International Peace Conference

(92 Speakers — Strategic Briefing | Moments of Influence Calendar | 20 June 2026)

The Architecture of Global Stability

On 20 June 2026, the International Peace Conference convenes at Central Hall Westminster, London. In an era defined by rapid rearmament and shifting geopolitical alliances, this summit serves as a critical diagnostic for global stability and the prevention of international conflict. For the C-suite, the insights shared in London offer a vital roadmap for navigating macro-political risk and ensuring organisational resilience in a volatile world.

At 92 Speakers, we provide the functional authority required to translate these high-stakes diplomatic narratives into the intellectual chemistry of your corporate strategy. We connect you with the voices who understand that in 2026, peace is the ultimate prerequisite for sustainable growth.

The 92 Selection: Strategists of Stability and Human Rights

Our selection bypasses the ephemeral nature of celebrity, focusing instead on the cognitive depth and clinical rigour necessary to recalibrate leadership performance:

Zarifa Ghafari: One of the first female mayors in Afghanistan and a survivor of multiple assassination attempts, Ghafari is the definitive voice on courageous leadership. She provides boards with the authoritative roadmap for leading through terminal crisis and the critical necessity of female agency in global peace-building.

Rt Hon James Cleverly: As a former Foreign Secretary and Home Secretary, Cleverly is a definitive authority on geopolitical diplomacy. He offers the strategic diagnostic required to navigate international relations and the security frameworks that underpin global trade and sovereign stability.

Lyse Doucet CM, OBE: The BBC’s Chief International Correspondent, Doucet offers an unparalleled perspective on global conflict dynamics. Her presence on stage provides the clarity required to understand the human stories behind the headlines and their direct impact on global market stability.

Baroness Shami Chakrabarti: A pre-eminent human rights lawyer and former Director of Liberty, Chakrabarti deconstructs the ethics of governance. She demonstrates how the protection of fundamental rights is a critical commercial metric for any organisation operating on the world stage.

Giles Duley MBE: A documentary photographer and UN Global Advocate, Duley is a master of narrative resilience. He provides a profound analysis of the long-term human legacy of conflict, showing leaders how to integrate empathy into the structural architecture of crisis management.

Rageh Omaar: As ITV News’ International Affairs Editor, Omaar bridges the gap between global reporting and strategic insight. He offers the cognitive clarity required to understand how shifting cultural narratives in the Middle East and Africa dictate future investment trends.

Fergal Keane OBE: An award-winning foreign correspondent and author, Keane deconstructs the psychology of conflict. His expertise in the trauma of war offers boards a unique framework for building psychological safety and resilience within high-pressure teams.

Gelong Thubten: A Buddhist monk and mindfulness pioneer for global giants like Google, Thubten translates the search for inner peace into corporate performance. He provides the intellectual chemistry to bridge the gap between individual well-being and global harmony.

The Stability Mandate: From Conflict to Clarity

For corporate event planners and Chief Risk Officers, the 2026 International Peace Conference offers a high-impact window to demonstrate leadership accountability. When these experts are delivering keynotes, they equip your teams with the frameworks to secure a stable future:

  1. Systemic Resilience: Understanding the diplomatic levers that prevent local tensions from becoming global disruptions.

  2. Ethical Leadership: Aligning corporate values with international human rights standards to mitigate reputational risk.

  3. Human-Centric Strategy: Integrating the lessons of global stability into the daily management of human capital and diverse teams.

In 2026, the most secure organisations are those that treat peace not as an abstract ideal, but as a tactical commercial necessity.

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Formula E 2026

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G7 Summit 2026