To enhance local resilience and sustainable peace, the programme has actively led to the cessation of hostilities, rebuilding trust, and establishing and strengthening community-led peace structures across its focus regions. Some of the key local infrastructures for peace are the creation of Inter-Village Dialogue Spaces (IVDS), where neighbouring communities with a history of conflict are twinned to foster sustainable peace and capacitated to directly engage in addressing their disputes. Additionally, the programme has developed Conflict Monitoring Committees (CMCs) along key conflict-prone areas (Conflict belts), which operate on a broader geographical scale than IVDSs. These committees comprise representatives selected by the conflicting communities themselves, enabling swift conflict resolution with minimal external intervention. A notable success story is the Baragoi CMCs, which have played a pivotal role in mitigating conflicts, preventing crimes, and facilitating recoveries through timely early warning information sharing. To further coordinate peace efforts, the programme, in support of the Frontier Counties Development Council (FCDC), created County Peace Actors Forums (CPAFS) in each county. These forums provide a platform for organisations and stakeholders working in peacebuilding to harmonise their efforts, prevent duplication, and enhance the impact of their initiatives. They are anchored in each county’s Directorate of Peace and the office of the County Commissioner for Sustainability. Additionally, the programme has trained 41 Certified Professional Mediators across 13 counties, accredited by the Courts, empowering them to resolve conflicts at the grassroots level. Some of these mediators have even collaborated with the judiciary to provide alternative dispute resolution mechanisms, further embedding sustainable peace solutions within local communities.