Research | 24/03/2025
GIGA researchers Theodora Benesch and Julia Köbrich worked in Togo for three months preparing, implementing, and collecting data for their research project “Religion for Peace.” Alongside their partner WANEP-Togo, they developed a training programme for younger people, ages 18 to 35, that was carried out in ten cities across the country. The goal was to promote interreligious dialogue and thus contribute to social cohesion and peacebuilding.
The trainings provided younger people of diverse religious backgrounds a platform for exchange. By way of interactive workshops, collaborative games, and lively debates on the role of religion in society, they were able to get to know each other, develop a mutual understanding, and explore ways to peacefully co-exist. A central message of the trainings was that Islam, Christianity, and African Traditional Religions have many values in common, though these may be expressed through distinct practices.
In order to scientifically examine the effectiveness of the training, Theodora Benesch and Julia Köbrich developed a research design in the form of a randomised controlled trial. In cooperation with the Centre for Research and Opinion Polls in Togo, two waves of telephone interviews were carried out: one in January, prior to the trainings, and one in February, following the trainings. More than 1,000 young people took part in each set of interviews. A third data collection wave in June will shed light on the possible medium-term effects of the training on interreligious relations and peace engagement among the participants. The results will provide WANEP-Togo and other peacebuilding actors systematic insight into both the way the trainings function and how future trainings might be designed. The GIGA’s research will benefit from the data collected in that conclusions on causal determinants of interreligious peace and peace engagement can be gleaned.
WANEP-Togo (West Africa Network for Peacebuilding – Togo) is a peace network active in Lomé since 2002. It brings together multisectoral NGOs with the goal of strengthening sociopolitical stability and social cohesion. The GIGA’s cooperation with the network has expanded since 2002 and facilitates research in direct exchange with civil society–based peace practice. The joint project tests not only theoretical concepts but also their practical implementation.