What Is Peace Education
What Is Peace Education
What Is Peace Education
Seminar
Peace Education
Subject: Psychology
Mentor: prof. Ji-Sun Kim
Peace education is the process of gaining the values, the knowledge and
developing the attitudes, skills, and behaviors to live in harmony with oneself,
with others, and with the natural environment. Peace education is currently
considered to be both a philosophy and process involving skills, including
listening, reflection, problem solving, cooperation, and conflict resolution.
Violence in our world may be seen in its various forms from domestic abuse to
militarism, which has been defined as The result of a process whereby military
values, ideology and patterns of behavior achieve a dominating influence over
political, social, economic and foreign affairs of the state. Militarism comes
from values, opinions and social organizations which support war and violence
as legitimate ways to manage human affairs. Military traditions salutes,
parades, war movies, paramilitary societies, and other militaristic rituals are
deeply rooted in minds throughout the world and contribute a global
predicament where nuclear warheads imperil human civilization, where arms
races gobble up precious resources, and where political elites use military forces
to protect their privileges.
Social violence and warfare can be described as form of pathology, a disease.
Few people would be satisfied with simply treating the symptoms of a severely
debilitating or life threatening disease. Yet, we continue to respond to most
forms of violence by preparing for the continued incidence of social violence
and the repeated outbreak of warfare, rather than trying to eliminate their causes.
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Peace education provides not only a way to promote such a desire for
peace within the human mind but also knowledge about peacemaking skills so
that human beings learn alternative, nonviolent ways of dealing with each other.
Paul Smoker and Linda Groff have described several different types of peace,
which are: International system (peace is not just the absence of war, but it also
represents a balance of forces.), Holistic system of peace (its focused on unity
and diversity), Intercultural peace (exists when different religious and ethnic
groups live together harmoniously.), Civic society (when country is not at war,
and there is not structural violence at the macro level), the micro level (sharing
material resources to put an end to exclusion, injustice, and political and
economic oppression.), a sixth type of peace concerns the way human beings
relate to the Earth and is achieved when human beings live sustainably on this
planet. The final form of peace has to do with inner peace that is achieved
through the psyche. There are philosophers and religious leaders, such as Dalai
Lama and Thich Nhat Hanh, both from Buddhist Tradition who maintain that
inner peace and outer peace are interrelated. (Personally I think that inner
peace and understanding is the base for outer peace.) Once the fighting has
stopped, peacemaking strategies can be used to get the parties together to try to
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work out their differences. Peacekeepings aim is to respond to violence and
stop it from escalating. Peacemaking has as its aims the teaching of skills to
resolve conflicts without the use of force. In order to prevent conflict,
peacebuilding strategies are used to create a culture of peace that does not
celebrate violence, but rather promotes nonviolence as a way to avoid the horror
of war.
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Strategies for Peace
Peace educators need to become familiar with different approaches so they can
present their strengths and weaknesses to students who may, in turn, decide for
themselves the best ways to achieve peace.
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Maria Montessoris Contribution to Peace
Education
Averting war is the work of politicians; establishing peace is the work of educators.
Maria Montessori
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personality, but because of natural law of selection there will always be ones that
will make others unhappy, which is law of polarity.
References: