Role of Historical Truth in Conflict Transformation

Course instructor: Svjetlana Nedimovic
Working language: Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian language

Context:

Reconciliation is often discussed as the most desired form of conflict transformation within divided societies, conditioned by situating individual and collective memories for the use of a legitimate and widely-accepted narrative which is called the truth about the past. It is thought that on the basis of such conceived narrative it is possible to build harmonic or at least cooperative relations in today’s societies. 

Although this chronological chain of events for reconstructing deeply divided societies seems logical, the order is actually paradoxical: On one side, reconciliation is seen as an imperative in divided societies. On the other, reconciliation is conditioned by the establishment of a universally accepted historical narrative, which is actually only one of the products in the process of reconciliation; if it is possible at all to harmonize all voices when it comes to history. 

Course Description:

The course has two purposes. In terms of substance, its goal is to discuss the status of historical truth in societies and its role within the process of facing the past and as a means of searching for a historical truth within state institutions (judiciary, commissions, academic sphere) as well as within social institutions (creative industry, informal relations). The purpose of the course is to open discussion about the ethical and political status of truth and debate about the mechanisms of establishing and disseminating historical truth, which would neither be hindered by institutionalism in terms of theoretical framing nor by empirical critics of institutionalized forms for searching for the truth. 

The second important aspect of the course is work on participant's essays. The course will provide guidance on participant's writings not only because they are a channel for disseminating gained knowledge, but also because they present an important element of cognitive processes and understanding the world in general.

Note: Writing essays is a prerequisite to attend the course. 

Course Goals:

Theoretical Goals

  • Discussing the issue of the perception of historical truth
  • Discussing the ethical and political status of historical truth
  • Critical approach towards institutionalized and other mechanisms for searching for truth
  • Analyzing informal transformative social capacities in post-conflict periods

Practical Goals

  • Development of writing as a self-reflection, open and unfinished process
  • Development of critical thought within texts and work on texts individually and in groups
  • Adopting critics as a key element in the process of writing and developing the ability to use critics within texts
  • Writing communicative texts outside the disciplinary and experience framework of the author

Course: Strategic Peacebuilding

Instructor: Jayne Docherty

Course Description: 

This course will explore the challenges and dilemmas of peacebuilding in contemporary protracted and violent conflict. It will focus on learning how to:

  1. understand the meaning of being strategic in the midst of conflict, 
  2. develop a strategic plan for coordinating the peacebuilding work of multiple actors and stakeholders, and 
  3. create and sustain a network of partners for building peace in a specific location. We will work primarily from the perspective of nongovernmental practitioners, but with careful attention to coordinating NGO work with Track I official actors (national, international, and regional), funding agencies, community based organizations (CBOs) and others working to promote peace.

Participants will interact with current approaches, frameworks and theories, and become familiar with the language and terminology used at different levels of peacebuilding. 

The course also focuses on practical skills. Participants will work in teams to create strategic peacebuilding plans for their own organization, community, or region. They will also practice workplace skills such as preparing one-page briefings, reports and/or talking points about a conflict, and responding to and using information from the media to prepare an advisory memo to a funding organization. The second half of the course will be a simulated strategic peacebuilding exercise in which all class participants will take a role in the conflict and work together to produce a plan of action for building peace. 

Course Objectives:

This course is intended to help participants:

  1. Understand the frameworks, theories and practices being used to guide peacebuilding activities.
  2. Learn to identify and understand the various actors working on peacebuilding in a specific conflict situation.
  3. Think strategically about integrating (horizontally and vertically) the efforts of actors using different frameworks for peacebuilding in order to promote “peace writ large”.
  4. To bridge the gap between in-class simulation and real cases of conflict, working under pressures or time, fund, politics, etc.
  5. To reflect on peace practice as related to oneself, ones organizations, and one’s context.
  6. Build an action agenda for a specific organization or network in a conflict situation and plan ways to integrate that action agenda with the action agenda of other actors

Before Class Meets:

1. Complete the Introductory Readings (provided to registered participants)
2. Prepare a story (2-4 pages long) about your work in response to a conflict in your community or country. 

For examples of stories, see: http://www.gppac.net/documents/pbp_f/

Be sure your story includes: 

  • THE SETTING: Where are you working? This includes geography (city, country, etc.) but also sector or organization (example: Are you working with community level conflicts in a neighborhood? Are you working with conflicts between two or more organizations? Are you working on national level political conflicts?)
  • THE STORY OF THE CONFLICT: What is this conflict about? Why are people in conflict?
  • YOUR IDENTITY: Who are you in relation to this conflict and how did you get involved? 
  • THE ACTION: What kind of work did you do? 
  • YOUR ALLIES AND RIVALS: What did others do? Who else was working in the area on this conflict? Who did you work with? Whose work “got in the way” of your work? What other groups do you wish you could have worked with better? NOTE: This point is often not included in the People Building Peace II stories at the link above. But we must have this information for our class so please do not forget to include it. 

Schedule:

This is a broad overview of the schedule. More details will be provided before the class begins.

First Third of the Course: 

We will become familiar with the concepts of:

  • Strategy, tactics, and operations as a way of describing our peacebuilding work
  • “Peace writ large” 
  • Organizational fields – specifically the organizational field of peacebuilding
  • Emergent systems
  • Political opportunity structures and ripeness
  • The Curle model (and variations on the Curle model) as a tool for thinking strategically about our work
  • Core competencies for peacebuilding 

We will use activities, games, role-plays and cases to practice:

  • Thinking strategically about peacebuilding work
  • Reflecting on stories about our own peacebuilding work
  • Mapping the organizational field of peacebuilding as it exists in our own locations

Second Third of the Course:

We will become familiar with concepts related to:

  • Design, monitoring and evaluation (learning) of peacebuilding programs
  • Theories of change
  • Worldviews and peacebuilding paradigms

We will use activities, games, role-plays and cases to practice:

  • Identifying theories of change in specific peacebuilding programs
  • Identifying opportunities and challenges for coordinating peacebuilding activities
  • Using design, monitoring, evaluation and learning to improve peacebuilding programs

The Last Third of the Course:

We will become familiar with the concepts of:

  • Social capital
  • Networks (inclusive, exclusive and “networks of effective action”)
  • Isomorphic pressures
  • Vertical and horizontal integration of peacebuilding actors

We will use an extended simulation to practice:

  • Thinking strategically about a specific conflict challenge
  • Forming horizontal and vertical networks to focus on “peace writ large”
  • Developing organizational plans for action that coordinate with the actions of others

We will conclude the course by:

  • Reflecting on lessons that we might take back to our own organizations and communities
  • Preparing for the after-course work of essay writing

Bibliography:

The items with * will be included in your reading packet. Other readings are recommended but not required.

  1. Anderson, Mary B. and Lara Olson (2003). Confronting War: Critical Lessons for Peace Practitioners. Cambridge, MA: The Collaborative for Development Action, Inc. Students will read Section II (chapters 6 and 7). Available on line at: www.cdainc.com/cdawww/pdf/book/confrontingwar_Pdf1.pdf
  2. Bush, Kenneth, “A Measure of Peace: Peace and Conflict Impact Assessment (PCIA) of Development Projects in Conflict Zones”, Working Paper No. 1, The Peacebuilding and Reconstruction Program Initiative, International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, 1998. Available at: web.idrc.ca/uploads/user-S/10533919790A_Measure_of_Peace.pdf  Students will focus on Part I and Part II.
  3. Church, Cheyanne and Mark Rogers (2006). Designing for Results: Integrating Monitoring and Evaluation in Conflict Transformation Programs. Washington, DC: Search for Common Ground. Students will read Chapter 2 on theories of change. Full text at: http://www.sfcg.org/programmes/ilr/ilt_manualpage.html
  4. *DiMaggio, Paul J. (1991). Constructing an organizational field as a professional project: US art museums, 1920-1940. In The New Institutionalism in Organizational Analysis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (pp. 267-292).
  5. Fitzduff, Mari (September 2006). Core Competencies for Graduate Programs in Coexistence and Conflict Work – Can We Agree? In Leadership Notes from Project on Leadership and Building State Capacity. Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Center. Available at: http://www.wilsoncenter.org/publication/core-competencies-for-graduate-programs-coexistence-and-conflict-work8212can-we-agree
  6. Francis, Diana (2010). From Pacification to Peacebuilding: A Call for Global Transformation. Pluto Press. 2010. - Students will be given a few chapters from this book. The whole book is recommended.
  7. Gladwell, Malcolm (2000,2002). The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference. New York: Back Bay.  Recommended not required.
  8. Lederach, John Paul; Neufeldt, Reina, and Culbertson, Hal (2007). Reflective Peacebuilding: A Planning, Monitoring and Learning Toolkit. South Bend, Indiana: The Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies and Catholic Relief Services. Available on line at: http://kroc.nd.edu/research/books/strategic-peacebuilding/391 Students should download the entire manual for use in class.
  9. Nan, Susan Allen (2008). Conflict Resolution in a Network Society. International Negotiation, 13: pp. 111–131. 
  10. Ricigliano, Robert (2003). Networks of Effective Action: Implementing an Integrated Approach to Peacebuilding. Security Dialogue, 34(4), pp. 445-462. 
  11. Schirch, Lisa (2005). The Little Book of Strategic Peacebuilding. Intercourse, PA: Good Books. Recommended, not required. Available also in Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian language - translated by the Peace Academy Foundation. 
  12. Simmon, P.J. (1998). Learning to Live with NGOs. Foreign Policy, 112 (Autumn), pp. 82-96.

Politics, Power and Inequalities

Instructors: Vlasta Jalušič and Tonči Kuzmanić, Mirovni inštitut, Slovenia

Working language: Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian 

Course Description:

The course aims at an in-depth analysis of understanding the issue of inequality and its correlation with violence and relationships between politics, power and (in)equality. The approach to the course is based on the premise that inequalities undermine politics and power, and that they contribute to violence or lead to violence. However, inequalities can sometimes present greater danger then violence. Therefore, the course discusses proactively if violence is really “the worst thing that can happen to us.”  The empirical baseline of the course are the cases of revolutions as generators of power and politics, while the focus will be put on experiences from 1968, on the revolutions in Central and East Europe during 1989, and the recent revolutions in Middle East and Africa (known as the “Arab Spring”). 

Key questions are: What happens when political-based power becomes a stunted basis of institutions? How to discuss and understand (in)equal state policies in such contexts and how to respond to them? Various experiences in establishing power and its institutionalization will be discussed and accompanied by exercises in forms of concrete policy analysis of laws and documents that refer to issues of (in)equality and its consequences. 

Course goals: 

  1. Understanding and rethinking of terms such as politics, power, revolution and (in)equalities, relationships and links between them, and possible consequences of these links on the post-socialistic and post-capitalistic global context.
  2. Differentiating, defining and rethinking of terms and their practical adoption. 
  3. Analysis and decoding of concrete phenomena of inequalities in societies where participants live and work, as well as indetifying their possible contributions to peace or violence. 
  4. Analysis of inequality policies on the basis of concrete examples of policital documents, laws, etc. (concrete examples will be taken from participant's home states). 

List of Reading Materials: 

  1. Hannah Arendt, O nasilju. U Hannah Arendt, Politički eseji, Antibarbarus Zagreb, 1996, 176-190. 
  2. Vaclav Havel, The Power of Powerless. Moć nemoćnih : ogledi o politici. Nove Knjige, 1990
  3. Jean Jacques Rousseau, Rasprava o porijeklu i osnovama nejednakosti među ljudima. Str. 33-71
  4. Michel Foucault: Panopticism.U: Foucault Reader str. 206-213 i Biopower, ibid. 259-272. (Michel Foucault, Znanje i moć, Globus, Zagreb 2004. Michel Foucault, Rađanje biopolitike, Svetovi, Novi Sad 2005.).
  5. Mahmood Mamdani, An African Reflection in the Tahrir Square. http://pambazuka.org/en/category/features/73187.
  6. Carol Lee Bacchi.Women, Policy and Politics: the Construction of Policy Problems. (1999) London: Sage. 3-13 i 35-49. 
  7. Vlasta Jalušič: Kompleksne nejednakosti. Tekst iz knjige Majda Hrženjak, Vlasta Jalušič, Vrata nisu baš odprta. Treba da jih gurneš, pa da se otvaraju... Perspektive v reševanju kompleksnih neenakosti. Mirovni inštitut, Ljubljana 2011. str. 11-32.
  8. Proposals or passed antidiscrimination laws from home states of participants. 

Documentaries and other films: 

  • Adam Curtis  collection: The Trap i The Power of Nightmare
  • Lorédana Bianconi: Do you remember revolution?

Essays