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Bibliography: Over-sharing (Part 68 of 119)

Blasco, Maribel (2009). Linking Rights with Lives: The Micropolitics of Educational Decision Making in Urban Mexico. Comparative Education Review, v53 n1 p41-61 Feb. This article uses life course theory and family bargaining theory to explore how decisions over schooling are negotiated in poorer Mexican families for whom compulsory basic education is a luxury. It explores educational decision making by conceptualizing education in terms of the way it meshes with other social relations and institutions across the life span. This article is based on a case study of a public "secundaria" (lower secondary school) located in a marginal area on the outskirts of Guadalajara, in the state of Jalisco, Mexico. Although the data were collected from one school, the theoretical framework proposed is intended to be informative for schools and populations sharing similar conditions, namely, economic insecurity that makes it hard for parents to plan ahead to support their children's schooling or to invest in their own futures, lack of integrated social security mechanisms that facilitate school attendance and support households across the life span,… [Direct]

Baratta, Donna Geidel (2012). The Effects of Online Professional Development in Technology with Virtual Communities of Practice on Teachers' Attitudes and Content Integration. ProQuest LLC, Ed.D. Dissertation, Western Connecticut State University. This quasi-experimental study examined the effects of online professional development in technology with Virtual Communities of Practice (VCoP) on teachers' attitudes and content integration. This research study took place completely online. Over a period of nine months three cohorts of educators from diverse backgrounds and geographical locations took part in a six week course of online professional development using resources designed by the researcher. The comparison group in each of the three cohorts accessed content via a course website and corresponded with the researcher only. The treatment group in each of the three cohorts accessed content via a course wiki and corresponded with the researcher and with each other as members of a VCoP. Both groups received the same professional development content. Three instruments were used for data collection online: A researcher designed demographic Survey, the Teachers' Attitudes Toward Computers (TAC) and the Levels of Teaching… [Direct]

Al-Nuaim, Hana Abdullah (2012). The Use of Virtual Classrooms in E-Learning: A Case Study in King Abdulaziz University, Saudi Arabia. E-Learning and Digital Media, v9 n2 p211-222. The phenomenal growth and subsequent increasing use of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) innovations has led to an increase in their use in higher education over the past decade. Past research has criticised e-learning (compared to traditional face-to-face lecturing) for its failure to engage students in their learning. However, King Abdulaziz University (KAU) has only limited seats available for its traditional face-to-face programmes and therefore was determined to provide a viable alternative in the form of an e-learning programme, the first in Saudi Arabia. One of the requirements of this programme was that it should fit current sociocultural customs, enabling students from the K-12 Saudi educational system who are not skilled in independent learning or discovery to construct their own knowledge. The university created a programme that underwent rigorous course development and quality control to engage students more actively through asynchronous technologies–virtual… [Direct]

Shreeve, Robin (2009). Some Ideas from England: A Practitioner's Perspective. National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER) Australia's vocational education and training (VET) system is well regarded internationally, in particular for its competency-based training and flexible delivery. Yet we can also learn from the experiences in other countries. In March 2009, NCVER invited Robin Shreeve, Principal and Chief Executive of City of Westminster College in the United Kingdom (UK), to present at a seminar on developments in vocational education and training in the UK, where VET is known as the skills or further education (FE) sector. This paper provides Shreeve's views on the UK system and his insights into lessons for Australia. Key messages include: (1) The English and Australian systems, while sharing some similarities, have distinct differences socially, economically and politically; (2) One of the biggest differences between Australian technical and further education (TAFE) institutes and English FE colleges is the student profile. In the UK over 40% of students use FE colleges as the primary pathway… [PDF]

Passe, Jeff (2006). Sharing the \Current Events\ in Children's Lives. Social Studies and the Young Learner, v19 n1 p4-7 Sep-Oct. In this article, the author talks about two elementary classroom activities used as teaching tools, namely \Show and Tell\ and \Sharing Time.\ As a teaching tool, Sharing Time has several advantages over Show and Tell. It avoids children bringing valuable items to school, reduces emphasis on materialism, allows opportunities for extended oral expression, and, as the author explains, links to the social studies curriculum, including the study of current events. Sharing Time is more than an opportunity for student self-expression and teachers to catchup on youth culture. The author discusses Sharing Time in relation to economics, civics and government, geography, culture, sociology, history, and supervision. Among other things, he emphasizes that the best guidance for conducting Sharing Time is to keep in mind its utility as a teaching tool, to remind everyone of its purpose. (Contains 4 notes.)… [Direct]

Pracana, Clara, Ed.; Wang, Michael, Ed. (2017). International Psychological Applications Conference and Trends (InPACT) 2017 (Budapest, Hungary, April 29-May 1, 2017). Online Submission We are delighted to welcome you to the International Psychological Applications Conference and Trends (InPACT) 2017, taking place in Budapest, Hungary, from 29 of April to 1 of May, 2017. Modern psychology offers a large range of scientific fields where it can be applied. The goal of understanding individuals and groups (mental functions and behavioral standpoints), from this academic and practical scientific discipline, aims ultimately to benefit society. This International Conference seeks to provide some answers and explore the several areas within the Psychology field, new developments in studies and proposals for future scientific projects. The goal is to offer a worldwide connection between psychologists, researchers and lecturers, from a wide range of academic fields, interested in exploring and giving their contribution in psychological issues. The conference is a forum that connects and brings together academics, scholars, practitioners and others interested in a field that… [PDF]

Helms, Marilyn M.; Takeda, Margaret B. (2010). Globally Sustainable Management: A Dynamic Model of IHRM Learning and Control. Learning Organization, v17 n2 p133-148. Purpose: After a thorough literature review on multinational learning, it is apparent organizations \learn\ when they capitalize on expatriate management, a \learning strategy\ (international work teams, employee involvement and other human resource policies), technology transfer and political environment and cross-cultural adaptation. This suggests learning is possible when control mechanisms are relaxed or reduced, resulting in an ambiguous relationship between multinational learning and control. There has been no research on the relationship between learning and control largely due to this assumption of ambiguity and this paper attempts to overcome this gap by presenting a holistic approach to multinational learning and control. This paper posits that focusing on optimizing learning and control through flexible IHRM policies is a globally sustainable approach to MNE management. The purpose of this paper is to present a conceptual framework designed to address two major issues in… [Direct]

Doo, Myungcheol (2012). Spatial and Social Diffusion of Information and Influence: Models and Algorithms. ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, Georgia Institute of Technology. In this dissertation research, we argue that spatial alarms and activity-based social networks are two fundamentally new types of information and influence diffusion channels. Such new channels have the potential of enriching our professional experiences and our personal life quality in many unprecedented ways. First, we develop an activity driven and self-configurable social influence model and a suite of computational algorithms to compute and rank social network nodes in terms of activity-based influence diffusion over social network topologies. By activity driven we mean that the real impact of social influence and the speed of such influence propagation should be computed based on the type, the amount and the time window of the activities performed by a social network node in addition to its social connectivity (social network topology). By self-configurable we mean that the diffusion efficiency and effectiveness are dynamically adapted based on the settings and tunings of… [Direct]

O'Krafka, Karen (2010). Tramping Trail with Elroy in the Early Years of CELP. Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Outdoor Education, v22 n3 p34-35 Spr. The author is sipping tea on the eve of a week-long winter trip–over a decade since she first tramped trail with Mike Elrick into the winter wilderness. This evening holds for her the same electricity that it did in 1997–anxiety and excitement–when Elroy guided a motley crew of teens (his gang) into the woods and frozen waters of Algonquin Park. With his wealth of wisdom, Mike carefully crafted those frozen days of prospector tents, baking bannock, singing, solos, star gazing and frozen-fingered guitar groove into the first few steps of a semester-long journey. Their journey meandered through winter, spring and summer, and explored a rich geography of life that failed to penetrate their school walls. They were intrepid, exploring the confluence of community, environment and leadership, and gaining invaluable life skills to meet the challenge of any life expedition. This journey was the Community Environmental Leadership Program (CELP). This semester-long program wasn't just a… [PDF]

Mandleco, Barbara (2010). Women in Academia: What Can Be Done to Help Women Achieve Tenure?. Forum on Public Policy Online, v2010 n5. Women are not tenured at the same rate they are receiving PhDs, and less likely to be tenured when compared to their male counterparts. Reasons women have difficulty achieving tenure include not discussing important information about an academic appointment with colleagues, working part time or as adjunct faculty, being involved in \pastoral or administrative\ work, not having a realistic understanding of how important research is when untenured, and experiencing non academic issues. Interventions to alleviate this situation include departmental/campus policies before/during/after the woman is hired. Before being hired it is important to provide female faculty mentors to bright/capable women doctoral students and help them prepare for the academy by prioritizing scholarship over teaching and encouraging publications. During the hiring process it is useful to target women through advertising/recruiting at conferences, consider hiring current female doctoral students after completion… [PDF] [Direct]

Leader, Chari. (2010). The Good Business of Transfer: Why Improving College Transfer Pathways Makes Good Sense for New England. New England Journal of Higher Education, v24 n3 p18-19 Win. It's rare for policymakers to think of higher education pathways beyond their own experiences as traditional students. Many went to college directly after high school, stayed in dorms and graduated ready for careers. But the world today must depend upon learners (young and older) who may not be able to choose this path to career success. Today's learners often do not have the luxury of focusing 100% of their efforts on college as their top priority. Many are working. Many are parents. Many simply cannot afford to think of anything beyond meeting today's challenges. This article discusses why improving college transfer pathways makes good sense for New England. Credits earned "in and out" of college, "in and out" of the military, and over time can be lost if adult students are discouraged from re-entering college to pull it all together in completing a degree that is the magic ticket to retaining a job or qualifying for a new one. Just like in Pennsylvania where… [Direct]

Stuart, Reginald (2010). Cautionary Tales. Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, v27 n23 p10-13 Dec. When Kemba Smith Pradia spoke this fall to a gathering of students at South Carolina State University, her candid talk about violence against women and the campus "hype" over drugs, sex, and money resonated with students and faculty alike. Ten years ago, Kemba Smith was wasting away in a federal prison as prisoner No. 26370-083. Used by others as a "drug mule," Kemba Smith had pleaded guilty to her low-level involvement in a violent cocaine drug ring. She was serving a mandatory federal prison term of 24 1/2 years with no chance for parole. Smith's "nightmare" was a case of a promising college student who became a poster child for the failures of a hastily written federal mandatory minimum drug sentencing law. In December 2000, during his final days in office, President Bill Clinton commuted Smith's prison sentence to the 6 1/2 years she had served. With her new lease on life, Kemba Smith Pradia has worked to get her life on track, advocate for drug… [Direct]

Pai, Vinay (2011). Incentive Mechanisms for Peer-to-Peer Streaming. ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook. The increasing popularity of high-bandwidth Internet connections has enabled new applications like the online delivery of high-quality audio and video content. Conventional server-client approaches place the entire burden of delivery on the content provider's server, making these services expensive to provide. A peer-to-peer approach allows end users to reduce the burden on the service provider by contributing bandwidth by uploading data they have downloaded to other clients. However, the success of a peer-to-peer system hinges on resources contributed by participants. Unfortunately, studies have shown that end users are often reluctant to contribute resources to the system without a concrete incentive to do so. Our thesis is that a robust incentive mechanism is necessary to encourage nodes to contribute resources to the system, and a receiver-driven architecture with a pairwise incentive mechanism allows for great flexibility, simplicity, robustness, and performance. The popular… [Direct]

Villano, Matt (2008). Building a Better Podcast. T.H.E. Journal, v35 n1 p31-33, 36-37 Jan. When Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduced the company's iPod in October 2001, it was the first portable media player of its kind, and he predicted the technology would change the educational landscape forever. Today, more than six years later, a growing number of educators are using the iPod and a bevy of other tools to supplement lessons with that digital file-sharing activity, podcasting. Still, while anyone can podcast, creating podcasts with true academic value can be tough. How can K-12 educators make the content unique, and relevant to teaching and learning? Technology coordinators from districts all over the country say there are nuances to making worthwhile podcasts, and simple tools that can empower teachers to turn run-of-the-mill podcasts into compelling educational exercises…. [Direct]

Smith, Anne B. (2009). A Case Study of Learning Architecture and Reciprocity. International Journal of Early Childhood, v41 n1 p33-49. This ethnographic case study follows the trajectory of one child's learning disposition, reciprocity, and its relationship to the \learning architecture\ of her early childhood and primary school learning environments, over eighteen months. Learning dispositions are coping strategies or habits of mind, and tendencies to respond to and select from situations in specific ways. Learning architecture encompasses opportunities for mutual engagement, power-sharing, positioning and making connections. I followed Lisa, as she simultaneously attended two early childhood centres during Phase one of the study (at four years); in an early childhood centre which she attended at Phase two (at nearly five years); and after she had started school at Phase three (at five years and four months). The paper examines the kind of self, which was being created for Lisa, within the discourses and practices of the different settings. Her learning disposition towards reciprocity was both supported and… [Direct]

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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 1 of 226)

Ntokozo Dennis Ndwandwe (2024). Barriers to Implementing Peace Education in Secondary Schools in South Africa. Journal of Peace Education, v21 n2 p164-184. This study aimed to explore barriers to implementing peace education in secondary schools in South Africa. The empirical inquiry employed qualitative research methodology and evaluation research design to examine the implementation of a peace education programme in three selected secondary schools in the Western Cape, South Africa. Purposive sampling was used to select the research sites and participants. Data were collected through semi-structured individual interviews with the manager of the Quaker Peace Centre (QPC) programme and school principals; and focus group discussions with teachers and learners. The data were analysed through thematic content analysis. Findings indicate that peace education was implemented with modest success outside the formal curriculum by following a multimedia approach using learner-run peace clubs and anti-bullying campaigns. However, barriers to the implementation of peace education persist, including financial constraints; inadequate allocation of… [Direct]

Barbara Anita Bodn√°r; Ferenc Arat√≥ (2024). Narratives and Common Traits of Peace Education and the 'Teaching Students to Be Peacemakers' Programme: Rethinking the Role of Cooperative Learning in Peace Education. Intercultural Education, v35 n5 p539-557. The aim of this study is to analyse the 'Teaching Students to be Peacemakers' programme, which is frequently cited in the Peace Education discourse, within the context of Peace Education. Based on a systematic literature review conducted using the PRISMA method, the study focuses on this programme that emerged as significant from the review results. It first examines how the programme reflects the fundamental concepts and peace approaches of the Peace Education discourse. The subsequent section compares the programme with various types of Peace Education and the broader discourse of cooperative learning. It investigates whether the shift in Peace Education literature towards postmodern, poststructuralist, and Critical Peace Education approaches can rely on the cooperative learning paradigm. Additionally, the study highlights how a simplistic methodological interpretation of cooperative learning may hinder its use in supporting these increasingly emphasised approaches and explores how… [Direct]

Ntokozo Dennis Ndwandwe (2024). Confronting a Leadership Vacuum: The Principal's Leadership Role in Peace Education in South African Schools. International Journal of Educational Management, v38 n3 p804-818. Purpose: This research aimed to assess the leadership role of principals in the implementation of peace education in selected secondary schools in the Western Cape, South Africa. Design/methodology/approach: This study employed qualitative research approach to assess the leadership role of principals in the implementation of peace education in selected secondary schools in the Western Cape, South Africa. Data were gathered from a small sample of six principals from six selected secondary schools which were engaged in the implementation of a peace education programme, and data were analysed using thematic content analyses. Findings: Findings of the study suggest that principals possess a low level of understanding or awareness of their leadership role in the implementation of peace education. The study pointed out the constraints such as time constraints and learners' negative attitudes and social influences hinder the effective implementation of peace education in selected secondary… [Direct]

Dicky R. Munaf; Hasan Albana; Imran Siregar; Lisa'diyah Marifataini; Sumarni; Suprapto; Yedi Purwanto (2023). The Peace Education Concept and Practice at Universities: A Systematic Review. Cogent Education, v10 n2 Article 2260724. Peace education has long been integrated into the higher education curriculum to equip students from diverse cultural backgrounds, languages, religions, regions, and lifestyles with the knowledge, skills, and values necessary to foster a culture of harmony and prevent future conflicts. This systematic research examines the peace education concept and practice in action from various universities in the world garnered from research articles published within the last 5 years between 2017 and 2021. This study uses international database in the form of articles in Scopus journals using such keywords in the Scopus database (scopus.com). The keywords we used were "peace education and higher education", "peace education and university", "peacebuilding and higher education", and "peacebuilding and university". Articles from many databases are selected using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) approach. From the… [Direct]

Frans Kruger; Michalinos Zembylas (2024). Affective Atmospheres of Coloniality and the Decolonisation of Peace Education: Theoretical Insights and Political Possibilities. Studies in Philosophy and Education, v43 n6 p691-707. Two recent lines of inquiry that have emerged in educational philosophy and research are the turn to affect theory and the call for decolonising education. Although there have been some efforts to bring these two lines of inquiry together and inform educational philosophy and research, there is still important conceptual work to be done, especially in the context of peace education, our focus in this paper. To initiate this work, we consider the concepts of "affective atmospheres" and "atmospheric attunements" that have been discussed within the context of affect theory. Drawing on these two concepts, we argue that fundamental to any attempts to decolonising peace education is elucidating the coloniality of affects. This is a necessary step towards dismantling the colonial affects that permeate peace education praxis and are maintained through perceptions of peace and conflict embedded within a Western, Eurocentric frame. The paper analyses the theoretical… [Direct]

Julia Paulson; Peter Manning (2024). Some Contradictions of Multiple Perspectives Approaches to Peace and History Education: Lessons from Cambodia. Ethics and Education, v19 n2 p185-200. This article reflects on tensions arising in multiple perspectives approaches as they are deployed in response to histories of atrocity and conflict. We call attention to the ways that multiple perspectives intersect with the challenges posed by competing memories of violence and questions of responsibility. Focusing on a peace education programme that sought to work with 'complex' perpetrator histories in Cambodia, we explore how peace education can produce its intended aims of building dialogue and empathy across groups while, coextensively, enabling space for potentially harmful forms of historical revisionism. We show how the multi-perspectivity in peace education can be misaligned with the subjectivities that it seeks to reconcile or dignify in the present and reflect on the need for peace educators to develop approaches that move beyond the presentation of 'perspective' and identity as synonymous. We conclude by calling attention to other potential figurations of "shared… [Direct]

Ilfiandra; Nadia A. Nadhirah; Sofwan Adiputra (2023). The Peace Education Model in Developing a Peaceful Classroom Climate: Lesson-Learned from Indonesia. Pegem Journal of Education and Instruction, v13 n4 p25-35. The current school climate is no longer peaceful because the prevalence of conflict and violence tends to increase from time to time. In general, students have not been able to resolve conflicts constructively, and the majority of student conflicts are helped to develop by teachers and administrators. Indonesia's education vision is towards global education and peace education, but peace education in Indonesia does not yet have a clear platform. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of peace education in developing a peaceful classroom climate based on school type and gender. The research approach used is quantitative with quasi-experimental methods and non-equivalent pre-post group design. The research participants were 15 teachers and 72 students who were selected by purposive sampling form vocational high school and senior high school in West Java Province. The results is that peace education in total has not been effective in building peaceful classroom…. [PDF]

Husnul Amin (2024). Value-Based Frameworks and Peace Education in Faith-Neutral, Faith-Based and Faith-Inspired Schools in Islamabad: A Comparative Analysis. Journal of Peace Education, v21 n1 p54-81. This study aims to conduct a comparative analysis of diverse moral and value-based frameworks within the context of peace education. The selected schools represent three distinct ideological orientations: secular and faith-neutral (Roots Millennium School System/RMS), faith-inspired (International Islamic University School-IIUI School System), and faith-based Deobandi Madrassa (Jamia' Faridiyya Islamabad). Employing a comparative case study approach, the research endeavors to address several key research questions: What religious or moral-ethical philosophies underlie the distinct moral frameworks of each school system? How have these schools developed formal and informal strategies to translate these philosophies into practical implementation? To what extent are these frameworks influenced by specific religious worldviews and responsive to challenges in political, economic, or cultural spheres? What dimensions of peace education are encompassed within these values-based frameworks?… [Direct]

Benavides Castro, Angie; Bermeo, Maria Jose (2023). Territorial Peace Education as Responsive Praxis: Case Analysis of Education Innovations in Colombia. Journal of Peace Education, v20 n1 p8-29. This article explores responsiveness in peace education practice. It develops the concept of territorial peace education to emphasize the situated nature of responsive approaches in peacebuilding. With this conceptual framing, the study examines four case studies of pedagogical innovations for peace in Colombia. It describes how educators engaged specific and emergent conflict dynamics in their respective settings. The findings show the various ways in which territorial dimensions informed the design and implementation of these initiatives. They also highlight the role of relationality, resourcefulness and positionality as components of responsive practice. This study contributes to research on the role of the local in peace education and raises avenues for further research…. [Direct]

May, Amy; McDermott, Victoria; Smith, Cortney (2022). The Communication Discipline and Peace Education: A Valuable Intersection for Disrupting Violence in Communication Centers. Journal of Communication Pedagogy, v6 p142-155. Violence is a significant issue impacting the physical, mental, social, and economic health of our learning communities. For decades the discipline of peace education has explored the effects of nonphysical violence on students and educators, as well as ways to create more peaceful, less violent, and equitable educational practices. While communication frameworks have been used in peace education research, no research found has theorized the potential value of peace education for the communication discipline. Using the contextual background of communication centers, this piece seeks to disrupt steadfast norms and practices within communication centers from the perspective of peace education. We provide an overview of the field of peace education and explicate opportunities within the communication discipline to use peace education frameworks, theory, and practice to develop pedagogies of renewal and close with practical recommendations for communication centers going forward…. [PDF]

Schultze-Kraft, Markus (2022). On Peace Education in Colombia: A Grounded International Perspective. Journal of Peace Education, v19 n3 p281-302. Promoted by the peace process between the Santos administration (2010-2018) and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which resulted in the signing of a peace accord in November 2016, peace education at Colombia's higher education establishments and schools is gaining momentum. Educators have seized upon the opportunity afforded by the peace process and the associated legislation, particularly Law 1448 (2011) on victims and Law 1732 (2014) on the Peace Chair ("C√°tedra de la Paz"), to energise peace education. Yet this is proving to be difficult. Among the challenges are the persistence of high levels of political, criminal and other types of violence following the termination of the armed conflict affecting learners' attitudes, behaviours and values; little relevance for peace education of established education in ethics and democratic citizenship competences; limited concrete knowledge on tertiary peace education as a pedagogical field; a vague legal framework; and… [Direct]

Archer, David Tim, Ed.; Hajir, Basma, Ed.; McInerney, William W., Ed. (2023). Innovations in Peace and Education Praxis: Transdisciplinary Reflections and Insights. Routledge Research in International and Comparative Education. Routledge Research in International and Comparative Education This edited collection brings together a series of conceptual explorations and practical case studies to illuminate a developing innovative praxis of transdisciplinary peace and education. Drawing on the work of the Cambridge Peace and Education Research Group as well as international scholars, this book responds to calls for transdisciplinary peace and education praxis and presents innovative examples of peace and education research practices, peace interventions in educational settings, and alternative ontologies in peace and education work. Foregrounding the concept of 'second-order reflexivity', the book prioritises the lived experiences and viewpoints of struggling populations regarding the worth of 'peace' as grounded within their contexts. Ultimately, this book showcases how the practices of peace education and research can challenge the binaries of modern and postmodern approaches and provide examples of holistic transdisciplinary approaches that embrace complexity and… [Direct]

Affandi, Idrus; Anggraeni, Leni; Paramitha, Sandey Tantra; Ramadhan, Muhammad Gilang; Wahyudin, Dinn (2022). Optimization of the Board Game as a Platform for the Concept of Peace Education: A Survey Method Study. International Journal of Education in Mathematics, Science and Technology, v10 n2 p494-511. The implementation of peace education in the university environment has not yet found the right technical implementation, so the main goal in peace education has not been achieved, especially the application in the university environment. Therefore, this research aims to determine the general perception of board games as a media of peace education for students. This study uses a survey method collected from a representative sample of students from three different universities. The sampling technique in this study uses purposive sampling aimed at students who have courses in which peace education is integrated. The research locations this time are the Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia (UPI), Universitas Padjadjaran (UNPAD), and Institut Teknologi Bandung (ITB). This study indicates that students are very enthusiastic if this board game becomes a platform for delivering peace education in the student environment. This study concludes that students agree with the concept of delivering… [PDF]

Itir Toks√∂z (2024). A Case for Peace Education through Science Fiction: Migration. Journal of Peace Education, v21 n2 p141-163. Given the increasing popularity of the science-fiction genre, its capacity for worldbuilding and its long-dur√©e vision, coupled with both the difficulty of discussing issues of migration in today's world as something more than a problem of the present and the necessity to go beyond this presentism, the author argues that science-fiction films provide an excellent tool for peace education inside and outside the classroom in general and to address migration in particular. This article discusses the why and how of using science fiction films for peace education, which the author claims is not necessarily taught in the classroom or special programs but should also be seen as part of lifelong learning/continuous education…. [Direct]

Mathias Awonnatey Ateng; Mohammed Gadafi Ibrahim (2023). The Role of Civil Society Organizations in Deconstructing Ethnopolitical Conflict Narratives through Peace Education: Lessons from the Northern Region of Ghana. Journal of Peace Education, v20 n3 p251-272. The collective adherence to contradictory conflict narratives has underpinned the intractable ethnopolitical conflicts that have occurred in the Northern Region of Ghana. Changing the conflict narratives that perpetuate ethnopolitical conflicts in the region through peace education is a prerequisite for any meaningful peacebuilding. Consequently, the study examined how civil society actors use peace education to deconstruct negative conflict narratives in the region. The study is qualitative and relied on both primary and secondary data sources. Primary data was obtained through in-depth interviews with 20 participants. The data was analyzed using an inductive-deductive thematic analysis approach with the aid of NVivo 12 software. The study found that civil society organizations' (CSOs) peace education programs create awareness, facilitate mutual understanding, and engender values of human rights, non-violence moves to conflict resolution, reconciliation, and trust-building. Peace… [Direct]

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