Helping Children Outgrow War
Helping Children Outgrow War
Helping Children Outgrow War
Technical Paper No. 116 Human Resources and Democracy Division Office of Sustainable Development, Bureau for Africa U.S. Agency for International Development
Human Resources and Democracy Division Office of Sustainable Development, Bureau for Africa U.S. Agency for International Development SD Technical Paper No. 116
Prepared by
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................ i Guidebook Overview ...................................................................................................... iii Introduction ...................................................................................................................... 1 Cases ............................................................................................................................... 15 The Teacher Emergency Package: Rebuilding School from a Box .................................................. 15 Child Soldiers: Finding the Way Home after the Fighting Is Over ................................................. 27 The Butterfly Garden: For Hope to Take Wing ............................................................................ 39 Childrens Participation: Listening to Small Voices ........................................................................ 53 Peace Education: Building Security from the Community up ......................................................... 65 Teachers Voices: Dialogue and School-making Amid the Wreckage .............................................. 77 Community Leadership Training: Building Development Capacity after Displacement .................... 93 Human Rights Training: Learning to Defend Dignity ................................................................. 103 Conclusion .................................................................................................................... 117 Appendix ....................................................................................................................... 123 Resources ...................................................................................................................... 129
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The number of countries in Africa where there is internal armed conflict has grown steadily over the past decade. Children are the most vulnerable population affected; they are the first victims of physical, social, and emotional violence, and of failed health systems. When access to education is severed, their potential to develop is stunted. This document is a response to the growing need to address these issues from the Office of Sustainable Development of USAIDs Africa Bureau (AFR/SD). It has grown out of the consultations and collective work of many of those within USAID and its partners who are on the forefront of this challenging terrain. Within the Africa Bureau, in 2000 Talaat Moreau and Yolande Miller-Grandvaux initiated our work in this area with a background paper, Countries in Crisis: Basic Education Issues to guide thinking on appropriate responses to providing support for basic education in postconflict settings. In the spring of 2001, the Center for International Education (CIE) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, organized a graduate seminar that examined case materials from around the world and provided the genesis for the current work.1 Vachel Miller and Fritz Affolter of CIE, in consultation with AFR/SD education advisor Ash Hartwell, developed the text and cases. Our understanding of learning in post-conflict settings is based on the work of many others who have labored to build a comprehensive and accessible base of knowledge. A leader in this effort has been the Global Information Network in Education (GINIE). More recently, Emily Vargas-Baron formed the Institute for Reconstruction and International Security through Education (RISE) to support educational reconstruction efforts. As mentioned above, key documents that assess the status of the field include the work of Miller-Grandvaux and Moreau for USAID, as well as the 1999 study of education in complex emergencies by a group of the Education For All (EFA) Forum. Regarding the consequences of childhood trauma and approaches to healing, two primary resources are Judith Evans paper (1996) on Children as Zones of Peace and Graca Machels (2000) report on the impact of armed violence on children. We are deeply indebted to the authors of the case material collected here, as well as to Ervin Staub for his inspiration and support. We have been assisted by many people during the preparation of this guidebook. We would like to thank Kent Ashworth, an independent consultant to the IEQ Project, for his encouragement and his creativity in suggesting the guidebooks title. Valuable insights and suggestions were provided by USAID; Anne Dykstra, Senior Education Advisor, Economic Growth, Agriculture, and Trade/Women in Development (EGAT/WID); and AFR/SDs Yolande Miller-Grandvaux, Talaat Moreau,
The course was co-facilitated by Gretchen Rossman, Yvonne Shanahan, Fritz Affolter, and Vachel Miller. Special thanks to Gretchen Rossman and Yvonne Shanahan for identifying key resources and cases that contributed to the development of this guidebook.
Tracy Brunette, Diane Prouty, and Sheryl Pinnelli. Education Development Centers Cathy Lee and her design team, particularly Emily Passman and Ronnie DiComo, provided the artwork and formatting for the text and brochure. Maureen McClure, the guiding force behind the GINIE website, (www.ginie.org), enabled this text to be posted to that site. Christine Chumbler of the Africa Bureau Information Center provided editorial oversight and managed the printing and distribution of the document. This publication, the accompanying brochure, and website text were made possible through the AFR/SD Task Order to the Improving Education Quality Project, and the supportive leadership of its director, Jane Schubert. Kay Freeman, the head of the AFR/ SD basic education team, has championed the development of this guidebook as a reflection of a critical area in which USAID will increasingly play an important role.
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GUIDEBOOK OVERVIEW
Helping children outgrow war is an overarching goal of educational reconstruction in post-conflict settings. Given the diversity and complexity of such settings, responses must be both highly adaptive and informed by insights gained from interventions elsewhere. This guidebook offers several examples of successful interventions in postconflict settings internationally, situating them within a framework that emphasizes the ecology of childrens well-being and learning. Helping children outgrow war involves helping communities heal from violence and determine their own paths of development. Successful interventions can enable teachers, parents, and community leaders to engage safely with traumatic events, to articulate their aspirations, and to build trust across multiple levels of society as the infrastructure of a culture of peace. The challenge of post-conflict educational reconstruction, in this sense, is larger and more diffuse than rebuilding the shattered infrastructure of schooling. This guidebook is not intended to address the complex technical, financial, and political issues involved in rebuilding school systems. While it touches on those issues, it is concerned more broadly with creating conditions for constructive learning in the wake of social violence. The insights gathered in these case studies crystallize in a series of interlocking challenges: Realizing opportunities for experimentation and change while satisfying the needs for stability, security, and the familiar Supplying learning resources without neglecting learners own capacities for reflection and creation Giving away ownership of project development to children and communities Creating spaces for people divided by conflict to talk, play, and learn together Safeguarding patience with processes of personal healing and community reconstruction that do not operate according to institutional timelines To facilitate navigation of the guidebook, the cases have been organized according to post-conflict phases, including emergency, recovery, rehabilitation, and reconstruction. These phases indicate the stability of government and the health of civil society, important parameters for guiding programmatic choices.
Helping children outgrow war involves helping communities heal from violence and determine their own paths of development.
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Taken together, the cases illustrate many of the key dimensions of a comprehensive approach to helping children overcome violence and rebuild their lives. Following each case study is a discussion of critical theoretical issues and a set of questions regarding practical considerations for project design in the readers target context. While not intended to serve as a training manual per se, this guidebook contains several elements that could be readily extracted for use in training workshops or policy discussions. Thumbnail sketches of the cases follow: Taken together, the cases illustrate many of the key dimensions of a comprehensive approach to helping children overcome violence and rebuild their lives. The Butterfly Garden. In the city of Batticaloa, Sri Lanka, there is a garden dedicated to creative play for war-affected children. The Butterfly Garden nurtures healing through creative expression and trusting relationships with mentors. Childrens Participation. Involving children in local research and project implementation activities is a powerful vehicle for learning. A case study from Sri Lanka illustrates the challenges of childrens participation in a conflict setting. Peace Education. Insights from a peace education project in a Kenyan refugee camp show how community participation can be blended with educational change to build the basis for attitudes and behaviors oriented toward peace. Project DiaCom. In Bosnia, Serb and Bosniak teachers from ethnically divided cities meet through Project DiaCom to enter into the process of dialogue. Learning to talk with one another again is the beginning of a long road to reconciliation and ultimately, to the creation of inclusive schools. Community Leadership. Relief efforts have shifted toward building capacity for community development among internally displaced people (IDPs) in Azerbaijan. Reflections on a community mobilization project indicate the opportunities and difficulties involved in working with IDP communities. Human Rights Training. In Peru, a human rights organization conducts workshops that bring diverse participants together to learn about their rights and share their experiences with one another. The training has greatly improved participants ability to advocate for their rights, share their learning with others, and help prevent violence in their immediate environments. Child Soldiers. The exploitation of children as participants in violent conflict can result in deep psychological wounds and alienation from home communities. In Africa, demobilization projects attempt to help former child soldiers return to their communities and begin their lives anew. Teacher Emergency Packages. These kits, also known as school in a box, provide recreational equipment and basic materials to enable teachers to begin instructional activities in a war-ravaged context. They are an initial step toward educational reconstruction.
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Post-conflict educational reconstruction is a demanding field. While offering principles for program design, this guidebook is also intended to provide inspiration for the work, illustrating the depth of human resilience and the real possibility of rebuilding relationships in the aftermath of violent social conflict. These cases are small chapters in a much larger story. Gathered here are just a few of the many ways that communities learn to hope and children learn to outgrow war.
INTRODUCTION
Violent conflict has become tragically common in recent years. Some 4 million people have been killed in armed violence worldwide since 1989 and more than 35 million people have been displaced by conflict, about half of whom are children. Recent conflicts are characterized by deliberate acts of terror against civilian populations and the devastation of social institutions. In the face of such upheaval, education has a crucial role in promoting security and stability. Educational reconstruction, when undertaken with care and creativity, can support childrens capacity for resilience and provide the kind of learning opportunities that lead to a more peaceful future. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) is exploring post-conflict education as an emerging area of action. In this guidebook, we have gathered cases, resources, and concepts that can be useful for the planning of educational interventions in post-conflict and crisis settings. Our choices of cases are intended to affirm the goals of education in crisis periods noted by Miller-Grandvaux and Moreau: to protect, heal, and prevent future crises (2000). This guidebook includes issues related to the reconstruction of formal educational systems, while attending more broadly to the rehabilitation of the psycho-social conditions supportive of community well-being and childrens learning. This approach positions education as a key element within a larger agenda of helping children outgrow war. And we believe that helping children outgrow war involves helping communities heal from violence and determine their own paths of development. There are few areas of international education as compelling and challenging as postconflict reconstruction. Program designers and practitioners must balance multiple demands: technocratic concern for system rehabilitation, humanitarian concern for healing the wounds of violence, political concern for effective civil institutions, and social concern for renewing trust and cohesion as a pillar of peace. All of these interests are important and, to a large degree, interrelated. While this guidebook cannot address all of these concerns directly, it offers principles and questions that can inform the integration of these issues for effective project design. As is evident from the research Miller-Grandvaux and Moreau have conducted for USAID as well as the recent Education for All (EFA) thematic study on education in crisis situations (EFA Forum, 1999), there are multiple approaches to post-conflict education. Yet there is relatively little evaluative and reflective material available about educational interventions in many post-conflict contexts. Clearly, the research and practice base for the field is still maturing, and the material gathered here should be supplemented with additional case studies and practice-based insights.
This guidebook includes issues related to the reconstruction of formal educational systems, while attending more broadly to the rehabilitation of the psycho-social conditions supportive of community wellbeing and childrens learning.
Guidebook Content
This guidebook begins with a brief discussion of a framework that can assist project designers in analyzing and constructing interventions in post-conflict settings. The framework, based on the work of psychologist and genocide scholar Ervin Staub (1989), focuses on the fundamental emotional needs of individuals and communities and enables development planners and practitioners to explore how interventions affect socioemotional well-being and conditions for constructive learning.1 The main section of this book contains a series of cases covering such themes as rapid educational response packages, demobilization of child soldiers, childrens participation in project implementation, healing from trauma, community mobilization, and peace education. Effective responses to post-conflict settings are highly attuned to local histories and conditions, including the duration of the conflict, the actors involved, the intensity of the violence, and the fragility of the peace. Each post-conflict situation is unique. Effective responses to post-conflict settings are highly attuned to local histories and conditions, including the duration of the conflict, the actors involved, the intensity of the violence, and the fragility of the peace. By emphasizing case studies, we hope to avoid a linear, prescriptive approach and instead to honor the challenge of creatively adapting interventions that have been effective in one setting for other contexts. Any intervention in a crisis or post-conflict setting must contend with severe constraints. Because intensive political and economic pressures may come from multiple angles, program designers should proceed cautiously, carefully considering how the welfare of children can be a focal point for dialogue among all stakeholders. To augment the cases, we introduce critical concepts related to the projects and highlight principles that may be useful for informing planning and practice. Following the discussion, we include questions about the potential application of particular aspects of the cases to the readers context. These questions are not intended as quick guidelines for program design in terms of staffing, facilities, or curriculum.2 Rather, they are intended to open dialogue and innovative thinkingin partnership with communities, families, and childrenabout important design choices and their impact on childrens learning and well-being.
The role of fundamental emotional needs and concern for psycho-social well-being in development discourse is the subject of recent analysis by Affolter (2002). This guidebook does not address a number of important choices that often arise in post-conflict educational reconstruction regarding language of instruction, home or host country curriculum, financing, and teacher training. Guidance on specific issues, based on the field experience of leading organizations such as UNESCO and UNHCR, is collected in Rapid Educational Response in Complex Emergencies (Aguilar and Retamal, 1998) as well as Education as a Humanitarian Response (Retamal and Aedo-Richmond, 1998), which also includes a rich review of several countryspecific experiences with refugee education and education in emergency situations. In addition, a review of educational responses in several recent refugee emergencies has been conducted by Sinclair (2001a).
This guidebook should be considered a work in progress. Undoubtedly, there are valuable case studies and concepts that we have not yet encountered or fully appreciated. The field of post-conflict educational reconstruction has expanded rapidly in recent years, and no one volume can respect the diversity and complexity of the issues involved. We hope this guidebook provides a useful window on the efforts of teachers, facilitators, community leaders, NGO workers, and families to help children outgrow war and, in the long run, to rebuild stable, equitable, and caring societies.
A new consensus has emerged that relief and humanitarian aid should contribute to the larger effort of development from the earliest stages.
the larger effort of development from the earliest stages (Aguilar and Retamal, 1998; Vargas-Baron and McClure, 1998). Education must be a top priority; waiting to begin educational interventions until conditions have stabilized may itself exacerbate instability (EFA Forum, 1999). There are powerful linkages between education, peacebuilding, and security. Schooling can help reestablish social stability and facilitate the acquisition of basic competencies needed for economic recovery in the long term. Schooling can help reestablish social stability and facilitate the acquisition of basic competencies needed for economic recovery in the long term. Most nations undergo several recognizable stages of recovery from conflict. To help organize our selection of cases, we have employed the framework suggested by Dykstra (personal communication, November 1, 2001), which involves the following phases: emergency, recovery, rehabilitation, and reconstruction.3 With each successive phase, the stability and capacity of the government increases. In the emergency phase, basic social services have ceased functioning, and communities may require external assistance for survival. In the recovery and reconstruction phases, a provisional government resumes functioning, and social services, such as schooling, begin to return to normal operation. These phases give a rough indication of the stability of government and the health of civil society. In this manner, they provide important parameters for guiding programmatic choices and gauging the capacity of partners to undertake reconstruction efforts. The farther a particular society has moved toward reconstruction, the greater the capacity that local and national actors will have for supporting education. The phases suggest a kind of scaffolding, with the role of external actors fading over time. Transitional periods between phases involve choices that may be made by government officials or set in place by a broader peace processrather than choices made by educators. These choices are likely to become solidified in later phases. For example, the choice of language of instruction for formal education may be made by groups organized to form a transitional government. Subsequently, it is rare for a central ministry to modify such a decision. Post-conflict transitions, even more than phases, indicate the shifting ground Nevertheless, schooling alone is not adequate for the larger challenge of reducing the toxicity that violence creates within childrens social environments. The complex challenge of educational reconstruction merits an ecological approach that acknowledges the connections between psychological well-being and learning. Such an approach, we believe, provides the basis for helping children outgrow war.
There are several typologies for classifying nations emerging from conflict. UNICEF, for example, uses the phases loud, transition, and rehabilitation/reconstruction (Evans, 1996). In their review, Miller-Grandvaux and Moreau (2000) employ a taxonomy that includes pre-crisis and postcrisis as phases. Such classifications of any particular situation can change over time; the phases might spiral around one another as reconstruction from one conflict becomes a prelude to another period of social upheaval.
of legitimacy and power; the roles and capacities of all actors involved in educational reconstruction are shaped by these shifts.4 The framework of post-conflict phases and transitions is very useful; however, it should be kept in mind that the life experiences of people in local communities may not fit cleanly into these categories. Actual circumstances in a country may exhibit characteristics of different phases, varying dramatically across regions and over time. Indeed, the movement implied by linear phases is rarely linear or uniform within a country. Any clearly demarcated phase may be a brief interlude before a long, complex transition. In this sense, the categories only provide a general description, and need to be supplemented by more nuanced understanding of the particularities of a given situation. As pointed out by Miller-Grandvaux and Moreau (2000), the umbrella term post-conflict is itself a profound simplification. Conflict has raged for years in some regions, with no post period in sight. Even after fighting stops, how long does a society remain in reconstruction? And for whom? For development agencies and donors, the duration of any given phase may be linked to government stability and capacity. For individuals and communities, however, there may be no clear point when reconstruction stops, since the consequences of conflict, like shrapnel, penetrate deep into minds and hearts, to be worked out over a lifetime and beyond, and affecting relationships and identities for generations. Given the complexity of post-conflict settings, this guidebook does not attempt to articulate a definitive framework for decisions about when to intervene or how to direct investments. It assumes an intention to engage and suggests principles and questions we believe will be useful for enhancing childrens opportunities for learning and well-being.
The consequences of conflict, like shrapnel, penetrate deep into minds and hearts, to be worked out over a lifetime and beyond, and affecting relationships and identities for generations.
For an overview of transitions, phases, and steps toward the reconstruction of formal education systems, please refer to the appendix.
Nation/Culture
(Macro System)
Community
(Exo System)
Home
(Micro System)
Siblings
Child
Peers Social Services
Media
School
State Institutions
Social Policies
From an ecological perspective, concern for the welfare of the child is not simply a matter of direct service to children. The target population is embedded in concentric rings of relationships and influence. The childs well-being is embedded in the welfare of his or her family; parents well-being is embedded in income-earning opportunities and relationships with peers; the efficacy of local institutions is embedded in regional networks and national policy environments; etc. Thus, the goal of enhancing childrens welfare is intimately linked to the welfare of mothers and fathers, their relatives, their support networks and affiliation groups, community organizations, and so on, in concentric rings of relationships circling out from the child at the center. The ecological model affirms the value of interventions aimed at different social layers because they all have an influence on the child. That influence will tend to be more indirect and diffuse the farther it moves from the immediate family environment surrounding the child. Nevertheless, conditions at each layer matter for the layers nested within it. The quality of interaction with adults in a school or marketplace; the way in which teachers understand and address the consequences of trauma; the extent to which community leaders have a voice in shaping development initiatives; the degree to which political leaders engage in a type of governance that fosters security and trust rather than retraumatization and renewed violenceall of these influence the well-being of children, and all influence how children outgrow the violence that threatens to disable them. Yet even in a supportive environment, some children may never recover from war. Early experiences of violence and abuse can do irreparable damage to the human brain, particularly in the centers of emotional regulation and memory, increasing the likelihood of aggressive behavior in adulthood (Teicher, 2002). Violence can leave scars that no educational intervention can heal, and even the best interventions are limited in their ability to undo the wrongs of the past.
From an ecological perspective, concern for the welfare of the child is not simply a matter of direct service to children.
An Intervention Matrix
Considering the phases of post-conflict reconstruction as one dimension and the ecological layers surrounding a child as the other dimension, we have constructed a matrix to organize our selection of cases. Within the matrix, we have located our case studies to indicate how they might fit into a comprehensive effort to support children. Arrows are used to suggest the location and direction of the projects. A more realistic representation would show the cases overlapping several cells, horizontally and vertically, since the boundaries between phases and ecological levels are crossed by almost all of the projects profiled in this guidebook.
Emergency
Recovery
Rehabilitation
Reconstruction
Butterfly Garden
Community (Exo-level)
Teacher Emergency Package
Childrens Participation
Community Leadership
While some organizations have focused on the reestablishment of the formal education systems that were in place prior to the emergency, this may not be the best way to promote learning. Emergencies provide an opportunity to explore alternative approaches to education (p.15). In nature, severe disturbances to an ecosystem, when viewed over time, enable that system to maintain its biodiversity (Simon, 2000). A forest fire, for example, opens space for flowers and saplings to grow. Normal conditions, without such disturbances, often lead to the dominance of a few highly competitive species. The metaphoric application to post-conflict settings is instructive. Although crises in the social world come at a terrible cost, once they have occurred, it is useful to consider how they open space for diverse social and organizational arrangements for learning to flourish. In the absence of traditional schools, how else might learning be organized? And who might do the organizing? How can educational reconstruction promote authentic dialogue about childrens well-being, parents aspirations, and shared commitments to building a peaceful future? Violence and displacement create the need for the familiar; consequently, the introduction of radical innovations in the wake of social upheaval may create further psychological hardships. In each context, project designers should consider what processes will enable communities to balance their needs for security and the familiar with the opportunity to critically review old structures and experiment with new approaches. In other words, a profound challenge to post-conflict reconstruction is to develop mechanisms and conditions that nurture the kind of change that feels safe. Interventions in post-conflict settings invite project designers to think in terms of what Jan Visser, former head of UNESCOs Learning Without Frontiers project, calls the learning ecology (2001). For Visser, the learning ecology is to learning as the biosphere is to life, i.e., the resource and context for its flourishing. This concept places the reconstruction of schools as one aspect of the larger project of the revitalization of the learning environment. Thinking in terms of a learning ecology moves concerns for quality education beyond the classroom into the broader environment surrounding children.
Thinking in terms of a learning ecology moves concerns for quality education beyond the classroom into the broader environment surrounding children.
Do these needs reflect western cultural norms? Staub believes that his taxonomy is cross-culturally valid. The emotional need for feeling secure, for example, will affect a persons subjective wellbeing in any context. At the same time, however, needs satisfaction strategies are culturally shaped. Thus, the ways in which needs are satisfied vary across culture, based on cultural values and accepted practices.
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sense of security and positive identity enables people to be open to others and to focus on others welfare, rather than concentrating exclusively on themselves. For these reasons, the positive fulfillment of basic needs is a basis for pro-social behavior and the growth of cohesive families and communities. When needs are frustrated, on the other hand, people may turn inward toward their own groups and seek fulfillment of their needs in ways that diminish or harm others through scapegoating minority groups or advocating exclusivist ideologies. The frustration of basic psychological needs, when combined with other facilitating factors, is often the basis for mass violence (Staub, 1989; 1999). As articulated by Staub, the frustration and the satisfaction of basic psychological needs have a powerful relationship with the level of cohesion and aggression in a society. Consequently, we believe that attention to these needs is a critical concern in post-conflict settings for interventions that seek to protect, heal, and prevent future crises. Discussion of basic psychological needs will surface throughout this guidebook, as we examine how particular strategies might address basic needs among various groups. The following table provides a brief overview of a selected subset of the full range of basic psychological needs, as articulated by Staub (forthcoming): Basic Psychological Need
Security
The positive fulfillment of basic needs is a basis for pro-social behavior and the growth of cohesive families and communities.
Description Perception of being free from physical and psychological harm and being able to satisfy essential biological needs Capacity to protect ones self from harm, fulfill important goals, and have a potential impact on society Sense of having a well-developed self and a positive self-conception; involves self-awareness and acceptance of ones limitations Relationships in which we feel close ties to other individuals or groups Understanding of people, the world, and of our place in it; a sense of meaningfulness
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
The basic psychological needs framework is a valuable approach to regenerating the ecology of learning. It does not address the content of childrens learning; rather, it addresses the conditions in which learning can flourish in different types of educational environments. Traditionally, of course, schooling has had little to do with fulfilling 11
psychological needs. The normative practices of modern schooling tend to dissociate psycho-social well-being from learning, since learning is often viewed as a matter of individual acquisitiongaining knowledge or skillsdivorced from a social context. In light of recent insights into learning (Caine and Caine, 1997; Wenger, 1999), however, we can begin to think about learning differently, in ways that connect learning with the positive fulfillment of basic psychological needs. We believe that conditions that fulfill basic psychological needs are also conditions for meaningful learning, as we begin to articulate below: Security. Security implies an absence of threat. From a physiological perspective, threat can limit the brains capacity for learning. Under conditions of threat, the human brain tends to downshift, that is, to lose its capacity for creativity and higher-order synthesis, as it seeks safety in familiar patterns (Caine and Caine, 1997). Optimal learning requires a secure environment that allows the learner to move beyond the known in the construction of new understanding. Positive connection. One of the fundamental principles to emerge from studies of learning in professional work environments is that learning is a social phenomenon (Wenger, 1999) arising from inclusion in communities that share common activities. According to Smith, you learn from the company you keep (1998, p. 9). Our feelings of positive connection, of belonging, have a powerful influence on the direction of our learning. Positive identity. Learning serves identity. We tend to learn things that fit with our sense of self and the kind of person we aspire to become. Because our sense of identity shapes what is meaningful to us, matters of identity reside at the heart of our choices about what we care to learn. In part, we fulfill the need for positive identity by joining groups that we valuewhether militias or NGOsand our learning is what enables us to participate in, and contribute to, those groups. Comprehension of reality. This need is perhaps the one most obviously connected to learning. We might even rename it the basic need for learning, since it recognizes the fundamental human craving to make sense of the world and our place within it. The human brain seeks meaningful patterns in our experience, and we resist learning that does not fulfill our need for meaning (Caine and Caine, 1997). The connections of these ideas to post-conflict settings are evident. Security is a primary learning concern in post-conflict settings, in terms of both the physical environment and the psychological environment, i.e., learners perceptions of threat, perceptions that may be very different according to age, ethnicity, and gender. Further, the task of making sense of traumatic events, of finding meaning, is a powerful learning challenge that all survivors of social violence face. They seek to comprehend what happened and why it happened in order to come to terms with the violence they have endured.
We fulfill the need for positive identity by joining groups that we valuewhether militias or NGOsand our learning is what enables us to participate in, and contribute to, those groups.
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With these connections in mind, the basic psychological needs approach offers a set of design criteria for post-conflict programming. Planners can use it to articulate how particular programs affect the satisfaction or frustration of participants basic psychological needs. This question is important because, to the extent that a program can satisfy multiple needs in a constructive manner, it will support both childrens learning and well-functioning communities. Below are several examples of design questions grounded in the basic psychological needs framework: How can an intervention create a sense of security for members of a community? How can participation in project design and implementation build connection and a sense of belonging among participants? How do educational activities affirm the identity of learners? How do educational activities enable learners to sharpen their comprehension of reality and sense of meaningfulness? As is evident from these questions, the basic psychological needs framework can be applied from multiple perspectives to illuminate differences in need satisfaction for teachers, parents, or NGOs, and to indicate areas where needs are not being addressed. Further, considering differences in how basic psychological needs might be met in different groups can also illuminate points of tension, where competing needs may require careful balancing. For example, the need among NGO staff for comprehension of realityfor understanding what is happening in a situation in their own termsmay result in a desire to tightly control program planning or measure outcomes in ways that frustrate community members needs for shaping their own sense of meaning in their own lives. No one program will meet all needs equally. By considering what needsand whose may be addressed by a particular program, planners will better understand the meaning, consequences, and limitations of their work. After each case study, we provide a table as a tool for project designers to use in articulating how a project can address the basic psychological needs of various groups. By considering what needsand whose may be addressed by a particular program, planners will better understand the meaning, consequences, and limitations of their work.
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The package was designed to provide essential materials for a self-sufficient classroom and thus enabled teachers to resume instructional activities wherever they found themselves after normal systems had been disrupted.
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by Hannu Pesonen I was ordered to kill an old woman. When I refused, I was tied up and beaten. They threatened to shoot me instead. Then I did something to her. It happened in some village nearby. I took part in burning four huts there, and later burned five elsewhere. I didnt want that either. In Sierra Leone, the abuse of childrens rights has been more systematic and widespread than perhaps in any other armed crisis of the past decade in the world. In Sierra Leone, the abuse of childrens rights has been more systematic and widespread than perhaps in any other armed crisis of the past decade in the world. For eight years the RUF, along with other rebel factions, has waged a merciless civil war against the Sierra Leone government. No ideological reasons exist for the war. It has been fought mainly for the control of the rich diamond fields, which allow the owners to increase their wealth, and to pay for the troops and war material. Dragging on for years and years without resolution because it lacks strategic importance to the outside world, the war has suffocated the whole country with a thick net of destruction. It has completely devastated the school and health facilities and forced 1 million out of 4.5 million people to flee from their homes. It is difficult if not impossible to find a child in Sierra Leone who has not seen, heard, or been part of atrocities committed in the war or who does not have relatives that have been affected. Four out of five children in Sierra Leone have been affected by the war, one way or another. The rest have been involved indirectlyby being denied education or health services, for example, says Sahr J.B. Ngayenga, a senior manager of PLAN in Sierra Leone. Abducted from his home at Waterloo town, Saidu was one of the several thousand children taken by rebels when they attacked the capital Freetown and its surroundings in January Sitting with a trauma researcher in Waterloo town refugee camp school, a shy smile on his face, tiny Saidu Kamara, 11 years, certainly looks more like a victim than a killer. Technically speaking, however, he is a former child combatant in one of the worlds cruelest rag-tag armies, the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) in Sierra Leone, West Africa.
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Excerpted from an article in the Winter 2000 issue of PLAN News, published by PLAN International Australia. Available at www.plan.org.au/downloads/pdf/plannews/plannews_winter2000.pdf.
1999. Before the rebels were forced to withdraw by the ECOMOG peace-keeping forces, several weeks of heavy fighting and looting turned large areas into smoldering ruins. Relatively speaking, Saidu is one of the luckier abductees. More than 1,500 children still remain in rebel hands; some of them have been kept for years. Saidu, however, managed to escape from his abductors after a seven month ordeal, hiding with a friend in a pit when he was ordered to fetch water. The rebels were hurrying back to the bush and did not notice the small boys, who finally ran to the advancing ECOMOG soldiers. A few weeks after his escape, Saidu now speaks of his experiences for the first time. One event after another, he quietly goes through his bad memories of the fighting and his current feelings, a PLAN trauma worker at his side. I just harmed this one woman, that was all, he repeats in a very small voice. In the other corner of the bare room, another trauma worker talks with a 10-year-old girl, who is still unable to sit properly after several months of sexual abuse by the rebels. Across the schoolyard outside, hundreds of their peers play handball, jumprope, and dance in a deafening symphony of shouting, drum-beating, clapping, singing, shrieking, and applaudingand laughing, too. They all take part in RapidEd, PLANs quick remedial program for war-affected children, which combines basic elements of numeracy and literacy with therapeutic and healing forms of self-expression. RapidEd is being run in the schools at the internally displaced peoples camps in and around Freetown. The camp schools were set up voluntarily by the displaced teachers, who realized that for children living in these conditions any school would provide a haven of normality, allowing them a feeling of safety for at least a few hours each day. But the school alone is not enough. The traumas and bad memories piling up inside must be helped to come out, before the burden becomes too heavy to carry. Two things are considered essential: the quick return to school, and tackling and exposing the deep trauma as soon as possible, before it is buried deep inside the growing children, says Terence McCaughan, regional program advisor of PLAN West Africa. Saidu acts as most do. Loud noises startle him easily, and he sometimes becomes irritable. He always watches out and tries to stay alert, and he trusts adults less than he did before. He is not very hopeful about the future, either, and he was first very reluctant to talk. As a normal reaction, the children do not want to speak about their experiences. They keep them inside and will not overcome the trauma. Through different kind of outward expression, connected to the safety of a school, they are much more likely to open up. We encourage them to sing, tell stories, discuss with others, play, make dramas, or draw pictures, explains McCaughan. The camp schools were set up voluntarily by the displaced teachers, who realized that for children living in these conditions any school would provide a haven of normality, allowing them a feeling of safety for at least a few hours each day.
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To facilitate this work, schools receive kits containing an assortment of carefully selected equipment matching the program content. They include number and letter charts, pens and chalk, as well as balls, skipping ropes, and local musical instruments. The methodology, developed by PLAN in cooperation with UNESCO, is based on experiences in other war zones and includes constant personal discussions with trauma advisors, teachers, and research assistants. Training camp teachers and PLAN staff in recognizing and dealing with child trauma is therefore crucial to success. The discussions they have to carry out are extremely difficult. They must be conducted, and the questions be asked, in a very sensitive way, notes McCaughan. It is not easy at all, but most of PLANs team members have a grim advantage: they have been displaced themselves, and they have seen their property looted and houses burnt down. So far, the results are mostly encouraging. PLAN staff conducting recreation activities in the Waterloo camp confirm that in three months, the sports and playing have made a large positive impact on the childrens behavior. They open up much more easily and are less aggressive. Saidu agrees. I was very worried to talk, as I want to remove these things from my mind. I now feel more relieved. But I still feel very sad, too. In Grafton, teachers and PLAN staff alike clap their hands with the bewildered audience of camp children, as their friends stage a colorful drama of diamonds trade, orphans treated badly by a stepmother, a big rebel killing soldiers who come to challenge him, and girls being forced to work as slaves. The teachers and PLAN staff involved in the drama activities of RapidEd say they want students to relive traumatic events in the play, but those events must be given a different angle, that of reconciliation, and be explained. To expose themselves publicly takes them a long way toward that goal. Many of the children here were present when their parents were killed. They became withdrawn, reserved, hostile. They used to fight with each other. Now their personal relations have developed, and they are much more cooperative. At the moment, 3,200 children and youth take part in RapidEd. The curriculum is 36 weeks long, the equivalent of a full school year, whereafter the children should be able to enter the normal school. PLANs objective is to extend RapidEd throughout the country as soon as the security situation allows, not only in the camps but also to the reopening village schools. This means, in practice, that the program may form a basis for remedial education for all the children whose education has been disrupted by war.
Two things are considered essential: the quick return to school, and tackling and exposing the deep trauma as soon as possible, before it is buried deep inside the growing children.
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The emergency educational response in Rwanda took stock of previous emergency experiences such as those of Afghanistan, Central America, Somalia, and Tanzania. Large populations of children needed to be educated and an effective, rapid response was needed in the absence of a functional school infrastructure, an adequate supply of trained teachers, and school supplies. Educationalists have been forced to consider creative alternatives for these victims of armed conflict. In areas of special political instability such as the horn of Africa and neighboring countries, entire generations of children have not attended school. In the case of Somalia, since Siad Barre was ousted from government, no real educational system has been reestablished. The absence of a Ministry of Education has forced international agencies to take that role. As a result of this abnormal situation, a Teacher Emergency Package (TEP) was developed by UNESCO in Somalia. The TEP was envisaged as providing a concrete response for nonformal primary education in emergency situations such as refugee camps. UNESCO PEER adapted it and translated it into Kinyarwanda to respond to educational needs for the refugee camps of Ngara, Tanzania. The TEPs main educational objective in the camps was to initiate literacy and numeracy for the benefit of illiterate children, and was linked through learning to leisure-time activities that enabled them to express and deal with their feelings of separation, insecurity, and loss related to their refugee displaced status. The TEP or school-in-a-box as a mobile classroom, was easily adapted to Rwandas educational needs after July 1994. It was designed to work where school buildings had been looted or destroyed. Its duration of use as an emergency curriculum gave a sufficient time for the process of rehabilitation of the educational system. In collaboration with the newly appointed Ministry of Education of Rwanda in 1994, based on an estimated figure of 700,000 primary school children, 9,000 TEPs were produced and distributed at prefecture and commune levels thus providing in a very short period of time the essentials required to reassemble the surviving teachers and school-age children to reopen the schools. The impact of the TEP was enormous; by February 1995, more than 1,700 schools had been reopened, 11,700 teachers had been trained, and nearly 7,000 TEPs had been distributed. This emergency educational action was able to bring back to school, seven
The impact of the TEP was enormous; by February 1995, more than 1,700 schools had been reopened, 11,700 teachers had been trained, and nearly 7,000 TEPs had been distributed.
Excerpted from Aguilar, P. and Richmond, M. (1998). Emergency Educational Response in the Rwanda Crisis. In G. Retamal and R. Aideo-Richmond (Eds.), Education as a Humanitarian Response, pp. 119141. Herndon, VA: Cassell. The Continuum International Publishing Group. Reprinted with permission of the publisher.
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months after the horror of genocide, more than half a million children, thus providing the basis for normalization and relative stability in their communities. The TEP strategy for Rwanda was accompanied by a two-day training program for underqualified or semi-trained teachers. The first day included basic theory and a demonstration of the TEP methodology. The second day focused on practical teaching skills for literacy and numeracy using the didactic materials provided for the teacher, as well as the use of the teacher guide. In an attempt to reestablish the educational system, a training of trainers was set up to be followed by the training of teachers in their communities, thus a cascade of training was adopted to respond to the urgent training needs of Rwandan teachers: a core group of 21 national trainers was established and divided into teams of four or five who were sent out to the 11 prefectures. Each commune was represented by two primary school teachers who, in turn, trained the other teachers in their own communes. In all training sessions the emerging local education authoritiesdistrict and local supervisors, headmasters, church representatives and local government authoritieswere represented; this was mainly due to the fact that this was the first systematic activity taking place at the community level. It is worth mentioning that there was a remarkable absence of women teachers in over 90 percent of all training provided nation-wide during this process. UNICEF has conditionally been funding and assisting to reestablish an in-service teacher training system where female teachers would be given incentives to increase their participation. At the same time as this process of emergency was being developed, the new authorities in Kigali were reinforcing the establishment of a centralized Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education. In-service teacher training has become more and more a regular program where priorities and activities are determined at the Kigali level. Consultation for the harmonization and revision of primary school curricula has come as a late response to the pressing needs of the grassroots-level teachers. However, this effort is being done with the participation of ministry specialists, local educational authorities, district and commune supervisors, headmasters, and other ministries, for example the Ministry of Family and Women Promotion, in order to ensure the gender component in the new curricula and teacher training. Notwithstanding this, there is an urgent need for action, since 70 percent of primary school teachers are underqualified and many of them were appointed during the emergency and have been only exposed to the TEP training, which is unquestionably insufficient.
TEACHER
In all training sessions the emerging local education authoritiesdistrict and local supervisors, headmasters, church representatives and local government authoritieswere represented; this was mainly due to the fact that this was the first systematic activity taking place at the community level.
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Discussion
The use of emergency kits touches upon core dilemmas in post-conflict education. On one hand, they can be an invaluable asset in an emergency situation. When thousands of schools have been destroyed and many teachers killed, the kits provide immediate materials for restarting familiar educational processes on a broad scale. As demonstrated in the Rwandan case, the kits can be distributed quickly throughout a country, enabling schools to be reopened simultaneously. The existence of an
operational school signifies that the world is still working, that the community and the future of its children have not been irrevocably damaged.
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The movement from recreational, playful, collaborative activities to nonformal, competency-based learning activities is a key curricular innovation underlying the use of the RECREATE and TEP kits.
The movement from recreational, playful, collaborative activities to nonformal, competency-based learning activities is a key curricular innovation underlying the use of the RECREATE and TEP kits. This curricular sequence of first engaging children in safe play and then moving on to more classroom-style instruction respects childrens immediate needs for connection and expression as well as long-term concern for the development of basic competencies. In this way, the use of the kits in emergencies anticipates later phases of reconstruction. Although they are designed for short-term use, the kits may last beyond emergency situations and can be used by a variety of audiences. In several African locations, the kits have found their way into existing schools and adult literacy programs (UNESCO, 2002).
Kits Reconsidered
The use of emergency education kits was discussed at the Inter-Agency Consultation on Education in Situations of Emergency and Crisis, a meeting of international professionals held in November of 2000. Among their criticisms, participants noted that the kits may
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create dependency because of their convenience; they are addictive to users, donors, and procurement managers (Inter-agency Consultation, 2000). Because they are packaged in a standard form, the kits often fail to meet highly variable needs on the ground (Sinclair, 2001a). Further, the deployment of kits can preclude dialogue among families, children, educational officials, and NGOs in the field about the meaning and operation of educationdialogue that can build connections and shared vision. In other words, the use of kits may answer questions before they can be asked.
TEACHER
The use of kits may Some of those questions might include: What does it mean to be a competent adult in a community? What does a community hope for its children? Besides schooling, what other means may be available to support those goals? What materials are already at hand within a community that might be creatively employed for developing childrens basic competencies? Participants in the Inter-Agency Consultation recommended that kits be pared down to a basic level. In this way, they can be more easily restocked. Further, it was recommended that kits be phased out as quickly as possible to avoid dependency and that agencies agree on principles for the construction of kits, rather than on their specific contents. answer questions before they can be asked.
Training Needs
As demonstrated in the Rwandan experience with TEPs, the provision of teacher training in the use of the kits is critical. Cascade approaches to training have been used for the sake of large-scale coverage in a short period, although the effectiveness of such training is not well known. Generally, a three-day training is advised, with extra time added for addressing sensitive issues related to trauma. The materials in the kit can be used in the training, ensuring congruence between the training and the actual use of the materials. The training can also involve community and government representatives, a first step in a much longer process of rebuilding community cohesion and sustainability in educational reconstruction efforts. As suggested in the Rwandan case, the participation of women in training opportunities may require special attention. The changing roles of women following conflict, as well as the important role of female teachers for the success of girls in school, requires that careful consideration be given to means of recruiting women teachers for training and in acknowledging womens contributions to peace and stability.
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By providing resources for childrens recovery from traumatic experiences, in combination with resources for the development of basic competencies, emergency education kits can be a crucial tool in helping children outgrow war. How would you introduce the TEP within a community? Whom would you involve? What adaptations to the standard TEP and RECREATE kits might make them more appropriate to local needs?
What gender considerations are important for the contents of the kits and the design of teacher training?
What challenges involving sustainability and participation might emerge from the use of the kits?
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In your context, how could the use of emergency education kits satisfy basic psychological needsfor children, teachers, and NGOs?
Children NEED
Security
Teachers
NGOs
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
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CHILD SOLDIERS: Finding the Way Home After the Fighting is Over
Introduction
Despite international human rights norms that prohibit the exploitation of children in armed conflict, wars around the world increasingly involve child soldiers. Armies and militia groups recruit child soldiers to do the dirty work of war, from serving as spies to walking through minefields. Some children may see soldiering as a means of finding security or supporting a liberation struggle; others are coercively recruited and subjected to physical abuse and forced to commit acts of violence against their families or home communities (Wessells, 1997). Once hostilities cease, child soldiers face great challenges in coming to terms with the pain they have endured and the pain they have inflicted. They may experience unwelcome memories of violent events and feel constantly on alert for danger. Behaviorally, they may tend to respond aggressively to others, making participation in traditional school environments difficult. Because of their history of violent acts, child soldiers may be rejected by their home communities. Without family support or opportunities to earn income in constructive ways, child soldiers may return to violence as a means of fulfilling their needs. Fortunately, there is much material now available on experiences in different countries with the demobilization and social reintegration of child soldiers. The case study included here focuses on UNICEFs work with former child combatants in Liberia. It highlights the importance of reunification with families and access to educational opportunities for child soldiers. Following the case study is a discussion of key aspects of social reintegration programs for child soldiers and the dynamics of recovery from being both victim and perpetrator of violence.
CHILD SOLDIERS
Once hostilities cease, child soldiers face great challenges in coming to terms with the pain they have endured and the pain they have inflicted.
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Civil war in Liberia began in 1989 and continued until 1996, when the countrys 14th peace agreement went into effect. An estimated 15,000 of Liberias 1.4 million children served in the civil war, constituting as much as 37 percent of some factions armies. The participation of children in Liberias civil war was characterized by a particularly high number of volunteers. Most fighters joined for one reason: security. Living in factioncontrolled territory without a gun was an open invitation for harassment and intimidation by fighters, who often beat and robbed young boys of their food and clothes. Joining ranks was perceived by children to be a means of protecting themselves from this kind of victimization. Other children were forcibly recruited. After 1993, many faction commanders, prompted by heavy losses on the battlefield, began to target children in recruitment drives. These children were often forced to witness the beating, killing, or rape of a family member and were told that they would be killed if they didnt join. Others, once captured or arrested, were forced to commit an atrocity that would sever ties with their community. They were told that refusal would be met with death. Several peacemaking and demobilization efforts were made over the course of the civil war. However, these were thwarted by the factions disinclination to disarm, and by repeated outbreaks of fighting. In November 1996, the implementers tried again, and in 1997 the exercise successfully concluded with no further major hostilities among the factions, paving the way for free and fair election that took place that July. In this climate of peace, it became possible to carry through demobilization and reintegration of former child soldiers. This report explains how demobilization of child soldiers and their reintegration into civilian society has been and continues to be planned and carried out. Disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration are important steps to lasting peace. During disarmament, fighters surrender their weapons, ammunition, and other war material before undergoing a process whereby the chain between them and their commanders is broken. At this stage, fighters can be reintegrated into civil society by a process that allows them to become productive members of civilian communities once again. With each new peace agreement promising disarmament and demobilization, agencies were asked to determine how to best meet the needs of children. It was felt that this
The participation of children in Liberias civil war was characterized by a particularly high number of volunteers. Most fighters joined for one reason: security.
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Excerpted from case material posted in 1999 on the Global Information Networks in Education website. Available at www.ginie.org/ginie-crises-links/childsoldiers/liberia2.html.
group would need special guidance making the change from military to civilian life. UNICEF was chosen to chair the Technical Working group on Child Soldiers. This involved coordinating demobilization and reintegration activities and the interventions assigned to each agency involved in the exercise. With less than three months to plan the exercise, the working group set about drafting a framework for child soldier demobilization. This built on plans made before Liberias capital, Monrovia, was looted in April 1996, although due to losses sustained during this looting, resources were scarcer and so cutbacks had to be made.
Most children wanted to be reunited with their families, who were likewise very happy to be reunited with their children.
Reintegration
The obstacles to reintegration were enormous. The very structures needed to help the former child soldiers capture a sense of normalcy, such as families, schools, community
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groups, and traditional societies, had been ravaged by the war. Moreover, the children had huge psychological burdens to deal with and were often stigmatized for their participation in the war and rejected by the communities and families. Moreover, lacking education or skills to become independent, few former child soldiers had the means to rebuild their lives. Seventy percent of children said that they thought returning to school would be the best way to rebuild their lives, but the national education system lay in tatters. Seventy percent of children said that they thought returning to school would be the best way to rebuild their lives, but the national education system lay in tatters. Despite these difficulties, reintegration programs have been highly successful in the area of family reunification and social reintegration. Another difficulty was the fact that while it was acknowledged that reintegration programs should be developed at the same time as demobilization programs, this was not carried out in Liberia. Reintegration programs developed before the fighting in April 1996 had to be abandoned, and agencies were too unwilling amidst growing uncertainty and skepticism to reinvest.
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After vocational training ranging from poultry production to carpentry to graphic arts, students are organized into cooperatives and, if appropriate, given small start-up loans to set up their own businesses.
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Future Plans
Guided by the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the Graca Machel Study on the Situation of Children in Armed Conflict, UNICEF Liberias approach to reintegration for war affected youth, including former child soldiers, in 2000-2002 is: To promote the protection and care of war-affected youth within the context of the family and the community To increase and intensify quality advocacy and communication efforts in raising awareness on the plight of children who need special protection Always value the principle of respecting the views of the child in decisions and activities that affect their lives. To always value the principle of respecting the views of the child in decisions and activities that affect their lives This approach is based on the lessons learned in projects developed in Liberia between 1994 and 1998. It aims to complete and build on the progress made towards the achievement of sustainable reintegration of the young people most severely affected by Liberias devastating civil war. To use life skills, vocational skills training, and psycho-social skills and leisure (sport, music, and art) as tools for reconstruction
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Discussion
Once armed conflict ends, the process of demobilizing child combatants can begin. As outlined by UNICEF, a first priority is reunification with families. In some cases, reunification occurs spontaneously, but in situations in which children have been forced to commit violent acts against family or community members, returning child soldiers may be rejected. As occurred in Liberia, demobilization programs often involve facilitators spending time with family members in advance of the ex-soldiers arrival, to prepare them for understanding the childs experiences and potentially aggressive behavior. Such conversations enable the parents to make sense of the childs actions and welcome the child back into the family. Over time, the support that parents and other caregivers can give to children will greatly influence their recovery. At a symposium on the demobilization of child soldiers held in Cape Town, South Africa in 1997, participants noted that family reunification was the key factor in the social reintegration of former child combatants (Symposium, 1997). To facilitate child soldiers reintegration with their families, a UNICEF project in Sudan provides the children with a Going Home kit that includes basic materials such as a mosquito net, blankets, fishing lines and hooks, and cooking utensils. Children are also given clothing and supplies to help them get started back to school (UNICEF, 1999a). These materials enable ex-combatants to help support themselves and contribute to their families welfare. For soldiers, social conflict provides steady work. When conflict ends, fighters may not have a means of maintaining themselves, and so demobilization programs for child soldiers often provide opportunities to learn marketable skills. These skills are intended to enable the child to contribute positively to a society at peace and feel hopeful about long-term economic opportunities. The SWAY program operated by UNICEF in Liberia, for example, provides literacy and vocational training, with small loans as seed money for business ventures. Most of all, children finished with war want opportunities to learn.
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CHILD SOLDIERS
Also, teachers are likely to need training to better understand the impact of trauma on children and how they can assist in childrens recovery. Efforts to assist child soldiers have much in common with more general efforts to support the healing of war-affected children. Through drawing, children can express the meaning of past events, and collaborative games enable children to regain a sense of playful, mutually helpful connection with peers.
Learning Peace
As mentioned briefly in the UNICEF case study, peace education is an important dimension of demobilization and reintegration projects. Intensive involvement in armed struggles tends to force alignment of the combatants beliefs with the ideology of the group, an ideology that usually involves explicit devaluation or hatred of a rival group, as well as the legitimation of violence. Such belief systems do not disappear when child soldiers hand over their guns. To move toward peace, these belief systems must be addressed in school curricula through peace education as well as experiential, nonformal programs. Part of demobilization is the slow shift from ideologies of antagonism and the glorification of violence to constructive ideologies that offer an inclusive, peace-oriented vision of the future. Child soldiers face the difficult task of coming to terms with moral sensibilities deformed by war. As happened in Liberia, new child soldiers are often forced to commit acts of violence in ways designed to alter their identities and eliminate moral concern for victims. Without appropriate support and assistance, child soldiers may easily revert back into learned patterns of aggression as a means of satisfying their immediate needs. Having broken moral barriers and learned to devalue members of rival groups, child soldiers have advanced far along a progression of destructive behavior, a progression that makes further violence much easier to undertake (Staub, 1989). That is why efforts to reintegrate child soldiers into community life are an important step toward lasting peace. Having meaningful opportunities to learn and contribute to others well-being, feeling connected to community life, inhabiting a world that makes sense all of these can enable former child soldiers and their communities to move beyond the violence of the past.
Being both a victim and perpetrator of violence can inflict terrible moral and spiritual damage on children, damage that needs to be addressed from within the cultural system of meaning the child inhabits.
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African cultures, purification rituals for those who have perpetrated crimes are important for ridding the perpetrator of contamination caused by war and the threat of vengeance from the spirit world. As transitions from one phase of life to another, such rituals prepare former combatants for their social reintegration. Based on his work with child soldiers in Angola, Wessells (1997) offers the following description of an indigenous approach to healing and reintegration: In one community a few years ago, a traditional healer told me of a ritual he ordinarily conducts to purify former child soldiers. First, he lives with the child for a month, feeding him a special diet designed to cleanse. During the month, he also advises the child on proper behavior and what the village expects from him. At the end of the month, the healer convenes the village for a ritual. As part of the ceremony, the healer buries frequently used weaponsa machete, perhaps, or an AK-47and announces that on this day the boys life as a soldier has ended and his life as a civilian has begun (p. 37). In the transition from military to civilian life, a relationship with a community elder can be especially powerful for youth. The role of the elder in Wessells story is instructive; the elder lives with the child, providing constant guidance and care. Such a relationship makes it more likely the child will accept the elders guidance and seek to model the elders behavior. Further, the elder can serve as an advocate for the child vis-a-vis family and community, encouraging them to accept the child. The status of girls in armed conflict is rarely discussed, making them invisible to intervention planners. Programs aimed at demobilization should be attentive to the experience of girls in conflict and give priority to addressing their needs.
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support for finding acceptance and means of income generation in their home communities. Yet such training should not simply assume a preference for traditional gender roles and under-valued economic activities.
Educational reconstruction infused with peace education, psychological healing, and human rights protectioncan help prevent the involvement of children in future social destruction.
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How do parents and other community members view childrens participation in social conflict? Part of demobilization is the slow shift from ideologies of antagonism and the glorification of How long have child soldiers been away from home and what level of education had they attained before leaving? violence to constructive ideologies that offer an inclusive, peaceoriented vision of the future.
How have girls been involved in social violence? What special needs might they have in order to reintegrate into community life?
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In your context, how could interventions for child soldiers satisfy basic psychological needsfor children, families, and the community?
CHILD SOLDIERS
NEED
Security
Children
Families
Community
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
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How can the imagination become a resource for helping children free themselves from the burden of traumatic experience?
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HEALING AND RECONCILIATION FOR WAR-AFFECTED CHILDREN AND COMMUNITIES: Learning from the Butterfly Garden of Sri Lankas Eastern Province
1
The Butterfly Garden invariably opens the children to new experiences: formative relationships with the animators, befriending children from other villages, exploring the garden and its resident creatures, and discovering their energetic and imaginative world.
By Rob Chase This paper is a brief account of seven years of project work in Sri Lanka that began as a Canadian university-led initiative in support of the Convention for the Rights of the Child. The work resulted in the formation of the Butterfly Garden, an innovative program of accompaniment and healing for war-affected children, and reconciliation at a community level. The principles and practice of the program are described, and important operational and paradigmatic considerations are highlighted vis--vis undertaking a community development approach to wage peace and accompany children affected by war. The early but noteworthy success of the Butterfly Garden as a zone of peace for children also raises questions about current development assistance and humanitarian aid policies and practices.
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Excerpted from a paper presented at the International Conference on War-Affected Children, Winnipeg, Canada. (2000a). Available at www.waraffectedchildren.gc.ca/sri_lanka-e.asp.
In Batticaloa District, a childs family life often involves household displacement, orphanhood, separation and loss from refugee migration, extreme poverty, and the absence of care providers (mainly women) who are working in the Gulf States. The district is known for high rates of suicide and recruitment to militant groups. Nevertheless, school attendance, highly valued throughout Sri Lankas post-colonial history, is held in high esteem and relatively well maintained. The Health Reach partner in Batticaloa was a Jesuit priest and trained counselor who had started a small counseling center for ex-detainees and war widows. The team trained and supervised 30 young women to conduct fieldwork in four highly affected villages interviewing 170 children. Over 40 percent had personally experienced conflict related violence (e.g. home attacked or shelled, being shot at, beaten, or arrested). Over 50 percent had close family members killed violently, including disappearances of a family member following abduction or detention. Nearly all of the children recalled events for which the definition of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) applied (i.e., personal experience or witnessing event(s) of actual or threatened death, serious injury, threat to integrity of self or others); 92 percent of these events were directly conflict-related, as distinct from domestic violence, or accident. Severe (20 percent) and moderate (39 percent) levels of post-traumatic psychological distress were found, as well as similar levels of depression and unresolved grief reactions. Many children disclosed experiences and shared emotions previously withheld from others.
In Batticaloa District, a childs family life often involves household displacement, orphanhood, separation and loss from refugee migration, extreme poverty, and the absence of care providers (mainly women) who are working in the Gulf States.
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For five years the Butterfly Garden has provided after-school and weekend creative play programming to over 600 schoolchildren from 20 communities around Batticaloa representing local ethnic groups (ethnic Tamil and Muslim). Schoolteachers are introduced to the Butterfly Garden in presentations at schools. Children with psychological difficulties are selected to attend weekly for a nine-month program; on a given day 50 children from two to four villages of different ethnicity attend. The program offers a rich choice of play and art activities (claywork, drama, storytelling, music, arts, and crafts) and is facilitated by a dozen staff animators. These local men and women from the different ethnic groups are trained through a variety of apprenticeship and skills development techniques such as hands on experience, attention to ones own personal healing work, on-site mentoring, and workshops arranged for visiting Sri Lankan and international resource people. The Butterfly Garden invariably opens the children to new experiences: formative relationships with the animators, befriending children from other villages, exploring the garden and its resident creatures, and discovering their energetic and imaginative world. The animators and the programs process respectfully uphold the childs creative spirit and inherent goodness, modeling nonviolent behavior and alternative ways to resolve conflict and deal with disturbing emotional issues. Children with personal distress are invited to take part in a stream of reflective and expressive activities called the Amma Appa (Mother-Father in Tamil) Journey developed at the site that includes culturally indigenous rituals to honor deep feelings and promote healing and reconciliation. Through this, children experience healing insights into their lives and selves, and into their connection with others, past and present. The program responds to the developmental maturity and creative growth of the children who come to consider the garden as part of their world, real and imaginary. It accompanies the children to young adulthood by providing follow-up session cycles, as well as planning days of performance and play in exchanging villages. At the community level, the program explores ways that the childrens experience and the positive results witnessed by their teachers and families may foster community reconciliation. Each program cycle closes with a grand environmental opera inspired by the childrens invention, while ongoing collaboration with schools and dialogue with village leaders is encouraged. A pragmatic outreach program has emerged based on the strengths of the Butterfly Gardens work with children and opportunities for greater presence in the villages. The list below summarizes key aspects and principals of the Butterfly Garden program that have been important in its relative success and that may differentiate it from other programming for war-affected children. While some may be unique to local community setting and staff skills, other features may be generalized to a model of zones of peace for children. The program:
At the community level, the program explores ways that the childrens experience and the positive results witnessed by their teachers and families may foster community reconciliation.
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Accompanies children throughout their adolescence within their communities (versus foster care/residential, or single/brief encounters) Aims to give childhood back to the children by providing them with opportunities to play and have fun, a sanctuary, and a positive counterbalance to their stressful and impoverished lives Offers an alternative culture of caring, given the eroded social and cultural supports available to children Provides healing and creative opportunities emergent with local culture that are neither stigmatizing nor medicalized Is staffed by young adults from the local community with creative talents and skills with war-affected children Maintains a close and responsive relationship as a local organization to its community, and is a resource for schools and local orphanages Promotes dialogue about ongoing local community tensions, and offers an approach to reconciliation A reasonable timeline for evaluation would be to follow the children involved in the Butterfly Garden into their adult years. Nevertheless, even at the early stage of five years, the program has been shown to have a very positive effect on the participating children, with more incremental signs of success as a peace building and reconciliation measure at the community level. Even at the early stage of five years, the program has been shown to have a very positive effect on the participating children, with more incremental signs of success as a peace building and reconciliation measure at the community level.
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What is evolving in the Butterfly Garden is a culturally appropriate approach to healing and community that is growing out of the creative spirit inherent in children. This universal quality, expressed through play, may be as sacred and affirming as religious ritual is for adults.
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The Butterfly Garden endeavors to reflect the same attention to process in its community relations as it does with cultivating relationships of trust with the children. A UNICEF case study noted: Given the depth and intensity of war-experience that each child brings with him or her into the garden, it would be impossible to even begin nurturing the self-healing process unless a relationship of trust was established between the child and the animator. By building relationships with the children themselves, the space is created for the development of a more intimate relationship. Physical and emotional presence is a necessarybut by no means sufficientrequirement for the development of trust. As importantly, relationships of trust are cultivated with communities themselves, on all sides of the ethnic, religious, and political divides. The garden thrives within a network of trust between children, animator and child, animators, and the Butterfly Garden and the community. Any weakness in the net compromises the program. Training and program management. Building the personnel team takes a lot of dedicated effort. The program staff is all from the local area, and all aspects of developing a program and office start essentially from scratch. The main input from outside has been the Canadian artistic advisor and co-founder who resides there much of the time. The prospects of finding suitably qualified experts in Sri Lanka or elsewhere who are prepared to relocate to a war zone are slim. In the animators work with the children, offering ones unmediated presence is emphasized in order to respond creatively and spontaneously as the children probe various avenues of artistic expression. Such empathetic presence may catalyze self-healing in both the animators and in the children. It is important to note that the animators themselves have lived through war trauma; this heightens their sensitivity and empathy, but may also interfere or distort responses to the child. Community programming for war-affected children needs to have built-in healing potential for those who work with children. The Child-Driven Logic of the Butterfly Garden. Everything in the garden is shaped for and by childrenthe physical layout, play structures, program, food, and artwork. As one animator put it, children are the alpha and the omega of the Butterfly Garden. The result is a sense of ownership, comfort, and security, an oasis from the war-littered space beyond the walls of the garden. The structure and process are derived from the children, not dictated by what adults think children need or want. It is within this physical and psychic space that the opportunity for healing arises, allowing the child to leave the narrowand often constricting and violentworld of adults and enter into the sacred space of play. It is through play that children are able to touch their own originality and to see the originality of those around them.
Neutrality, transparency, open dialogue, and observing and exemplifying respect for basic child rights and nonviolent conflict resolution are seen as the best protection for the program and its personnel on site and in the community.
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From this, a substantial critique emerges of the donor-driven efforts targeting war-affected children that have led to a commodification of traumatized children and short-term programs of limited usefulness. Community programs for children should see them as children first who are to be given opportunities to be just that before being categorized.
The structure and process are derived from the children, not dictated by what adults think children need or want.
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development and humanitarian aid projects. In the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), and particularly in HIVOS, the Butterfly Garden has found allies willing to take risks with their funding, realizing perhaps how very urgent the need is to find innovative models that will at least begin to address the psychological healing of children in war zones. The view presented here asserts that motivation for program needs should come from the community as opposed to the community responding to the funders agenda. Strict adherence in project implementation to result-based outputs defined a priori is antithetical to what is necessary to build trust and practical approaches in this kind of project work. The underlying global and local factors fuelling wars like the one in Sri Lanka are grim and complex. There is a tendency to commodify trauma and children in war zones by humanitarian relief organizations to a (largely) secure and affluent Canadian domestic public. While this approach may catch public attention, it may not change the pain and retraumatization these children suffer as long as the situation remains unchanged. Advocacy efforts may be well-intentioned, but there is great risk that actions do not live up to words.
Motivation for program needs should come from the community as opposed to the community responding to the funders agenda. Strict adherence in project implementation to result-based outputs defined a priori is antithetical to what is necessary to build trust and practical approaches in this kind of project work.
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Discussion
A discussion of this case study addresses many issues that are of relevance for program designers interested in creating initiatives that aid war-affected children.
Consequences of Trauma
Trauma distorts the horizon of well-being that enables people to frame immediate hardship as transitory. In other words, trauma destroys the space children have available for growing into the future. Trauma does violence to childrens imaginative capacity. The imagination of the traumatized child can be held hostage by the uninvited recurrence of traumatic images. Traumatized children may suffer from anxiety and have difficulty concentrating. Children live more fully in the world of imagination and fantasy than adults, and disruptions of the interior, unseen world are especially troubling. Because healthy cognitive development depends on a sense of wonder and play, trauma can constrict cognitive growth by limiting the range and autonomy of the imagination (Garbarino and Kostelny, 1996). Traumatic experiences can also crush a childs aspirations for the future. A child who has narrowly escaped death may expect to be killed soon if social violence continues. The child may feel vulnerable, having lost a sense of control over immediate circumstances and the future. In this way, trauma distorts the horizon of well-being that enables people to frame immediate hardship as transitory. In other words, trauma destroys the space children have available for growing into the future. As a background, it is useful to consider how traumatic experiences effect children and their capacity for learning. An experience of violence can shatter childrens sense of basic trust in other people and the benevolence of their world. Hence, the world becomes a dangerous place that demands self-protective vigilance. Wounded children may come to expect hostility from their environment and interpret others behavior in that light, making aggressive behavior more likely. Trauma may also pull a child inward, causing withdrawal from peers and adults. By inducing fear and passivity, by replacing connection with estrangement, trauma makes the world a less spirited place.
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to remain constantly vigilant for danger. It gives them a child-friendly place, literally, another world, safe from the hostilities of the world around it and open to the boundless explorations of the imagination. In any post-conflict setting, Evans (1996) recommends that children have a secure place to gather, a place that they themselves own. The Butterfly Garden provides such a space; as Chase notes, everything in the garden is shaped for and by children. Children do not just play alone at the Butterfly Garden; the children are accompanied by young adults who themselves have undergone similar troubling experiences. The garden invites animators to connect with their own creative energies and use play as an avenue for their own healing. These mentors can function as models of resilience for the children and can provide credible guidance grounded in their own experience. This is especially important in Sri Lanka, given the number of adults either killed in conflict or working outside the country. The presence of caring mentors strengthens the social support network around the child and thus builds resistance to further trauma. The trusting bond that grows between the child and animators nurtures healing. It also helps the animators themselves contribute to the well-being of others and develop peacebuilding skills. In this sense, the garden is also a practical training center for a new cadre of community leaders. In the Butterfly Garden, the child is not treated as a patient or client of a service for mentally ill youth, but as a creative agent in authentic, sustained relationships with peers and mentors. The garden becomes a generative ground that nurtures the childs own process of trauma recovery. Rather than labeling the child as deficient or in need of treatment from experts, as many interventions tend to do, the garden assumes a capacity for healing within the child. What the garden offers is a protective space in which childrens innermost creative expressions can unfold and liberate them from being victims of trauma. While affirming the spiritual capacity of children for self-regeneration, this approach avoids religious sectarianism. Through its focus on children, the Butterfly Garden becomes a space for supporting social cohesion. Participants come from different ethnic groups and learn to develop constructive inter-ethnic relationships that may indirectly influence the attitudes of other family members. To extend its impact, the project stages operas that tour the community and fosters discussions about reconciliation. These activities can strengthen the climate of healing and nonviolence around the children and their families. The Butterfly Garden is a site where children can feel safe and immerse themselves in the joy of creative play. Yet the strength of the Butterfly Garden is also a limitation as a vehicle for social reconstruction, in that its activities are largely bounded by its physical site. As a single, central site, the project is not able to provide broad access. From 1996 to 1999, over three program cycles, approximately 500 children have participated in the
Rather than labeling the child as deficient or in need of treatment from experts, as many interventions tend to do, the garden assumes a capacity for healing within the child.
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gardens program, a relatively small percentage of war-affected children in the region.2 Nevertheless, the hundreds of children who have benefited from the garden become adults who possess deeper resilience and self-understanding and can become healers in their communities. Such qualities are critical for the future of Sri Lanka, a nation with the highest suicide rate in the world, where more people take their own lives than lose them in armed violence (Bush, 2001).
Managing Trust
There are also important lessons from the Butterfly Garden experience at an administrative level. The implementation of the project involved careful consideration of local stakeholders interests, and the development of the relationships and visibility necessary for the garden to thrive in a volatile political environment. Project implementers started with a community-based research project about the impact of social violence on children and then worked closely with local education officials to garner their endorsement of the project. These efforts built a solid foundation of support and legitimacy. On multiple levels, the Butterfly Garden has cultivated trust, as evidenced by agreements with local militias to allow free movement of the Butterfly Bus. Trust is a precious quality of relationship that promotes childrens healing as well as community support of the project. Trust is not always cultivated by the machinery of development assistance behind the project, however. Expectations of rapid, large-scale impact can run against the grain of processes needed to develop community-owned, locally-rooted projects that build on the creativity and regenerative capacity within children. Further, short-term funding cycles can pit local organizations against each other and increase pressure for quantified data on outcomes. As Chase points out, linear expectations for results do not support the subtle, often slow processes of healing and change underway in the Butterfly Garden.
Yet the strength of the Butterfly Garden is also a limitation as a vehicle for social reconstruction, in that its activities are largely bounded by its physical site.
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Originally, outreach plans for the Butterfly Garden called for the establishment of peace gardens in local villages. Those plans have been revised since then and more attention is being given to the development of new programs for adolescents and village festivals related to peace themes (Chase, 2000b).
What might a site for childrens creative expression and healing look like? Even amid the severe circumstances found in emergency How might such a site be staffed? situations, with imagination, and the goodwill of neighbors, communities can begin to grow their What interests would be threatened by such a project? own gardens of peace and hope.
How could a site for children support reconciliation and learning in the larger community?
What organizational funding patterns and reporting expectations frustrate the development of trusting relationships, among agencies and community partners?
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In your context, how could a site for childrens healing satisfy basic psychological needsfor children, families, and the community?
Children NEED
Security
Families
Community
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
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CHILDRENS PARTICIPATION
Children can be active agents in articulating their own needs and providing guidance for educational reconstruction.
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By Priya Coomaraswamy
Our learning from past experience pointed to a need for a greater understanding of childrens lives, experiences, needs, and issues, particularly from the perspective of children, if we are to understand the impact of program interventions on childrens lives.
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Excerpted from a chapter in Stepping Forward: Children and Young Peoples Participation in the Development Process. (1998). In V. Johnson, E. Ivan-Smith, G. Gordon, P. Pridmore, and P. Scott (Eds.), (pp. 161165). London: Intermediate Technology Publications. Reprinted with permission.
As we build a relationship of trust, children and adults should start to communicate and share their thoughts more freely.
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children were informed about the purpose of the research work and the dissemination of the findings. While their consent was obtained, the extent of understanding among the younger children needs to be reviewed. Age and maturity of children must be considered in efforts to involve children.
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CHILDREN
By encouraging partner organizations to adopt a child-focused approach to program development and use the UNCRC as a programming tool, attitudes towards child participation are being examined.
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The security situation in conflict areas frustrates regular extended interactions with children. It delays project development and creates concern among children and adults about their continued participation for project completion. Other organizations are also willing to explore child participation. The main hurdle is the attitudes of individuals. Our experience has underlined that this child-focused approach with its child rights perspective requires a different capacity of staff and a continued training input to develop the skills necessary for effective implementation. Children have shown that, given the opportunity and encouragement, they can contribute to developmental initiatives. The nature of their involvement could be an indicator of their increasing self-confidence and self-esteem.
Conclusion
The major thrust of our child-focused work has been to make children visible within the policy and practice of development initiatives. In SCF Sri Lanka, our work has created opportunities for exploring child participation. Our practical experience has shown that, while the process has its challenges, children can make significant contributions through participation in research and program development. Our learning will help develop further child-focused work in Sri Lanka.
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Discussion
Crisis management often implies expert intervention from outside the community. Discussions of educational reconstruction can be dominated by a technocratic rationality that maps the inputs required at each stage of reconstruction. While such an approach has a clear utility, it also has the potential to preempt local meaning making and participation in the recovery effort. It may be especially counterintuitive for some relief agencies and development planners to value childrens participation in emergency conditions. Although challenging to facilitate, childrens participation in analysis and decision-making may be especially important in the early phases of reconstruction. The breakdown of traditional authority and management structures can open spaces for childrens involvement, spaces that may close over time as those structures solidify. In post-conflict settings, childrens participation can be fundamental to a child-centered recovery process (Machel, 2000). The Convention on the Rights of the Child offers a strong basis for the promotion of childrens participation in educational reconstruction. War-affected children, like all other children, have the right to develop their talents and abilities to the fullest extent. Opportunities for children to participate in program planning and evaluation can support their personal development while improving programs in ways that matter directly to the children themselves. Although challenging to facilitate, childrens participation in analysis and decision-making may be especially important in the early phases of reconstruction. The breakdown of traditional authority and management structures can open spaces for childrens involvement, spaces that may close over time as those structures solidify.
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CHILDREN
in their communities. It is an opportunity for adults to modeland for children to practicethe skills of empathic listening, conflict resolution, and critical thinking. As Hart (1999) points out, enabling children to participate in project planning and implementation offers practice in democratic behavior, behavior at the core of building stable civil society. At the same time, participatory research activities such as mapping, modeling, and interviewing can be integrated with literacy and numeracy skill development. The practical work of collecting community data can provide children a concrete and meaning-rich context for working with basic competencies learned in school. As noted in the Sri Lankan case, childrens participation can be a valuable resource for the evaluation and monitoring of post-conflict programming. The lack of evaluation in such programming is one of the most disturbing gaps in the field. To better understand the outcomes of programs that aim to help children outgrow war, children should be consulted about their experiences. Moving beyond the extraction of information, projects might also involve children in co-constructing evaluation activities and interpreting the meaning of data. In this way, evaluation can become a catalyst for further dialogue and learning.
Rather than assuming women and girls wish to return to traditional ways after the end of a conflict period, agencies can use participatory activities to affirm women and girls capacities for decision-making and community leadership.
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Are facilitators willing and able to take the time necessary to build trusting relationships as a basis for shared inquiry? Are the conditions conducive to effective participation? (Is the environment safe? Is there a mix of opportunities for large-group, small-group, and individual conversations? How are children of mixed ages and abilities enabled to work together? Do activities occur on a schedule convenient for the children?) Are there meaningful outcomes to the effort that are visible to children? Care must be taken Such questions, and others asked by the Save the Children-UK project in Sri Lanka, indicate the level of reflection that should accompany participatory work with children. Child participation may also raise political concerns. The empowerment of children could be threatening to partisan groups. Rather than emphasizing an empowerment agenda, it may be safer to focus on child participation as a means of improving services (Pridmore, 1998). Generally, thoughtful reflection on the political, emotional, economic, and cultural context is necessary to inform child-centered project design and implementation processes. Child participationlike community participation generallycan be manipulated to serve pre-determined agendas. Given the dictates of results-oriented funding, project goals are usually established in advance of participant involvement, especially under conditions that emphasize efficiency and timely action. Doing so reduces the space available for authentic involvement in project design and implementation. Further, children are attractive for public relations efforts. War-affected children can be easily commodified, as noted by Chase in his discussion of the Butterfly Garden. Images of children in dialogue with adults may be used for symbolic capital to impress project funders, even though childrens participation may have little real influence in the dynamics of decision-making. Participation may even result in further disillusionment and frustration, as the gap between the rhetoric of participation and the realities of decision-making becomes clear. At worst, childrens participation can become a tool for manipulation, masking the real dynamics of authority at play in a given context. Care must be taken that childrens participation does not become a mere fund-raising tool or symbol of a projects good intentions. When considering potential roles for children, there should be honest assessment of power and the extent to which children will have a voice in decision-making processes. that childrens participation does not become a mere fundraising tool or symbol of a projects good intentions.
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Thoughtful reflection on the political, emotional, economic, and cultural context is necessary to inform child-centered project design and implementation processes.
What preparatory work would be necessary with NGO staff and community leaders to develop support for childrens participation?
How could participatory processes be made gender-sensitive in order to promote girls participation in project design and implementation?
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In your context, how could childrens participation satisfy basic psychological needs for children, community leaders, and NGOs?
Children NEED
Security
Community Leaders
NGOs
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
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PEACE EDUCATION
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By Margaret Sinclair
Background
The objective of the program was to develop materials and methodologies that could help build a better future for the refugees in these camps and that could be adapted to help refugees elsewhere. The normal practice in refugee schools is to use a curriculum similar to that of the childrens place of origin, or sometimes that of the country of asylum. For various reasons, the refugees present when education programs were established in the refugee camps in Kenya preferred to follow the Kenya curriculum. In the predominantly Somali camps in the North East, Somali is also taught. In the predominantly South Sudanese camps in the North West, the refugees hope to use an anglophone curriculum on the East African model after returning to their area of origin. The camps include a wide range of nationalities, and the crises from which the refugees have fled seem long-lasting. For these and other reasons, it was agreed that first an environmental and then a peace education program be piloted in the Kenya camps to enrich refugee education. The objective of the program was to develop materials and methodologies that could help build a better future for the refugees in these camps and that could be adapted to help refugees elsewhere. The six refugee camps (three in Dadaab and three in Kakuma) have a total population of almost 200,000 refugees. The refugees in Dadaab are predominately Somali but there are also Ugandans, Ethiopians, Sudanese, and Rwandans. In Dadaab, there are 15 primary schools with about 17,000 students. A few students attend a local secondary school. In Kakuma the refugees are predominately from southern Sudan, but a growing number are from elsewhere including Somalia (both Bantu and Somali), Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Liberia. In Kakuma there are 21 primary schools with about 20,000 students. There is also an established secondary school in the first camp and secondary classes beginning in the other camps. For historical reasons the population profile of Kakuma is heavily skewed towards youth. There are a large number of young Sudanese males who arrived as a group acknowledged as unaccompanied minors, who are now reaching adulthood. They are not necessarily recognized as a part of their own cultural group (e.g. there has been no initiation and historically they have remained separated from the general community).
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Excerpted from Refugee Education in Kenya: Education for a Peaceful and Sustainable Future. Case study posted in 2001 on the website of the UNESCO Emergency Education Assistance Unit. Available at www.unesco.org/education/emergency/casestudy/kenya.shtml.
Both areas have ethnic, cultural, religious, tribal/clan, and language diversity. It was felt that if programs could be designed that were appropriate for each of these groups and useful to all of them, then they might be useful as a starting point for future programs in the region. The peace education program is being developed in response to the perceived needs of the refugee communities and the violence inherent in the refugee camps. The environmental education program responds to the situation of these camps, which are in arid lands where damage to the fragile ecosystems is a cause of conflict with local people, and where daily life reflects a shortage of fuelwood, water, etc. Awareness-raising and skill development with respect to conflict resolution and concern for the environment will be helpful also in the case of repatriation, contributing to peaceful and sustainable reconstruction and development.
Community groups requested peace education trainings for themselves as well as for the schools.
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To strengthen and reinforce the conflict resolution activities being undertaken by refugees themselves in the camps, as well as any other initiatives related to peace education To monitor and evaluate the peace education program to ascertain its impact and worth To support the development of similar initiatives in other refugee situations Awareness-raising and skill development with respect to conflict resolution and concern for the environment will be helpful also in the case of repatriation, contributing to peaceful and sustainable reconstruction and development. The pedagogic objectives of the peace education pilot project are primarily the development of skills as follows:
Communication
Better listening Perceptions Feelings (emotions) Understanding the other person (empathy) Being fair to all sides (neutrality) Understanding of bias Understanding of stereotypes, discrimination, and prejudice
Appropriate assertiveness
Understanding of self Understanding of others Similarities and differences Assertion, aggression, and submission
Co-operation
Understanding of own and others strengths and weaknesses Trust
Critical thinking
Analysis Facts and opinion (impartiality and bias) Problem-solving
Conflict resolution
Negotiation Mediation
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Development of knowledge
Peace and conflict Justice Human rights and responsibilities Gender Interdependence
PEACE EDUCATION
The peace education program was developed following extensive participatory action research involving the various community groups.
Program Development
The peace education program was developed following extensive participatory action research involving the various community groups. The groups all stressed that a school program alone was not sufficient. There were specific requests for a similar program for the adult population as well. This would, inter-alia, reinforce and support the school program. The program therefore has several components and inter-linking parts: Peace education in schools Community workshops in peace education Public awareness for the community Peace education in nonformal education Peace education workshops for agency staff As with environmental education, the program developed from the philosophy that readyto-use lesson or session plans would be needed, because many teachers would not have the time or ability to develop these plans themselves, based on a generic training. Hence the first materials produced were as follows: Community Workshop Facilitators Manual: a guide of lesson plans, activities, and methodology for the facilitators of the community workshops (12 half-day sessions). Teachers Activity Book: a series of graded lesson plans covering one period per week for each year of primary school up to year seven for the various concept areas. It includes the methodology both for the lesson and the on-going concept development.
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Supplementary Materials: story books, pictures/posters to act as discussion starters, role play cards, and songs and poetry (traditional or written in the communities). Public Awareness Materials: posters, songs, poetry, and drama for street and community theater. Almost all of this material has come from the community groups themselves generally as a product of the workshops.
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The materials and methodologies developed in the Kenya pilot projects are serving as the basis for the development of locally-adapted programs in other refugee locations. It is intended that these approaches should be mainstreamed into normal refugee education programs. In this regard, it may be noted that the largest costs are those of start-up. Where there is not expertise already in place, the development work requires the employment of expert staff/consultants to work through the various stages from participative research to the development of materials, training of teachers and trainers, and so on. Formal and nonformal Apart from start-up costs, there will be some recurrent costs after mainstreaming. These should be integrated into normal education, environment, and other project budgets, but this can be difficult to ensure under situations of budget shortfalls common to organizations working in emergency situations. Ongoing dedicated financial and specialist support of a modest nature, if available, will help ensure the continued development of these programs. approaches should be harmonized: using a whole community approach when possible, and involving many community groups and events.
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Discussion
Violence does not end when a region has entered a post-conflict period. Aggression often persists in multiple forms: in revenge killings, inter-ethnic fighting, domestic abuse, and, more subtly, the erosion of hope for a habitable future. Hostility may be particularly common in refugee camps and other temporary settlements because they bring together diverse groups in unwelcome conditions.
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on the insight that peace education involves everyone. Thus, the project developed several community-based components, with school-oriented work as one aspect of the whole community approach. Such an approach touches on multiple layers of the ecology of learning. The lessons learned in the Kenyan peace education program merit reemphasis. First, peace education was developed alongside environmental education in a holistic approach that acknowledged the relationship between environmental degradation and social conflict. As with environmental education, it was found that peace education was a process, not a time-bound activity that would produce immediate outcomes. Further, the refugees themselves typically serve as peace education teachers and workshop leaders. Their training emphasizes the importance of modeling positive communication skills and the use of active pedagogical strategies (Baxter, 2001). An in-depth case study of the peace education program notes that the program is highly popular among refugees (Sommers, 2001). Evidence from interviews indicates that the project is bearing fruit: adult participants and some children have formed their own peace education groups and have been called upon to resolve conflicts in the camps. A limitation on the projects capacity to build peace, however, is that the participants tend to be people who already behave in peaceful ways (Sommers, 2001). Marginalized youth, the most violence-prone segment of the camp population, usually do not participate. Among adult participants, the project tends to serve the educated elite, often excluding women.
Teachers who demand unquestioning obedience or use physical punishment may undermine the development of nonviolent, democratic behaviors among students.
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of those they help. In short, valuing others is not merely a cognitive skill; it is learned through concrete experiences. Effective peace education, then, should include culturallysensible practice in collaboration, trusting, and caring for the welfare of others.
Positive Bystandership
There are some important dimensions of peacebuilding not covered in the case material presented here. In his research on group violence, Staub (1992) has found that bystanders can exert a powerful influence in stopping violence. Bystandersboth proximal and distantcan denounce the behavior of perpetrators and uphold the dignity of victims. Doing so can be especially effective in situations where a perpetrator group has dehumanized its victims and may believe that others support its aggression due to their complicity. Positive bystandership means a willingness to publicly address violations of human rights and human dignity. In terms of peace education, developing positive bystandership can be encouraged at the individual level, as children and adults are invited to discuss meaningful ethical issues and speak about their concerns for people being harmed in their communities. At another level, we might ask, how can the school itself serve as a positive bystander? Through public events (such as displays, dramas, and community dialogues), how can the school bear witness to violence and harmdoing? Preparing for such events can be an opportunity for adults and children to discuss their war-time experiences and provide a sense of efficacy in the creation of a more peaceful, positive future. Yet peace education may be politically volatile. In contexts in which power seems scarce and various groups struggle for dominance, there may be resistance to messages of collaboration and nonviolence. Continuous dialogue among all stakeholders is important to sustaining peace education initiatives, with special attention that the voices of children and women are heard.
Positive bystandership means a willingness to publicly address violations of human rights and human dignity.
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Understood broadly How do local communities traditionally manage conflict? as an effort to affirm nonviolent, inclusive values and practices among children and communities, peace What attitudes and skills might be important to promote in a peace education initiative? education is integral to building a new cultural infrastructure of collaboration across group boundaries. How can peace education reach beyond children to include other perpetrators of violence in the community?
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In your context, how could peace education satisfy basic psychological needsfor children, families, and the community?
PEACE EDUCATION
NEED
Security
Children
Families
Community
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
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PROJECT DIACOM
The real heroics of Bosnian teachers remind the rest of the world of what it too often forgets: That children are precious gifts that civil societies must protect.
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The Bosniak women wanted to reconnect with their neighbors as a cautious first step toward repatriation.
Three years ago, shortly after the cessation of the Bosnian War, I was pulled to Bosnia by the determination and vision of a Bosniak (Muslim)2 female refugee. With the aid of a translator shouting over the static of a Bosnian phone connection, Emsuda implored me to share my skills as a healer and peacebuilder with the women of northwestern Bosnia. Please come to Bosnia. Help us rebuild our lives. Karuna Center for Peacebuilding provides education and training in conflict transformation, reconciliation, and nonviolent social change. We often work with communities in transition and in regions torn by war and violence. To operate respectfully and in partnership, we enter other cultures and conflicts carefully. Emsudas invitation matched our mandate. Her connection to organizations close to our vision, such as the Fellowship of Reconciliation, paved the way for our first 1997 trip. Our hearts responded to Bosnia. Our experiences there reinforced our decision to engage. In the years since, Karuna Center has developed Projekt Dijakom, the Project for Dialogue and Community-Building, offering education and training in partnership with the Foundation for Community Encouragement (FCE), a Seattle-based NGO. FCE community-building leader Ann Hoewing and I currently facilitate seminars for educators three times yearly in two Bosnian cities: one Bosniak, the other Serb. Each trip to Bosnia includes dialogue workshops, follow-through conversations with former participants, meetings with educational administrators, and vigilant crisis management. The work that Karuna Center offers in Bosnia has evolved over the years as we closely follow the pace and guidance of our local partners. From an early emphasis on trauma healing and organizational development with Bosniak female leaders, our participants asked us to help them contact their former friends and colleagues: Serb women currently living across the official Inter-Entity Boundary Line. The Bosniak women wanted to reconnect with their neighbors as a cautious first step toward repatriation. The paired cities, Bosniak Sanski Most and Serbian Prijedor, with a combined population of about 160,000, once housed Serbs and Bosniaks, plus a smaller percentage of Croats, without regard to ethnicity. Under Tito, ethnic identity became a relic from the past, replaced with brotherhood and unity, his slogan for a united Yugoslavia. In fact, participants
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Excerpted from an article published in Peacework, November 1999, p. 46. Available at www.afsc.org/pwork/1199/119904.htm. Throughout, the term Bosniak is used to refer to Bosnian Muslims.
report that examining past history, especially past hatreds and atrocities, was a punishable offense. During the 199295 Bosnian war, however, with Tito dead and Milosevic in command, Prijedor was ethnically cleansed of Bosniaks, who faced expulsion, incarceration in camps, or death. Many of those Bosniaks who survived currently live in Sanski Most, just 36 kilometers away from land that may have belonged to their families for generations. As the war came to a close, Serbs living in the ethnically-mixed Sanski Most region also lost their ancestral homes as they fled to Prijedor in the Republika Srpska to live in safety with other Serbs. Out of their concern Criminality and brutality took hold in Prijedor as they did elsewhere in former Yugoslavia. Homes were pillaged and dynamited, mosques decimated, livestock and farmlands destroyed. Worse still, Prijedor gained a reputation for operating concentration camps early in the Bosnian war. Some Bosniak participants in our inter-ethnic seminars are survivors of those camps in Omarska, Trnopolje, and Keraterm. With this history, with this house-by-house destruction of people and property, why would the Bosniak women seek out their Serb neighbors? And why would they want to reside there again, among the ruins and ghosts? Unlike most Americans, Bosnians live deeply rooted in family, land, and place. Homes are often multi-generational, expanding to accommodate new members and handed down through the years. Refugee Bosnians in our groups actively fantasized reclaiming and rebuilding their beloved homesteads. Despite the tragedy, or in defiance of the tragedy, their vision of return kept hope alive through the years of exile and grief. The Bosniak women now hoped that dialogue with Serb women would help them understand the havoc. Perhaps dialogue would ease their way home. After careful reflection, we agreed to meet with Serb women in Prijedor to explore bicommunal dialogue. However, very few Serb women would risk encountering the Bosniaks. We imagine that the danger was too great both in terms of physical safety and emotional self-protection. Many women likely stood aside as the violence escalated; few risked their own lives to become rescuers. Now Serb women were being invited to an impossible conversation, and most declined. A few brave Serb women, however, participated in a five-day dialogue group. The women on both sides were fragile and overwhelmed by emotions. They did their best to create bonds of empathy based on their mutual despair, common history as Yugoslavs, and shared fate as female victims of a war they did not invite and could not control. Out of their concern for the next generation, they suggested that we work with Bosniak and Serb educators, whose attitudes and behaviors will partially determine the success of future repatriation and the reintegration of communities. Their advice led to the development of Projekt Dijakom for educators from Prijedor and Sanski Most. We secured endorsements from the ministers of education of the two political for the next generation, the women suggested that we work with Bosniak and Serb educators, whose attitudes and behaviors will partially determine the success of future repatriation and the reintegration of communities.
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entities, Republika Srpska and Bosnian Federation, so that Projekt Dijakom would be protected by official recognition and sanction. Initially, educators participated hesitantly, but their mission in shaping the future provided a common frame for building relationships. We have now facilitated seven inter-ethnic educators seminars, with more on the horizon in coming years. Each dialogue seminar lasts three to five days and welcomes about 25 educators, a mix of Serb and Bosniak teachers, school counselors, and administrators, both new and returning participants. We have also started our first training seminar to prepare a selected group of Serb and Bosniak educators as future project leaders and dialogue facilitators. Responsibility for Projekt Dijakom will shift to local facilitators as they strengthen their ability to confront their deeply conflicted identities, prejudices, and post-traumatic war wounds. Each inter-ethnic gathering of educators feels like another small miracle to me. Remembering their extremely recent history, I can hardly imagine how we can sit in the circle together, let alone conduct rational conversations. But we do, step by step, despite denial, revisionist history, blame, and evasion, let alone multiple traumas and unprocessed grief. Each day of the workshop we remain in dialogue, facing the past in order to have a future, and learning the theories and skills of communication and peacebuilding. The long-term goals of Projekt Dijakom include sensitizing a significant number of educators in the two school districts in multi-cultural tolerance and socially responsible behaviors, so as to make repatriation possible for those Bosniak and Serb families who wish to return home. We hope participants will use their communication and conflict resolution skills to address past injustices and perceptions of history, strengthen crossborder cooperation, and promote what we have named welcoming schools. Our teaching methods are participatory and innovative. Accustomed to traditionally structured classrooms, teachers sometimes replicate our democratic and collaborative styles in their classrooms. We present issues of group process and civic responsibility new to Bosnians educated under Yugoslavias communism. After my presentation of the cycles of violence and reconciliation at a recent workshop, a Serb teacher commented that these concepts ought to be taught on Serbian television. Workshops are designed to provide a safe container for the wide spectrum of feelings present in the group. We observe participants testing safety, becoming vulnerable, and self-disclosing as they feel trust. Slowly, Serbs and Bosniaks who have segregated themselves begin ethnically mixed conversations, acknowledging together the enormous post-war problems and the long road toward restoration and healing.
The long-term goals of Projekt Dijakom include sensitizing a significant number of educators in the two school districts in multi-cultural tolerance and socially responsible behaviors, so as to make repatriation possible for those Bosniak and Serb families who wish to return home.
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We pay close attention to the rhythms of the group, shifting our agendas to match their emerging needs. Often a crisis erupts, challenging us to design an intervention on the spot. The group crisis may be a sharp expression of ethnic prejudice or blame, an issue of member dominance or withdrawal, an inappropriate verbal attack, or a dispute about history and memory. Each crisis becomes an opportunity to examine issues of individual and collective authority and responsibility in Bosnia, critical concerns in this postwar period of establishing civil society. We encourage participants to have a dialogue rather than a debate, to accept divergent perspectives, to identify both common ground and differences, to soften rhetoric and emphasize feelings, to behave respectfully, and to address past issues with as much honesty as they can manage. We alternate the focus between their responsibilities as educators for modeling tolerance and their roles as human beings caught in their own process of grief, rage, prejudice, and fear. Although it is emotionally safer for participants to focus on their dilemmas as educators outside the dialogue group, we observe how much learning develops in each moment of contact between Serb and Bosniak group members. We know that fear, hurt, and historical grievances fuel communal aggression. Deeply wounded people often become caught in cycles of anger and grievance fueled by ideology and mythology. Politicians and media play on these historical memories, contributing to endless cycles of revenge and counter-violence. All of these wounds, beliefs, myths, and traumas are present in the dialogue. As facilitators we must be allies to Bosniaks and Serbs, encouraging them to recognize the suffering of others and to express their own needs in ways that do not perpetuate revenge. At the same time, we must guard against denial or revisionism about the Bosnian War, in which not all suffering was equal and where there were victims and perpetrators, rescuers and bystanders. Movement toward a well-rooted and sustainable peace in Bosnia calls for a transformation in the severed relationships between the ethnic groups. Without that, the Dayton Accords and other official agreements will continue to be sabotaged by the people. Postwar changes in attitudes and behaviors require conscious intention and continuous reinforcement to counteract patterns of hatred, blame, and counter-violence. Strategies like sustained dialogue encourage and reinforce the shifts required to establish new social behaviors. Educators represent a critical sector within Bosnian society. We know their acceptance of each other as Serbs and Bosniaks in northwest Bosnia is crucial to a sane future for this region. We also acknowledge that their tragic history makes every inter-ethnic conversation an act of courage and an experience of grace. As we reflect on the series of seminars already completed and look toward the next two years of continued dialogue and community-building, we see both positive and challenging patterns. Plagued by their traumas, histories, and current nationalist mythologies, defensiveness falls away slowly and unevenly. We have no yardstick to measure the pace
PROJECT DIACOM
We encourage participants to have a dialogue rather than a debate, to accept divergent perspectives, to identify both common ground and differences, to soften rhetoric and emphasize feelings, to behave respectfully, and to address past issues with as much honesty as they can manage.
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Postwar changes in attitudes and behaviors require conscious intention and continuous reinforcement to counteract patterns of hatred, blame, and counter-violence.
of progress, nor can we account for the myriad social pressures within families and communities that press against change. From our own experiences as Americans we recognize the tenacity of racism and prejudice in the individual and collective psyche. Thus we note and affirm each positive shift of attitude, deviation from dominant ideology, and gesture of warmth and reconciliation. Despite the slow pace and backsliding, there are triumphs. Graduates of our program have initiated an inter-ethnic educators group and enthusiastically teach newly acquired skills to students and colleagues. In the future, as families repatriate in both directions, we know that educators from Projekt Dijakom will reach out their hands in welcome, modeling a future where conflicts are transformed by dialogue, kindness, and mutual respect.
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In this section, I attempt to emphasize a different approach to assessing assistance for education in complex emergencies and to give a more personal testimony. Rather than just looking through the lens and experience of an international relief practitioner, I would like to provide an insight through the plight of the Bosnian teachers. In this way, I differentiate between international relief practitioners from other countries who provide technical expertise and assistance during an emergency and local practitioners/professionals from the country in crisis who remain, adapt, and provide their own response. In the process of looking at the experiences of local practitioners during an emergency, issues related to assistance in the post-emergency period are addressed. To do this, I have raised the following questions: To what extent is assistance to education critical in a complex emergency? To what extent should assistance in education go beyond providing basic supplies to providing training programs that consider both immediate and longer-term needs? Who should be involved in making decisions regarding the kind of assistance to be provided? It is argued that understanding is embedded in the experiences of those most affected by a complex emergency. Thus, priorities for assistance identified by local practitioners provide a critical source of knowledge that should inform decision-making within international relief agencies. This points to the need in a complex emergency to give a stronger voice to local practitioners. While this chapter is specific to the context of education in Bosnia where local educators continue to work through fragile, but still functioning, educational governance structures, these questions have implications for other contexts. During the war, teachers, like many educators serving in various capacities throughout the system, made conscious decisions to keep schools functioning. They expressed a powerful belief that education was one of the foundations of life in a stable society and should remain so in time of war. Even if the structure and content of the education system
. . . understanding is embedded in the experiences of those most affected by a complex emergency. Thus, priorities for assistance identified by local practitioners provide a critical source of knowledge that should inform decision-making within international relief agencies.
Excerpted from Cohen, L. (1998). Aid to Education in the Bosnian Complex Emergency: Giving Voice to Local Practitioners. In G. Retamal and R. Aideo-Richmond (Eds.) Education as a Humanitarian Response (pp. 142151). London: Cassell. The Continuing International Publishing Group. Reprinted with permission of the publisher.
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would be forced to change in order to accommodate an often brutal and dangerous environment, schools in some form would continue to be a source of stability.
PROJECT DIACOM
To respond to the emergent needs of children during the war, Bosnian teachers were forced to reconsider not only their educational practice but also the role and function of schools at war.
Teachers could no longer rely on a pre-war educational structure that mandated what, where, and how to teach. Traditional sources of authority could no longer provide the level of financial, material, and intellectual support and, therefore, the level of guidance that existed before the war. In some cases, even those who were mobilized to teach had no formal teacher education training. They had to depend on their teaching instincts. To maintain educational provision, they had to improvise and innovate out of necessity. Therefore, in many ways, decisions about what to do in a school, including what should be the structure of a school under conflict, fell on these individual teachers. Teachers became school-makers in ways that before April 1992 seemed unimaginable. As Garman and Piantanida (1995) write, in times of social upheaval or crisisteachers are called upon to broaden their vision of their role. As traditional school infrastructures disintegrate, teachers find themselves in the position of school-making. By school-making, these authors refer to the ability of teachers to develop approaches to the design and orientations of the learning environment so as to address the critical needs of children experiencing profound crisis and upheaval in their lives. To respond to the emergent needs of children during the war, Bosnian teachers were forced to reconsider not only their educational practice but also the role and function of schools at war. As school-makers in a complex emergency, Bosnian teachers were in a position to articulate what kind of assistance they needed from international relief agencies to support their work. To underscore the importance of assistance to education in emergency and to begin to provide a space for reflection and to give a voice to local practitioners, the responses of Bosnian teachers were put forward during training seminars organized by UNICEF and the University of Pittsburgh. Of particular importance was the dialogue that took place in July 1995 with Bosnian teachers and teacher educators from the canton of Zenika, located in central Bosnia. This event was organized in co-operation with the local Pedagogical Institute and Pedagogical Academy. The training program in active learning was designed as a follow-up to recommendations from the first assessment conference on the status of education and effects of the war, held in Sarajevo in November of 1994. On that occasion, the Ministry of Education identified training programs for teachers as a priority. Many educators throughout Bosnia had expressed their concern about the ability of teachers to cope with the changing conditions of schools and the emergent learning and psychological needs of children during the war. It was reported that the education system had functioned, in some cases, due to the commitment and sheer willpower of teachers: educational resources had been scarce, school buildings had been destroyed, and children exhibited behavioral problems and stress uncommon under normal conditions. Salaries for teachers were nonexistent and schools had to undertake many different functions.
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Activities designed to give a voice to teachers as they cope and respond to complex emergencies raise questions for future discussions and research. These activities pose questions about the role and importance of education in civil society. Participant Bosnian teachers, including those who became teachers during the war, identified assistance in education as a critical priority. They exhibited a profound commitment by continuing to teach, often under extremely chaotic conditions. While the crisis in education was not as visible as that in the health sector, for most practicing teachers the emergency was real and related to the immediate and long-term psychological and spiritual survival of a generation of children and young adults. However, Bosnian teachers, even in the middle of an intense war, retained a vision of the future. As reported during these seminars, this vision included maintaining an education system as much as possible, even if rooms or classrooms were destroyed and educational materials were nonexistent. To teachers, as well as other committed educators, maintaining schools not only meant that children could learn during the war, but also that some sense of normalcy could remain in childrens lives even in the midst of social, economic, and political upheaval. This dialogue among local practitioners helped to make clear that, during a complex emergency, the role and function of schooling expands, as does the role of teachers. Bosnian educators from pedagogical institutes became school-makers in ways that never seemed imaginable before 1992. Their efforts were not only to provide support to schools, but also to support training programs that enhanced the capacity of untrained teachers to meet the new challenges and the emergent needs of students. Too often, the testimonies of local practitioners, their coping mechanisms, and the provision of adapted responses to the educational challenges are left out of the process of assistance in complex emergencies. The UNICEF/University of Pittsburgh program, by creating the conditions of a timely dialogue among educators in Bosnia-Herzegovina under the conditions of war, has contributed to the important need to collect and document the testimonies and voices of local practitioners in order to better understand their priorities, needs, and experiences for the reconstruction of a viable future education system.
To teachers, as well as other committed educators, maintaining schools not only meant that children could learn during the war, but also that some sense of normalcy could remain in childrens lives even in the midst of social, economic, and political upheaval.
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Discussion
CT PROJECT M DIACOM
In troubled times, teachers can be a cornerstone of child protection and positive social change. Teachers have a direct impact on the lives of the children they teach, and they have a key role in shaping the climate of their schools as well as the values and discourses of their communities. As Green (1999) points out, teachers can help create the social fabric of tolerance that enables displaced families to return home and live amicably beside former enemies. By modeling processes of trust-building and nonviolent conflict resolution, Project DiaCom involves teachers in a deep experiential learning activity that informs their teaching and behavior with family, friends, and others.
By modeling processes of trust-building and nonviolent conflict resolution, Project DiaCom involves teachers in a deep experiential learning activity that informs their teaching and behavior with family, friends, and others.
Building Trust
Most crisis settings involve deep, overlapping social cleavages. Dialogue between groups is a crucial dimension of the recovery process. There are some core principles suggested in the work of Project DiaCom that may be useful to dialogue projects elsewhere. First, dialogue cannot be forced. Participants must come to it voluntarily, when they are ready to begin listening to the experience of the other group. Reconciliation must be a local agenda; outsiders cannot demand it. Reconciliation efforts that are undertaken too quickly by international agencies may have the unfortunate consequence of increasing tensions (Maynard, 1999). Further, dialogue develops slowly. Before moving to more difficult topics, Green invites participants to discuss themes of common interest such as hopes for their children. Such conversations are relatively safe, and they affirm common concerns in ways that lay the foundation for reconciliation. Participants build trust with each other as their sense of security grows. Such trust enables greater vulnerability, which, in turn, can support deeper dialogue. Sustained inter-ethnic dialogue also requires support from local authorities. As did the developers of the Butterfly Garden in Sri Lanka, the leaders of Project DiaCom discussed their work with local stakeholders and gained official sanction before the project began. Doing so gave the dialogue a professional legitimacy that encouraged teachers engagement.
Understanding Violence
Another important aspect of Greens work is that she uses conceptual models about the cyclical nature of violence that shed light on what Bosnia has suffered. Gaining such comprehension can demystify the experience and provide insight into how the cycle can be broken. Helping traumatized people realize that they are not alone, that others have experienced similar patterns of violence, can change the meaning of the experience. Conceptual understanding of the origins and dynamics of social violence helps people feel reconnected with humanity and may also humanize perpetrators (Staub and Perlman, 2001).
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Project DiaCom functions as a kind of peace education program for teachers themselves. Analyzing the conflict with new conceptual tools helps teachers engage with their own ideological positions and the ways in which they may demonize other social groups. They gain a new level of self-awarenessa challenging, but critical aspect of peacebuilding in the long term. For a more peaceful society to arise from violent social conflict, teachers, students, and whole communities need to address how their own beliefs may have contributed to the legitimacy of violence.
Green notes that some school principals are more interested in the project as a vehicle for teacher training than for reconciliation, given the political sensitivities of that issue (Miller, 2000).
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Supporting School-makers
The concept of school-making highlights the critical role that teachers play in helping children outgrow war. In post-conflict settings, teachers have new responsibilities, and, often, new conviction about the importance of their work for protecting children amid the wreckage around them. Crises present an opportunity for teachers, in dialogue with parents and students, to take on the role of school-makers as used by Cohen. It is a powerful moment for de facto decentralization, when former dependency on central authority transforms into reliance on self and immediate community. In such moments, teachers need support in tapping community resources and in tapping their own capacities for resilience and leadership. For agencies involved in educational reconstruction, a key goal should be listening to teachers and supporting their school-making efforts. As Cohen asks, how can teachers be engaged as leaders in dialogue about training needs and reconstruction options? How can agencies involved in educational reconstruction better listen to teachers, as a means of helping communities develop their own positive visions of the future?
The concept of schoolmaking highlights the critical role that teachers play in helping children outgrow war. In post-conflict settings, teachers have new responsibilities, and, often, new conviction about the importance of their work for protecting children amid the wreckage around them.
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Indeed, innovative approaches to school staffing may create tangled political and administrative problems for education officials. Sustainability becomes a concern: can innovations started under post-crisis conditions be reasonably continued? In several reviews of educational reconstruction principles, sustainability is emphasized as a guiding principle in human resource decisions (Miller-Grandvaux and Moreau, 2000). Involving paraprofessionals in a teaching staff may raise problems in later stages of reconstruction, if not considered from a long-term perspective. Project designers need to consider how emergency responses and temporary measures will evolve as reconstruction proceeds.
PROJECT DIACOM
Safeguarding Civility
As was evident in the school-in-a-box discussion, the symbolic importance of schooling for reestablishing a sense of normalcy is often emphasized in the post-conflict education literature. The presence of teachers is important to communities as a reminder that civil society has not been destroyed. Writing about Bosnia, McClure describes how teachers, by their very presence, point toward a better future: One of the great lessons Bosnian teachers on all sides of the war have taught the rest of the world is that basic education is more than teaching literacy in school buildings. It is more than a traditional civil service job with a small but steady paycheck. It is more than a new building or a winning athletic team. It is a fundamental moral commitment to the protection of childrens futures. This protection lies not in buildings or government mandates but in the civility and resourcefulness of people who chose not to allow their ethnic identities to overwhelm their professional ethics (1998, p. 14). It is that same sense of moral commitment to future generations that brought the Bosniak and Serb teachers together in Project DiaCom. They realized that by working on their own emotions of fear and anger, by working on their own struggles with reconciliation, they could better support and mentor children in the skills needed for a multi-cultural society. Although these teachers were not responsible for the war, they took responsibility for promoting peace within their lives and in their teaching. Teachers have a critical role in post-conflict settings as protectors of social stability and, in a larger sense, as guardians of the future. Listening closely to teachers and supporting their efforts to protect children may be one of the most important actions agencies can make toward helping children outgrow war.
engaged as leaders in dialogue about training needs and reconstruction options? How can agencies involved in educational reconstruction better listen to teachers, as a means of helping communities develop their own positive visions of the future?
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How can crises open possibilities for community members to contribute to schools? To what extent has conflict forced teachers to become school-makers?
What leverage do teachers have in supporting reconciliation and dialogue in their communities?
How might the Project DiaCom approach be modified to fit local circumstances?
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In your context, how do teachers efforts to maintain schools satisfy basic psychological needsfor children, teachers, and the community? Children NEED
Security
Teachers
Community
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
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COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP
Educational The case that follows describes a community leadership training program that was carried out for NGO employees working with refugee and IDPs (internally-displaced persons) in Azerbaijan in 2000. The case discusses the cultural and psychosocial feasibility of such an undertaking, as well as project design issues that need to be considered by policymakers interested in initiating socio-economic development programs in refugee and IDP communities. Although it does not involve children directly, this type of initiative illustrates an important dimension of a comprehensive approach to post-conflict reconstruction. By creating opportunities for women and men to feel a greater sense of competence and hope, the project strengthens the support system around children. Educational interventions alone, even broadly conceived, are best accompanied by efforts to build organizational capacity and income-generating possibilities. These efforts help open the long-term horizon of hope that motivates learning and supports well-being. interventions alone, even broadly conceived, are best accompanied by efforts to build organizational capacity and incomegenerating possibilities.
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LAUNCHING COMMUNITY MOBILIZATION INITIATIVES AS A STRATEGY FOR STRENGTHENING SOCIAL COHESION: Conclusions from a Learning Experiment
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The project aimed to enable 35 women and men working with international and local NGOs, as well as representatives of refugee community boards, to support community leaders in the refugee settlements.
In 2000, the Caucasian Republic of Azerbaijan carried the sad distinction of being one of the countries hosting the highest percentage of refugees or internally displaced people (IDPs) in the world. As a result of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict in the early 1990s, approximately 1 million Azerbaijanis were forced to relocate into the eastern provinces of the country. Living in humiliating conditions such as tent villages, barracks, offices, boarding schools, and even railway cars, refugees and IDPs continue to await the day when they, perhaps, will be able to return to their western homeland. In the meantime, Azerbaijani IDPs suffer greatly from the disintegration of their extended family structures. They have experienced the loss of place and personal dignity, as well as the destruction of a sense of community and closeness with other people. They tend to be at risk of, or suffer from, trauma-related psychiatric disorders. The international NGO community, which had provided relief since the early 1990s, has come to realize that it will no longer be able to continue to provide traditional relief services as it has done in the past. With no end to the conflict in sight, there was little purpose to continue to distribute, year after year, clothing, medicine, or food. It was understood that traditional relief work would only increase refugees/IDPs sense of dependency and, at the same time, their resentment against foreign presence and assistance. Because the future prospects of Azerbaijans refugees/IDPs were unpredictable and possibly void of major opportunities for improvement, many NGOs decided to shift from traditional refugee relief service to the implementation of development-related strategies, such as community mobilization support.
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Based in part on an unpublished report produced by Affolter, F. W. and Findlay, H. J. (2000). Assessment of Community Mobilization and Leadership Problems and Challenges in Azerbaijani IDP and Refugee Camps. Funded by USAID through the Global Training for Development Project, Baku, Azerbaijan.
war-torn, post-Soviet Azerbaijan into a liberal market-based society, through enhancing grassroots development initiatives in Azerbaijani refugee communities. Specifically, the project aimed to enable 35 women and men working with international and local NGOs, as well as representatives of refugee community boards, to support community leaders in the refugee settlements. In the end, participants were expected to train community members in the area of community leadership (management, participatory research, conflict resolution, project design, proposal writing, etc.), as a catalyst for community-generated development projects. Some participants The training program consisted of several blocks. The trainees first participated in a twoweek seminar to study community leadership and research methods. They also carried out a community needs assessment and then analyzed the resulting data. Eventually they proposed a list of their own training needs. Next, a selected group of Azeri NGO personnel were invited to participate in a fourweek training seminar to study participatory research, adult education methods, planning and project design, proposal writing, conflict resolution, lobbying, and networking. Towards the end of this workshop, participants were asked to develop an action plan for stand-up trainings on one or more topics in refugee communities. Later, participants reconvened for a two-week session that enabled them to complete their training preparations. Participants were video-taped when delivering their practice trainings and given feedback from their mentors. From then on, participants were expected to continue to provide leadership workshops to interested community members as part of their professional work as NGO employees. They assisted communities in the execution of participatory needs assessments and the drafting of project proposals (as, for example, for the purchase of infrastructure for laying water pipes, building community centers, or starting up micro-businesses such as a vegetable canneries), to be submitted to funding agencies in the Azeri capital, Baku. This overall process proved to be effective in some areas and ineffective in others. As far as the transfer of training was concerned, most newly trained NGO trainers delivered fairly successful training designs to their colleagues. Indeed, some participants (especially members of rural communities) reported successful workshop deliveries in various refugee camps, which not only produced an enormous boost to their own self-esteem, but also sometimes resulted in finding new employment opportunities. In this sense, the capacity to effectively deliver workshops and training seminars had an empowering effect on the trainees as well as the communities. Nonetheless, the limited amount of time available for training allowed participants to develop training skills on the basis of only one workshop development experience. There (especially members of rural communities) reported successful workshop deliveries in various refugee camps, which not only produced an enormous boost to their own selfesteem, but also sometimes resulted in finding new employment opportunities.
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In order to guarantee a more successful transfer of knowledge and skills in these areas, it would have been necessary to provide more time for practice in the workshops, as well as supervised delivery within the communities.
was no continuation or follow up that would have encouraged participants to branch out into other topics and develop a broader resource base of training ideas. Consequently, participants who had focused on conflict resolution continued to address this topic in their work with communities, without ever exploring the delivery of workshops on community needs assessment or project design and proposal writing. And others who had become versatile in community needs assessments and proposal writing were never encouraged to face the challenge of preparing and delivering workshops on conflict resolution. In order to guarantee a more successful transfer of knowledge and skills in these areas, it would have been necessary to provide more time for practice in the workshops, as well as supervised delivery within the communitiesareas that had simply not been budgeted for by the project designers. Only four teams were ultimately successful in submitting proposals for community development projects, with or on behalf of the IDP communities. Some of those had to be rejected due to weaknesses in the overall project design. The low number may be in part due to the fact that participants had other obligations with their organizations; however, it was also due to the fact that there was not enough opportunity to engage in supervised practice activities in project design and proposal writing.
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Discussion
This training experience leads to several insights and recommendations regarding the use of community mobilization training in IDP communities. The discussion that follows will first explore limitations to the effectiveness of the overall project idea. It will then discuss the reasons why community mobilization training can be a means of meeting basic psychological needs and initiating community development for adult participants, as well as the children they care for.
Cultural, Organizational, and Psychosocial Considerations that Make Community Mobilization Initiatives Appear Unfeasible
NGO extension personnel working in IDP and refugee communities encountered a series of obstacles in their efforts to contribute to community mobilization. 1. Soviet Style Civic Participation. Interested in promoting participatory decisionmaking and research techniques, extension workers struggled against a Soviet management legacy that, during the past 75 years, had discouraged, if not forbidden, independent grassroots decision-making processes. The citizenry of Azerbaijan as well as other former Soviet member states had been socialized into a pattern of Soviet style civic participation that consisted of absolute obedience to vertical administrative structures as well as the loyal execution of committee decisions. Citizens had been trained to rely on the government to provide food, jobs, and housing. To expect that NGO extension workers would be able to quickly undo this mental model of socio-economic dependency was unrealistic. 2. Community Leadership, East and West. It also became questionable whether the term participatory community mobilization used by international NGOs corresponded with the cultural understanding or expectations of Azerbaijanis on how decision-making processes in communities ought to be carried out. The term community leadership, for example, is in itself problematic. Leadership, when translated into Azeri, does not have the same connotations as it does in Western cultures. Azeri vocabulary has terms for key people or active people who consult on behalf of the community just as key people in political parties canvass with other key persons. This behind-the-scenes leadership does not necessarily involve seeking consensus for making decisions on behalf of the community. 3. Loss of Family Networks. It also became apparent that leaders were not prepared to effectively facilitate community change. IDPs themselves did not perceive each other as members of one community. Settlements were an amalgamation of individuals and families that happened to flee different areas of the occupied territories and were grouped together by default. 4. Intrinsic Motivation. Finally, NGO extension workers came to recognize an apparent emotional inhibition and apathy on part of many refugee and IDP community members to engage in self-initiated actions geared toward creating a better future
Citizens had been trained to rely on the government to provide food, jobs, and housing. To expect that NGO extension workers would be able to quickly undo this mental model of socioeconomic dependency was unrealistic.
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within the squatter settlements. After seven years of waiting under humiliating circumstances in the aftermath of traumatic circumstances (many were driven violently from their homelands), the emotional resources of the IDP groups were often depleted. Families continued to see their children grow up with no opportunities to generate income that would allow them to start their own families. Older parents shared their one-room shelters with their recently married children who lacked the opportunity to obtain their own housing. Health care continued to be unavailable. Unemployment dispirited men even more than women. Signs of social morbidity (abuse, alcoholism, suicide, etc.) were on the increase. Obviously, refugees and IDPs were interested in working on a better future, but a better future within squatter settlements was, in their eyes, absurd. After all, where they were staying was not their land! Why should they invest in soil that was not even theirs? Obviously, refugees and IDPs were interested in working on a better future, but a better future within squatter settlements was, in their eyes, absurd. After all, where they were staying was not their land! Why should they invest in soil that was not even theirs? 2. Experiential Learning and Attitudinal Change. A second argument for the introduction of participatory community mobilization methods was the recognition that participatory community practice enhanced natural experiential learning, which, in turn, facilitated social learning and coping with unaccustomed life situations. Hence, engaging community members in participatory project and problem analysis was likely to spark interest in active community development learning, as well as strengthening social cohesion at the local level. Elsewhere it has been argued that enhancing the development of local institutions that give people a voice is a key ingredient for creating the social infrastructure (or local social capital) necessary for developing sustainable problem-solving approaches in postconflict situations (see Colletta and Cullen, 2000). 3. Community Mobilization and Healing. Practices such as participatory research, planning and problem-solving have the potential for helping people overcome trauma, enter a process of healing, and thereby contribute to conflict reduction in the long run. The creation of joint goals and shared efforts creates positive
Cultural, Organizational, and Psychosocial Considerations in Favor of Investing in Community Mobilization Initiatives
Despite these challenges of initiating project relationships with refugees and IDPs, there were also strong arguments for mobilizing refugees to undertake community development initiatives. 1. Dynamics of Structural Change. The traumatic changes experienced by refugee/IDP communities contributed to a change in traditional perceptions of gender roles and responsibilities. Women began to play an active role in community mobilization and decision-making processes, and in some cases became the officially recognized representatives of their communities. Azerbaijani women frequently turned out to be key collaborators in NGO efforts to improve community infrastructures.
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connections, which in turn may contribute to the satisfaction of basic emotional needs such as security, belonging, and effectiveness. Writing about healing at the community level, Staub (1998) points out: Constructive visions are important. A victim group needs both to engage in the past, in the form of memorials, rituals, grieving, and empathy with themselves, and to look at and move towards the future A constructive vision of the future that is inclusive, that embraces all segments of society and points to goals around which people can unite, can fulfill basic needs and bring practical fruits (p. 236). Community development projects, initiated locally, can help solidify the shared visions that can unite fragmented communities and improve the prospects for lasting peace. 4. Spill-Over Effects for the Dependents of Project Participants. Although there is only anecdotal evidence, it is not far-fetched to assume that successful project experiences that respond to the individual and collective needs of refugee communities ultimately also satisfy the emotional needs of children. The successful construction of a school building or a community center as a product of community-spirited action has symbolic value and will be noticed as such by children and others who have not been involved directly, thereby boosting their resilience. Generally, the level of confidence and competence experienced by adults has a profound influence on childrens ability to endure the hardships of social displacement. Community development projects, initiated locally, can help solidify the shared visions that can unite fragmented communities and improve the prospects for lasting peace.
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3. Psychosocial Purpose. Workshops dedicated to instruct community outreach personnel in participatory techniques predominantly focus on facilitation skills, social research, and perhaps adult pedagogies. Seldom or never do they address the psychosocial benefits of collaborative research and learning. It would be worthwhile to encourage trainees to not only consider the social and psychological implications of participatory action research, but also the psychosocial benefits of planning and working together. Overall, the Azerbaijan community mobilization experience offers valuable insights into the complexities of participatory work with displaced communities. Participatory community development efforts can turn out to be strategic tools in helping refugee communities to undertake socio-economic development initiatives, as well as enhance subjective feelings of security, effectiveness, control, and comprehension of community circumstances. Nonetheless, communities need to be coached for a longer period of time. Their supervisors need to adopt the role of critical friends who assist communities struggles to self-organize, by providing assistance and know-how wherever scaffolding is needed, but by fading out and standing back wherever communities appear able to advance on their own. This cannot be done through training workshops alone, but requires long-term working relationships. Although a community mobilization program is not directly oriented to supporting the children of the community, it may contribute indirectly to childrens socio-emotional well-being, as long as it succeeds in sparking hope, confidence, zest, and satisfaction in the minds and hearts of childrens caregivers. Grassroots development initiatives provide a context to support the healing and learning that help children outgrow war.
Although a community mobilization program is not directly oriented to supporting the children of the community, it may contribute indirectly to childrens socio-emotional wellbeing, as long as it succeeds in sparking hope, confidence, zest, and satisfaction in the minds and hearts of childrens caregivers.
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Grassroots In what ways might community mobilization training contribute to community development? development initiatives provide a context to support the healing and learning that help What would be the essential elements of effective community mobilization training for local groups? children outgrow war.
What level of commitment with regard to staff and time would be needed for reaching training goals?
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In your context, how could community mobilization training satisfy basic psychological needsfor children, trainees, and the community?
Children NEED
Security
Trainees
Community
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
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Creating an environment around children in which violence is not tolerated and human rights are actively defended is a necessary complement to child-centered projects in an ecologically-oriented approach to helping children outgrow war.
Based on the case study, a group known as Psychologists for Social Responsibility awarded IPEDEHP their annual award for Building Cultures of Peace in 1999 (Bernbaum, personal communication, January 2002). For her report, Bernbaum interviewed 20 participants, their families, and members of their communities. This study was not intended to be a program evaluation, rather, it was intended to show the impact the program could have on participants. Thus, Bernbaum deliberately focused on those participants who applied what they learned in their home communities. (Approximately 40 percent of trainees are not active in follow-up.)
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HUMAN
WEAVING TIES OF FRIENDSHIP, TRUST, AND COMMITMENT TO BUILD DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
3
Background
Over a three-day period participants are introduced to basic concepts of human rights, democracy, citizen participation, and interactive training methodologies that they can take back to their communities. From this context, the Peruvian Institute for Education in Human Rights and Peace (IPEDEHP) emerged. The institute is composed of a group of educators, with backgrounds working in the Ministry of Education and in popular education, who met through their common interest in human rights as members of Amnesty International in the early 1980s. For its first 10 years IPEDEHP focused on teachers who had been particularly affected by the violence. Recognizing that the teachers were themselves key targets (both on the part of the terrorists and the military), IPEDEHP began its training with games and other activities that helped teachers, in a neutral atmosphere, to deal with the trauma they were experiencing and to prepare for practicing human rights and democracy in their classrooms. In 1996, building on a decade of experience providing training in human rights and democracy to teachers, the institute extended its program to community leaders. With financing from USAID in Peru it designed a course for community leaders in human rights, democracy, and citizen participation entitled: You Have Rights: Know Them, Defend Them, Promote Them. Starting in the early 1980s and well into the 1990s Peru was rocked by violence from terrorists, drug traffickers, and the Peruvian military. Between 1980 and 1994, this violence left 25,000 Peruvians dead and thousands of innocent people imprisoned under suspicion of being terrorists. Over 6,000 people disappeared and hundreds of thousands of families were displaced. The social fabric in areas where terrorism was at its peak was disrupted as community leaders were systematically murdered. At the same time the Peruvian economy suffered a decline that had no equal in the rest of Latin America. In 1989 the minimum wage in Peru purchased 23 percent of what it could in 1980.
Course Description
The course is brief and intensive. Over a three-day period participants are introduced to basic concepts of human rights, democracy, citizen participation, and interactive training methodologies that they can take back to their communities.
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Adapted from Bernbaum, M. (1999). Weaving Ties of Friendship, Trust, and Commitment to Build Democracy and Human Rights in Peru. Available at www.human-rights.net/IPEDEHP/study_english.
The training is designed to evoke memories and laughter in ways that connect participants to their own knowledge of human rightsand connect them to each other. The training activities include games, skits, and discussions of personal experiences. A game might ask participants to, for example, recall a time in childhood when they cried or felt afraid of terrorism. The activities are intended to draw out strong emotions and memories, as a means of engaging participants deeply and continuing the process of healing from social violence.
The training process as a whole includes self-reflection alongside social analysis. Participants begin by examining themselves: the extent to which they are behaving in a democratic manner in their households and communities and the extent to which they are upholding basic human rights.
The training process as a whole includes self-reflection alongside social analysis. Participants begin by examining themselves: the extent to which they are behaving in a democratic manner in their households and communities and the extent to which they are upholding basic human rights. It is only after they have looked at themselves and their own behavior that they can begin to look outside to see how democracy and rights are being practiced in their communities and in Peru in general.
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HUMAN RIGHTS
The training uses as a point of departure the premise that all participants come with a rich and diverse background of knowledge and experiences that must be tapped throughout the course. While attending the course, participants acquire knowledge of human rights and democracy by sharing their own experiences. It is only after building their own concepts based on their collective experiences that they are introduced to the theory behind these concepts and what the official legal instruments (Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Peruvian Constitution, etc.) have to say about human rights. Upon completing the course they return to their communities to apply what they have learned in accord with the needs and realities of their communities. During the course, participants are given materials that will enable them to share their learning with others. This toolkit is designed to be immediately useful to participants when they return to their communities. It contains copies of the human rights and democracy games they have played, along with an easy-to-use methodological guide and a summary of the principals underlying the training methodology. These materials enable trainees to facilitate the games, role-plays, and small group discussions they have experienced. The toolkit also contains reference materials on human rights, including a set of guidelines on various rights and what should be done when they are violated. Course graduates, regardless of location and education level, report that they are able to use the toolkit to replicate the three-day training course in their communities. Individuals involved in mass media find the materials of great assistance in designing and delivering radio and television programs focusing on human rights and democracy. During the third and final morning of the training, participants form groups according to home region, and each group prepares a work plan for implementing what they learned at the course when they return home. The course also involves presentations by national human rights institutions, such as the National Coordinator on Human Rights. Representatives of these institutions encourage participants to promote human rights in their communities and contact them for support.
The training uses as a point of departure the premise that all participants come with a rich and diverse background of knowledge and experiences that must be tapped throughout the course.
Course Strengths
One of the strengths of the program is the diversity of participants. Their social positions vary widely: from a lawyer with a masters degree who was already actively involved in defending human rights when she came to the course, to teachers, and to campesino leaders (women and men) who live in isolated areas and who have less than a primary education. Everybody gets something out of the training course. Some acquire, for the first time, knowledge of what their legal rights are and what democracy is; while for others the course provides an opportunity to update their existing concepts on human rights and democracy. Everybody acquires skills in applying interactive training methodologies that
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make them more effective training multipliers when they return to their communities. New friendships are made, often with people that the leaders would never otherwise have had an opportunity to meet. Besides building solidarity among participants, the training process is designed to build cohesion at an organizational level.4 IPEDEHP works with local organizations to prepare for the training sessions. Long before the course is delivered in a given area of the country, IPEDEHP enters into an agreement with counterpart organizations at the community level to identify leaders in their communities and motivate them to replicate what they have learned after receiving the training. Representatives of the counterpart organizations attend the IPEDEHP training course with the community leaders. This way, IPEDEHP strengthens local organizations and helps build ties between them and community leaders. Trainees are not abandoned after the course concludes. As a Peruvian priest who has been affiliated with IPEDEHP since its inception described it, The three day course is the spark that ignites the motor. The gasoline (follow-up) is added once the car gets on the road. In order to augment the impact of the training, IPEDEHPin close coordination with its counterpart organizationsprovides active follow up for community leaders consisting of a one-day session three months after the initial training, annual meetings, and a bulletin issued every two months. These mechanisms serve as an important networking device that keeps community leaders connected with human rights organizations. They also provide participants with an opportunity to reflect on their successes and challenges and to receive new information on human rights and democracy. In sum, there are several features of IPEDEHPs training program for community leaders in human rights, democracy, and citizen participation that make it stand out: All learning is built upon and closely linked to the participants daily lives. The practice of human rights and democracy begins from within. IPEDEHPs training program is highly interactive. The course involves more than just a one-shot training experience. Community leaders leave the course with a practical and easy to use toolkit of materials to guide the application of what they learned in the course once they return to their communities.
Besides building solidarity among participants, the training process is designed to build cohesion at an organizational level.
One year after its founding in 1986, IPEDEHP took a leadership role in building a Peruvian human rights network. This network, which IPEDEHP continues to nurture, involves some 70 organizations that work in human rights throughout Peru.
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Participants engage deeply with IPEDEHPs human rights training course because it touches upon issues of immediate and profound significance in their lives. Course activities draw out memories, passions, anxieties, and ethical commitments. Such engagement takes place within a secure, affirming context, thereby contributing to participants own healing from past victimization. At the same time, the training fosters critical thinking about human rights abuses in Peru and practical means for defending human dignity. The training and subsequent follow-up activities enable community leaders to make the link between knowledge of human rights and their protection. Course activities draw out memories, passions, anxieties, and ethical commitments. Such engagement takes place within a secure, affirming context, thereby contributing to participants own healing from past victimization. At the same time, the training fosters critical thinking about human rights abuses in Peru and practical means for defending human dignity. As an organization, IPEDEHP itself works in a highly reciprocal manner, building ties of friendship and trust with other groups. It freely gives away its training materials and methods, while receiving support from local organizations in the selection of community leaders and in follow-up work. This level of reciprocity forms an important basis for sustaining democracy, democracy built on respect for human rights.
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Discussion
The You Have Rights program is a subtle approach to social change, generating farreaching impacts fueled by participants desire to protect their own and others human rights. With support from IPEDEHP, participants often replicate the human rights training course in their home communities. At a meeting held in 1998 of representatives of community leaders trained by IPEDEHP, it was found that 256 trainees had conducted workshops for some 5,400 people on human rights themes.
Learning Multiplied
In addition to replicating the course, participants have found other creative means of sharing their learning. Some participants have started radio programs about human rights; others have led human rights marches, organized community-based committees for human rights issues, and even started shelters for abused women. Many community leaders have provided advice for friends and neighbors on how to defend their rights. Trainees often find multiple ways of integrating human rights concerns into their lives as community leaders. The games played during the training function as a catalyst for ongoing learning. Bernbaum found that the first thing that most of the community leaders did upon returning to their communities was to play the human rights and democracy games with their families. And their family members, in turn, played the games with others: younger children played the games with classmates, playmates, and teachers; spouses and friends shared their knowledge with colleagues and peers. In this way, the training did not seem to lose strength as it rippled outward. Family members often developed the same enthusiasm for the games as did the original participants. Participants in the IPEDEHP training were selected based on demonstrated community leadership and intention to share their learning with others. Nevertheless, the ways in which the course content spread throughout communities and families is impressive. In other cases highlighted in this guidebook, such as the emergency education kits, the use of the pre-made materials themselves are the focus of training, and the lived experience of trainees is a marginal concern. In the IPEDEHP training, however, pre-made materials are secondary to the lived experience of trainees. This difference may help explain why the materials are used enthusiastically by many IPEDEHP trainees. Their personal experience of reflection, creativity, and connection with others propels the use of the materialsa depth of feeling rarely achieved by standard training in the use of ready-made materials. The first thing that most of the community leaders did upon returning to their communities was to play the human rights and democracy games with their families. And their family members, in turn, played the games with others: younger children played the games with classmates, playmates, and teachers; spouses and friends shared their knowledge with colleagues and peers.
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Bernbaum reports this observation from the husband of a woman who attended the course: She brought the materials from the course. They looked like they were games for children. But it wasnt that way. One learns through playing. We played the games with our neighbors. Some had questions. My wife helped us to understand the game and its significance. Our neighbors now know that if they have problems in the future they can go to my wife in order to learn what institutions they should go to. Our neighbors now comment that there is something to learn in my house (1999, p. 47). As participants bring games home and play them with others, interest in human rights issues spreads. As the quote above illustrates, this process led to the subtle transformation of the participant and her house as a recognized site of learning in their neighborhood. Being recognized as knowledgeable about human rights and committed to human rights protection gives trainees an added sense of esteem as well as a new stature in their communities. This dynamic contrasts with cascade models of large-scale training in which successive layers of training sessions are organized for broad diffusion of desired skills. In the IPEDEHP approach, the diffusion of knowledge and skills is organic, relying on the power of the human rights issues, the commitment of the community leaders, and the appeal of the activities to spread. Such an approach to scaling up is less systematic than cascade models, but it may be more sustainable, and certainly allows greater space for individual creativity. The organization attempts to support what participants themselves wish to do with their learning, rather than compelling them to follow-up in a prescribed form.
HUMAN
In the IPEDEHP approach, the diffusion of knowledge and skills is organic, relying on the power of the human rights issues, the commitment of the community leaders, and the appeal of the activities to spread.
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I knew how to defend my rights. I told my husband about what I had learned in the course and he didnt like it. At the beginning he didnt want me to go to the Human Rights Committee meetings, but I didnt stop going. I always speak of our rights. Little by little he is changing. We no longer hit our children. We speak to them as equals (1999, p. 55). This quote demonstrates the value of the program for improving the family environment in which children grow. The trainees growing confidence in asserting her rights has expanded into a commitment to protect the rights of others, including her children. The expression of This observation also suggests the efficacy of an approach to healing that is less explicitly therapeutic than other interventions in post-conflict settings. The expression of memory and emotion in the training is not isolated as an intervention, but instead, embedded within a larger context of learning about human rights and social change. It leads to practical changes that make a difference in the lives of participants. Bernbaum found that a number of the women who participated in the training reported that they now did not permit their husbands to beat them. Like the woman quoted above, several women said that they had learned not to beat their children and treat them as equals. They no longer believed that physical punishment of children was appropriate. In this respect, the IPEDEHP training had a direct impact on reducing levels of violence in childrens lives. memory and emotion in the training is not isolated as an intervention, but instead, embedded within a larger context of learning about human rights and social change.
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HUMAN RIGHTS
We have always linked up with others at the local level. We give and we receive, parting from the reality and the needs of the situation we are in. We work in coordination with local institutions. We never work alone. Our interest is not in strengthening ourselves. Instead we strive to strengthen local groups and social movements (1999, p. 21).
The training weaves together the fabric of civil society, the fabric that supports lasting peace and the protection of human rights.
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IPEDEHP started its work with a focus on teachers; as discussed with regard to Project DiaCom in Bosnia, teachers can have a strong influence on the character of schools and communities following social conflict. Bernbaum notes that, at a meeting of teachers previously trained in the methodology, they discussed their recent activities, which included organizing a workshop in classroom conflict and a childrens rights week, as well as radio programs and festivals. Clearly, the kind of training program modeled by IPEDEHP can be a powerful catalyst for change in the ecology of learning. Of course, IPEDEHP also faces several challenges. Among those challenges, Bernbaum points out, is a dependency on external funding. That funding is often given for a limited duration, causing frustration about the possibility of long-term continuity in the work. Funding constraints also limit the organizations capacity to provide additional materials and resources in support of trainees efforts to share their experiences with others and take action in their communities. Trainees must find their own sources of support for their efforts. However, the motivation to continue promoting human rights is strong. In recent followup interviews with 18 former participants in the program, Bernbaum found that they remained active in human rights work more than three years after her initial study. The respondents also said they would continue their involvement, regardless of future external support, since they had internalized the commitment to human rights (personal communication, January 2002).
The IPEDEHP approach could be integrated with other human rights and peace education initiatives in a comprehensive social reconstruction effort.
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The course provides a comprehensive program of education and action that touches on the meaning of life of a number of the participants, integrating basic values (dignity, respect, equality, selfesteem) within the context of their daily lives. How could people from diverse social positions be brought together to discuss human rights? Who should be involved in developing and coordinating human rights training? What elements of IPEDEHP training might be adapted for local circumstances?
How could human rights training be integrated with other educational initiatives?
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In your context, how could human rights training satisfy basic psychological needs for children, families, and the community?
Children NEED
Security
Families
Community
Effectiveness
Positive Identity
Positive Connection
Comprehension of Reality
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How can interventions respect their strength and enable communitiesand children themselves to act as the primary agents of educational reconstruction?
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and analysis. More qualitative inquiry into the lived experience of children and teachers in crises and recovery periods is badly needed. As the knowledge base in post-conflict educational reconstruction grows, it is important to refine guidelines and strengthen standards for practice. Given the complexity of postconflict situations, however, guidelines are unlikely to provide simple formulas for effective project design. They may even have the unintended consequence of obscuring dialogue with communities about their own aspirations for educational reconstruction and their own resources for learning. Agencies should be cautious not to replace uncertainty about what to do with a kind of expertise that precludes innovation and dialogue. Perhaps post-conflict educational reconstruction is best understood as a series of interlocking challenges. We suggest that the key challenges for regenerating a viable environment for childrens learning and well-being are these: Nurturing opportunities for change while satisfying needs for stability, security, and the familiar Supplying learning resources without neglecting learners own capacities for reflection and creation Giving away ownership of project development to children and communities Creating spaces for people divided by conflict to talk, play, and learn together Safeguarding patience with processes of personal healing and community reconstruction that do not operate according to institutional timelines Looking to the projects profiled here, some tentative responses to these challenges emerge. These projects have many elements in common, including activities that enable participants to gain greater understanding of local social conditions and facilitate the development of practical skills. Several of the projects involve experiential learning in democratic, collaborative behaviors. Acknowledging the violence and loss participants have endured is also critical, with activities that invite creative expression and relationship building, across generations and identity groups, informed by culturally familiar methods of healing. Many of the cases highlighted in this collection involve simple human activity, especially playing and talking. After all, these are the very activities threatened by traumatic experience. Painful experiences tend to force people inward, separating them from others. But play, dialogue, and collaborative action can help people to turn back outward, gently, and reconnect with others. Working together toward common goals is a powerful means of overcoming devaluation of and hostility toward another group. Enabling people to talk and play together again is a central task of rebuilding a constructive environment for learning.
Painful experiences tend to force people inward, separating them from others. But play, dialogue, and collaborative action can help people to turn back outward, gently, and reconnect with others.
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GARDEN
How play spreads peace at the Butterfly Garden
After a couple of months in the garden barriers begin to crumble and the day eventually dawns when the children are composing songs and music of their own, creating stories together on Mud Mountain, and performing their own nonsensical theater sketches based on common experiences shared in the garden. They break bread together at noon and play non-competitive, gender-mixed games after lunch. At the end of the day, there is a closing assembly in which they display or perform the works of their days creation. Some of the artwork they make is given back to the garden for exhibition in the Butterfly Gallery or for use as props in the theater, but for the most part, the children take their creations homesmall seeds of peace scattered among the war desecrated villages where they live.
(Paul Hogan quoted in Chase, 2000b, p. 45)
Schools in post-conflict settings cannot simply The commonalities of these projects also speak to some degree of the limitations of traditional schooling as a vehicle for social reconstruction. Schooling is not typically oriented toward creative play or reflective dialogue, and children are rarely treated as partners in decision-making. School is a space owned and operated by adults. Schooling often replicates structures of authority and messages about the value of particular social groups that underlie more obvious forms of violence. Schooling per se does not necessarily lead to greater compassion and toleranceafter all, how many war leaders and dictators have been well-schooled, even in elite institutions? As noted earlier, however, the existence of functional schooling and the presence of capable teachers can be a powerful source of security for families and a beacon of hope for their communities. In many emergency situations, one of the first activities that communities undertake is the reestablishment of schools for their children. Functional places of learning provide children with opportunities to gain the skills necessary for competent participation in the reconstruction of economic and civil life. This tension between the desire for schooling and the limitations of schooling suggests the importance of innovative, integrative strategies that surround the reconstruction of formal education with less formal programs for parents, teachers, and other community members. Such strategies would combine healing, skill-building, peacebuilding, and community development agendas in gender and culturally sensitive manners. Such strategies would be grounded in dialogue to begin the process of building new confidence and connection among government authorities, local leaders, youth, and families. As such approaches gain acceptance, the familiar emphasis on investment in human capital in development education is being replaced with an emphasis on investment in skills related to peace, democracy, and the strengthening of civil society (EFA Forum, 1998). Schools in post-conflict settings cannot simply be places for children to learn basic skills. Rather, schools must be partners in a community-wide effort to help children outgrow war. be places for children to learn basic skills. Rather, schools must be partners in a community-wide effort to help children outgrow war.
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In her report on Children as Zones of Peace, Evans (1996) offers several principles for assisting war-affected children, based on dialogue at several international meetings. We list several of these principles here to crystallize key points threaded throughout the guidebook: Essential relationships and primary caregivers must be supported. Holistic and integrated services are required to respond to childrens needs. Learning is an enabling right and catalyst for development. Interventions should be oriented toward transformation. Community approaches are the most effective. When children are taking positive action, follow their lead.
Clearly, the implementation of the approach suggested in this guidebook relies on partnership among many different agencies and actors. Their work is deeply interdependent; choices at transitional moments often create the parameters for other choices over time. Care must be given to minimize practices that generate organizational territorialism and competition rather than collaboration. We suggest that the ecological and basic needs frameworks presented here can provide reference points for dialogue about the importance of collaboration and the ways in which the work of various partners effects different layers of the ecology of childrens learning and well-being. Although the importance of collaboration has received significant attention, time is an axis of post-conflict work that is not fully appreciated (Maynard, 1999). Relief in dramatic crisis situations is intended to be rapid, and relief work has a flair of heroism that garners public attention and sympathy (Vargas-Baron and McClure, 1998). Organizational responsiveness is a key asset in many circumstances; however, it may condition expectations that outcomes will also appear quickly. Around the world, market pressures force organizations to work more quickly and show results faster than ever before. In educational reconstruction, that pressure may manifest itself in an emphasis on quick results that are easily counted: the number of rapid education kits deployed, the number of schools rebuilt, the number of teacher recruits trained, etc. Such numbers may satisfy institutional demands for accountability. And they do represent concrete achievements, especially with regard to large-scale responses in complex emergencies. Yet they may undermine the deeper dynamics of reconstruction by pushing too hard and too quickly for measurable results at the expense of processes that run on a slower clock.
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Violence occurs quickly, at the slash of a machete or the twitch of a trigger finger. Healing and dialogue, on the other hand, are slow work. Authentic participation is slow work, especially with children. Rebuilding a sense of confidence and trust in others is slow work. Engagement with overwhelming memory is slow work. Helping children outgrow war must go gently; day rises slowly from night. By meeting basic psychological needs and working on multiple ecological levels, projects can do much to improve the conditions for constructive learning and the general sense of well-being in communities recovering from the damage of violence. Good post-conflict education projects also help build lasting peace. Political insights from several of the cases suggest the strategic value of focusing on improving childrens welfare as an entry point into the larger agenda of peacebuilding. Taking small steps to involve children in project work, to create spaces owned by children, to connect children and families across lines of divisionall of this supports more visible state-level peacebuilding efforts in subtle and important ways. In the broadest ecological sense, the work of educational reconstruction is also the work of building a just and peaceful world. Post-conflict educators are allies with all who work to bring that world into being.
Taking small steps to involve children in project work, to create spaces owned by children, to connect children and families across lines of divisionall of this supports more visible state-level peacebuilding efforts in subtle and important ways.
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APPENDIX
Education in Crisis: Development Sequence and Transitions
1
The following list is a work in progress that attempts to convey the need to include educators in the technical, operational and political decisions that take place during transitions from an educational emergency to rehabilitation and reconstruction of educational systems. The development sequence, in reality, may not be as clear as portrayed. The most important transitions are those that result in no government, internationally recognized interim and official governments.
Country Context:
Conflict and displacement of population destroy cultural norms, government systems (including education), currency, and economic systems. Educated people and professionals flee the country. Currency collapses; black-market and barter drive the economy.
Education Markers:
Neutral course content, language and math emphasized. Recreation is a component whether in camps or temporary settlements. NGO/UN or teachers and curriculum often uncoordinated. NGO/AID organization runs education projects, provides supplies. Curriculum is often different from project to project and can be uncoordinated. Teachers are generally unpaid volunteers from the former system or from the community; they may receive food or commodities from parents or NGOs. Education supplies are usually furnished by parents; teaching materials are rudimentary. Food is often provided to students in schools or classes as needed. Counseling for psychological trauma comprises part of most programs. Classes are held in homes, churches, or makeshift buildings.
Adapted from a chart prepared by Anne Dykstra (personal communication, November 1, 2001).
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Education Markers:
A former government or colonial power may sponsor the education system. Or another country may impose education criteria. Future language of instruction is decided. Population projections of students and teachers are ongoing for fund raising. Former teachers are identified. School organization is decided. Future elements of a new curriculum and standards are set. Lead education agencies are identified. Donor coordination is attempted. School feeding continues and expands.
Country Context:
Repatriation and demobilization begins. Massive increase in the need for social services. Pockets of fighting and displaced people exist. An interim government runs the country, with or without peacekeepers. Inflation continues but at a slower rate; the official currency returns.
Education Markers:
Push by government to build and repair education infrastructure. Emergency teacher training. Enrollment schemes announced. Interim ministry of education (MOE) formed with small budget. Establishment of limited school calendar. Recovery of old school records, former curriculum, syllabus and textbooks is attempted. Temporary curriculum and syllabus are written. Emergency education supplies are donated, with variable distribution. An urgent need for data. Donor coordination by MOE is sporadic. Donors, NGOs, and government agree on community participation and some decentralization on a limited basis. Few links exist between central education authorities and technicians with rural schools. School feeding declines.
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Fighting diminishes but there are still pockets of conflict in the country. Inflation is high, official currency circulates, black market continues and includes supplies meant for education.
Education Markers:
Education officials are appointed by the interim government, some may come from the military, political parties, or from the former education ministry. Teacher training schedule, content, and qualifications are formalized. Recruitment for teachers starts; decisions about including repatriated educators made. Construction or repair of schools is often politically determined. NGO registration and rules regarding presence in-country are formalized. Interim government calls for a new curriculum and textbooks; plans are developed, and costs projected. Bank and donor missions arrive. Donor competition increases. NGOs begin revision of projects anticipating either consolidation of technical focus and geographical positioning. Banks sponsor sector analysis. Best statistics are compiled. Budget forecasts are made, donor round-tables begin to raise money for rehabilitation. Interim MOE drafts 510 year education plan. Some professional educators return to the country.
Country Context:
New state constitution is drafted and adopted, includes definition and broad enabling language for education. Public Investment Plan (PIP) drafted. New NGOs arrive across sectors. Those present during emergency seek a defined niche and competition for recognition as lead agency peaks. UN and donor community expands, new alignment of advisors across sectors arrive. Expatriate community multiplies exponentially; officials struggle to deal with donor community. Demobilization is completed; repatriation of refugees is completed; civil war or incursion is largely finished; few displaced people remain. Official currency grows stronger, economy picks up, black market continues, stabilizes, or declinesand includes educational supplies furnished by the state. Economic speculation causes prices to rise.
Education Markers:
MOE officers at various levels are designated; key officials may or may not be educators; most authority is centralized. State education budget adopted. Teacher pay set. Allocations fall short of budget lines.
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New curriculum is drafted for all subjects; agreement is reached on the content of history and social sciences. The language of instruction approved by legislators. School maps and projections of students, teachers, classrooms, schools are published by the state. Management information system may be funded; the education planning office starts to function. MOE policies on equity, budget, career system, and operations are approved. Education for All (EFA) goals are set. 510 year education plan detailing the gaps within the education sector, setting timed goals and setting forth budget marks for state and donor share of investment in education. Urban areas start split/shifts because of crowding; primary teacher shortage is severe. Supplies and new construction or repair of schools are often paid for by parents; old texts may be used as supplies catch up with demand. The language of instruction and social sciences (history) can bring volatile debate. Donors sponsor training for MOE staff and teachers, technical expertise remains thin. Attempts are made to coordinate donors and NGOs as major investments in education begin. Bidding and contracting for construction by MOE begins. Debates on investment in primary vs. secondary and university are constant. Donor/NGO policies on payment of stipends for work by government officials may result in open competition between agencies for technical staff and increased corruption in government. Some elements of decentralization and community participation in education are evaluated.
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Education Markers:
Civil service reform is planned; new qualifications for various levels of education personnel are adopted. Donors question data because student and/or teacher ghost-numbers are high. MOE plans donor coordination system and revises NGO registration and operational rules. Private tutoring, selling test answers, and fees for entrance/promotion/graduation charged by underpaid, unpaid teachers increases. New curriculum is adopted; new textbooks written and arrive in schools. Massive teacher training begins to update teachers. Instructional hours in primary expand to international norms; full K-6 implemented. Secondary instruction expanded; selection for university entrance formalized; graduation from either secondary or university is often tied to government promises of jobs. Quality, not just enrollment in primary school, becomes an issue. Testing and promotion policy is reformed and systems to implement them are put in place. New sector analysis; donor round-tables fund new government; loans are set in place. Cost per student educated increases for both the state and parents.
Country Context:
Organization of the government, including the ministry of education, is published. Functions are defined. Currency stabilizes; inflation decreases to predictable levels. National census takes place, categories of ages to be surveyed are set. PIP is revised. Local elections are planned and carried out in all sectors; programs and many decisions are donor driven. Economy expands fed in part by investment from the donor community in various reconstruction projects.
Education Markers:
Civil service reform results in a fully articulated career ladder for educators at every level tied to qualifications and a salary scale. A 510 year plan for education is approved and targets for education in the state budget are set. Key policies are written, approved, and published i.e. ministry organization, language policy, testing, and promotion policy. Education statistics are updated and published regularly according to international definitions. Teacher training reform begins.
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Supervisory system is expanded. While government emphasis is still on infrastructure, loans for education quality improvement are expanded. Distribution system is improved country-wide. Decentralization and community participation are institutionalized. Secondary and university levels receive further finance to expand form donors and government. Technical training for MOE staff at all levels expands; technical work improves on return of staff. Education targets are tied to economic growth and education is widely viewed as the system upgrading the future labor force.
Education Markers:
State financing of education is adequate relative to the state budget. Political will to improve equitable, quality education is apparent. Regular educational calendar is in place, curriculum cycle is in place, and statedriven systematic quality reforms go forward. Teacher training, both inservice and preservice, steadily increases the quality of classroom instruction. Learning achievement is measured to published criteria; the system of testing and promotion is generally seen as fair. Expansion of access for secondary and university are issues of equity. Reaching international norms such as EFA and accreditation become part of planning. The rate of allocation and receipt of state budget more closely matches targets in the national budget. Demand for education is understood and educational systems can provide schooling in a predictable, equitable, and transparent fashion most of the time. Cost to parents for education decreases and stabilizes. Teachers are paid on time as a rule. Quality, as measured by learning achievement, is reasonable and increasing.
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Violent civil conflict has become tragically common in recent years. Children are the most vulnerable population affected: They are the first victims of physical, social, and emotional violence. Helping children outgrow war is an overarching goal of educational reconstruction in post-conflict settings. Given the diversity and complexity of such settings, responses must be both highly adaptive and informed by insights gained from interventions elsewhere. This guidebook offers several examples of successful interventions in post-conflict settings internationally, situating them within a framework that emphasizes the ecology of childrens well-being and learning. Helping children outgrow war involves helping communities heal from violence and determine their own paths of development. Successful interventions can enable teachers, parents, and community leaders to engage safely with traumatic events, to articulate their aspirations, and to build trust across multiple levels of society as the infrastructure of a culture of peace. The challenge of post-conflict educational reconstruction, in this sense, is larger and more diffuse than rebuilding the shattered infrastructure of schooling. This guidebook is not intended to address the complex technical, financial, and political issues involved in rebuilding school systems. While it touches on those issues, it is concerned more broadly with creating conditions for constructive learning in the wake of social violence.
For additional copies, please contact: Africa Bureau Information Center 1331 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 1425 Washington, DC 20004-1703 e-mail: abic@dis.cdie.org Or to access the pdf file from the web, go to: www.usaid.gov/regions/afr/pubs www.ginie.org/children