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Beyond Equity and Inclusion in Conflict Resolution: Recentering the Profession [Minkštas viršelis]

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 245x177x19 mm, weight: 590 g, 1 BW Illustrations, 1 Tables
  • Serija: The ACR Practitioners Guide Series
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Mar-2022
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1538164388
  • ISBN-13: 9781538164389
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 245x177x19 mm, weight: 590 g, 1 BW Illustrations, 1 Tables
  • Serija: The ACR Practitioners Guide Series
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Mar-2022
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1538164388
  • ISBN-13: 9781538164389
Beyond Equity and Inclusion in Conflict Resolution: Recentering the Profession illustrates how racism has informed the field of conflict resolution and its allied professions. Useful for any field that recruits, standardizes, or professionalizes its adherents, this volume addresses how individuals, organizations, and institutions shape and have been shaped by racist ideas and practices. These ideas and practices, embedded in the fabric of our country, are exposed in this historic moment and held up to the light for close examination. In addition to a critique of the status quo, Beyond Equity and Inclusion in Conflict Resolution casts an eye toward creating a just and equitable future for the field. Narratives, interviews, poems, and essays from activists, practitioners, and scholars who represent diverse constituencies marry theory and practice to encourage, stimulate, and motivate colleagues to expand the boundaries for our field and our world.

Recenzijos

This timely and compelling book offers a valuable approach for addressing issues of systemic racism and oppression in the field of conflict resolution. The ideas are highly original and shed light on an important topic that is largely unacknowledged and certainly unaddressed. -- Tina Nabatchi, Director, Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration, Syracuse University Centering the personal and the lived experiences of BIPoC people (and starting with the authors as both subjects and agents themselves) as well as recognizing the 'gate keeper' and 'legitimizing' nature of white-dominated academics and academic institutions, and the positionality of this text in relation to that, is refreshing. The approach used by the authors provides a starting point for (re)entering into the discourse on conflict transformation by way of raising up a different epistemology that continues to be suppressed, underrepresented, and devalued to the detriment of the field. -- Manuel Padilla, Collaborative governance facilitator, Portland State University Extraordinarily thoughtful, timely, and necessary. This is a book that all of us need to read, to learn from, to discuss, and offer gratitude for having our eyes opened. -- Franklin Dukes, Distinguished Institute Fellow, Institute for Engagement and Negotiation, University of Virginia Penetrating and essential reading about inequalities in the field, offering deep insightsfor manifesting a more equitable future. This book is an invaluable call to action to make a necessary paradigm shift in conflict transformation work. It belongs in every course and training syllabus and to be actively engaged with to alter our institutions and practices. -- Leah Wing, Faculty, University of Massachusetts, Amherst This important book is for anyone interested in resolving conflict more equitably, and that is virtually everyone these days. It's a great resource for leaders, including HR professionals and others. It tackles a vital question: how to eliminate racism, cultural dominance, and institutional oppression in conflict resolution, and that includesrestorative justice, strategic peacebuilding, human security, conflict transformation, and more. The editors and writers represent uniquely diverse backgrounds and experiences, and write in forms as diverse as transcribed interviews, prose essays, poetry, and personal reflection. The result is unusual, delightful, and impactful. -- John Bourdeau, Professor Emeritus and Senior Research Scientist, University of Southern California Beyond Equity and Inclusion in Conflict Resolution is a much-needed compendium. You will likely feel validated by some essays and challenged by others; either way, this provocative collection will make you think. It's an important addition to the theory and practice of mediation. -- Douglas Stone, co-author, Difficult Conversations and lecturer on law at Harvard Law School, Co-author of Difficult Conversations and Thanks for the Feedback

Acknowledgments ix
Read This First: A Note From The Editors xv
SECTION I HINDSIGHT
1(110)
Introduction
1(3)
Beth Roy
1 Who Produces Knowledge?
4(14)
Aggregating Wisdom, Amplifying Voices: Conflict Resolution Practitioners of African Descent
5(13)
Cherise D. Hairston
2 Who Bridges Cultural Chasms?
18(5)
Rage Is Not an Option: An Indigenous Woman's Path to Building Resiliency and Advocacy
18(5)
Nadine Tafoya
3 How Do Organizations Welcome---or Rebuff?
23(15)
Achieving Belonging and Connectedness: Conflict Resolution Organizations Reiroagined
24(14)
Cheryl Jamison
4 How Do Institutions Maintain Dominance (Despite Their Best Intentions)?
38(14)
The Method Is the Message: Shifting the Conflict Transformation Paradigm, Sharing Power
38(14)
Roberto Chene
5 How Is Dissension Seeded Between Diverse Groups?
52(9)
Whiteness in Academia: Perspectives of a Brown Immigrant Woman
53(8)
Pushpa Iyer
6 Why Are Prestigious Positions Unequally Shared?
61(13)
The State of Rights and Dreams: Arbitrating Evidence of Racism
62(12)
Benjamin Davis
7 How Do the Tools We Use Foster Inequality?
74(14)
The Soft Technology of Control: How Mediation Practices Perform Racism
74(14)
Beth Roy
8 When Do Cultural Borrowings (Dis)Honor the Lenders?
88(5)
Cultural Appropriation vs. Cultural Learning
88(5)
Lucy Moore
9 What Do We See When We Refuse to Look Away?
93(15)
Kareem Was Killed Long Before the Trigger Was Pulled
94(14)
Hasshan Batts
Jeani Garcia
10 How Do White People Benefit from Challenging Racism?
108(3)
Letter from a White Editor to Her White Readers
108(3)
Beth Roy
SECTION II INSIGHT
111(62)
We by Rubye Howard Braye
111(1)
Introduction
111(1)
S.Y. Bowland
One Story: Many Experiences
112(5)
S.Y. Bowland
11 Vision of Inclusive Knowledge: The Art of the Credible Messenger
117(8)
Embracing the Good: Taking a Risk
117(5)
Maria Volpe
Writing a Multicultural Choir
122(1)
Dwight L. Wilson
Message to Credible Messengers
123(1)
Hasshan Batts
What Rule Do You Need an Exception To?
124(1)
S.Y. Bowland
12 Vision of Expansive Culture: The Path of Spirit in People and Conflict
125(9)
Responsibilities of a White Justice Fighter
125(3)
Jeff Hitchcock
The Jig Is Up! Movement
128(4)
Johnnie Mitchell
Vision for Justice
132(2)
Michelle Armster
13 Vision of Power-Sharing Organizations: The Path of Responsible Handlers of Power
134(6)
Achieving Solidarity in Decolonization: Dialogue Among Friends of Color
135(2)
Tom Kunesh
S.Y. Bowland Jiche
Jorge Morales
Diego Navarro
Women Like Me by Celeste Brock
137(1)
Bring Your Magnificence
138(1)
S.Y. Bowland
Ancestors
139(1)
Frank Eugene Hall
14 Vision of Welcoming Institutions: The Path of Healing
140(6)
Dignity, Respect, and Healing in a Diseased World
140(4)
Diane Ciccone
Verdict
144(2)
Mary L. Jones Wade
15 Vision of Equitable Practices: The Path of Mentorship and Leadership
146(6)
In Search of Academic Freedom: To Censor Word or Deed: Why Do We Ask the Question?
146(5)
Angle Beeman
Tsedale M. Melaku
How are we in the world?
151(1)
S.Y. Bowland
16 Vision of Seeing the Invisible Context of Oppression: Vision of Freedom from Violence
152(11)
The Mudang Sends the Missionary Home: Practicing Critical Humility in Intercultural Peace and Justice Work
152(11)
Jiche
17 Vision of Action: Path of Vision of a World of Humanity, Cleansed of Hate Speech and Violence
163(10)
An End to Myths and Hypocrisy: How Hate Speech Protects White Supremacist Ideology and Kills People of Color
163(6)
James Ciccone
Where Can I Say It?
169(4)
Laurie F. Childers
SECTION III FORESIGHT
173(110)
Introduction
173(2)
Mary Adams Trujillo
18 In the Beginning: Setting the Context
175(13)
Truth and (re)Conciliation
175(10)
Mark Charles
Birthing a Nation
185(3)
Jonathan Webb
19 Shifting Paradigms
188(20)
Shifting Paradigms
188(12)
Beth Roy
Roberto Chene
John Paul Lederach
S. Y. Bowland
Mary Adams Trujillo
One Hundred Years from Now? You May Not Be There
200(8)
Grande Lum
20 Keepers of Tears
208(9)
Writing as Conflict Resolution Practice
208(3)
Laurene Miller Patterson
Performance as Conflict Resolution Practice
211(6)
Jada Gee
21 "We need to elder better"
217(5)
Digging Out After Atlanta
217(5)
Tomi Nagai-Rothe
22 Transformative Pedagogies
222(22)
"We teach to change the world"
222(8)
Barbara L. Jones
Mary Adams Trujillo
Decentering Power, Centering Stories: Restorative Justice Pedagogies in Action
230(14)
Michelle Clifton-Soderstrom
Jamal Bakr
Henry Cervantes
23 Restorative Justice: What Is It Really?
244(16)
Sticking to Doing Things the Way We Always Have, Even When We Know It's Not Working
244(3)
Tonya Covington
Can Restorative Justice Make Young, Black Lives Matter in Schools?
247(13)
Johonna R. McCants-Turner
24 Hope and Healing
260(6)
Politics of Hope and Healing: Lessons from Chicago
260(6)
Gerson Ramirez
Henry Cervantes
25 Credible Witnesses and Testimonies
266(7)
Heart Work
266(2)
Rayshauna Gray
Radical Welcome
268(5)
Hasshan Batts
26 Walking by Faith
273(10)
Fierce Love: Friends, Racial Justice, and Policing: A Biblical Economy of Care
273(7)
Cherice Bock
Morning Musing
280(1)
Velda Love
Conclusion
281(2)
Lexicon 283(4)
References 287(7)
Index 294(14)
About the Contributors 308
S.Y. Bowland, JD, is a founder of the Practitioners Research and Scholarship Institute and co-edited the anthology Re-Centering Culture and Knowledge in Conflict Resolution Practice. She was born and raised in Harlem and earned her J.D. from the National Law Center at George Washington University. She is a skilled ADR and Restorative Processes Practitioner. She has taught at the high school, undergraduate and graduate educational levels.

Hasshan Batts, MSW, is a prison survivor, healer, son, father, brother, husband, grandfather and friend. Hasshan is a Community Epidemiologist, community based participatory researcher, and leading expert on Trauma Informed Care, Violence Prevention, Reentry and Community Engagement. Hasshan is the Executive Director of the Promise Neighborhoods of the Lehigh Valley, adjunct professor, Lehigh University post-doctoral Research fellow, Rider-Pool Collective Impact fellow, and a distinguished Robert Wood Johnson Culture of Health Leader. Hasshan has been featured in numerous interviews, documentaries and short films and he delivered a TEDX Talk on The Healing Power of Radical Welcome. Hasshan holds a joint MSW from North Carolina A&T and The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, a post graduate certificate in Global Health and Doctorate in Health Sciences from Nova Southeastern University in Florida.

Beth Roy, PhD, mediates organizations and communities confronting challenges to diversity. She teaches workshops on ways to talk and listen across differing identities. Her published works include Some Trouble with Cows: Making Sense of Social Conflict and 41 Shotsand Counting: What Amado Diallo Teaches Us about Policing, Race, and Justice. She co-edited the anthology Re-Centering Culture and Knowledge in Conflict Resolution Practice.. She is a co-founder of the Practitioners Research and Scholarship Institute.

Mary Adams Trujillo, PhD, is emeritus professor of intercultural communication and conflict transformation at North Park University. She is a co-founder of the Practitioners Research and Scholarship Institute and co-edited the anthology Re-Centering Culture and Knowledge in Conflict Resolution Practice. She conducts programs in intercultural dialogue and spiritual practice in community settings.