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TY - JOUR AU - Shahida Raz Bhutto , AU - Dr. Syed Shuja Uddin , AU - Jawad Hussain , PY - 2025/11/24 Y2 - 2026/06/10 TI - The Architecture of Peace: Rethinking Conflict Resolution in Contemporary International Relations JF - ` JA - ASSAJ VL - 4 IS - 02 SE - Articles DO - UR - https://www.assajournal.com/index.php/36/article/view/1121 SP - 1929-1939 AB - <p><em>The contemporary international landscape, characterized by intrastate conflicts, transnational threats, and a shifting multipolar order, has exposed the limitations of traditional conflict resolution frameworks. This article argues that the post-Cold War liberal peacebuilding model, predicated on institutional templates and top-down state-making, is increasingly inadequate. The article posits that a new, more resilient and adaptive "architecture of peace" is required to address the complex, networked nature of modern conflicts. The article is structured to first deconstruct the failures of the existing paradigm, highlighting its tendency to foster fragile, dependent states and its inability to reconcile international norms with local political realities. It then proceeds to articulate the core components of a reimagined architecture. This new framework is built on three foundational pillars: first, the principle of&nbsp;adaptive governance, which prioritizes context-specific, politically-informed approaches over standardized institutional blueprints; second, the integration of&nbsp;local agency and knowledge&nbsp;as central to sustainable peace processes, moving beyond treating local actors as mere beneficiaries; and third, the imperative of&nbsp;systemic resilience, which focuses on building societal capacities to manage conflict peacefully rather than seeking its permanent eradication through external imposition. By synthesizing insights from critical peace and conflict studies with practical diplomatic challenges, the article concludes that the future of conflict resolution lies not in monumental, rigid structures but in flexible, networked systems that can endure political shocks. This re-conceptualization necessitates a fundamental shift in the role of external actors from architects to facilitators, ultimately advocating for a peace that is locally owned, globally supported, and sustainably legitimate.</em></p><p><strong><em>Keywords</em></strong><em>:&nbsp;Conflict Resolution, Peacebuilding, International Relations, Liberal Peace, Adaptive Governance, Local Agency, Systemic Resilience, Intrastate Conflict, Multipolarity</em></p> ER -