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McCloud, Jennifer; Hurley, Angela – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2019
The fear of school violence drives "defensive" schooling policies, and it is not unlike the fear that currently supports aggressive foreign policies that sanction drone strikes and the incarceration of suspected terrorists. However, the current measures taken for defense against terrorism are not working, and the same types of…
Descriptors: Peace, Fear, School Safety, Aggression
Gonnella-Platts, Natalie – George W. Bush Institute, 2022
The Taliban's return to power in Afghanistan last year has produced a desperate humanitarian situation in the country. Nearly half of all households are experiencing acute food insecurity, maternal and infant mortality rates are rising quickly, and 97% of families are at risk of dropping below the poverty line. Most concerning is the intentional…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Access to Education, Civil Rights
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Malley, Muadth – History Teacher, 2018
When Lebanon gained its independence from France in 1943, it adopted a system that divided political power along clearly defined sectarian lines. The institutionalized sectarian nature of the country resulted in tensions that led to civil war in 1975. Lebanon quickly disintegrated into a number of irreconcilable cantons and seemed to be destined…
Descriptors: Peace, War, Foreign Countries, Political Power
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Marklein, Mary Beth – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2018
Higher education has proven to be a welcome and useful bridge between the United States and Vietnam, two countries that cut ties in 1975 in the aftermath of a painful war. In 1991, as the two nations began to reestablish diplomatic relations, the Fulbright exchange program with Vietnam quickly became the largest in Asia (Abuza, 1996). A…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, International Schools, International Educational Exchange
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Golding, David – Journal of Peace Education, 2017
This paper intends to contribute to recent developments in the theory of critical peace education. The role of cosmopolitanism in critical peace education is examined, particularly in relation to universal moral inclusion, secularism and universalism. It is then recommended that critical peace education draw from post-universalist and dialogical…
Descriptors: Peace, Teaching Methods, Moral Values, Educational Philosophy
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Christie, Daniel J.; Montiel, Cristina J. – American Psychologist, 2013
The contributions of American psychologists to war have been substantial and responsive to changes in U.S. national security threats and interests for nearly 100 years. These contributions are identified and discussed for four periods of armed conflict: World Wars I and II, the Cold War, and the Global War on Terror. In contrast, about 50 years…
Descriptors: Psychology, War, Peace, Scholarship
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Tupper, Jennifer Anne – Curriculum Inquiry, 2014
This article discusses the ongoing effects of colonialism on Aboriginal peoples in Canada and how these might be revealed and disrupted through particular curricular initiatives, informed by understandings of critical peacebuilding education. One such initiative, treaty education, has the potential to disturb dominant national narratives in…
Descriptors: Peace, Violence, Teaching Methods, Indigenous Populations
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Ritchie, Jenny; Lockie, Colleen; Rau, Cheryl – Journal of Peace Education, 2011
This article discusses some of the philosophical and pedagogical considerations arising in the development of a peace curriculum appropriate for use in early childhood education centres in Aotearoa New Zealand, with and by educators, parents/families and young children. It outlines contexts for the proposed curriculum, which include the history of…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Early Childhood Education, Young Children, Foreign Countries
Matthew Kalman – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Israeli, Palestinian, and American archaeologists unveiled a draft agreement on archaeological and cultural heritage that they hope to see included in a future Middle East peace agreement. Presenting their proposal to an audience of archaeologists at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, they said it was the first time that Israelis and Palestinians…
Descriptors: Current Events, Foreign Countries, Cultural Background, Archaeology
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Tuttle, Ian – History Teacher, 2008
Civilization's fountainhead, the Middle East, lies at the root of millenia of conflict. However, in no time more than its own has this discord been more clearly asseverated. By the end of the nineteenth century, a maelstrom of ideologies and territorial claims to sacred land had become a volatile mixture; the infusion of Jewish Zionism into…
Descriptors: Jews, War, Ideology, Political Divisions (Geographic)
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Dufour, Joanne – Social Education, 2006
The 2005 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded 60 years after the first atomic bombs fell on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing more than 200,000 people; the peace prize raises the hopes of those working to rejuvenate global efforts to prevent the spread and development of nuclear arms. This article profiles the International Atomic…
Descriptors: Nuclear Energy, Peace, Teaching Methods, War
United States Inst. of Peace, Washington, DC. – 1992
This document is the third in a series of biennial reports on the United States Institute of Peace. The Institute devotes itself to matters of international peace based on freedom and justice. Functioning as a nonideological educational resource for policymakers and officials, the Institute does not intervene directly in the formulation or conduct…
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Disarmament, Foreign Policy, Government Role
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Rigby, Ken – Journal of Peace Education, 2006
Understanding the nature of bullying in schools can assist in understanding aggression between nations. Although there are substantial differences between bullying behaviour practised by school children and bullying attributed to nations, there are some commonalities. This article examines seven basic elements that help in identifying and…
Descriptors: Bullying, Aggression, Peace, Conflict
Christensen, Kathy, Comp.; And Others – 1989
The Stanley Foundation annually assembles a panel of experts from the public and private sectors to assess specific foreign policy issues and to recommend future direction. The participants in the round-table discussion summarized in this report agreed that the Soviets are moving from a Marxist-Leninist version of socialism to a broader version,…
Descriptors: Area Studies, Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy, Global Approach
Howard, Norman, Ed.; Sussman, Colleen, Ed. – 1984
Steps the United States is taking to lessen the danger of war while building international confidence and security are described. The commitment of the United States to arms control is based on the conviction that the United States and the Soviet Union have a common interest in the avoidance of nuclear war and the survival of the human race. A…
Descriptors: Disarmament, Foreign Policy, International Relations, National Defense
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