, contributing to the collective efforts of civil society in their engagement with peacebuildingâ (HFC website 2023), given that it provides TCs and GCs with a place to meet and socialise in the space dividing the two communities. It hosts a range of events, including multicommunal performing arts festivals designed to strengthen links between citizens, build bridges and facilitate interaction (Ladini 2009, 54-5; Tziarras 2018).
Declining international support
However, it has become increasingly clear over the past decade that Cypriot CSOs are assuming greater responsibility for the future of the islandâs conflict and peacebuilding. There are several interconnected reasons for this. There is widespread domestic understanding that Cyprus is way down the list of priorities facing the international peacebuilding community. Even though Cyprus is geopolitically important for several reasons â including contestation between Turkey and the EU over offshore gas extraction in the Eastern Mediterranean â it is believed that international attention will remain predominantly focused on other issues, such as the Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Palestine conflicts, for the foreseeable future. It is telling that there has been little appetite to restart official peace talks since their most recent demise in 2017.
This declining international attention on Cyprus is evidenced by the decreasing amount of international funding being channelled into the islandâs humanitarian and peacebuilding activities. Over the past year, we have seen foreign actors and governments â most notably the US â limiting their financial humanitarian support. In early 2025, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) was heavily defunded, with over 80% of the agencyâs global humanitarian and peacebuilding programmes cancelled by March 2025 (Faguy 2025). The UK has also cut foreign aid by over ÂŁ6 billion, while other European countries have heavily reduced their commitments (Peace Direct 2026).
Cyprus is an interesting case in this regard, as the decline of international financial support began much earlier than 2025. The US was previously one of the most prolific supporters of Cypriot reconciliation measures. USAID financially supported the islandâs Action for Cooperation and Trust (ACT) programme, which was set up to support âcivil society initiativesâ aimed at âpeacebuilding and confidence buildingâ between both communities, including cultural heritage and educational projects (UNDP webpage 2023). However, the programme was discontinued in March 2016, following USAIDâs decision to stop funding Cypriot projects. This was primarily owing to USAIDâs priorities shifting âto other parts of the world where there is more active conflictâ (Interview with USAID employee 1, 2023).
USAID is not the only donor to curtail its financial support. The UK was also previously a significant supporter of Cypriot peacebuilding activities, but its âfocus has turned elsewhereâ in recent years, given there is âless money to go around than there used to beâ (Interview with Cyprus High Commission representative 2023). There is also a growing assumption among foreign donors that it is âfutileâ supporting Cypriot peacebuilding initiatives until the islandâs two nationalist administrations (in the RoC and TRNC) learn to âspeak with each other againâ and âreconcile their differences about the islandâs futureâ (Interview with Cyprus High Commission representative 2023). The domestic political situation is cited by other donors, including the EU, as a factor deterring their financial peacebuilding support.
Asserting Agency
Some initial studies have been carried out to question how the declining level of funding has impacted indigenous peacebuilding actors in different parts of the world. Peace Direct, an International NGO, finds that it has led to increased pressure on local peacebuilders to continue their activities without financial support, while long-term planning has become increasingly difficult owing to the precarious position many indigenous actors now find themselves in (Peace Direct 2026). Ukrainian CSOs are struggling to provide the same level and quality of humanitarian services, including educational programmes (Dolinina 2025), while peacebuilding CSOs operating in the Central African Republic and Democratic Republic of Congo are trying their best to continue at least some of their community integration activities (Peace Direct 2026). Another recent study finds that key âefforts led by women peacebuilders have been severely undermined by recent funding cutsâ, including women-led educational initiatives in Syria and Afghanistan (GIWPS 2025).
The purpose of this article is not to deny or challenge these negative implications arising from the decline of international funding, but to argue that this situation also creates an opportunity, at least once the initial shock of funding termination has subsided. This is the attitude shared by many Cypriot peacebuilding CSOs, which have had longer to adjust to decreased funding than CSOs operating in other contexts. They speak of asserting their agency by assuming greater ownership and responsibility for the islandâs conflict and peacebuilding efforts. This simultaneously allows them to break from their previous dependency upon external actors and agendas, with several CSOs claiming that their autonomy was previously restricted, given that donors typically prescribe and âdictate what exactly the money should be used forâ (Interview with HFC employee 1, 2023). As such, while many Cypriot CSOs originated as relatively ad hoc groups planning and facilitating T2 interventions in accordance with donorsâ preferences, they increasingly see themselves as integral to keeping the idea of a peaceful resolution âaliveâ within the wider Cypriot community. As few other actors are driving forward the Cypriot peace agenda, it is a case of âif not us, then who?â (Interview with AHDR employee 1, 2023).
While there is no single strategy or mechanism by which Cypriot CSOs assert their agency, one principal method has been to shape the structure and agenda of the overall peace process. In practice, this entails pressing for the inclusion of certain groups and individuals in the peace process, and campaigning for specific topics and conflict-related issues to be added to the islandâs overall peace agenda, or to be prioritised once negotiations resume sometime in the future. Several CSOs believe that their close relationship with the UNâs Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP) is integral in allowing them to push âfor change in how the conflict is managedâ (Interview with HFC employee 1, 2023). As official peace talks take place under the auspices of the UN, in collaboration with other members of the negotiation team, the UN ultimately determines their procedure and is generally responsible for managing and coordinating the islandâs peacebuilding efforts.
As such, the âgood relationshipâ formed between UNFICYP and two education-focused CSOs, the Association for Historical Dialogue and Research (AHDR) and the Home for Cooperation (HFC), has allowed the two CSOs to push UNFICYP, and the international peacebuilding community more broadly, into making peace education a âkey component of any eventual peace agreementâ (Interview with AHDR employee 1, 2023). The CSOs believe widescale adoption of the âpeace educationâ term and framework is itself a key âindicator of successâ (Interview with HFC employee 1, 2023), with UNFICYPâs Civil Affairs section fully integrating the âpremise of peace educationâ into their work and activities (Interview with UNFICYP employee 1, 2023). The CSOs and UNFICYP are clear that there would be fewer opportunities to influence the peace process and UNFICYPâs own priorities if external actors and donors, including the US, remained explicitly focused on determining the islandâs peace process.
In practice, the CSOsâ agenda-setting ability derives from AHDRâs Director being recently added to the Technical Committee on Educationâs membership. This is one of the islandâs 12 Technical Committees, which aim to encourage and facilitate âgreater interaction and understanding between the two communitiesâ (UNDP webpage). They also have specific remits and areas of focus, such as education, culture and the environment. AHDRâs Director has long worked with UNFICYP and is widely judged to have a âdeep knowledge of educationâ that benefits the committee (Interview with UNFICYP employee 1, 2023). His membership provides him with the opportunity to raise AHDRâs objectives with the full committee, including the CSOâs consistent call for schools to assume a âcritical, empathetic and multiperspectival approachâ to history education (AHDR Policy Paper 2013, 7). This has enabled AHDR to demonstrate the importance of peace education to UNFICYP and other committee members, and has contributed to UNFICYPâs acceptance of the peace education framework.
There are further examples of indigenous CSOs influencing the agenda of the Cypriot peace process. Hands Across the Divide (HAD) was established in 2001 as the islandâs first multicommunal womenâs organisation. It specifically focuses on uniting Greek and Turkish Cypriot women, in addition to campaigning for the inclusion of women in official peace negotiations. HAD believes their targeted campaigning has forced international actors, most notably the UN, to âtake noteâ of their âspecific demandsâ, including their desire for âmore women to be formally involved in peace negotiationsâ, which is now a priority for UNFICYP (Interview with HAD member 1, 2023). Indeed, the employment of a Gender Affairs Officer as part of UNFICYPâs Civil Affairs team â a position that was added in 2017 â largely stemmed from âcontinued discussion and campaigning from civil society groups, especially Hands Across the Divideâ as to the importance of gender inclusion in all aspects of peacebuilding (Interview with UNFICYP Gender Affairs Officer 2024). HAD are adamant that the islandâs civil society is increasingly âfilling the voidâ left by the international communityâs growing detachment from the island (Interview with HAD member 1, 2023).
Conclusion
The main objective of this article has been to illustrate an emerging trend within the peacebuilding field. There is now broad recognition that international actors, most notably the US, are rolling back the amount of support and funding available for peacebuilding and humanitarian activities around the world. While the wider implications remain somewhat uncertain, initial scholarly debate has largely focused on how this situation is undermining the ability of indigenous actors to develop and facilitate peacebuilding activities. It is, of course, the case that a sudden termination of funding significantly hinders peacebuilding actors, but this should also be seen as an opportunity, at least in the longer term. By focusing on the Cypriot context, this article has demonstrated how the growing disassociation and absence of international support have provided a space for indigenous actors to more explicitly shape the islandâs peacebuilding priorities. We have seen how CSOs are asserting their agency by increasingly setting the agenda of the islandâs peace process, specifically by influencing the UN peacekeeping missionâs focus. Although a lot more research is required in this area, we should no longer regard indigenous peacebuilders as secondary actors facilitating unofficial activities, but as central actors increasingly determining the future trajectory of conflict and peacebuilding.
References
Association for Historical Dialogue and Research. 2013. ââPolicy Paper: Rethinking Education in Cyprusââ. Nicosia: AHDR. https://www.ahdr.info/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/POLICY-PAPER_FINAL-LR.pdf.
Barrow, Mark. 2023. ââEnabling Within Constraints: Assessing International Aidâs Impact Upon Cypriot Peacebuilding Organisationsââ. Journal of Peacebuilding and Development 18, No. 3: 295-309.
Burgess, Heidi and Guy Burgess. 2010. ââConducting track II peacemakingââ. US Institute of Peace. https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/resources/PMT_Burgess_Conducting_TrackII.pdf.
Coufoudakis, Van. 2018. ââCyprus: The Crans-Montana Deadlock and the Next Stepsââ, Greek News, April 21, 2018. https://www.greeknewsonline.com/cyprus-the-crans-montana-deadlock-and-the-next-steps/.
Ăuhadar, Esra and Bruce Dayton. 2012. ââOslo and Its Aftermath: Lessons Learned from Track Two Diplomacyââ. Negotiation Journal 28, No. 2: 155-179.
Davidson, William. D. and Joseph V. Montville. 1981. ââForeign policy according to Freudââ. Foreign Policy 45, No. 45: 145-157.
Dolinina, Olga. 2025. ââUS funding cuts hit peacebuilding initiatives in Ukraineââ, Peace Direct, September 09, 2025. https://www.peaceinsight.org/en/articles/us-funding-cuts-hit-peacebuilding-initiatives-in-ukraine/?location=ukraine&theme=refugees-and-idps.
Faguy, Ana. 2025. ââUSAID officially closes, attracting condemnation from Obama and Bushââ, BBC News, July 02, 2025. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c307zq8ppj6o. Â
GIWPS. 2025. ââWomen Peacebuilders Bear the Brunt of the Funding Freeze: How You Can Helpââ, Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security, April 30, 2025. https://giwps.georgetown.edu/2025/04/30/women-peacebuilders-funding-freeze-how-you-can-help/.
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Jewett, Georgia. 2019. ââNecessary but insufficient: Civil society in international mediationââ. International Negotiation 24, No. 1: 117â135.
Kew, Darren and Anthony Wanis-St John. 2008. ââCivil Society and Peace Negotiations: Confronting Exclusionââ. International Negotiation 13, No. 1: 11-36.
Kmec, Vladimir and Gladys Ganiel. 2019. ââThe Strengths and Limitations of the Inclusion of Religious Actors in Peace Processes in Northern Ireland and Bosnia and Herzegovinaââ. International Negotiation 24, No. 1: 136-163.
Ladini, Gianfabrizio. 2009. ââPeacebuilding, United Nations and civil society: The case of Cyprusââ. Cyprus Review 21, No. 2: 37â61.
Lorentzen, Jenny. 2020. ââWomenâs Inclusion in the Malian Peace Negotiations: Norms and Practicesââ. Swiss Political Science Review 26, No. 4: 406-424.McKeon, Celia. 2004. ââOwning the process: The role of civil society in peace negotiationsââ. London: Conciliation Resources: https://www.c-r.org/resource/owning-process-role-civil-society-peace-negotiations.
Nilsson, DesirĂ©e. 2012. ââAnchoring the Peace: Civil Society actors in Peace Accords and Durable Peaceââ. International Interactions 38, No. 2: 243-266.
Paffenholz, Thania. 2014. ââCivil Society and Peace Negotiations: Beyond the Inclusion-Exclusion Dichotomyââ. Negotiation Journal 30, No. 1: 69-91.
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Smith, Helen. 2017. ââPatience is running outâ: pressure on Turkey and Greece as Cyprus talks openââ. The Guardian, June 28, 2017. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jun/28/a-best-and-last-hope-talks-begin-over-cypriot-reunification.
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Interviews
Interviews with the Association of Historical Dialogue and Research Employee 1, conducted by Mark Barrow. In-person interview in Nicosia, Cyprus (18 April 2023 and 20 March 2024).
Interview with Cyprus High Commission Representative 1, conducted by Mark Barrow. In-person interview by Mark Barrow (12 March 2023).
Interview with Hands Across the Divide Member 1, conducted by Mark Barrow. Online Video Call (07 November 2022). In-person interview in Nicosia, Cyprus (27 March 2023, 19 September 2023 and 29 March 2024).
Interview with Home for Cooperation Employee 1, conducted by Mark Barrow. Online Video Call (03 November 2022). In-person interview in Nicosia, Cyprus (22 March 2023 and 20 March 2024).
Interview with UNFICYP Employee 1, conducted by Mark Barrow. Online Video Call (25 November 2022). In-person interview in Nicosia, Cyprus (24 March 2023, 03 October 2023 and 02 April 2024).
Interview with US Agency for International Development (USAID) Employee 1, conducted by Mark Barrow. Online Video Call (12 January 2023).
Interview with UNFICYP Gender Affairs Officer 1, conducted by Mark Barrow. In-person interview in Nicosia, Cyprus (01 April 2024).
Further Reading on E-International Relations

