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An On-Line Public Lecture with Professor and PhD Candidate, Maria Teresa Uribe Jaramillo and Dr. Pablo Zapata Tamayo. The Lecture was broadcast live for students in Room 225, St. Paul’s College. How does the interpretation of ‘peace’ shape business for peace agendas? How do governmental and non-governmental approaches to peace impact peacebuilding in post-conflict Colombia? In their lecture, the Professors presented the findings of a recent empirical study that delves into the complex dynamics of business-society relationships in fragile post-conflict contexts. They highlighted three distinct types of business for peace agendas, each rooted in different interpretations of ‘peace’: indirect, direct, and independent from the government peace agendas. Maria Teresa and her co-author, Dr. Pablo Zapata Tamayo propose an approach for tracing peace polysemy and establishing a minimum convergence between peace agendas, offering practical implications for decision-makers. Arthur V. Mauro Institute for Peace & Justice at St. Paul’s College | mauro.institute@umanitoba.ca | umanitoba.ca/mauro_institute Maria Teresa Uribe Jaramillo is a Professor and PhD candidate at the Centre of Excellence for Sustainability at KEDGE Business School in Marseille. During her professional career, she has worked at EAFIT University in Colombia as manager of internationalization strategy, professor and research assistant in international affairs. She has also worked as an advisor to the Colombian’ Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and as consultant for organizations such as the Inter- national Development Bank, Korea Foundation and Konrad Adenauer Foundation. Co-Author, Pablo Zapata Tamayo (PhD Humanities and Political Science, EAFIT University) is a member of the research group Society, Politics and Connected Stories at EAFIT University. He has served more than 10 years as a professor, consultant, researcher and thesis supervisor in universities and local and national governments in Colombia. He is currently a professor and researcher in several institutions in France and Colombia teaching in the areas of inter- national relations and trade; public administration; local government; political science; democracy and communication.