Public Works Studio and the Arab Reform Initiative are organizing the launch event of their joint research paper, “Responding to Ecocide in Lebanon: Recommendations for Official and Community Engagement in Sustainable Recovery,” on 16 February 2026 at the Smallville Hotel, Mathaf. The event creates a collective space to present and discuss the paper’s findings and the resulting policy recommendations, with the participation of affected local communities, activists, researchers, civil society organizations, and decision-makers.
Event Background
Since October 8th, 2023, with the onset of the Israeli war on Lebanon, and its escalation on September 23rd, 2024, leading up to the ceasefire agreement on November 27th, 2024, the border villages have been subjected to brutal targeting, resulting in the deliberate destruction of entire villages in the south and ecocide. Israeli forces targeted infrastructure and heritage sites, destroyed forests, agricultural lands, and irrigation networks, causing severe damage to homes, trees, crops, soil, and the natural and agricultural environment, in addition to significant losses in the local economy. These actions aimed to impose forced mass displacement and to transform the border area into scorched land or a “buffer zone” unsuitable for human life, nature, or agriculture, amid implications that it may be turned into an “economic zone” emptied of its inhabitants.
In this context, over the past year, Public Works Studio has conducted monitoring, research, workshops, and interviews to assess the damages resulting from the ecocide and urbicide carried out by the Israeli occupation in southern Lebanon, and to identify social, spatial, and environmental priorities. Public Works has also monitored and reviewed existing reconstruction policies and frameworks, clarifying the responsibilities of the Lebanese state and local authorities in responding to this catastrophe.
Accordingly, we focused on Kfarkela, one of the affected border villages, where a workshop was organized bringing together a group of local residents. The workshop created an important space to understand challenges and discuss means for return and reconstruction. It also helped shed light on the environmental and agricultural priorities in the area. Additionally, Public Works Studio organized a collective discussion aimed to present the research findings and foster the development of joint recommendations and demands among participants including affected citizens, farmers, activists, civil society organizations, researchers, and decision-makers, focusing on the priorities for return, reconstruction, and addressing the environmental damages.
The paper documents the environmental and agricultural damage across southern villages, with a particular focus on the most heavily affected border towns that have been subjected to different forms of attack and destruction, and then zooms in on the border town of Kfarkela as a case study. It also seeks to draw lessons from the environmental interventions undertaken by the Lebanese state following the July 2006 war, and to assess current reconstruction and recovery frameworks and policies, alongside local community initiatives from an environmental perspective, in order to clarify the responsibilities of the various concerned actors. In conclusion, the paper puts forward policy recommendations that we consider essential, yet open to revision and development, to confront environmental and agricultural ecocide and to strengthen pathways for recovery and return.
This event creates a space to present the paper’s key recommendations and launch a discussion on translating them into participatory advocacy pathways for ecocide, reconstruction, and return in Lebanon, through collaboration between researchers, activists, and stakeholders, turning research insights into practical tools for policy and action.
Event Program

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