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Building Resilience to Genocide through Peace Education: Concepts, Methods, Tools and Impact
Lieu de publication | Année de publication | Référence: 
Chicago | 2017 | 94 p.
Auteur: 
Jonathan Bower, Mariana Goetz
Publié sous la direction de: 
Aegis Trust/ UNESCO
Région: 
Afrique

A three-day Colloquium in Kigali in February brought together academics and practitioners in and around the field of peace education to share concepts, methods and means of measuring impact, contributing to a stronger evidence base for the effectiveness of peace education. Three interesting takeaways from the Colloquium:

 


1. Building resilience against genocide requires critical thinking about the process of identity-based violence and its reversal.
2. The content of peace education programmes matters: interactive role-play type activities have been shown to have a longer lasting impact.
3. Unhealed wounds need to be addressed to prevent a repeat of violence; psychosocial support must accompany peace education to reduce anxiety, which can be an obstacle when accessing empathy.

 


A major achievement resulting from the consortium’s advocacy has been that the Government of Rwanda through the Ministry of Education has integrated Peace and Values education into the school curriculum. In a new phase of work Aegis is now supporting the implementation of the revised national curriculum that has integrated peace and values education (2016-19).

Fichiers: 
Type de ressource: 
Documents de recherche / articles de journaux
Thème: 
Prévention de l'extrémisme violent / du génocide
Paix / culture de la paix
Niveau d'éducation: 
Enseignement primaire
Enseignement secondaire
Enseignement supérieur
Mots-clés: 
peace
peace educaiton
violence
Colloquium Report