Peace Education
Peace Education
Peace Education
c may be defined as the process of acquiring the values6 the knowledge and developing the attitudes,
skills, and behaviors to live in harmony with oneself6 with others6 and with the natural environment.
There is thus no shortage of official statements on the importance of peace education. There are numerous United
Nations declarations or instruments which confirm the importance of peace education.[1][2] Koichiro Matsuura6 the
immediate past Director-General of UNESCO6 has written of peace education as being of "fundamental importance
to the mission of UNESCO and the United Nations". [3] Peace education as a right is something which is now
increasingly emphasized by peace researchers such as Betty Reardon [4] and Douglas Roche [5] There has also been a
recent meshing of peace education and human rights education [6]
a
ºan Harris and John Synott have described peace education as a series of "teaching encounters" that draw from
people:[7]
James Page suggests peace education be thought of as "encouraging a commitment to peace as a settled disposition
and enhancing the confidence of the individual as an individual agent of peace; as informing the student on the
consequences of war and social injustice; as informing the student on the value of peaceful and just social structures
and working to uphold or develop such social structures; as encouraging the student to love the world and to imagine
a peaceful future; and as caring for the student and encouraging the student to care for others" .[8]
Often the theory or philosophy of peace education has been assumed and not articulated. Johan Galtung suggested in
1975 that no theory for peace education existed and that there was clearly an urgent need for such theory. [9] More
recently there have been attempts to establish such a theory. Joachim James Calleja has suggested that a
philosophical basis for peace education might be located in the Kantian notion of duty.[10] James Page has suggested
that a rationale for peace education might be located in virtue ethics6 consequentialist ethics6 conservative political
ethics6 aesthetic ethics and the ethics of care.[11]
Since the early decades of the 20th century6 ³peace education´ programs around the world have represented a
spectrum of focal themes6 including anti-nuclearism6 international understanding6 environmental responsibility6
communication skills6 non-violence6 conflict resolution techniques6 democracy6 human rights awareness6 tolerance
of diversity6 coexistence and gender equality6 among others[12]. Some have also addressed spiritual dimensions of
inner harmony6 or synthesized a number of the foregoing issues into programs on world citizenship. While academic
discourse on the subject has increasingly recognized the need for a broader6 more holistic approach to peace
education6 a review of field-based projects reveals that three variations of peace education are most common:
conflict resolution training6 democracy education6 and human rights education. New approaches are emerging and
calling into question some of theoretical foundations of the models just mentioned. The most significant of these
new approaches focuses on peace education as a process of worldview transformation.
ºn general6 approaches of this type aim to ³alter beliefs6 attitudes6 and behaviours«from negative to positive
attitudes toward conflict as a basis for preventing violence´ (Van Slyck6 Stern and Elbedour6 19996 emphasis
added)[14]. As one peer mediation coordinator put it: ³Conflict is very natural and normal6 but you can¶t go through
your entire life beating everybody up²you have to learn different ways to resolve conflict´[15]
Approaches of this type train participants in the skills of critical thinking6 debate and coalition-building6 and
promote the values of freedom of speech6 individuality6 tolerance of diversity6 compromise and conscientious
objection. Their aim is to produce ³responsible citizens´ who will hold their governments accountable to the
standards of peace6 primarily through adversarial processes. Activities are structured to have students ³assume the
role of the citizen that chooses6 makes decisions6 takes positions6 argues positions and respects the opinions of
others´[17]: skills that a multi-party democracy are based upon. Based on the assumption that democracy decreases
the likelihood of violence and war6 it is assumed that these are the same skills necessary for creating a culture of
peace.
Approaches of this type familiarize participants with the international covenants and declarations of the United
Nations system; train students to recognize violations of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; and promote
tolerance6 solidarity6 autonomy and self-affirmation at the individual and collective levels.[18]
Human rights education ³faces continual elaboration6 a significant theory-practice gap and frequent challenge as to
its validity´[19]. ºn one practitioner¶s view:
å uman rights education does not work in communities fraught with conflict unless it is part of a comprehensive
approach« In fact, such education can be counterproductive and lead to greater conflict if people become aware of
rights which are not realized. In this respect, human rights education can increase the potential for conflict"[20]
To prevent these outcomes6 many such programs are now being combined with aspects of conflict resolution and
democracy education schools of thought6 along with training in non-violent action.