
From October 23 to 26, 2025, Barcelona hosted 4 Days 4 Peace, a series of events co-organized by the Centre Delàs d’Estudis per la Pau and the International Peace Bureau (IPB). The gathering brought together peace builders, researchers, and activists from various fields around the world to exchange perspectives, coordinate strategies, and strengthen the global movement for peace and disarmament.
The event opened on Thursday, October 23, with the Conference “Darkest Before Dawn. Pacifism in Times of Genocide and Rearmament.” The conference reflected on two years of genocide in Gaza, Western complicity, and the growing normalization of militarism. Participants called for non-violence and alternatives to the policies of rearmament and authoritarianism. The conference featured two main sessions: a dialogue on “Business and Complicity in the Genocide and Occupation of Palestine” with Shir Hever and Maha Abdallah, moderated by Laura Ferre Sanjuan; and a roundtable on “Rising Militarism and Power Politics in the International Arena” with Katerina Anastasiou, Joseph Gerson, and Corazon Valdez Fabros, moderated by Antonella Di Matteo.
On Friday, October 24, participants took part in workshops and strategy sessions organized around four thematic areas:
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Global Disarmament and Militarization – the risks of global rearmament and the need for civil society–led disarmament initiatives was addressed. Topics such as the impact of militarization on austerity policies and public welfare, the diversion of resources from social, environmental and next-generation programs, and ethical concerns related to war and genocide where discussed. Initiatives such as GDAMS, StopRearmEurope, the No to NATO Network, the 10% for All Campaign agreed to build synergies between the campaigns for stronger collective impact and proposed setting a common global mobilization date to unify efforts and increase visibility.
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Geopolitical Shifts and Global Governance Reform – how to strengthen international law, multilateralism, and the UN system to respond to current crises was explored. Proposed future visions included decentralizing global power structures, democratizing global institutions, reforming the UN system and redefining the notion of security.
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Solidarity with Palestine and Peoples Impacted by Militarism Worldwide – coordinating civil society action in solidarity with affected communities in Palestine, Sudan, DRC, Western Sahara, Cameroon, Myanmar, and Ukraine was the focus of the workshop. Solidarity platforms, webinars, conferences linking movements across regions, workshops integrating different analyses and investigative journalism efforts exposing violations of human rights were highlighted as examples of current strategic actions. Looking forward, it was suggested that solidarity strategies are framed by decolonial and justice-based lenses that prioritize the following: ensuring solidarity is interactive and grounded in local realities, strengthening the promotion of democratic and peace-oriented initiatives and broadening anti-imperialist analysis, among others.
- Stronger Together: Linking Peace, Climate, Social, and Gender Justice – examining the interconnected nature of the conflicts and global issues we are facing today. Participants highlighted the need to give space to underrepresented voices, bridge generational and regional divides, and remain mindful of power dynamics that can replicate forms of oppression even within peace movements.
4 Days 4 Peace unfolded in Barcelona at a moment when militarization is accelerating worldwide, social protections are eroding, and fear continues to be weaponized for political gain. Throughout the workshops, conversations, and plenaries, one insight resurfaced in every region, from Brazil to Georgia, Israel to Russia, South Africa to Italy and Spain: despite vastly different political contexts, military spending is rising everywhere, often justified by narratives of fear: fear of crime, fear of immigrants, fear of neighboring states, fear of terrorism. Yet what became equally clear is that these fears rarely reflect the real insecurities people face in their daily lives. Participants repeatedly emphasized the widening gap between elite security, defined through weapons, borders, and geopolitical rivalry, and human security, rooted in healthcare, education, housing, social welfare, and climate resilience.
The testimonies shared during the conference revealed patterns that transcend borders: in Latin America, the “war on drugs” continues to feed militarized policing and surveillance. In the Middle East and North Africa, the “war on terror” sustains decades of repression and foreign intervention. Across Europe, rearmament plans are advancing under the banner of deterrence, while pension systems fracture and inequality deepens. From Russia’s cultural normalization of military solutions to Spain’s record-high defense budget to Greece’s per-capita military burden, the logic is the same: resources are diverted from social needs toward weapons systems that do little to protect the people who fund them.
Despite these stark realities, the conference centered not on despair but on possibility. Hope, as many articulated, is not a passive feeling but a discipline—a conscious decision to imagine and build alternatives. Campaigns such as those mentioned above demonstrated that civil society is already constructing transnational strategies for demilitarization. Yet the discussions also highlighted the urgent need to expand these efforts: to reach younger generations, to engage cultural workers and trade unions, to collaborate with African and Latin American organizations, and to frame demands not only against militarization but for something: health, climate justice, shared security, and dignified futures.
Throughout the sessions, a recurring question emerged: How do we shift public opinion when most people never question military budgets at all? Participants emphasized that peace movements must reclaim the language of security itself, grounding it in human needs and everyday struggles. Fear will continue to be exploited unless we counter it with a vision that recognizes people’s desire to feel safe, and shows that true safety comes from community, social investment, and justice, not from arms races.
For Nonviolence International, the days in Barcelona reaffirmed three strategic priorities: deepening work on Western Sahara and other under-addressed struggles of decolonization; building pathways to engage younger audiences; and strengthening connections across the Global South, especially in Africa and Latin America. The conference made clear that the fight against militarization cannot remain Eurocentric and US-centered. It must be global, intersectional, and grounded in the lived experiences of those most impacted by violence, whether state, structural, or economic.
4 Days 4 Peace offered not only analysis but also direction. It reminded us that while militarism feeds on fragmentation, peace grows through connection. And it called on all of us, researchers, activists, movements, and communities, to expose the systems that profit from conflict while amplifying the possibilities of cooperation, accountability, and common security. As the climate crisis accelerates and geopolitical tensions rise, this work becomes not only urgent but existential. The task ahead is to turn shared concerns into shared action, and shared action into global change.

Photo: Nayef Hashlamoun Bilin, Palestine



