Monthly Archives: March 2025

Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 63 of 226)

Carlsson-Paige, Nancy; Levin, Diane E. (1987). The War Play Dilemma: Balancing Needs and Values in the Early Childhood Classroom. Based on survey data and written for educators and parents, this book examines the role of war play in early childhood education settings, its potential negative effects, and what educators might do to limit these effects. This examination is offered from both a developmental and a sociopolitical view. Four approaches to solving potential problems resulting from war play are discussed: banning war play; taking a laissez-faire approach; allowing war play with defined limits; and facilitating war play. The book discusses differences between parents' and teachers' approaches to war play and offers guidelines and strategies for approaching war play in the classroom. Among these include supporting those children not interested in war play and using the issues that arise out of children's war play as subjects for classroom discussion. The document includes four appendices which present a sample of the questionnaires and responses used to develop the book, samples of curriculum webs which…

Amy L. Kenworthy; Andrii Shestak; Mariya Tytarenko; Martha Tychenko; Myroslava Chekh; Olena Trevoho; Sophia Opatska; Valeria Kozlova (2025). 'See Us': An Urgent Call to Collaborate with Colleagues in Crisis Environments around the World. Teaching in Higher Education, v30 n2 p544-554. This essay is written as an urgent call for collaboration. It is a provocation for academics in non-crisis environments to proactively reach out to our academic colleagues in Ukraine and other severely disrupted crisis environments around the world to work together to create and extend knowledge and understanding about interpersonal and organizational phenomena during extreme circumstances. We — those of us who are higher education practitioners living within non-crisis environments — have colleagues around the world who are navigating through fractured and uncertain contexts. They are calling out to be seen, to be heard, to be engaged and partnered with in generative and holistic ways. In this essay, we begin a conversation about potential topics for collaborative exploration in our learning and teaching spaces with the hope that they will inspire action and connection between academics living within relative peace and privilege and those living within severe disruption and crisis…. [Direct]

(1986). International Consultation on Peace Education and Research in Higher Education. Higher Education in Europe, v11 n2 p64-68. A January 1986 UNESCO international conference on the role of higher education in promoting international understanding, cooperation, peace, and respect for human rights focused on the nuclear threat and conventional warfare, the role of international governmental and nongovernmental organizations, research and education for peace, and interdisciplinarity and the diffusion of knowledge. (MSE)…

Lange, Matthew (2011). Educations in Ethnic Violence: Identity, Educational Bubbles, and Resource Mobilization. Cambridge University Press In "Educations in Ethnic Violence", Matthew Lange explores the effects education has on ethnic violence. Lange contradicts the widely-held belief that education promotes peace and tolerance. Rather, Lange finds that education commonly contributes to aggression, especially in environments with ethnic divisions, limited resources, and ineffective political institutions. He describes four ways in which organized learning spurs ethnic conflicts. Socialization in school shapes students' identities and the norms governing intercommunal relations. Education can also increase students' frustration and aggression when their expectations are not met. Sometimes, the competitive atmosphere gives students an incentive to participate in violence. Finally, education provides students with superior abilities to mobilize violent ethnic movements. Lange employs a cross-national statistical analysis with case studies of Sri Lanka, Cyprus, the Palestinian territories, India, sub-Saharan… [Direct]

Caroline Kelley (2024). Fostering Compassion and Empathy: The Role of Humane Education in Early Childhood. Childhood Education, v100 n6 p12-17. Bringing peace to the world is a profound aspiration, and it can be achieved by instilling the values of empathy, compassion, and respect in young children through humane education. Humane education sows the seeds of hope for a future that can heal our planet and usher in positive societal change. Humane education fosters empathy and ethical thinking in young children, equipping them with the emotional intelligence and moral foundation needed to make compassionate choices and positively impact their communities. Humane education not only fosters a sense of responsibility and stewardship for the planet but also encourages critical thinking and problem-solving skills that are essential for resolving conflicts without resorting to violence. By equipping young minds with knowledge and values that prioritize compassion, we are shaping a more compassionate and just society where differences are understood and respected and conflicts are resolved through dialogue and understanding. The hope… [Direct]

Almanza, M√≥nica; Kasumagic-Kafed≈æic, Larisa; Masabo, Fran√ßois; Millican, Juliet (2021). Pedagogies for Peacebuilding in Higher Education: How and Why Should Higher Education Institutions Get Involved in Teaching for Peace?. International Review of Education, v67 n5 p569-590 Oct. This article makes the case for why higher education institutions should take the teaching of peacebuilding seriously. It is co-authored by a team from four countries (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Rwanda, Colombia and the United Kingdom) who were involved in a small international research project looking at "Pedagogies for Peacebuilding". Together they are trying to answer questions about the legitimacy of bringing these discussions into higher education and lecturer/student relationships. The authors discuss the spaces in which peacebuilding can be usefully considered within higher education curricula; the significance of higher education in helping young people develop habits of peace; and how the citizens and leaders of the future might be helped to understand the meaning and importance of peacebuilding. In the course of their argument, the authors consider the intention and impact of different pedagogical approaches…. [Direct]

(1994). 1994–International Year of the Family. The United Nations General Assembly has proclaimed 1994 as International Year of the Family with the theme, "Family: Resources and Responsibilities in a Changing World." Objectives for the year include increasing awareness of family issues among governments and the private sector, highlighting the importance of families, increasing understanding of their problems, promoting knowledge of the economic and social processes affecting families, and focusing attention upon the rights and responsibilities of all family members. This document presents the following materials for schools to celebrate the year of the family: (1) suggestions for how schools can plan to be involved in The Year of the Family; (2) Year of the Family logos; (3) a proclamation form from the state superintendent; (4) a quiz to test the knowledge about issues facing the American family; (5) ideas for teaching children about different cultures; (6) a worksheet on family issues and concerns; (7) suggestions… [PDF]

Bangayimbaga, Apollinaire; Ndura, Elavie; Timpson, William (2014). Conflict, Reconciliation and Peace Education: Moving Burundi toward a Sustainable Future. Routledge Research in International and Comparative Education. Routledge Research in International and Comparative Education When the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States occurred–causing that nation to wage wars of revenge in Afghanistan and Iraq–the people of Burundi were recovering from nearly forty years of violence, genocide and civil wars that had killed nearly one million and produced another million refugees. Here in this small East African nation, one of the four poorest nations on earth, however, was a desire for reconciliation–not revenge–and it still runs deep today. The University of Ngozi in northern Burundi was created in 1999 and is now dedicated to peace, reconciliation and sustainable development. People in this region tell remarkable stories of tragedy and recovery amid these horrors. Their stories can inspire others to preserve their humanity and resist the urge to continue the violence, focusing instead on forgiveness, reconciliation and a better way forward. This volume presents case study analysis while pointing to the promise of a new kind of education that is… [Direct]

Pirtle, Sara, Ed. (1984). Perspectives at Work: Fourteen Activities for Building Peacemaking Skills. Grades One to Six. Designed for teachers of students in grades 1-6, this representative sample of artwork and creative writing illustrates activities for teaching peace education. Based on a curriculum created by the Greater Boston Chapter of Educators for Social Responsibility ("Perspectives"), the booklet presents student art and writing samples illustrating student ideas about peace, cooperation, and conflict resolution. Students study local community builders, famous peacemakers, and people who are different from themselves, and examine change, decision making strategies, and the future. Suggested activities for students in grades 1-3 include making peace flowers as a cooperative effort, interviewing community builders, studying the life of famous peacemakers, and examining conflicts. Activities for students in grades 3-5 include defining peace, dramatizing the decisions of famous peacemakers, studying changes, exploring a non-violent future world, imagining oneself in the future, and…

Goehner, Thomas B. (1999). Woodrow Wilson: Prophet of Peace. Teaching with Historic Places. This lesson describes President Woodrow Wilson's struggle with and his ultimate failure at achieving lasting world peace through the League of Nations. The lesson focuses on November 23, 1923, the eve of the fifth anniversary of the Armistice that concluded World War I, when a frail and ill Wilson was ready to deliver a commemorative address by radio from the library of his brick home on S Street in Washington, DC. The lesson could be used in teaching units on foreign policy, peace education, presidential history, or the history of World War I. The lesson objectives are to: articulate the ideals of world peace and world order that Wilson espoused; describe the conflict between Wilson's ideals and the Senate's policy of isolationism; and explain why the ideals of a visionary like Wilson are significant in forming the policies of the government. The lesson is divided into the following teaching activities sections: Setting the Stage: Historical Context; Locating the Site: Maps… [PDF]

Iryna Kushnir (2025). 'It Is More than Just Education. It's Also a Peace Policy': (Re)Imagining the Mission of the European Higher Education Area in the Context of the Russian Invasion of Ukraine. European Educational Research Journal, v24 n1 p111-126. Following the launch of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, scholarship has not yet addressed the role of the European Higher Education Area (EHEA) in this context. This paper asks: What is the political role of the EHEA as an institution and the instrumentalisation of its higher education (HE) cooperation initiatives in the context of the invasion? To investigate this, the paper thematically analyses interviews with representatives from key HE stakeholders in three EHEA members — Germany, France and Italy, as well as key recent international communications related to the EHEA's response to the war. The thematic analysis revealed two overarching themes leading us to consider that: (1) the EHEA has been regaining its lost significance through shaping and disseminating its response as an institution to the invasion of Ukraine; and (2) HE cooperation in the EHEA in the context of this war has been acquiring a new meaning. These themes lead us to conclude that the… [Direct]

Bickmore, Kathy; Guerra-Sua, √Ångela; Kaderi, Ahmed Salehin (2017). Creating Capacities for Peacebuilding Citizenship: History and Social Studies Curricula in Bangladesh, Canada, Colombia, and M√©xico. Journal of Peace Education, v14 n3 p282-309. Public education is one influence on how young people learn to navigate social conflicts and to contribute to building democratic peace, including their sense of hope or powerlessness. Social studies curricula, in particular, introduce core concerns, geographies, governance and civil society, and participation skills and norms. History education narratives frame identity, (dis)trust or peaceful coexistence, and provide exemplars of how social conflicts and injustice have been handled in the past. To shed light on these peacebuilding and peace-blocking choices, this paper examines government-sanctioned social studies and history curricula in contrasting contexts of violent conflict and peace: Bangladesh, Colombia, M√©xico, and (Ontario) Canada. Our comparative analysis shows how these official curricula (de)normalize violence and militarism, present national identities as hegemonic/exclusive or plural/inclusive, and create opportunities for teaching/learning peacebuilding citizenship… [Direct]

Amutuhaire, Tibelius (2023). Improving Access and Equity in East African Higher Education through Internationalization. FIRE: Forum for International Research in Education, v8 n1 p22-39. The 1998 UNESCO World Conference on Higher Education in Paris recommended that global higher education institutions should internationalize and reduce inequalities between developed and emerging countries. Since then, universities strive to incorporate an international dimension in their service. The aim was initially guided by the 20th century understanding of internationalization being just, fair, and an equitable process that promotes peace and mutual understanding. However, under the influence of the General Agreement on Trade in Services and competition, internationalization changed focus and became less inclusive. This paper explores inclusive international education in East Africa using narrative review methodology. Findings suggest that rather than promoting access and equity in higher education, internationalization, for example, excludes economically disadvantaged, disabled, and adult learners. Thus, in addition to internationalization at home, inclusive… [PDF]

Abu Ahmad, Manal Yazbak; Ben Hagai, Ella; Dembo, Robert; Dessel, Adrienne B. (2017). Support for Palestinians among Jewish Americans: The Importance of Education and Contact. Journal of Peace Education, v14 n3 p347-369. The violent and protracted Israeli-Palestinian conflict continues, and Jewish Americans play a significant role in influencing related US foreign policy as well as in promoting positive interactions with Palestinians globally. Diaspora populations have played an important role in international peace processes and American Jews are actively involved in peace efforts for Palestinian human rights. Previous research indicates a relationship between views about Israel, knowing Palestinian narratives, and promoting peace processes. Thus, the attitudes and experiences that Jewish Americans have are important to understand and predicting their support for Palestinians. An online internet survey distributed to Jewish listservs (n = 173) measured variables of gender, age, political views, Jewish socialization, family and own attitudes about Israel, courses on the conflict, and having been to the West Bank. Results indicated younger, more liberal Jewish Americans who had taken courses and been… [Direct]

Pois, Anne Marie (1989). Educating Women for Peace: The United States Section of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom and Political Organization during the 1930s. The focus of this paper is the U.S. section of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (US WILPF) and its efforts to mobilize an activist and durable women's peace reform organization in the 1930s. Members wished US WILPF to serve as an avenue for expanding women's political power and for reaching the goals of nonviolent change and economic and social justice at all levels of national and international life. It was the first modern women's peace organization to emerge after World War I. With its national headquarters in Washington, D.C., it functioned as a public interest group with Dorothy Detzer as chief lobbyist, while local branch members applied pressure on legislators and officials and attempted to educate communities on peace issues. Mildred Scott Olmstead, the national organization secretary, worked to expand and strengthen the group at the grassroots level in order to increase US WILPF's political clout. This two-pronged approach to peace education–lobbying… [PDF]

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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 64 of 226)

Ali Panahi; Hassan Mohebbi; Rebecca L. Oxford (2024). Rebecca Oxford's 50 Years of Contributions to Language Education and Related Fields: A Systematic Review. Language Teaching Research Quarterly, v41 p169-230. This article systematically reviews the quantity and quality of Rebecca L. Oxford's publications over five decades of research and publication in language education and related fields. The first section portrays Oxford's contributions in four thematic areas: language learning strategies, language teaching, psychology, and peace. For each theme, many of Oxford's publications and ideas are presented. The second section is an overview of her career achievements, such as books published, courses taught, and academic honors. The third and the fourth sections present the systematic review. Specifically, the third section explains in detail the methodology used by Panahi and Mohebbi for their systematic review of Oxford's work, while the fourth section presents results of the systematic review across 338 of her works (journal articles, book chapters, and books). Oxford's personal response is the last section…. [PDF]

Grob, Leonard M. (1985). Buberian Peace Education in the Mideast: A Buberian Critique. Educational Theory, v35 n4 p423-35 Fall. In 1979 in Israel, the Education for Peace Project on the Basis of Martin Buber's Philosophy was begun by Dr. Haim Gordon, incorporating Buberian Learning Groups as its cornerstone. This paper argues that Dr. Gordon departs from Buberian philosophy and imperils the success of his innovative pedagogy for peace. A response by Haim Gordon is offered. (MT)…

Giere, Ursula (1997). Adult Learning in a World at Risk: Emerging Policies and Strategies. Expectations and Prospects for the 21st Century As Voiced by Respondents to a 1996 UNESCO Questionnaire in Preparation for the Fifth International Conference on Adult Education (CONFINTEA V). CONFINTEA Background Document. Emerging adult education policies and strategies were studied through a survey of United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) member states, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and social partners. Questionnaires were returned by 93 countries and 12 NGOs. The study focused on the following: social change and its impact on adult education since 1985; adult education around the world; trends in adult learning around the world; formal and nonformal adult basic education; adult literacy; adult learning and the technological revolution; vocational training for adults; education toward a culture of peace; education for a democratic, civil society; education and the all-round development of all individuals; formulation of a broader vision of adult learning; integration of adult learning into the lifelong learning system; the changing role of the state, universities, and NGOs; the strengthening of cooperative structures; new ways of financing adult… [PDF]

Sebaly, Kim P. (1983). The Global Education Movement and Achievable Reforms in the Pre-Service Education of Teachers. The importance of the current movement for global education in the elementary and secondary schools, and in higher education, has been indicated by the convening of the first national conference on global education, held at Easton, Maryland, in May 1982. During this conference, leaders in the field of global education presented issues and themes that were comprehensive and wide-ranging. This conference raised new questions about the meaning of global eductaion and extended the networks of those seeking to find appropriate answers. Activities and presentations at the conference concerned: (1) materials and technologies for teaching; (2) studies of cross-cultural settings and training programs; (3) studies of different beliefs about issues of world order; (4) preservice teacher education and global education; (5) curriculum innovation and institution building; (6) professional support groups; and (7) international participation in planning and implementing programs in global…

(1990). The African Adult Education Movement in Blossom. Report of the Secretary General to the Second General Assembly on the 1987-90 Period. Since 1987, many activities have been undertaken by the African Association for Literacy and Adult Education (AALAE). Perhaps the most important program activity has been the building of institutional capacities in the adult education movement. Important elements are organizational development, networking and solidarity, management development training, and small grants. Networks have been instituted to help members develop and implement programs. Under the Catalytic Initiatives Program, AALAE undertakes specific, concentrated action in particular subregions to strengthen adult education. The Exchange Program facilitates the sharing of experiences between adult educators and development activists. In other activities, the AALAE: (1) developed a program for Peace Education, Human and People's Rights; (2) began to build training capacities, especially through the training of trainers; (3) conducted a feasibility study to determine the need for an African Training Center for Literacy… [PDF]

Buchborn, Thade; Burnard, Pamela; Hebert, David G.; Moore, Gwen (2022). Reconfiguring Music Education for Future-Making: "How?". Music Education Research, v24 n3 p275-281. Global and societal changes present profound challenges and complexities for the future of music education practice and research. In these times of rapid change, four members of the MER editorial board reflect on the need to challenge normalising discourses of music education and encourage new understandings and/or territories within the field. In this viewpoint paper, we proffer four provocations on the themes of music(s) and social justice, climate change and sustainability, peace and democracy and enduring impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and ask how music education can play a central role in future-making. The paper concludes with an invitation to consider special issue proposals that advance similar or new themes…. [Direct]

Hook, Glenn D. (1979). Japan: Political or Apolitical Education for Peace?. Prospects: Quarterly Review of Education, v9 n2 p223-31. Explores various programs and materials used in elementary and secondary schools in Japan to foster education for peace. Educational problems are identified relating to Japan's experiences during World War II and to differences in attitudes toward international understanding among generations. (DB)…

Van Galen, Jane, Ed.; And Others (1992). Sociopolitical Analyses. Educational Foundations, v6 n4 Fall. This theme issue of the serial "Educational Foundations" contains four articles devoted to the topic of "Sociopolitical Analyses." In "An Interview with Peter L. McLaren," Mary Leach presented the views of Peter L. McLaren on topics of local and national discourses, values, and the politics of difference. Landon E. Beyer's "Educational Studies and the Liberal Arts: Cultural Politics and Institutional Change" outlined the conceptual orientation to educational studies that formed the basis for efforts at institutional change and explored the nature of the institutional, bureaucratic, and cultural constraints to proposals. In "Sociopolitical Influences on Federal Government Funding of Gifted and Talented and Bilingual Education Programs," Ursula Casanova and Sheila Chavez examined the influence of various socio-political factors on government policies in federal programs for the gifted and talented and those for bilingual education and… [PDF]

van Stapele, Peter, Ed. (1987). The Necessity of the Arts in Education. Proceedings of the International Conference of the World Education Fellowship (32nd, Utrecht, Netherlands, August 12-18, 1984). Exploring the place of the arts in the precollege curricula, chapter 1 of these proceedings opens with an overview of the conference by Maria Meulenbeek. The papers in chapter 2 discuss the relationship between art and education and include the authors Hermann Rohrs, Peter van Stapele, Geoff Haward, and Jagjivan R. Sheth. Ways to bring art into the classroom are outlined in chapter 3, including papers on: "Negotiating the Drama Curriculum with Senior Secondary Students," by Frank McKone; "Puppets in Education in India" by Mabel Aranha; "Motivating International Understanding through Art: with Special Reference to the Foreign Language Classroom" by Esther Lucas; "Imaginative Literature: Antidote to Dogma–with Particular Reference to the Poetry of Wilfred Owen," by Rex Andrews; and "Educational Perspectives in Modern West Indian Novels," by Frank A. Stone. In chapter 4, Safia Sultana discusses how the study of art can help people live…

Jones, LaTuan T.; Trotter, Jennie C. (1998). Create Peace Now. The Peace Project: An In-School Suspension Program for Middle and High School Students with Violent Behaviors. The Peace Project was initiated in 1993 by the Wholistic Stress Control Institute in conjunction with three schools to develop an intervention for middle school students who were repeatedly suspended for violent behaviors. It is an in-school suspension program for violent youth. The project provides training and services in conflict resolution, stress management, and peace education in a 9-hour program. The program is a comprehensive, interactive program that uses lectures, videos, group discussions, and role playing. This manual is divided into four parts. The first section is an overview and evaluation report for the Project's third year of operation in a middle school in an inner city Atlanta (Georgia) neighborhood. In the third year 282 students participated in the program, 35 teachers received violence prevention training, and 30 parents received training or information. The Peace Project reduced the number of suspensions by 25 percent. Part II contains copies of all the forms…

Airaksinen, Timo, Ed.; Batra, Poonam, Ed.; Kozhevnikova, Margarita, Ed.; Webster, R. Scott, Ed. (2022). Humanizing Education in the 3rd Millennium. SpringerBriefs in Education. SpringerBriefs in Education This book proposes some insights and ideas into how education might be humanized. The chapters inform, provoke, and guide further inquiries into imagining and actualizing human education. It presents the view that education should be primarily understood as human education, which offers universal good for the entire planet. It centres around the significant values that make life, in a holistic sense, meaningful, worthwhile, and socially just. It discusses the fundamental idea that human education is the key to peace, individual and social freedoms, social justice and harmony, fraternity and happiness all over the world, and how educational ideals and methods must be reconsidered to achieve this end.This book originates from an international conference and round-table, "Human Education in the 3rd Millennium," in July 2019 in Dharamsala, India…. [Direct]

Reardon, Betty A. (2001). Education for a Culture of Peace in a Gender Perspective. The goal of this study unit on education for a culture of peace in a gender perspective is to assist teachers in their efforts to educate caring and responsible citizens, open to other cultures, able to appreciate the value of freedom, respectful of human dignity and differences, and able to prevent conflicts or resolve them by nonviolent means. Designed as a resource for teacher education, the manual is relevant for secondary schools and can also be used for secondary school teacher preparation and for facilitators of non-formal adult education. It responds to the demands of a growing number of educators who want to be part of a global movement toward a culture of peace and to provide their students with learning experiences in holistic and gender-sensitive human rights and peace education. The manual is divided in two parts: Part 1, the social foundations component, offers an overview of the developing field of education for a culture of peace, its purposes, the issues it…

(2021). Girls' Education: The Path to Progress. Global Partnership for Education Although more girls than ever go to school today, 129 million girls worldwide are still denied an education. Educating girls generates huge dividends for economic prosperity, gender equality, climate resilience, public health, and lasting peace and stability. GPE believes that all girls should be educated, healthy and safe, and it has taken bold steps to realize this vision by: (1) Hardwiring gender equality into everything we do; (2) Investing in girls; (3) Putting gender equality at the heart of education systems; and (4) Putting girls' education on the world stage…. [PDF]

(2012). Sustainable Library Development Training Package. Peace Corps This Sustainable Library Development Training Package supports Peace Corps' Focus In/Train Up strategy, which was implemented following the 2010 Comprehensive Agency Assessment. Sustainable Library Development is a technical training package in Peace Corps programming within the Education sector. The training package addresses the Volunteer competency, \Facilitate improved teaching and learning skills and practices.\ The purpose of this Sustainable Library Development Training Package is to support and provide guidance to Peace Corps Volunteers engaged in library projects as both primary work assignments and secondary project activities. The training package is intended to strengthen the work of Volunteers in partnership with their communities and to help Peace Corps better demonstrate its impact. This training package includes detailed session plans that provide a foundation in sustainable library development for all trainees or Volunteers in education projects that include library… [PDF]

Campina, Ana; Magalh√£es, Manuela (2018). Migrants and Refugees in European Union: "Warm Peace", Human Rights Education and Political Sustainability. Journal of Education and Training Studies, v6 n11a p29-32 Nov. Nowadays European Union migrant's situation, named as a crisis, has begun during the II World War due the Holocaust. Considering the EU position and their state member facing serious Human Rights violation as well as a political complex diplomatic development (inside and outside) the European context. Holocaust has obliged millions of European citizens to "escape" from their own countries to be able to survive. The political consequences of this movement were controlled based on the diplomacy considering the war context and each state "position". Due the most different reasons, along the 20th century the migration in, from and to Europe was an important and strong social movement but without a negative global political impact but economical. However, the last decade, especially after 2010 with the "Spring Arab" revolutions in Middle East and North Africa, Europe has been the destination of millions – illegal migrants and Refugees…. [PDF]

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