Peace & Security Policy

Peace & Security Policy

Geopolitical power struggles and weakened international regimes are confronting the countries of the world with new and complex questions and decisions. In particular, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022 marked a critical juncture in European security and brought the need for strong, unified action to the fore.

Promoting solidarity and facilitating understanding between states and societies are of paramount importance to the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung’s work on peace and security. We are dedicated to fostering dialogue, diplomacy, and development to ensure security and stability in global contexts of crises and conflict. FES UK’s annual Security Dialogue brings together British and German politicians and other experts to facilitate progressive collaboration between the two countries and discussions around topics such as defence and security cooperation, the European security architecture, the contribution to peace and stability in the Middle East, and, more recently, the threat of Russia.

Peace policy also involves fighting global injustices, as peace cannot be made until the salient global injustices between and within states are eliminated. In this regard, FES works towards greater gender equality and liberation - both locally and globally - and pursues a clear transformative approach to feminist foreign policy that confronts existing patriarchal power structures and condemns all forms of discrimination.

Established in Vienna in 2016, the FES Regional Office for Cooperation and Peace in Europe (FES ROCPE) addresses profound modern-day challenges to European security and acts as a platform for dialogue on how to best equip European peace and security architecture for future challenges. FES ROCPE and FES UK collaborate on establishing united approaches to security and peace based on the values of social democracy.

Related Links

From Hybrid Peace to Human Security

The Royal United Services

Regional Office for International Cooperation & Peace

Latest Events

Monday, 21.10.2024 | Foreign & Security Policy | Event

This paper identifies several security risks that would need to be considered by European policymakers ahead of the election on 5th November 2024,…


More

Thursday, 14.03.2024 | Foreign & Security Policy | Event

The Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung London (FES) and the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) collaborated again on the annual dialogue on Security and…


More

Thursday, 25.02.2021 | Foreign & Security Policy | Event

When UN-Resolution 1325 was passed 20 years ago, it was celebrated as a milestone in the history of gender equality. Yet, women still often remain…


More

Related Publications

Security Radar 2025

Our colleagues at the FES Regional Office for International Cooperation in Vienna present the newest edition of the FES Cooperation & Peace flagship project, the Security Radar 2025. The report was presented at the recent Munich Security Conference.

Security Radar 2025 is the fourth edition of a representative public opinion poll first conducted in 2019, then in 2022 and again in 2023 in several countries across the OSCE space. It is a survey capturing citizens’ attitudes on a broad array of foreign and security policy issues. The focus of this year’s edition is once more Russia’s war in Ukraine and the European response.

Security Radar 2025 revisits the last 14-country edition that was presented at the Munich Security Conference several days before Russia invaded Ukraine. The FES Regional Office for International Cooperation in Vienna wanted to see how attitudes changed three years on, and includes almost the same set of countries in the report: France, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Sweden, Turkey, United Kingdom, Ukraine and the United States. Only three countries are “new” and feature in the “Security Radar” for the first time: Sweden, a country that recently joined NATO in response to Russia’s attack on Ukraine; Georgia, a South Caucasus state that has been rocked by mass protests since the reversal of its decision to hold accession negotiations with the EU; and the Central Asian state Kazakhstan, an important country in a sometimes overlooked part of the OSCE area.

The goal of the Security Radar remains unchanged: To provide a realistic picture of public perception regarding current geopolitical challenges and security threats. Moreover, to show what political responses people in Europe and beyond consider necessary for European security, to what extent they value diplomacy and international organisations, and how they want their countries to position themselves with regards to the war.

Read the full publication here.

Security Radar 2025

Security Radar 2025

Europe - lost in geopolitics
Wien, 2025

Download publication (4 MB, PDF-File)

Related Publications