

Post-Conflict Recovery: We Need to Talk About The Adaptive Re-use of Place
Adaptively reusing socially significant buildings is an effective peacebuilding and recovery practice, it develops places as valuable...
Uniform November is a peacebuilding consultancy rooted in the belief that architecture, space, and memory are powerful tools for resilience and recovery after conflict.
Founded by a former UN staff member with years of experience working alongside NGOs, civil society, and international organizations, we bring deep insight into the strategies, communications, and practices needed to support communities living with the legacies of violence.
We believe that peacebuilding must begin in war. It cannot wait for silence or stability. It has to be shaped in the very conditions of violence, breathing the same air as the people it claims to serve — air choked with drone buzz, sirens, distant shelling, bad bread lines, and flickering generators.
Our work combines consultancy, training, and original research with critical reflection on how societies adapt to conflict, displacement, and trauma. From heritage reuse to housing, land, and property (HLP) solutions, from mapping sites of violence to developing trauma-informed approaches to memorialisation, we focus on practical interventions that strengthen social cohesion and reduce the risk of renewed violence.
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Uniform November has been working in Kyiv, engaging with those shaping peacebuilding under the direct pressures of war. This work goes beyond cultural heritage — it is about understanding how societies improvise resilience while under fire, and how peace must be crafted in parallel with survival.
Our research and fieldwork there has included dialogue with:
Civil actors searching for and recovering the missing from battle lines
Private security operatives and emergency responders
Psychologists and trauma support providers
Housing, land, and property (HLP) specialists navigating displacement and return
Civil alliance group founders shaping collective responses to crisis
Journalists and researchers documenting violence and resistance
Military commanders and activists balancing survival with long-term vision
These encounters inform both our practical consultancy and our research outputs, grounding our conviction that recovery and reconciliation are not abstract ideals but lived processes forged in conditions of exhaustion, scarcity, and danger. The lessons drawn from Ukraine deepen and expand our global work on post-conflict recovery.
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Heritage Reuse – Breathing new life into buildings and cultural landmarks damaged by war, enabling communities to reconnect with their histories while shaping their futures.
HLP Solutions – Addressing complex housing, land, and property challenges faced by displaced populations to support return, resettlement, and recovery.
Memorialisation & Trauma-Informed Practices – Exploring how memory and place shape recovery, and helping communities create spaces that acknowledge violence without being trapped by it.
Research – Conducting original field-based and theoretical research into peacebuilding, recovery, and resilience — from mapping sites of violence to documenting everyday practices of survival, adaptation, and social cohesion.
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We have collaborated with UNESCO, ICCROM, the British Council, UN-Habitat, the International Organization for Migration (IOM), and The HALO Trust, alongside grassroots groups, military stakeholders, and local leaders in Iraq, Syria, Indonesia, and beyond.
Key contributions include:
Designing an urban park for youth in Mosul on land once occupied by ISIS.
Mapping sites of violence in Mosul and Tal Afar with IOM’s MHPSS unit.
Conducting national HLP assessments to support IOM’s resettlement strategies.
Training local and international staff on post-conflict memory, persecution, and place.
Supporting UNESCO and ICCROM’s Revive the Spirit of Mosul project, empowering Iraqi architects and engineers to reuse cultural landmarks.
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We don’t see peacebuilding as a template—it’s a process that requires sensitivity, creativity, and honesty. Our approach draws on years of fieldwork, policy expertise, and research to help organizations and communities navigate the complexities of recovery.
Through our writing, consultancy, and partnerships, we aim to deepen understanding of how the built environment, cultural memory, and everyday survival can contribute to stability, dignity, and peace.
Uniform November exists to ask difficult questions, share critical insights, and design practical strategies for recovery and resilience.
Uniform November was launched by Frazer MacDonald Hay in 2016. Since then, it has grown into a consultancy and research platform that connects practice, theory, and lived experience of conflict.
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Our work is rooted in field engagement, critical research, and collaborative learning. We share knowledge, exchange ideas, and develop tools that help communities, practitioners, and institutions adapt to violence, displacement, and the long process of recovery.
We offer training, workshops, and tailored educational programmes built around the themes that define our practice:
Peacebuilding in War – Understanding how peace must be shaped under fire, in conditions of fear, scarcity, and trauma.
The Fundamentals of Peacebuilding – Strategy, communication, and adaptation in volatile environments.
Heritage and Socially Significant Buildings – The adaptive reuse of cultural and everyday spaces, and their role in community identity.
The Power of Place – How architecture, memory, and space shape resilience and social cohesion.
The Everyday – Why ordinary spaces and routines matter in both conflict and recovery.
Housing, Land, and Property (HLP) – Navigating the legal, social, and political challenges of displacement and return.
Trauma, Memory, and Violence – Working with built environments imbued with difficult histories, silences, and contested narratives.
Cultural Heritage and Protection – Safeguarding heritage under threat, and rethinking its role in recovery.
Take time to explore the Uniform November Blog, our knowledge-sharing platform for developing collaboration, dialogue, and awareness across the peacebuilding and humanitarian fields. Here we publish reflections from the field, research insights, and thought leadership on recovery, resilience, and memory in conflict and post-conflict environments.
““whatever is true for space and time, this much is true for place: we are immersed in it and could not do without it. To be at all - to exist in any way – is to be somewhere, and to be somewhere is to be in some kind of place”.
"No one therefor can conceive anything, but they must conceive it in some place”.
F.M.H is a Post-conflict, consultant - Specializing in Social Cohesion, DDR, Memorialization, Architectural Conservation, Housing Land and Property (HLP) issues.
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+ Forensic Architecture London
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+ Global Justice Academy, Edinburgh
+ PIRO Oslo
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+ DPIR Uni of Oxford
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+ Conflict, Crime and Security Research (PaCCS)
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+ CSTPV Uni of St Andrews
+ Centre for Development and Emergency Practice Oxford Brooks
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+ Space Group Heriot-Watt University
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+ Post-war Reconstruction and Development Unit - York
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