The International Peace Institute was created with support from UN Secretary-General
U Thant in 1970, originally with the purpose of studying UN peacekeeping and developing peacekeeping doctrine, with strong financial backing from
Ruth Forbes Paine Young. Its first President was Maj. Gen.
Indar Jit Rikhye, Indian commanding officer of
UN peacekeeping forces and a former military advisor to the UN Secretary-General. Under his tenure, IPI initiated an innovative program aimed at training civilians and military officers together for the challenges of preventing conflict and building peace. In 1990, under
Olara Otunnu, a
Ugandan diplomat and politician, IPI branched out into the political dimensions of war and peace. During this time, IPI became known for its case studies of UN field operations and for its forward-looking analysis on new roles for the UN in the security sphere. Otunnu also initiated IPI's Africa Program, currently its longest-running program.
David M. Malone, a Canadian scholar-diplomat, took over as President in 1998, followed by
Terje Rød-Larsen, from 2005 to 2020, a Norwegian
sociologist and diplomat who has served the UN as its senior envoy in the Middle East, and a principal architect of the 1990s
Oslo Peace Accords. IPI today focuses its work on multilateral cooperation, peace operations, climate change and sustainable development, women, peace, and security, human rights and humanitarian affairs.
Terje Rød-Larsen The organization's former president
Terje Rød-Larsen had close ties to
Jeffrey Epstein, leading to his forced resignation in 2020. IPI's board characterized Rød-Larsen relationship with Epstein "repugnant to the institution's core values". It commissioned an audit from
KPMG, as well as other reviews and policy overhauls. Norwegian authorities alerted US Epstein investigators in 2019 after reports that Rød-Larsen brought in young, unqualified women from Eastern Europe on very short internships whose photos were then taken in front of the UN building and shared with Epstein Investigation of these reports did not result in any publicly-disclosed criminal inquiries to individuals beyond Rød-Larsen and his wife, Norwegian diplomat
Mona Juul. The lawyer for one woman “confirmed to the newspaper that she is one of Epstein's victims, but emphasizes that IPI is not connected to the abuse.” Further investigation by
Verdens Gang and other media sources established that the tip shared in 2019 had been mischaracterized and referred to two specific cases, in which the lawyer for both victims stated, "Neither Terje Rød-Larsen nor IPI as an institution was involved in the sexual abuse or exploitation of Epstein's victims." Rød-Larsen described Epstein as "my best friend" and "a thoroughly good human being." Rød-Larsen, his wife
Mona Juul and their children are accused of receiving personal substantial gifts from Epstein. In his will Epstein left 10 million US dollars to Rød-Larsen's children. Epstein also named Rød-Larsen the executor of his estate in a previous will. Rød-Larsen has worked to bolster contact between the
MAGA movement and the European
far right, despite previously having been a
Labour Party politician in Norway.
Aftenposten described him as the central node in Epstein's network in Norway. ==Activities==