What If Peace Truly Begins at Home?
Inaugural Peace Begins at Home Summit: Global Virtual Event
29th October 2025
26 speakers from 17 countries unite to address violence at its roots and chart a path to peace
On 29 October 2025, the inaugural Peace Begins at Home Summit will bring together 26 speakers from 17 countries for a one-day global virtual gathering that asks a radical question: what if peace truly begins at home?
Produced by the Center for Partnership Systems and inspired by cultural historian Dr. Riane Eisler’s Partnership vs. Domination framework, the Summit will reframe peace not as a distant ideal but as a systems challenge that starts where we live, love, and raise each other: in the home.
“This summit is not just about ending violence. It’s about reimagining systems — from families to nations — where partnership, not domination, defines our relationships.” — Dr. Riane Eisler, President & Founder, Center for Partnership Systems
“I learned nonviolence and peace from my parents — not just through words, but through how they lived.” — Ela Gandhi, peace activist and former South African MP
Turning Insight into Action
Inspired by the work of Dr. Riane Eisler (94), the Peace Begins at Home Summit unites global leaders through keynotes, survivor stories, TED-style talks, Indigenous wisdom, and neuroscience to show how patterns of domination learned at home ripple into classrooms, courtrooms, boardrooms, and even war zones. At a time of rising authoritarianism, climate crises, and lost hope, the Summit combines lived testimony, research, and practical solutions to reclaim a culture of partnership. Insights from the day will be captured in a Peace Begins at Home Handbook, shared worldwide to drive action and impact far beyond the Summit.
Highlights include:
Dr. Riane Eisler, Holocaust survivor, systems scientist, and author of The Chalice and the Blade, hailed as “the most important book since Darwin’s Origin of Species.” Her groundbreaking work shows how the violence tolerated in families fuels the violence we see in politics, economies, and beyond.
Ambassador Anwarul K. Chowdhury, former UN Under-Secretary-General, champion of the culture of peace.
Dr. Richard Davidson, neuroscientist, founder of the Center for Healthy Minds, and one of TIME’s most influential people
Ela Gandhi, global peace activist, former South African MP for women’s and children’s rights, and granddaughter of Mahatma Gandhi
Helena Norberg-Hodge, Byron Bay-based author, filmmaker, and Right Livelihood Award recipient is a global voice for ecological sustainability, economic justice, and cultural renewal.
Gary Barker & Jackson Katz, trailblazers in the men’s movement, reshaping masculinity.
Angela Sterritt, award-winning investigative journalist and author, serving as MC to guide the day.
Youth leaders from Afghanistan, the DRC, and beyond
The day will culminate in a Solutions Showcase highlighting practical, real-world initiatives that can be adopted globally, followed by Voices of the Future, a youth-led segment calling peers and leaders to urgent, actionable partnership.
Access & Tickets
All tickets include 30-day replay access. Prices are intentionally low, and bursaries are available for those experiencing financial hardship.
Early Bird - $53 AUD
Supporter Ticket - $106 AUD (funds a ticket for someone else who cannot afford it)
Solidarity Pass - Free (bursary option)
Community Screening - $227 AUD (one-time group viewing for up to 100 people; non-commercial)
Bring your community together with a watch party — one license covers up to 100 people.
Full details and registration: www.peacebeginsathomesummit.org
About Dr. Riane Eisler
Dr. Riane Eisler, systems scientist and cultural historian, is internationally known for her groundbreaking book The Chalice and the Blade (translated into 25+ languages). She has advised the United Nations, EU, and US government, and was named one of the world’s “great peacemakers” alongside Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. She shares the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s Distinguished Peace Leadership Award with the Dalai Lama and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
About the Center for Partnership Systems (CPS)
The Center for Partnership Systems (CPS) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit advancing a global shift from domination to partnership through research, education, and practical tools. CPS works with institutions, governments, and communities to build more caring, equitable, and sustainable societies.