The Cross-Border Conflict, Evidence, Policy and Trends (XCEPT) research programme explores conflict-affected borderlands, how conflicts connect across borders, the intersection of climate stresses and conflict, and the factors that shape violent and peaceful behaviour. Funded by UK International Development, XCEPT offers actionable research to inform policies and programmes that support peace.  

XCEPT is the most ambitious conflict research programme ever undertaken by the UK Government. Bringing together world-leading experts and local researchers from across the world, XCEPT’s multidisciplinary approach focuses on the causes and consequence of conflict in some of the world’s hardest to reach places. We use technology to complement traditional research methods, using satellite imagery and open-source investigations together with traditional mixed-methods research to better understand protracted conflicts in Africa, the Middle East, and South and Southeast Asia. 

Running from 2018 to 2027, XCEPT’s approach includes a cross-border local research network dedicated to building the capacity of local researchers, and a flexible and responsive £8 million Research Fund, managed by Chemonics UK, lead implementer of XCEPT.  

XCEPT’s research falls into four clusters:

Stability and governance in borderlands:

  • How is power gained and exercised in peripheral spaces? How does centre-periphery contestation shape conflict in borderlands and across borders?
  • How does trade (licit and illicit) in borderlands intersect with transnational conflict? How are local livelihoods, governance, and stability impacted?
  • How can donor, regional, and national interventions adapt to better support conflict reduction, stability, and improved governance in borderlands?

Illustrative research projects:


Conflict connectors and ecosystems: 

  • How do flows of people, weapons, goods and ideas connect conflicts across borders and regions?
  • How should interventions in the security, development, peacebuilding, and governance spheres adapt to deal with the transnational dimensions of conflict?

Illustrative research projects:


Climate and conflict:

  • How do climate mitigation efforts influence conflict dynamics across different regions? What are the peacebuilding challenges and opportunities associated with the mining of minerals for the green transition?
  • In what ways can climate adaptation strategies be designed to reduce conflict and enhance resilience?
  • How effective are regional stabilisation efforts in addressing climate-related peace and security risks?

Illustrative research projects:


Violent and peaceful behaviour: 

  • What are the pathways to violent and peaceful behaviour? What role is played by exposure to conflict and trauma-related mental health problems, or individual and social factors?
  • What builds resilience and protects communities and individuals from the impact of conflict? What promotes post-traumatic growth or resilience after conflict or trauma?
  • How does (lack of) trust in institutions interact with other factors to affect attitudes to violence and reconciliation?
  • How does cross-generational trauma and memory shape dispositions vis-à-vis the state and communal solidarity?

Illustrative research projects: