Theories on Peacebuilding and Social Change

When pursuing social change, questions about what should be the first priority have been a long-standing matter of philosophical interest and debate. What is more important? Is it efforts that expand individual and personal capacities? Or, is it efforts seeking to redress systems and structures? Do...

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Main Author: Dinda Dinda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Journal of Social Science Research and Review 2020-02-01
Series:International Journal of Social Science Research and Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijssrr.com/journal/article/view/22
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spelling doaj-190d18ab283143098d68762f497dd23c2021-08-19T17:51:59ZengInternational Journal of Social Science Research and ReviewInternational Journal of Social Science Research and Review2700-24972700-24972020-02-01231710.47814/ijssrr.v2i3.2222Theories on Peacebuilding and Social ChangeDinda Dinda0Faculty of Economics and Business, Brawijaya University, IndonesiaWhen pursuing social change, questions about what should be the first priority have been a long-standing matter of philosophical interest and debate. What is more important? Is it efforts that expand individual and personal capacities? Or, is it efforts seeking to redress systems and structures? Do we start with the world out there— focusing on the distribution of power and resources within and between societies—or the world within—aiming to develop awareness, growth, and commitment to change on a personal level? While various approaches to peacebuilding and social justice can be located along the full range of this spectrum, conversations about how to approach these endeavors in a complimentary, integrated way are fairly new. Consequently, tensions do exist around how to set priorities. For instance, those committed to promoting attitude change must contend increasingly with critical perspectives which prioritize and address the structural roots of social conflict. On the other hand, those that pursue strictly the structural roots at the heart of a conflict situation—often the tactics and goals of critical social movements—are at risk of polarizing and enflaming conflict in ways that do not easily lead to constructive resolution. In other words, the bridge building skills of the peacemaker are key to conflict transformation work. At the same time, bridge building skills devoid of a critical social justice perspective are arguably shallow at best.https://ijssrr.com/journal/article/view/22peacebuildingsocial change
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dinda Dinda
spellingShingle Dinda Dinda
Theories on Peacebuilding and Social Change
International Journal of Social Science Research and Review
peacebuilding
social change
author_facet Dinda Dinda
author_sort Dinda Dinda
title Theories on Peacebuilding and Social Change
title_short Theories on Peacebuilding and Social Change
title_full Theories on Peacebuilding and Social Change
title_fullStr Theories on Peacebuilding and Social Change
title_full_unstemmed Theories on Peacebuilding and Social Change
title_sort theories on peacebuilding and social change
publisher International Journal of Social Science Research and Review
series International Journal of Social Science Research and Review
issn 2700-2497
2700-2497
publishDate 2020-02-01
description When pursuing social change, questions about what should be the first priority have been a long-standing matter of philosophical interest and debate. What is more important? Is it efforts that expand individual and personal capacities? Or, is it efforts seeking to redress systems and structures? Do we start with the world out there— focusing on the distribution of power and resources within and between societies—or the world within—aiming to develop awareness, growth, and commitment to change on a personal level? While various approaches to peacebuilding and social justice can be located along the full range of this spectrum, conversations about how to approach these endeavors in a complimentary, integrated way are fairly new. Consequently, tensions do exist around how to set priorities. For instance, those committed to promoting attitude change must contend increasingly with critical perspectives which prioritize and address the structural roots of social conflict. On the other hand, those that pursue strictly the structural roots at the heart of a conflict situation—often the tactics and goals of critical social movements—are at risk of polarizing and enflaming conflict in ways that do not easily lead to constructive resolution. In other words, the bridge building skills of the peacemaker are key to conflict transformation work. At the same time, bridge building skills devoid of a critical social justice perspective are arguably shallow at best.
topic peacebuilding
social change
url https://ijssrr.com/journal/article/view/22
work_keys_str_mv AT dindadinda theoriesonpeacebuildingandsocialchange
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