The End of the Age of Intervention?
Peace and Conflict in a Post-Aid World
King’s College London
APRIL 13-14, 2026
Join us for the 12th Annual Conflict, Security, and Development Conference
This postgraduate-led event has long provided a platform for meaningful dialogue on the most pressing issues in conflict, security and development. This year's theme, 'The End of the Age of Intervention? Peace and Conflict in a Post-Aid World', addresses the increasingly pressing and evolving politics and challenges of aid provision in the international development community.
Agenda
13th April 2026
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Investigate the current debates around global development aid and its structural transformations in the international system. The panel will explore the geopolitics of developmental assistance, the decline in traditional aid, the emergence of new and non-traditional donors, and the reasons behind recent institutional shifts within USAID and the merging of DFID and how these changes signal recalibration in purpose and practice of aid.
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Have a drink and come discuss with our speakers, practitioners, and fellow students from different Universities
14th April 2026
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Delve further into the conceptual framework of aid, specifically exploring how global aid provision is being redefined in form, purpose, and motivation. The discussion will examine political, economic, and ideological forces that challenge traditional ODA models and will consider the implications of declining aid.
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A well-deserved break and lunch, accompanied by a further opportunity to discuss with our speakers, practitioners, and fellow students from different Universities
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Consider the practical implications and smaller-scale impacts of shifting aid provision and priorities. Specifically, this panel will evaluate how these changes influence outcomes for vulnerable populations, ranging from broader socio-political backsliding in governance of developing states to specific adjustment behaviours of vulnerable populations or communities.
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Discuss the wider geopolitical consequences that may come from traditional Western donors scaling back their aid commitments. In particular, speakers will debate how new actors, including China, Russia, and the Gulf states, are stepping forward with alternative aid models that are reshaping global influence and exchange.
Our Speakers