From February 26 to March 1, 2026, the Open Nations team participated in the international conference “Creating Resilient Communities for Peace and Justice: The Roles of Business and Civil Society”, organized by LCC International University Center for Dialogue & Conflict Transformation.
Participants from around the world explored how business and civil society can help build communities that consciously choose paths of peace, justice, and social cohesion. During the conference, we discussed responsibility, systemic transformation, and the idea that peace does not happen by chance — it requires courage and collective action.


As part of the conference, Svitlana Zaluzhna and project manager Iryna Pashkevych led the workshop: Families as Peacebuilders: Dialogue, Trust, and Belonging
The team presented a family-centered approach to peacebuilding through intercultural dialogue, sharing experiences from Lithuania, Ukraine, and Norway, and demonstrating how dialogue, storytelling, and reflective practices strengthen trust, belonging, and community resilience. Participants highly valued the depth of the workshop, the safe space for sharing experiences, and the opportunity to truly listen to one another.
The audience represented 27 countries, including Afghanistan, Armenia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada, Croatia, Egypt, Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Germany, Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Kurdistan, Latvia, Lebanon, Lesotho, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Nigeria, South Korea, Spain, Turkey, Ukraine, and the United States. Interactions with people who have experienced refugee situations and armed conflicts were especially meaningful — their stories were vivid, powerful, and inspiring.

Events like this highlight how important it is to be together with like-minded individuals, to feel support, and to see that ideas and actions are not isolated. Such spaces foster new partnerships, strengthen ideas, and reinforce faith in collective action.
For Open Nations, this workshop was a natural continuation of our systematic work with families, dialogue, and building trust within communities. We are grateful for the opportunity to be part of this international dialogue.






