Manila Bulletin: Sustained Peacebuilding Needed After Decades of Conflict

by Daniel Perez - News Editor
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Main Topic: The need for improved peacebuilding efforts in the Philippines.

Source: A discussion paper from the Philippine Institute for Growth Studies (PIDS) titled “Toward Resolutions and Reconciliations: Understanding the Elements of Peacebuilding in the Philippines.”

Key Findings/Arguments:

* High Cost of Conflict: Decades of armed conflict have resulted in notable loss of life (approximately 40,000 deaths from CPP-NPA clashes, 150,000 in Mindanao) and displacement (3.2 million displaced between 2008-2022).
* Holistic Approach: Peacebuilding is most effective when economic, political, and security incentives are aligned, and government commitments are credible and long-lasting. Success should be measured by avoided human and social costs, not just signed agreements.
* Incentive Compatibility: Interventions should be designed so that cooperation is more beneficial than continued conflict for all parties.
* Integration of security & Socioeconomic Programs: Security measures and development programs need too work together.
* monitoring & Evaluation: Improved monitoring and evaluation systems (including digitalization) are needed to track the outcomes of reintegration programs (like ECLIP) beyond just outputs.
* Fiscal Accountability: PIDS recommends special audits by the Commission on Audit (COA) for peacebuilding programs (ECLIP, PAMANA, BDP) to improve efficiency and track beneficiaries.
* Community Involvement: Reconciliation ceremonies, especially those highlighting women’s roles, and the involvement of neutral facilitators (CSOs, faith groups, academics) are crucial for community healing and trust.
* Lessons from Thailand: The Philippines could learn from thailand’s success in ending communist insurgency through military containment, amnesty, and socioeconomic inclusion.
* Address Root Causes: Lasting peace requires addressing the underlying causes of conflict, notably in rural and indigenous communities, through local engagement and inclusive political participation.

Dates Mentioned:

* Published: Jan 12, 2026
* Updated: Jan 10, 2026
* Discussion Paper Date: Jan. 7 (presumably 2026,though not explicitly stated)
* Displacement Data: 2008-2022

Authors: Adoracion M. Navarro and Janina Sofia H. Jacinto (PIDS senior research fellow and research analyst, respectively).

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