Monthly Archives: March 2025

Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 27 of 226)

Borel, Rolain; Cawagas, Virginia; Jimenez, Alicia; Salvetti, Nika (2011). Education for Sustainable Development at the University for Peace. Journal of Education for Sustainable Development, v5 n2 p245-249 Sep. This article features the University for Peace (UPEACE), an international academic institution that was created as a Treaty Organization within the framework of the United Nations (Resolution 35/55-1980) to support the central peace and security objectives of the United Nations. UPEACE has carried out postgraduate programs since its inception in the early 1980s. In 2000, as part of former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's initiative towards reforming the United Nations system, UPEACE entered into a new phase of consolidation and expansion. In the Class of 2010, the university enrolled 198 graduate students from 58 countries. The headquarters of the UPEACE system is in Costa Rica, the country that proposed the creation of the University to the UN General Assembly. The UPEACE system also includes offices in Addis Ababa, Geneva, Manila and New York. UPEACE embraces a comprehensive multi- and inter-disciplinary approach in its focus on peace and conflict transformation. While all… [Direct]

Smith, David (2010). Peace Keepers: Colleges as Teachers of Peace and Conflict Resolution. Community College Journal, v81 n1 p44, 46 Aug-Sep. Americans increasingly are looking to community colleges to solve some of the most pressing problems facing this country–not necessarily a surprising revelation. Community colleges have long been in the business of making communities stronger and more vibrant, minimizing economic and social inequities, and instilling hope in those who need it most. As a result, individuals, no matter their age, gender, race, or ability, can avail themselves of the benefits of higher education. Community colleges have done much to promote prosperity and security, competitiveness and equity, and cultural and social enrichment. Thus, it should come as no surprise that community colleges are ideally positioned to promote peace and security in an increasingly violent, unstable global society. Community colleges that pursue peace and conflict initiatives generally follow one of four strategies, often in combination with each other. This article discusses the four pillars of peace education…. [Direct]

Loukaidis, Loizos; Zembylas, Michalinos (2017). Greek-Cypriot Teachers' Perceptions of Religious Education and Its Contribution to Peace: Perspectives of (In)compatibility in a Divided Society. Journal of Peace Education, v14 n2 p176-194. This paper explores the ways in which a group of primary school teachers in Cyprus interprets religious education and its contribution to peace. In particular, this phenomenological exploratory study: first, examines how teachers perceive religious education and whether this conceptualization is considered to be (in)compatible with peace in the context of a conflict-affected society; and, second, shows some of the tensions that exist in the aims of religious education between the desire to encourage mutual understanding and exposure to religious pluralism, on the one hand, and the political demands for entrenching ethnic cleavages, on the other. Although these tensions are largely contextual, they nevertheless raise two important issues that are worthwhile to consider for religious education and peace in conflict-affected societies: first, the "naturalization" of religion and religious instruction, on the one hand, vs. the recognition that some models of religious… [Direct]

Quigley, Kevin F. F. (2013). The Peace Corps and Higher Education: Finally the Envisioned Partnership?. Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, v17 n2 p137-150. A number of structural and contextual changes underway suggests that now that the Peace Corps has begun its second half-century, it may be the opportune time for a broader and deeper strategic partnership with higher education along the lines that the Peace Corps founders' envisioned. That partnership would involve higher education playing an expanded role in recruiting, training, and evaluating Peace Corps volunteers to supplement the more than 100 existing partnerships between the Peace Corps and higher education in graduate study…. [PDF]

Fontana, Giuditta (2018). Mapping the Relationship between Education Reform and Power-Sharing in and after Intrastate Peace Agreements: A Multi-Methods Study. Journal on Education in Emergencies, v4 n1 p74-113 Aug. To what extent does the adoption of consociational power-sharing affect the design and implementation of education reforms? This article maps this territory through rich and detailed interviews collected in Lebanon, Northern Ireland, and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in 2012-2013. Insights from these interviews are corroborated by evidence from the first large-scale dataset of educational provisions in intrastate peace settlements (the Political Agreements in Internal Conflict [PAIC] dataset). There is strong evidence that the values and practices of power-sharing affect the implementation of education reforms: they constrain syncretistic (integrationist or assimilationist) initiatives and enable pluralistic reforms. Analysis of the PAIC dataset also suggests a relationship between the adoption of power-sharing and the inclusion of education reforms in peace agreements: pacts including power-sharing are more likely to also include pluralistic education reforms. Beyond… [Direct]

Bjorn G. J. Wansink; Jan van Tartwijk; Minke A. Krijnen; Tim Mainhard; Yvonne H. M. van den Berg (2024). Citizenship in the Elementary Classroom through the Lens of Peer Relations. Educational Psychology Review, v36 Article 34. We explored the potential of using a peer relations approach for researching children's citizenship in elementary classrooms. Children express or enact citizenship through their behavior toward classmates and the relationships they engage in (i.e., lived citizenship). These behaviors and relationships can be more or less in line with goals for citizenship education. We propose that, through peer relations methodology, these behaviors and relationships can be assessed systematically. In addition, some of the widely researched behaviors and relationships in peer relations research already closely align with goals for citizenship education. With this theoretical and methodological argument, we consider recent publications on classroom behaviors (i.e., prosocial behavior and aggression) and relationships (i.e., positive and negative affect) and their meaning for exemplary goals for citizenship education (i.e., solidarity, peace, and social cohesion). We show how individual children and… [Direct]

Byron, Amanda Smith (2011). Storytelling as Loving Praxis in Critical Peace Education: A Grounded Theory Study of Postsecondary Social Justice Educators. ProQuest LLC, Ed.D. Dissertation, Portland State University. Looking through the philosophical lens of love, this study seeks a deeper understanding and appreciation of how postsecondary social justice educators use storytelling, in the context of critical peace education, to create social change. This research explores the guiding question of how storytelling is used to encourage social change and to inspire action toward the goal of greater social justice. The argument for the importance of this research is located within the crisis of neoliberalism, where the very tenets of democratic education are being challenged by an educational agenda that favors standards-based learning and employment training over the critical and analytical thinking skills required for democracy to flourish. The results of this study identify storytelling as a method of ideology critique, and locate it within a larger process of loving praxis. A theoretical model of loving praxis is offered to explain how postsecondary social justice educators engage story as an… [Direct]

Abura, Mary; Kester, Kevin; Rho, Ella; Sohn, Chaewon (2022). Higher Education Peacebuilding in Conflict-Affected Societies: Beyond the Good/Bad Binary. International Journal of Comparative Education and Development, v24 n3-4 p160-176. Purpose: This comparative case study looks towards the diverse approaches of higher education to support peacebuilding, from policy and philosophy to pedagogical practices, in conflict-affected and post-conflict settings. The achievement of global development goals is dependent on addressing access to quality education in conflict-affected contexts, including higher education. However, in settings affected by conflict, higher education is often perceived to be a luxury, not a necessity. This study, then, explores whether and how higher education might support peace and development through the unique perspective of the "three faces" of higher education in conflict contexts. Design/methodology/approach: The paper is designed as a qualitative comparative case study. The research examines the work of university educators in two institutions in Afghanistan and Somaliland, highlighting the challenges and opportunities they face working in conflict-affected societies and their… [Direct]

Hirsch, Tal Litvak (2006). The Use of Stories as a Tool for Intervention and Research in the Arena of Peace Education in Conflict Areas: The Israeli-Palestinian Story. Journal of Peace Education, v3 n2 p251-271 Sep. The aim of this paper, in the area of peace education, is to demonstrate the feasibility of using stories as part of educational programmes and research. This paper has two sections. In the first, a brief overview of peace education theory and practice in the Israeli context will be presented. The concept of stories and the possibility of using stories in educational programmes and research in peace education will also be discussed. In the second section, two psychological educational projects that use stories in the area of peace education will be demonstrated and the similarities and differences between the two projects will be noted. In conclusion, guidelines will be presented which can be applied in peace education programmes, not only in Israel but in other regions of conflict throughout the world. (Contains 7 notes.)… [Direct]

Baroud, Jamilee; McLean, Lorna R. (2020). Democracy Needs Education: Public Performance, Peace, and Pedagogy, Julia Grace Wales. Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, v56 n4 p503-519. In this article, we explore the academic life of Julia Grace Wales as a public intellectual and peace activist. The study addresses the largely neglected field of female educators and peace activists in the early to mid-twentieth century through a case study of one woman's lifelong popular education campaign to achieve peace and social justice. In these initiatives of lectures, publications, poetry, hymn, memoir, textbook, and correspondence with leaders in religious, academic, and government institutions, Wales took seriously her role as an academic in a democratic society to resolve international conflicts without war. As a public educator, she emerged at a time of growing professionalisation and specialisation among American universities. Although Wales was unique in her position as a woman, academic, and peace activist, we learn how she capitalised upon multiple profiles to advance her point of view. In this article, we assert that it was from her position on the margins that she… [Direct]

Anna Aluffi Pentini (2024). Children's Rights…and Duties! In Pedagogy and Intercultural and Peace Education. Intercultural Education, v35 n5 p558-569. The contribution deals critically with the issue of citizenship and children's rights, identifying a silent void starting from the change we have witnessed with the progressive questioning of the principles, secular, and religious, of adult authority and the sacrosanct affirmation rights of minors and their defence against violence and abuse. This questioning, for example in Italy, took the form of the abolition of the concept of patria potestatis, replaced with that of parental responsibility. However, looking at the juridical, pedagogical, and children's literature, it seems that in the face of numerous publications which speak of children's rights, very few are those that deal with the theme of (any?) the duties of minors…. [Direct]

Haetta, Ole Einar; Nordkild, Siv Ingrid (2023). Mathematics Teaching in "l√°vvues" from the Perspectives of Indigenous Education and Critical Peace Education. Journal of Peace Education, v20 n2 p176-195. This study focuses on how teaching is affected when two cultures meet: the S√°mi culture, represented by the "l√°vvu," and the culture of teaching mathematics in a school. It describes the use of the "l√°vvu" (a S√°mi temporary dwelling) as a classroom for teaching mathematics. For several years, and in cooperation with researchers, the teachers at the Guovdageaidnu Lower Secondary Schoolg have been developing interdisciplinary teaching content related to S√°mi traditional knowledge. The findings of this study describe how tenth-grade students taught younger students. The empirical data used in this study originated from students' teaching in "l√°vvues" and consisted of audio recordings, field notes, and notes from conversations between the authors. The teaching was carried out at another S√°mi school for students of the same age and younger. The organization of the teaching and the teaching itself can be seen as a hybrid of S√°mi child rearing and the ordinary… [Direct]

Amoah, Emmanuel; Wagner, David; Yaro, Kwesi (2020). Situated Perspectives on Creating Mathematics Tasks for Peace and Sustainability. Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, v20 n2 p218-229 Jun. In this paper, we reflect on our experiences teaching and working with mathematics teachers in Canada, Ghana, India and Swaziland to explore challenges and opportunities for creating mathematics tasks for peace and sustainability. Our exploration of these experiences is oriented around our interest in embedding peace and sustainability into mathematics education following the Sustainable Development Goals identified by the United Nations. We claim that attention to local contexts affords mathematics educators a medium for engaging in authentic, meaningful and context-driven mathematics tasks that address issues of local environmental, cultural and societal concerns. However, we argue that globalisation has already colonised local communities. The associated "technoscientificity", along with the conservative nature of textbooks, time constraints and the dominant force of poverty remain hindrances in creating mathematics tasks that are issue centric and socially relevant to… [Direct]

Abu-Nimer, Mohammed; Mahmoud, Ola; Nasser, Ilham (2014). Contextual and Pedagogical Considerations in Teaching for Forgiveness in the Arab World. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, v44 n1 p32-52. This study was conducted among Arab teachers in four countries in the Middle East (Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt and Palestine) to examine their views and methods on teaching for forgiveness in their classrooms. A total of 87 teachers in K-12 classrooms participated in semi-structured interviews as part of a larger study on teaching for forgiveness in the region. Thematic analyses of interviews suggested that teachers created opportunities to model and teach forgiveness as part of their civics education curriculum. They also expressed eagerness for instructional guidance and curriculum materials to systematically teach forgiveness in schools. The strength of religion and historical religious figures as positive sources for teaching forgiveness was also evident. Findings highlight the need to integrate education for peace and forgiveness in the education system, especially as a result of recent political developments in the Middle East, and to provide methods to assist teachers to do so in… [Direct]

Harjes, Kirsten; Siegel, Mona (2012). Disarming Hatred: History Education, National Memories, and Franco-German Reconciliation from World War I to the Cold War. History of Education Quarterly, v52 n3 p370-402 Aug. On May 4, 2006, French and German cultural ministers announced the publication of "Histoire/Geschichte", the world's first secondary school history textbook produced jointly by two countries. Authored by a team of French and German historians and published simultaneously in both languages, the book's release drew considerable public attention. French and German heads-of-state readily pointed to the joint history textbook as a shining example of the close and positive relations between their two countries, while their governments heralded the book for "symbolically sealing Franco-German reconciliation." Franco-German textbook reform provides one of the most successful historical models of cultural diplomacy and peace education worldwide; yet, among scholars and education reformers its history is little known and the reasons for its success are even less understood. Historians of education in both countries have highlighted instead the active role that educators… [Direct]

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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 28 of 226)

Powers, Janet M. (2007). Teaching War Literature, Teaching Peace. Journal of Peace Education, v4 n2 p181-191 Sep. This article explores literature taught in three different courses and the peace education approaches used for each, including epics in literature courses, Vietnam War literature, and literature of anger and hope. The author recommends the teaching of war literature as an essential part of a peace education curriculum. Devastating events such as the Holocaust, the Hiroshima-Nagasaki bombings and the Partition of India should be studied not only as history but also as literature, for deeper truths may emerge from metaphoric representation and descriptive details than can be provided by factual accounts…. [Direct]

Kester, Kevin (2019). Reproducing Peace? A CRT Analysis of Whiteness in the Curriculum and Teaching at a University of the UN. Teaching in Higher Education, v24 n2 p212-230. Peace and conflict studies (PACS) higher education is a blossoming field. Literature (both conceptual and conjectural) and research (theoretical and empirical) has proliferated in recent decades. This paper details case findings from an ethnographic study with university-based PACS educators completed at one University of The United Nations in 2015. The six-month ethnography involved document analysis, participant observation, and semi-structured interviews with 25 peace scholars and 108 postgraduate students. Data was thematically coded and analyzed using concepts from critical race/critical Whiteness studies. This paper outlines the study and explores the theme of Whiteness that emerged from data. Findings point toward the cultural reproduction of Whiteness in the faculty, pedagogy, and institution. The paper concludes with a discussion of implications concerning global equity and 'post-structural violence' in PACS education, as well as a call for further research into the role of… [Direct]

Montessori, Maria (2015). The Education of the Individual. NAMTA Journal, v40 n2 p15-28 Spr. Only when we look at education from birth and follow the inner development of the child from the beginning can we truly see the child's psychological progress. Montessori states that personality cannot develop fully without freedom; even the formation of healthy social life requires freedom to associate, not coercion. The early childhood level develops the will, the elementary level leads to social understanding of civilization, and the adolescent level is the gateway to social organization and the fulfillment of the personality. [Reprinted from "Education and Peace." Copyright 2007 by the Montessori-Pierson Publishing Company.]… [PDF]

Murithi, Tim (2009). An African Perspective on Peace Education: "Ubuntu" Lessons in Reconciliation. International Review of Education, v55 n2-3 p221-233 May. This essay examines the value of educating for peace. It does this through a consideration of the African cultural world-view known as "ubuntu," which highlights the essential unity of humanity and emphasises the importance of constantly referring to the principles of empathy, sharing and cooperation in efforts to resolve our common problems. The essay is not based on field research, but rather on a discussion of the issues pertaining to "ubuntu" and peace education. The discussion focuses on how Desmond Tutu utilised the principles of "ubuntu" during his leadership of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission. It also outlines the five stages of the peacemaking process found among "ubuntu" societies: acknowledging guilt; showing remorse and repenting; asking for and giving forgiveness; and paying compensation or reparations as a prelude to reconciliation. Potential lessons for educating for peace and reconciliation are highlighted… [Direct]

Broadfoot, Harriet; Pascal, Chris (2020). Exploring Experiences of Compassion in the Daily Rhythms of One Early Childhood Community. European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, v28 n4 p457-474. Compassion is of high global relevance, being positioned as a core global competency for sustainable lifestyles promoting well-being, global citizenship and peace, which should be fostered in education. However, as a contested concept there is a vast gap in knowledge regarding compassion in early childhood education (ECE). In response, this research explored how one Pre-School community in England experience compassion in their daily lives. Within a sociocultural framework it illuminates children's and practitioners' experiences to raise awareness of compassion's role, what conditions facilitate it, and the ways it is experienced and expressed. Fieldwork involved observation, interview and focus groups, gathering different perceptions and interpretations to produce a multi-voiced account. Thematic analysis was applied to the data, with the findings providing a provocation for embedding compassion in ECE as an approach to sustainability, shifting perspective towards needs, rights,… [Direct]

Aravi, C.; Avraamidou, L.; Evagorou, M.; Vrasidas, C.; Zembylas, M. (2007). ICT as a Tool for Environmental Education, Peace, and Reconciliation. Educational Media International, v44 n2 p129-140 Jun. In this paper we describe a project that emanates from a conception of environmental education as peace education and utilizes ICT as a tool for bringing communities together and enriching ways of communication. We present the theoretical framework of the project, the dilemmas of peace education in light of the conflict in Cyprus, and then reflect on the lessons learned from the use of technology as a tool to address issues relating to environmental education and peace. We argue that such efforts are of particular importance because they aim at legitimizing a process of ongoing interaction. Thus, issues of interpersonal friendships, general beliefs in peace, and attitude change assume an interesting role in establishing communication channels that eventually aim at acknowledging each other's collective narratives. The obstacles on the road to peace in Cyprus are numerous; however, through the critical use of ICT each community's experiences of suffering may enhance its capacity to… [Direct]

Wulf, Christoph, Ed. (1974). Handbook on Peace Education. The intention of this handbook is to report on the present situation in the international discussion on peace education and to make further development of this field possible in the peace movement. The first of the three sections contains papers which are contributions on preconditions for and the foundations of peace education, along with discussion of various concepts of the function of peace education. Part two contains a summary of examples which attempt to explain peace education in more concrete terms, both in and outside of school. In these approaches, peace research, peace education and action for peace are seen as directly related to each other, a precondition to reach their maximum effectiveness. A number of reports on efforts to put peace education into practice in various countries are found in the third part of the handbook. Included are reports on the Bad Nauheim Conference on peace education, on different implementation strategies, and on work in peace education in… [PDF]

Bjerstedt, Ake (1994). Teacher Training in Relation to Peace Education in Schools: Views Expressed by Members of the PEC Network. Peace Education Miniprints, No. 67. This study did a preliminary examination of Peace Education Commission (PEC) members' views on teacher training in relation to peace education in schools. A questionnaire was mailed to all PEC members and 75 questionnaires were returned from 33 different countries. Findings included the following: (1) teacher training is of great importance; (2) training related to peace education should be included in both basic teacher training and in-service training; (3) little is currently done in teacher training related to peace education; (4) a broad-range policy for teacher training covering several approaches to peace education received strong support from the respondents; (5) with regard to how peace education should be related to the total system of teacher education, a clear majority (60 percent) favored a combination of special courses on peace education within basic teacher training as well as promoting peace education objectives and procedures in a number of different courses in… [PDF]

Brantmeier, Edward J. (2003). Peace Pedagogy: Exposing and Integrating Peace Education in Teacher Education. This paper discusses peace education, which is "the transmission of knowledge about the requirements of, the obstacles to and possibilities for achieving and maintaining peace, training in skills for interpreting the knowledge, and development of reflective and participatory capacities for applying the knowledge to overcoming problems and achieving possibilities." The paper asserts that peace education needs exposure and further integration into teacher education discourse and practice. It begins defining peace education, explaining how the purposes and goals of peace education already align with peace theory, and suggesting how a move from implicit to explicit peace education may strengthen the overall momentum of peace pedagogy in building a culture of peace. The paper also surveys the scholarly literature pertaining to the integration of peace education into teacher education (noting that it has been excluded from mainstream teacher education rhetoric), and it reviews… [PDF]

Bjerstedt, Ake, Ed. (1991). Membership Directory of the PEC Network: Mailing Addresses of the Peace Education Commission. Peace Education Miniprints No. 21. The Peace Education Commission (PEC) was established to facilitate international cooperation among individuals interested in peace education and research related to peace education. The main ambition of PEC is to serve as a useful network for transnational information and support in the peace education area. This document provides current mailing addresses for PEC members. (Author)… [PDF]

Thelin, Bengt (1991). Peace Education: A Tentative Introduction from a Swedish Perspective. Peace Education Reports No. 2. Discussing the concept of peace education, specifically from a Swedish perspective, this paper offers a rationale for the inclusion of peace education in school curricula throughout the world. Organized into three sections, the first section presents a historical background to current peace education efforts, and focuses on developments since World War II, especially within Swedish schools. The second section seeks to define the content of peace education, and includes a discussion of the intellectual history of war, the arms industry, human rights, developing nations, psychological problems, security policy, and peace and the environment. The third section discusses how peace education is currently put into practice in Swedish schools. An appendix contains an excerpt from a paper on peace education and a 25-item list of references. (DB)… [PDF]

Bjerstedt, Ake, Ed. (1993). The PEC Network 1993. Directory of the Peace Education Commission. Peace Education Miniprints, No. 47. This extensive list of the council members of the Peace Education Commission (PEC) from 1992-1994 gives mailing addresses and some telephone and fax numbers to enable direct contact with network members. The Peace Education Commission (PEC) facilitates international cooperation among individuals interested in peace education and research related to peace education. Operating via a Council and an Executive Secretary, the main ambition of PEC is to serve as a useful network for transnational information and the support of the peace education field through a newsletter service and an updated address list. (CK)… [PDF]

Bjerstedt, Ake (1992). Peace Education and Traditional School Subjects. Peace Education Miniprints No. 30. Part 1 of this paper explores four approaches for introducing peace education into the curriculum. The four approaches are: (1) peace education can be made into a special subject; (2) peace-related issues can be handled outside of the normal system of classes; (3) peace education can be seen as a common assignment for all, or several, school subjects; and (4) peace education may be viewed as aiming at education for peace values and non-violent interaction with others, moving the question of school subject attachment into the background. Part 2 of the paper illustrates these models of peace education with excerpts from interviews with peace educators from around the world. (DB)… [PDF]

Bretherton, Di; Tyler, Melissa Conley (2006). Peace Education in Higher Education: Using Internships to Promote Peace. Journal of Peace Education, v3 n2 p127-145 Sep. This paper discusses the role of praxis in peace education at the university level. An internship program is described as an example of how a program that integrates theory and practice might be implemented within a university context. Analysis of the program points to the potential of practical programs for maximizing student learning but also highlights the problems that arise from the lack of isomorphism between the disciplinary organization of a university and the holistic and applied goals of peace education. (Contains 1 note.)… [Direct]

Gur-Ze'ev, Ilan (2001). Philosophy of Peace Education in a Postmodern Era. Educational Theory, v51 n3 p315-36 Sum. Argues that peace education is actually part of the reality it attempts to change, noting problems in distinguishing between peace and violence, and arguing that justifications common in discussions of peace education serve certain acts of violence, and peace education is itself a manifestation of such violence. The paper examines possibilities for an alternative to current trends in peace education. (SM)…

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