Global Peace Index advocates for investing in peace not war
By Kielce Gussie
VATICAN NEWS
The
Australian Embassy to the Holy See hosts the presentation of the 2026 Global
Peace Index with the founder of the Institute for Economics and Peace Steve
Killelea as he breaks down the importance of having data on global peacefulness
and how to invest in peace rather than war.
Global Peace Index Presentation in Rome at the Australian
Embassy to the Holy See (L: Ambassador Keith Pitt & R: Steve
Killelea)
For the last twelve years, peace around the world has deteriorated: more countries are engaged in external conflicts, the number of drone attacks has increased over 11,500% between 2018 and 2025, and the number of people killed in domestic fighting has seen a six-fold rise since 2007.
The reason this data exists is thanks to the Global Peace
Index. Part of the Institute for Economics and Peace, Founder and Executive
Chairman Steve Killelea created the index to give people, governments, and
countries the information they need to concretely work for peace in the world.
Steve Killelea is the founder and executive chairman of the Institute for Economics and Peace
“Some people wonder why this is important. But if you can’t
measure something, can you truly understand it?” Killelea emphasized to Vatican
News.
How do you know?
First launched in 2007, the Global Peace Index (GPI) is an
important piece of research in the world regarding the measure of global
peacefulness. It brings three categories together to create the complete
index—militarization, ongoing conflict, and internal safety and security.
Before the GPI, a standardized, comprehensive index that
listed countries by peacefulness did not exist. Without this proper measuring,
Killelea begged the question, “How do you know whether your action is either
helping or hindering in achieving your goals? You simply don't.”
Investing in something greater
Hosting the presentation of the 2026
GPI in Rome on June 22, Australian Ambassador to the Holy See Keith
Pitt stressed the important work that Killelea has been doing with the GPI over
the last 19 years.
Australian Ambassador to the Holy See Keith Pitt introducing Killelea and the GPI
Its data outlines a rise in the number of conflicts around
the world and the founder pointed out a shift in how wars ended. In the 1970s,
23% came to a close with a peace agreement. Decades later in the 2010s, that
dropped to only 4%.
Why is that and why are there so many conflicts in the world
today? Killelea argued there are a number of “lingering, small grade
conflicts”, which can sometimes become major ones. “If we can't stop the
conflicts, then the number of them logically have to grow,” he explained.
One of the characteristic weapons used in warfare today
versus decades prior is drones, which have changed how conflicts are fought
faster than the world can keep up. To avoid falling behind, Killelea
highlighted the need for governments to “take a sober look at what the impact
of conflict will be on their economies and on their citizens, and also on the
global stage.”
Moreover, he pointed out that only around 0.1-1% of funding
spent on the military is given to building peace. AI has reduced the amount of
time needed to target from one day to mere seconds.
The problem of drones is an ethical one. Drones provide the
ability to kill without human oversight. This technology removes the human
aspect of warfare, seemingly making it easier to take the life of another
simply by pushing a button.
Killelea warned how “without human intervention, you will not
know whether AI has made a hallucination or a false positive.” That means
innocent people can be targeted and innocent lives destroyed.
Killelea highlighted how peace is achieved if people invest in peace
He noted how governments must begin to work out how to
create alliances in order to create peace. The key to this, the Institute for
Economics and Peace founder shared, is “governments waking up and realizing
that you can invest in war, but that does not actually create peace.”
Peace is achieved when people invest in peace.
He offered three concrete ways to do this. First, more
diplomacy. Second, when dealing with localized conflict, it is important to
understand the grievances and address them. Third, better people’s livelihoods.
“If people can see their livelihoods improving, they're a lot more likely to
not want to fight or try and overthrow the government,” Killelea stressed.
Hope on the horizon
But the data is not meant to signal that there is no light
at the end of the tunnel. On the contrary, Killelea highlighted that there is
hope. “The hope in humanity is that we all move through cycles,” he said, “I
think we can take hope in the fact that many of these countries will wake up
and realize where they may have thought they were bulletproof in the past,
they're not.”
He also stressed that today’s world needs messengers of
peace. Pope Leo XIV’s repeated calls for peace, dialogue, and an end to
violence does play a role in concretely achieving peace.
The GPI looks at and measures the factors that drive peace in the world
“I think at the moment we need some prophets of peace. The
old ones, such as the Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela, they've passed.
I think Pope Leo can take on that mantle, so I would fully encourage him to
really become that prophet of peace.”
The GPI looks at and measures the factors that drive peace
in the world
“I think at the moment we need some prophets of peace. The
old ones, such as the Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela, they've passed.
I think Pope Leo can take on that mantle, so I would fully encourage him to
really become that prophet of peace.”

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