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                                       Details for article 54 of 66 found articles
 
 
  Teaching to shift people's thinking toward peace: the relevance of Colman McCarthy's work for peacemaking criminology
 
 
Title: Teaching to shift people's thinking toward peace: the relevance of Colman McCarthy's work for peacemaking criminology
Author: Wozniak, John F.
Appeared in: Contemporary justice review
Paging: Volume 11 (2008) nr. 3 pages 229-244
Year: 2008-09
Contents: Peacemaking criminology is often conceived as a theoretical perspective built upon linkages between religious, feminist, and critical traditions. Equally important in peacemaking criminology is its teaching tradition, which promotes educating people about the values of peace, integration, cooperation, and caring over the values of control, repression, power, and domination. Teaching from a peacemaking perspective has generally involved efforts to design crime-related courses that feature core concepts, readings, and policies within peacemaking criminology writings. However, such peacemaking teaching and writings have not commonly provided a central focus upon what needs to be taught to shift people's thinking. This article thereby illustrates the work of peace educator Colman McCarthy, whose teaching experiences in high schools and universities are predicated upon influencing teenagers and young adults to embrace the idea that nothing can matter more than the struggle for and embracing of peace. This article also explores the ways in which Colman McCarthy's books, I'd Rather Teach Peace and All of One Peace: Essays on Nonviolence, offer a foundation to help people shift their thinking toward a culture of nonviolence and peace.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 54 of 66 found articles
 
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