Title: ENGAGING SCHOOLS IN THE PEACE PROCESS
1ENGAGING SCHOOLS IN THE
PEACE PROCESS
2DISCUSSION FLOW
- Assumptions / Premises
- The peace process expanding our frontiers of
meaning (the Tracks) - Why be involved in the peace process?
Why teach peace? in loco
parentis - Education for transformation (the ABC of
violence notions of peace) - Toward the enabling and ennobling classroom
Educating for democratic competence - Drawing from inherent capacities for
peacefulness - Positioning ourselves toward the peace process
3Assumptions 1
1. We are children of our time
2. Our thinking tendencies
- Homogenizing our cultures
3. Our peace educ. efforts not new
4Assumptions 2 (On Education)
Lederach, 1995
- Frameworks all-encompassing, sufficiently
common and sharable,
- Skills- and process-based education
- Studies of ourselves and our cultures reduced
to the level of technique
5THE PEACE PROCESS
GPH - MILF
GPH - CNN
GRP-MNLF
GRP-MILF
GPH - NDF
6- TRACK I DIPLOMACY
- Official governmental diplomacy
- A technique of state action whereby
communications from one government
go directly to the decision-making apparatus
of another". - Conducted by official representatives of
a state or state-like
authority and involves interaction with other
state or state-like authorities heads of state,
state depart-ment or ministry of foreign affairs
officials, and other governmental departments
and ministries
Track I I
Diplomacy
Track 1½ Diplomacy
Track III
Diplomacy
7Track I I Diplomacy
- citizen diplomacy
- multi-track diplomacy
- supplemental diplomacy
- pre-negotiation
- consultation
- interactive conflict resolution
- back-channel diplomacy
- facilitated joint brainstorming
- coexistence work
- INFORMAL INTERMEDIARIES /
NON-GOVERNMENTAL ACTORS - Religious institutions
- Academics
- Former government officials
- Non-governmental organizations,
- Humanitarian organizations
- Think tanks, among others.
8(No Transcript)
9TRACK 1½ DIPLOMACY
- Involves unofficial actors (former government
officials, or religious or social organizations
such as the Church or the Quakers) who intervene
in unofficial interactions between official
government representatives to promote a peaceful
resolution of conflict. - Direct mediation or conciliation by unofficial
third parties - "Consultation" and facilitation of interactive
problem-solving by unofficial facilitators. - Facilitation of problem solving or
confidence-building by official third-party
actors among private citizens in influential
sectors.
10TRACK III DIPLOMACY
- Unofficial third parties work with people from
all walks of life and sectors of their society to
find ways to promote peace in settings of violent
conflict. - Aimed at building or rebuilding broken
relationships across the lines of division among
ordinary citizens in communities, in a range of
sectors. - The premise of track three diplomacy Peace can
and must be built from the bottom up as well as
from the top down.
11Why be involved in the peace
process?
12Culture as a contact point,
a field of
contest in which all ideas, behaviors, values
and power structures are
legitimized / discarded,
foregrounded / backgrounded/
pushed to the
margins,
within the culture
that
successfully
draws the
peoples allegiance
or confuses them.
- Atty. Michael Mastura
13The Enculturation of Violence
14B
A
C
The ABC Triangle of Violence
15BEHAVIOR Hatred for the enemy, direct physical
violence, killing, torture, intimidation,
insults, etc.
B
ATTITUDES Feelings/ Values
Sources Hatred, fear, mistrust, racism,
bigotry, sexism, intolerance
A
CONTEXT System Struc Structural/
institutional violence, discrimination
(e.g. in education, employ- ment, health
care, etc.), globalization of economy,
denial of rights and
liberties, segregation (e.g., apartheid)
C
The ABC Triangle of Violence
16- ACTION
- Control the behavior
- Violence reduction to promote
negative peace
B
A
C
- ACTION
- Work to change attitude and context
- Violence reduction to promote
positive peace
17PEACE
NEGATIVE PEACE Absence of direct/ physical
violence (both macro and micro)
POSITIVE PEACE Presence of conditions of
well-being and just relationships social,
economic, political,
ecological
STRUCTURAL VIOLENCE e.g., poverty, hunger
Direct Violence e.g., war, torture, abuse of
children and women
SOCIO-CULTURAL VIOLENCE e.g., racism, sexism,
religious intolerance
ECOLOGICAL VIOLENCE e.g., pollution,
overconsumption
VIOLENCE
18- not just about
the imposition
of "solutions,"
but about
the creation
of OPPORTUNITIES
19- the creation of SPACES
(political, economic, social spaces)
in which indigenous actors can identify, develop,
and use all that
are necessary
to build a
peaceful,
prosperous
and
just
society
20- ATTITUDES / VALUES
- Self respect
- Respect for Others
- Respect for Life / Nonviolence
- Compassion
- Ecological Concern
- Cooperation
- Openness Tolerance
- Social Responsibility
- Positive Vision
Schema of Knowledge, Skills and Attitudes/ Values
- KNOWLEDGE
- Holistic Concept of Peace
- Conflict Violence -causes
- Some Peaceful Alternatives
- Disarmament
- Nonviolent Conflict Resolution
- Human Rights
- Gender Fairness
- Human Solidarity
- Democratization
- Devt Based on Justice
- Sustainable Development
- SKILLS
- Reflection
- Critical Thinking Analysis
- Decision Making
- Imagination
- Communication
- Conflict Resolution
- Group Building
21Harmony / Solidarity
Democracy
DIALOGUE
Inter-religious / Inter-cultural Communication
Toward the enabling and ennobling classroom
22Democratic competence Living peace in the
classroom
- Diversity as a learning resource
- Diversity as a place for compassion and
appreciation - Diversity as a point of enrichment and
celebration
Dealing with diversity
- Dissent as an opportunity for the
exercise of reason - Dissent as a venue for
the search for truth. - Dissent as a self-corrective mirror
Dealing with dissent
23Capabilities for Peacefulness
Spiritual Roots Scientific Roots Public policies Social Institutions
Spiritual Institutions Political Institutions Economic Institutions Educational Institutions Training Institutions
Security Institutions Research Institutions Communications media Cultural Resources
24Social Institutions
- Educational Institutions The possibility of
basing an entire university upon the multifaith
spirit of non-violence in service to human
needs. (Barefoot College in India, Deemed
University combining disci-plinary studies with
community applications (pol sci village
decision-making, physics radio repair, biology
well-cleaning, Shanti Sena (peace corps),
- Training Institutions Institutions that provide
non-violence training for social change, conflict
zone intervention, social defense, etc.,
including Aikido (Peace Brigades, Intl.,
Transcend , Nonviolence Intl.)
25- Research Institutions
Institutions that carry out
research on nonviolent struggles for democracy,
security, and justice researches to support
nonviolent social change promotion of worldwide
sharing of discoveries in research, education,
and action
- Problem-solving Institutions Institutions
dedicated to solving problems on nonviolence
principles (ex., Amnesty International (vs. human
rights violations abolition of death penalty,
Greenpeace International (defense of the
environment abolition of nuclear weapons),
Medicins sans Frontieres (humanitarian medical
care for victims of violence),.
26- Communications Media Books and media that
educate for nonviolent social change, or that
evoke non-violent thinking on various social
issues
- Cultural Resources Creations of art and
intellect that uplift the human spirit and
inspire advances toward realization of a
nonviolent society
synergizing creativity for peaceful social
transformation in the audio-visual, performing,
and literary
arts
27ALTERNATIVES FOR PEACE
- Academic departments
- University peace corps
- Universities
- Political parties
- Public service depts
- Common security institutions
- Civil society institutions
- Spiritual councils
- Problem-solving consortia
- Training institutions
- Leadership study and revitalization centers
- Centers for creativity
- in the arts
- Research and policy analysis institutes
- Media of communication
- Memorials
- Zones of peace
- Economic enterprise
- Centers for non-violence
28WHERE DO WE STAND? Our Roles in the Progression
of Conflict
STATIC UNSTABLE DYNAMIC
3. Negotiation 4. Advocacy and Education for Sustainable Peace
1. Education Latent 2. Confrontation War
29(No Transcript)
30Some Suggested Entry Points
- Changing Attitudes about the "Other"
- Opening Channels of Communication
- Improving Quality of Communication
- Relationship and Trust Building
- Changing Perceptions of the Conflict
- Exploring New Options for Negotiation
- Changing Conflict Dynamic Strengthening
Voices of Moderation - Developing Social Networks An Infrastructure
for Peace
31PAZ con Todo y Muchisimas Gracias !