Title: Definitions
1Definitions Descriptions of Key Course
Concepts
- Youth
- Participation
- Conflict
- Peacebuilding
Youth Participation Peacebuilding 2009
2Defining Key Concepts
- What are some of the key words that come to mind
when you see or hear the words Youth,
Participation, Conflict, and Peacebuilding?
- Please write your own definitions or descriptions
for each word on separate sticky pieces of
paper.
3Defining Youth
- How did we as a class define this key course
concept? - What are similarities and differences in the
meanings we assigned?
4Experts Defining Youth Beyond Age
Categories, 15-24 (UN)
- Youth is less an age range than a life phase
marking the movement from childhood into
adulthood. (Sommers 2007) - (The category is) created in everyday practice
at the intersection of the global and the local
(Shepler 2005) - Youth figure centrally in debates and
transition in membership, belonging the
hybridization of identities (Durham 2000) - Young people personify a given society's
deepest anxieties and hopes about its own
transformation (Maira Soep 2005) - Young people whether depicted by
chronological age or socially constructed roles
incarnate unique combinations of social
vulnerabilities and transformative potential
within their communities. (Hamilton 2007)
5Web of Youth Transitions When a cohort is
caught in its web, life is defined by
uncomfortable, uneven transitions
6Defining Participation
- How did we as a class define this key course
concept? - What are similarities and differences in the
meanings we assigned?
7Experts Defining Participation
- Processes of information sharing, consultation,
decision-making, implementation, and resource
control with, of, and by, beneficiaries (Hart
et al. 2004) - Approaches and methods to enable local people
to share, enhance and analyze their knowledge of
life and conditions, and to plan, act, monitor
and evaluate. (Chambers 1997) - Empowerment implies an increase in the
relative power and ability of disadvantaged
groups in their respective socio-political
environment. (Lambourne 2004) - Participation strengthens civil society the
economy by empowering individuals, communities,
and organisations to negotiate with institutions
and bureaucracies. (OECD 1998) - Human beings thrive when they connect with
civil society in a positive, meaningful, and
fulfilling way. (AED 2005)
8Ladder of Youth Participation
(Adapted from Hart 1997)
9Reflections on Youth Roles in Social Political
Change
- Organizations that are successful in involving
young people in meaningful ways are able to
translate this attitude into policies programs
that incorporate youth as partners in community
building. (International Youth Foundation 2002) - The young generation is traditionally seen as
one of the most dynamic mediums of social
change. (Glinski 1998) - Young people are key engines of
socio-political change, if not its primary
engineers. When effectively mobilized by
ideational leaders power brokers in
government, civil society, and/or militant
networks youth provide necessary energy mass
power to get the wheels turning for divergent
vehicles of social political change.
(Hamilton 2007)
10Defining Conflict
- How did we as a class define this key course
concept? - What are similarities and differences in the
meanings we assigned?
11Experts Defining Conflict
- A disagreement through which the parties
involved perceive a threat to their needs,
interests or concerns. (Mayer 1990) - A struggle over values and claims to scarce
status, power and resources (Coser, 1956) - Thinking in terms of a continuum helps us
appreciate, for example, that many wars are long
periods of (uneasy) peace interrupted by
occasional eruptions of violence. (Richards
2005) - A natural phenomenon that creates potential for
constructive growth. (Lederach 2003) - If channeled improperly, conflict has the
potential to intensify and erupt into violence.
(UN 2003)
12Conflict Analysis 3 Ps (People, Problem
Process)
People Who are the Actors in Conflict?
Process How is the Conflict Progressing?
Problem What are Issues at Conflict?
(Lederach 1995)
13Categories of Conflict Actors
Intra-Personal Conflict WITHIN 1 Person Inter-Personal Conflict BETWEEN 2 People
Intra-Group Conflict WITHIN Group Inter-Group Conflict BETWEEN Groups
14Relationships in ConflictParties Stakeholders
(Caritas 2002)
15Dimensions of Conflict
Personal Relational
Structural Cultural
(Lederach et al. 2005)
16Conflict is Like a Tree
Leaves and Branches Effects of Conflict
Trunk Core Issues
Roots Root Causes
(Caritas 2002)
17Conflict is Like a Fire5 Stages of Conflict
(Caritas 2002)
18 1 Gathering Materials (Potential Conflict)
192 Fire Begins Burning (Confrontation)
2033 Bonfire (Crisis)
214 Coals (Further Potential Conflict)
225 Fire Out (Regeneration)
23 Conflict Escalation (Stair Steps)
Goal Doing Well to Winning
Actors Few to Many
Issues Specific to General
Scope Small to Large
Tactics Persuasion to Threats
(Pruitt Rubin 1986)
24Defining Peacebuilding
- How did we as a class define this key course
concept? - What are similarities and differences in the
meanings we assigned?
25Experts Defining Peacebuilding
- Building of constituencies for peace (and) the
fostering of trust, good will, reciprocity, and
mutuality among youth from different ethnic or
religious groups. (Academy for Educational
Development 2005) - Conflict transformation is to envision
respond to the ebb flow of social conflict as
life-giving opportunities for creating
constructive change processes that reduce
violence, increase justice in direct interaction
social structures, and respond to real-life
problems in human relationships. (Lederach
2003) - Process of engaging with transforming the
relationships, interests, discourses and, if
necessary, the very constitution of society that
supports the continuation of violent conflict.
(Miall 2004) - Mutually supporting (but also sometimes
antagonistic) challenges of violence prevention
societal reconstruction. (McEvoy-Levy 2001)
26Dimensions of Peacebuilding
Personal Relational
Structural Cultural
(Lederach et al. 2005)
27 Transforming Conflict5 Stages of Peacebuilding
(Caritas 2002)
281 Transforming Materials Preventing Fire
292 Limiting What Ignites Preventing Flames
303 Limiting Damage
314 Cooling the Coals
325 Regeneration
33Conflict De-Escalation (Stair Steps)
Goal Winning to Doing Well
Actors Many to Few
Issues General to Specific
Scope Large to Small
Tactics Threats to Persuasion
(Pruitt Rubin 1986)
34Level of Peacebuilding Response
(Adapted from Lederach 1997)
35 Time Frame for Peacebuilding
(Adapted from Lederach 1997)
36Integrated Framework for Peacebuilding
(Caritas 2002, Adapted from Lederach 1997)
37Peacebuilding Triangle Targeted Actors
(Adapted from Lederach 1997)
38Exploring Peace Paradigms How Can We Achieve
Peace?
- Peace Through Power of Force
- (Threat of Armed Coercion)
- Peace Through Power of Development
- (Economic Opportunity)
- Peace Through Power of Law
- (Institutional Protections)
- Peace Through Power of Interaction
- (Conflict Resolution)
- Peace Through Power of Will
- (Nonviolent Resistance)
- Peace Through Power of Transformation
- (Education / Spirituality)
(Adapted from the Gandhi Marg 2002)