INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

Shaping democratic renewal: civic space and the path to
a New Democratic Pact for Europe 


  2 - 3 February 2026 Strasbourg, France (Palais de l'Europe, Room 1)



 

 About the Conference


At the 2023 Reykjavík Summit, Heads of State and Government of the Council of Europe adopted the landmark Reykjavík Principles for Democracy, setting out a common vision of the key elements of a functioning democracy. These Principles underscore the vital role of civil society in upholding democratic values and safeguarding fundamental freedoms across Europe.

The 2025 Report of the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Towards a New Democratic Pact for Europe, highlights the urgency of protecting civic space as a cornerstone of democratic renewal. It calls for stronger cooperation among member states, international organisations, and civil society to reverse current trends and reinforce democratic institutions.

In response, the process leading to the New Democratic Pact aims to revitalise democracy through innovation, institutional renewal, and civic empowerment. This high-level event will contribute to that effort by exploring how civic space can be strengthened at both national and international levels. It will showcase practical initiatives for monitoring civic space and inspire new approaches for civil society and member states to jointly advance the Pact and build a
more inclusive and resilient democratic future.

The conference will provide a strategic platform for reinforcing stakeholder commitment to developing and strengthening a coherent mechanism for monitoring and protecting civic space across Council of Europe member states. It will facilitate the exchange of best practices and the formulation of concrete proposals – including policy recommendations, collaborative frameworks, and pilot initiatives – aimed laying foundations for such a mechanism.

 Reference documents


      Programme of the conference

      Concept note

      Report of the conference

 Practical information


  • The conference will feature moderated panel discussions with diverse speakers from civil society, member states, and international organisations.
  • Each panel will include structured opportunities for audience engagement, such as Q&A sessions, live polling, and facilitated dialogue segments to encourage active participation, foster dynamic exchange and generate concrete ideas.
  • The event will take place in English and French, with interpretation provided, and will be live-streamed.
  • An accompanying programme will include an exhibition space for materials and a civic space resource table showcasing reports, standards, case law, and tools.
  • Financial support from the Council of Europe is no longer possible, as the budget has been fully allocated.

Map and access to the Council of Europe - The Council of Europe in brief

 Speakers (alphabetical order) 

Back Giorgi Kldiashvili, founding member and Executive Director of the Institute for Development of Freedom of Information (IDFI)

Kldiashvili
Giorgi Kldiashvili, founding member and Executive Director of the Institute for Development of Freedom of Information (IDFI)

Giorgi Kldiashvili is a founding member and Executive Director of the Institute for Development of Freedom of Information (IDFI). He has more than 15 years’ experience of working on government accountability, openness and anti-corruption policies in Georgia and internationally. Giorgi has been carrying out projects, studies, assessments and providing trainings for different international and governmental institutions and non-for-profit organizations. At IDFI Giorgi Kldiashvili worked and has publications on topics such as freedom of information, anticorruption policy and good governance, accountability and transparency, e-Governance and e-Democracy, open data, civil service and public administration, media and internet.

As an expert, he has been involved in international projects in the area of anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism, with a particular focus on the NPO sector.

In addition to his work in applied policy research with IDFI, as a historian by specialty, he has academic credentials as a researcher, undertaking studies in American and Soviet Studies. He is a professional archive researcher, conducting research in historical archives on the 20th Century history in Georgia and abroad for more than 20 years.

Giorgi holds graduate degrees in Contemporary History and worked as a professor at the Institute of American Studies at Tbilisi State University.

Giorgi Kldiashvili was a CSO Steering Committee Member of the Open Government Partnership (OGP) in 2017-2020.

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