This research paper examines the transformative role of education in fostering globalpeace and humanitarian action. Drawing on cross-national indicators, peer-reviewedscholarship, and five real-world case studies — Rwanda, Colombia, Bosnia &Herzegovina, Sierra Leone, and Sri Lanka — the paper argues that education is both astructural determinant of peace and a strategic instrument for humanitarianresponse. Eight visualisations are presented covering literacy and conflict risk, globalinvestment in education, programme-level outcomes, the competency mix ofgraduate programmes in peace and humanitarian management, and country-specifictrajectoriesofreconciliation,ex-combatantreintegration,humanitarian-aidallocation, and inter-ethnic trust. The paper concludes that scaling investment inpeace-oriented education — particularly through interdisciplinary masters anddoctoral programmes such as those offered by the Swiss School of Business Research(SSBR) — is among the most cost-effective levers available to states, multilateralinstitutions, and civil society for preventing violence and rebuilding fracturedsocieties.Keywords: peace education, humanitarian action, conflict prevention, reconciliation, ex-combatant reintegration, sustainable development, leadership.
Ripon Chandra Das (Sun,) studied this question.
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