Archive for May, 2009

ACRGNY Roundtable 4 June: Tobi Dress

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find below information on the ACRGNY Roundtable 4 June: Tobi Dress.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

ACRGNY - JOHN JAY COLLEGE ROUNDTABLE BREAKFAST, JUNE 4, 2009

John Jay College of Criminal Justice
899 Tenth Avenue
Room 610
8:00 AM - 10:00 AM

June’s Roundtable Breakfast will feature a woman well experienced with peacebuilding processes, Tobi Dress. Tobi, author of Designing a Peacebuilding Infrastructure: Taking a Systems Approach to the Prevention of Deadly Conflict, will discuss her view of conflicts and conflict prevention and resolution as processes, not single events, and will share her experience developing peacebuilding infrastructures with a focus on such critical aspects of the development process as good governance, respect for human rights and civil rights institutions, sound economic and financial systems and well-reasoned economic and social development.

Tobi P. Dress is an attorney, mediator and specialist in dispute resolution and peacebuilding processes. She currently serves as a legal officer for the United Nations Panel of Counsel (NY), and has worked with a number of other UN agencies and international organizations, including UNDP (NY; Bucharest), the International Labor Office (Geneva), UNESCO (Paris), the International Committee for the Red Cross (Geneva), and the International Organization for Migration (Geneva), amongst others, and has been on several missions for these agencies. She has also taught and lectured on dispute resolution and conflict prevention at several universities and law schools, and has written a book on peacebuilding for the UN Non-Governmental Liaison Service (Geneva). In her non-UN life she is a fiction writer and is working on a novel and a book of short stories.

There is no charge for the Breakfast but please let us know by return email that you’ll be coming, so we don’t run out of food!

International Ombudsman Association Professional Development Opportunities

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

The International Ombudsman Association (IOA) presents Professional Development Opportunities in
Bangkok, Thailand September 7-9, 2009 at the United Nations Conference Center at ESCAP (Education and Scientific Commission for Asia and the Pacific). More information

Kind regards
Brian Ward

Book Launch: On the Problem of Human Dignity

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find here a link to a book launch: On the Problem of Human Dignity: A Hermeneutical and Phenomenological Investigation to be held at the National University of Ireland Maynooth.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

About the Book

This book proposes a hermeneutically based understanding of human dignity which is substantiated by a phenomenological analysis conceived in the light of Edith Stein’s phenomenology.

In the first part a historical analysis lays bare four distinct traditions in European thought, each of which tends to conceptualise human dignity in a characteristic way. All of these make sense only because each one is concerned with the same idea, so that it is possible to regard the classical, the Christian, the Modern and the post-modern perspectives as contributing elements towards an eidetic analysis of the idea. In the second part it is argued that various definitions issuing from these different epistemological traditions can represent the essence of which we have experiential knowledge and contribute to our understanding of it.

Finally, in the third part, a constitutional analysis shows the intersubjective site of the idea and demonstrates why its simplicity and quasi-necessity makes it both universally accessible, and so difficult to explain that many contemporary authors actually deny the idea any precise content.

New book: Emoções, Sociedade e Cultura by Mauro Koury

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find http://www.editoracrv.com.br/ a link to a new book: Emoções, Sociedade e Cultura by Mauro Koury.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

Archtects For Peace Editorials

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find below links to Architects For Peace Editorials.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

Architects for Peace
Melbourne, Australia

MAY 2009
Cultural Identity Manifested in Visual Voices and the Public Face of Architecture
http://archpeace2.blogspot.com/2009/05/cultural-identity-manifested-in-visual.html

Also archived on Architects for Peace

July 2008
The Aga Khan Award for Architecture: Unveiling the Jewels of the Built Environment in the Developing World
http://archpeace2.blogspot.com/2008/07/aga-khan-award-for-architecture.html

February 2008
“What’s War/Peace - Construction/Destruction got to do with Architecture?”
http://archpeace2.blogspot.com/2008/02/whats-warpeace-constructiondestruction.html

————————————————————-
Dr. Ashraf M. Salama
Reader in Architecture
SPACE-School of Planning, Architecture & Civil Engineering
Queen’s University Belfast

David Keir Building, Stranmillis Road
Belfast BT9 5AG
United Kingdom

http://www.qub.ac.uk/space
http://qub.academia.edu/AshrafSalama
http://www.arti-arch.org/
http://www.archnet-ijar.org/
http://architectureurbanism.blogspot.com/

James Boskey ADR Writing Competition For Law Students

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find below information on the James Boskey writing competition for law students.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

James Boskey ADR Writing Competition

Sponsored by The ABA Section of Dispute Resolution in association with the Saltman Center for Conflict Resolution of UNLV Boyd School of Law and Penn State Dickenson School of Law.

Sponsored by The ABA Section of Dispute Resolution in memory of James B. Boskey, an intellectual, humanitarian, law professor, and mediator. Jim Boskey became known and beloved world-over for his publication of The Alternative Newsletter, a resource guide on ADR published quarterly. It was in its tenth year when Jim died in 1999. The publication provided a comprehensive yet very accessible window into the diverse dimensions of the ADR field. In many respects, Jim Boskey-through the alternative newsletter-was the voice of the ADR community.

Purpose of the Boskey ADR Writing Competition
The purpose of the competition is to promote greater interest in and understanding of the field of dispute resolution and collaborative decision-making among students enrolled in ABA accredited law schools.

The essay may address any aspect of dispute resolution practice, theory or research that the contestant chooses. Essays are limited to 15-25 typewritten pages, including footnotes or endnotes. The text of the essay must be double-spaced, with twelve-point font and one-inch margins.

First Prize: $1000 to the Competition winner and an invitation to publish in Penn State Dickenson School of Law Yearbook On Arbitration and Mediation. The Competition winner and honorable mention essays will also be posted on the Boskey Competition website.

Entry Information

Entries for the competition must be submitted by Monday, June 15, 2009. One electronic copy of the submission and one entry form must be submitted in order to register for the competition. Electronic entries are to be sent to Josephine Waugh at waughjos[@]staff.abanet.org, with the subject header “Attn: Boskey Dispute Resolution Essay Competition.”

Click here to download the Boskey Entry Form.

Register via mail send the completed Entry Form and essay to:

Boskey Dispute Resolution Essay Competition
c/o Jo Waugh
ABA Section of Dispute Resolution
740 15th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20005

Entries must be postmarked by U.S. mail or recognized commercial express service. Entries submitted by fax will be automatically rejected. Contestants will receive confirmation of the entry. The winner(s) will be notified by mail of their selection. The James Boskey Dispute Resolution Essay Competition is sponsored by the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution.

The James Boskey ADR Writing Competition is a project of the ADR in Law Schools Committee. The Boskey Writing Competition is Chaired by Jean Sternlight, Saltman Professor, UNLV Boyd School of Law & Director Saltman Center for Conflict Resolution.”

Spring 2009 Issue of the Peace and Conflict Review

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find below a note from the Editor of the Peace and Conflict Review Journal.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

Spring 2009 Issue of the Peace and Conflict Review

The Spring 2009 Issue of the Peace and Conflict Review, our open access and peer reviewed academic journal, has been officially released. Please visit www.review.upeace.org to access the articles/book reviews and get your free copy!

All the best,

Ross

Ross Ryan
Editor of Publications
UN mandated University for Peace
rryan[@]upeace.org
editor[@]monitor.upeace.org

Article on How Americans Think About Torture and Why

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find below an article on how Americans think about torture and why.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

HOW AMERICANS THINK ABOUT TORTURE–AND WHY
by Roy Eidelson

(http://royeidelson.wordpress.com/2009/05/10/how-americans-think-about-torture—and-why/ )

In recent weeks, new revelations about the harsh interrogation and torture of detainees during the Bush administration years have made headlines and stirred controversy. The positions of prominent advocates and opponents on each side are clear. But what do we know about how the American people in general have come to view the use of torture by the U.S. government?

The Pew Research Center for the People & the Press has been polling Americans on this key question for almost five years. Since 2004, representative samples have been asked, “Do you think the use of torture against suspected terrorists in order to gain important information can often be justified, sometimes be justified, rarely be justified, or never be justified?” The results over this time period have shown only minor fluctuations. The most recent numbers, from last month, reveal that 15% of Americans believe torture is often justified, 34% think it is sometimes justified, 22% consider it rarely justified, and 25% believe torture is never justified. So not only do 49% consider torture justified at least some of the time, fully 71% refuse to rule it out entirely.

Further insight into these numbers can be garnered from a different poll conducted a few months ago, in January 2009. Fox News/Opinion Dynamics asked a national sample of Americans, “Do you think the use of harsh interrogation techniques, including torture, has ever saved American lives since the September 11 (2001) terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon?” The results: 45% “Yes” and 41% “No” (with 14% responding “Don’t Know”). In other words, almost half of Americans think torture “works.”

Polling data on how Americans view specific interrogation techniques that were part of the Bush era arsenal are harder to find. But a national Gallup poll in January 2005, about eight months after the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal, sheds some light here. The following question was posed: “Here is a list of possible interrogation techniques that can be used on prisoners. Do you think it is right or wrong for the U.S. government to use them on prisoners suspected of having information about possible terrorist attacks against the United States?” In order of approval percentages, the survey found that 50% approved of depriving prisoners of sleep for several days; 36% approved of threatening to transfer prisoners to a country known for using torture; 29% approved of threatening prisoners with dogs; 18 % approved of forcing prisoners to remain naked and chained in uncomfortable positions in cold rooms for several hours; 14% approved of strapping prisoners on boards and forcing their heads underwater until they think they are drowning; and 13% approved of having female interrogators make physical contact with Muslim men during religious observances that prohibit such contact.

Based on this sampling of polling results, it is easy at first to be surprised and troubled by the degree to which Americans have expressed support for the inhumane treatment and torture of detainees. But public sentiment on such matters does not emerge in a vacuum. Rather, it often reflects the influence of carefully orchestrated marketing campaigns by powerful vested interests eager to shape opinion in support of a specific agenda or facts on the ground. Certainly it is now well known that the Bush administration embraced the use of “enhanced interrogation techniques” in national security settings. It is therefore instructive to carefully consider the five-pronged message that they and their backers promoted to create a citizenry supportive of torture.

The first component involved fostering a “war on terror” environment of pervasive fear in which the prospect of massive, catastrophic harm was repeatedly given center stage. Spurred on by improbable ticking time-bomb scenarios where every second matters, perceptions of an urgent need to protect the country from looming disaster created a “whatever it takes” mentality in which efforts to extract crucial information through harsh interrogations and torture became a “no brainer.”

The second element advanced the view that we need not be helpless against this threat because through torture–and torture alone–we can learn what we need to foil the plans of evildoers. Unsubstantiated evidentiary claims, hidden from inspection by veils of secrecy, were used to argue that specific interrogation techniques–regardless of how they might repulse us–were ultimately the only way we could protect ourselves.

Third was the frequent assurance that those we subjected to torture were themselves guilty of having participated in heinous acts of injustice that caused the loss of many innocent lives. This argument served to diminish concerns the public might have felt over the treatment these individuals received while in custody. Even in the absence of legal proceedings, the detainees could be deemed deserving of the physical and psychological pain inflicted upon them–they were responsible for their own suffering.

Fourth was the repeated assertion that the United States has a finely tuned moral compass and engages in torture only with regret and discomfort, only as a last resort, and only in the service of a far greater good. Sharp contrasts were drawn between “them” and “us”–between the detainees’ innate evilness and our inherent goodness, between their vile aims and our righteous purpose. In this context, the interrogators were presented as courageous and heroic, worthy of praise rather than criticism.

The fifth and final component was a concerted effort to stifle open debate when questions about the use of “enhanced interrogation techniques” arose. Standard strategy here involved painting skeptics and critics–including human rights leaders and organizations–as untrustworthy, irresponsible, misinformed, weak, or unpatriotic. In so doing, the public was encouraged to discount, ignore, or condemn these voices of concern, and important words of warning therefore went unheeded.

In sum, this seemingly successful campaign of mass persuasion depended upon convincing the public to believe five things: (1) our country is in great danger, (2) torture is the only thing that can keep us safe, (3) the people we torture are monstrous wrongdoers, (4) our decision to torture is moral and for the greater good, and (5) critics of our torture policy should not be trusted. And all the while, the marketers painstakingly avoided using the actual word “torture”–and contested the word’s use by anyone else. Of course, this strategy is by no means unique to the selling of torture. A similar approach, designed for hawking war, was used with devastating and tragic effect in building public support for the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Admittedly, we cannot be sure that torture would be less popular with Americans today if the Bush administration had not worked so hard to promote it. But there is good reason to think this might be the case. After all, the combination of an outsized public relations budget, an overly accommodating mainstream media, and an unwary audience of millions is every marketer’s dream. In similar fashion, we cannot really know whether there would now be even greater public support for torture if not for the efforts of those who have steadfastly spoken out against our country’s interrogation abuses. Looking ahead, as still more information emerges through declassification of documents, high-level investigations, or congressional hearings, we should expect to hear this five-part sales pitch over and over again from Bush-era torture advocates. But hopefully this next time around, far fewer of us will still be buying.

Graduate Workshop on Restorative Practices and Peace Education

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find below information on a graduate workshop on restorative practices and peace education.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

Graduate Workshop on Restorative Practices and Peace Education

We (Dr. Bill Timpson, myself, other CSU faculty) are offering a graduate level workshop at Colorado State University this summer from July 20-31 on Restorative Practices: Peace Education, Reconciliation, Cultural Diversity, and Sustainability. Please see the attached flyer and informational handout.

Thank you in advance.

Edward J. Brantmeier, Ph. D.
Assistant Professor
School of Education
Co-Chair, Peace and Reconciliation Studies Program–International Programs
Colorado State University
Office: 970.491.2113
Fax: 970.491.1317
E-mail: Edward.Brantmeier[@]colostate.edu
Webpage: http://sites.google.com/a/rams.colostate.edu/edwardjbrantmeier/

Call For Papers: Exile and Migration

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Dear HumanDHS network friends

Please find below a call for papers for a one day course on Exile and Migration.

Kind regards
Brian Ward

EXILE AND MIGRATION

A one-day Postgraduate conference

SAGE and School of Language and Cultures

Thursday, 11th June 2009

CALL FOR PAPERS

We invite papers from postgraduates working in all disciplines on any aspect

of exile and/or migration. Submissions which engage theoretical or empirical

approaches, or diverse methodologies, are welcome. We encourage papers

employing interdisciplinary frameworks.

Topics might include, but are by no means restricted to:

_ Political exile

_ Artistic or cultural representations of exile

_ Inner exile, or exile within borders

_ Aesthetic, artistic or linguistic exile

_ Exile from the past

_ Diaspora, migration and identity

_ Forced migration and asylum

_ Internal and international migration

_ Historical and modern migration

_ Theoretical, legal, or cultural relationships between exile and

migration

Papers should be up to 20 minutes long. Abstracts of 200-250 words should

be submitted to Lucy.Stone[@]postgrad.manchester.ac.uk by 15th May 2009.

The conference is generously supported by SAGE and the School of

Languages, Linguistics and Cultures, University of Manchester .