Conflict and education in Israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives

This research represents an innovative examination of the role of university educators in protracted ethnic conflict. In this exploratory qualitative case study, Israeli professors from five universities were asked to share their experiences and opinions as educators. They were invited to share thei...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Standish, Katerina
Other Authors: Byrne, Sean (Peace & Conflict Studies)
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/5282
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-5282
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-52822014-03-29T03:44:12Z Conflict and education in Israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives Standish, Katerina Byrne, Sean (Peace & Conflict Studies) Crowe, Roewan (Women's Studies) Jacoby, Tami (Political Studies) Doubleday, Nancy (Philosophy, McMaster University) Conflict Education Cultural Violence Conflict Narratives This research represents an innovative examination of the role of university educators in protracted ethnic conflict. In this exploratory qualitative case study, Israeli professors from five universities were asked to share their experiences and opinions as educators. They were invited to share their perceptions and perspectives when asked if they chose to challenge conflict narratives in the classroom. Research participants were asked to picture the future and to communicate their fears, worries, hopes and wishes. The educators interviewed in this study felt the atmosphere in Israel was hostile to individuals who teach from a critical standpoint and that there could be repercussions for persons who challenged the Zionist narrative. Educators used a variety of methods regarding contested materials: some spoke freely, many used a comparative approach using examples external to Israel, and some refused to discuss sensitive issues in the classroom. The results of this study point to an escalation in extreme positions in Israel, an inhospitable atmosphere for critical academics and a general pessimism regarding the future. However, this study also revealed the majority of those interviewed used strategies to challenge narratives of conflict in the classroom and most felt it was essential and beneficial to do so. Many respondents felt worried and uncertain about the future, most struggled to imagine a future that encompassed the qualities of ‘positive peace’ including mutual cooperation and equity among individuals and even fewer could imagine the means to manifest such a reality. When asked to imagine the future, responses were conservative, pessimistic and fearful and few educators articulated their professional contributions to social change. 2012-04-10T16:11:22Z 2012-04-10T16:11:22Z 2012-04-10 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/5282
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Conflict
Education
Cultural Violence
Conflict Narratives
spellingShingle Conflict
Education
Cultural Violence
Conflict Narratives
Standish, Katerina
Conflict and education in Israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives
description This research represents an innovative examination of the role of university educators in protracted ethnic conflict. In this exploratory qualitative case study, Israeli professors from five universities were asked to share their experiences and opinions as educators. They were invited to share their perceptions and perspectives when asked if they chose to challenge conflict narratives in the classroom. Research participants were asked to picture the future and to communicate their fears, worries, hopes and wishes. The educators interviewed in this study felt the atmosphere in Israel was hostile to individuals who teach from a critical standpoint and that there could be repercussions for persons who challenged the Zionist narrative. Educators used a variety of methods regarding contested materials: some spoke freely, many used a comparative approach using examples external to Israel, and some refused to discuss sensitive issues in the classroom. The results of this study point to an escalation in extreme positions in Israel, an inhospitable atmosphere for critical academics and a general pessimism regarding the future. However, this study also revealed the majority of those interviewed used strategies to challenge narratives of conflict in the classroom and most felt it was essential and beneficial to do so. Many respondents felt worried and uncertain about the future, most struggled to imagine a future that encompassed the qualities of ‘positive peace’ including mutual cooperation and equity among individuals and even fewer could imagine the means to manifest such a reality. When asked to imagine the future, responses were conservative, pessimistic and fearful and few educators articulated their professional contributions to social change.
author2 Byrne, Sean (Peace & Conflict Studies)
author_facet Byrne, Sean (Peace & Conflict Studies)
Standish, Katerina
author Standish, Katerina
author_sort Standish, Katerina
title Conflict and education in Israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives
title_short Conflict and education in Israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives
title_full Conflict and education in Israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives
title_fullStr Conflict and education in Israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives
title_full_unstemmed Conflict and education in Israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives
title_sort conflict and education in israel: university educators and challenging conflict narratives
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/5282
work_keys_str_mv AT standishkaterina conflictandeducationinisraeluniversityeducatorsandchallengingconflictnarratives
_version_ 1716658424998002688