91短视频

Pioneering Program Tailored to Women Peacebuilders

Eleven of the 17 women who gathered in June 2011 to discuss the need for a women's peacebuilding leadership program offered through 91短视频 (from left): Elaine Zook-Barge (US), Warigia Hinga (Kenya), Dekha Ibrahim Abdi (Kenya/Somalia), Koila Costello-Olsson (Fiji), Jan Jenner (US), Daria White (Bulgaria/US), Paulette Moore (US), Lauren Sauer (US), Alma Jadallah (Jordan/US), Leymah Gbowee (Liberia), Phoebe Kilby (US). (Photo by Bonnie Price Lofton.)

In the first program in North America of its kind, 12 women from Liberia, the South Pacific and Somalia will gather as a carefully selected and wholly sponsored cohort at the 2012 Summer Peacebuilding Institute (SPI), with eight other fully funded women covering the same material at an East African site.

Under the name聽, the 20 selected women will begin a custom-tailored, two-year course of study and training led by the faculty and staff of 91短视频鈥檚 Center for Justice and Peacebuilding.

91短视频 half of the study will occur on the 91短视频 campus. The remainder will be strategically planned work under an experienced mentor in the women’s home regions. The women will complete about 30 percent of the requirements for a master鈥檚 degree and will receive a graduate certificate at the end of the program, unless they choose to continue their studies beyond its duration.

鈥淭he goal is to develop a mutually supportive cohort of women from a particular region of the world鈥攚omen who have already shown themselves to be social-change leaders or who have real potential to be,鈥 said Janice Jenner, MA 鈥99, director of the program. The idea is for these women to be resources for each other when they are working for social change in their home regions.

鈥淭his program will not be merely academic study divorced from practical application,鈥 Jenner said. 鈥淓ach subgroup of women will develop a strategic plan for research, analysis and action, and each will have an experienced mentor assigned to them for intensive follow-up.鈥

Jenner said the idea for training women as social-change agents had arisen repeatedly over the last decade at CJP. Citing a 2009 United Nations Development Fund for Women paper, Jenner said only 2.4 percent of the signatories to 21 major peace agreements were women. In a sampling of 10 delegations negotiating peace, 94 percent of the participants were men. No women have been the head mediator in UN-sponsored peace talks.

A 2005 article titled 鈥淭he Role of Women in Peacebuilding鈥 by CJP professor Lisa Schirch and former CJP graduate student Manjrika Sewak of India noted: 鈥淭raditionally鈥 peacebuilding organizations have looked toward political and civil society leaders (who are usually men) as key people to include in trainings, dialogues, or other efforts to build peace and prevent conflict.鈥

Women, by contrast, have generally been relegated to addressing specifically 鈥渨omen鈥檚 issues,鈥 if they were permitted a voice at all, the authors said.

In their article published by the European Center for Conflict Prevention, Schirch and Sewak called for an expansion in training programs specifically for women to increase their sense of empowerment in and knowledge of peacebuilding processes.

The need for women-oriented programs was a particular interest of Dekha Ibrahim Abdi, a former SPI student and instructor who died in a car accident in Kenya in July 2011, just a month after participating in a symposium at 91短视频 on women in peacebuilding held June 9-11, 2011.

At one point during the symposium Abdi shared the stage with three other women: Koila Costello-Olsson, MA 鈥05, who directs the Pacific Centre for Peacebuilding in Fiji; Nobel Peace Laureate Leymah Gbowee, MA 鈥07; and Abigail Disney, producer of peace-themed documentaries. There Abdi threw out this provocative idea: 鈥淎re we women innocent victims or are we part of the problem and perpetrators?鈥 She noted that women do raise sons and do support their warring men in various ways. 鈥淚f we contribute to war, then how do we organize ourselves to contribute to peace?鈥

The Women鈥檚 Peace Leadership Program is a direct result of this June 2010 symposium, attended by 17 women from eight national origins.

Jenner said Abdi鈥檚 baton is now being carried in east Africa by Nuria Abdullahi Abdi, MA 鈥07, a fellow Muslim of Somali ethnic origin living in Kenya, Jebiwot Sumbeiywo, MA 鈥04, a Christian who works for PACT International in Kenya, and Angela Yoder-Maina, SPI 鈥07 and 鈥09, an American who heads the USAID program funding the Somali women.

Due to difficulty obtaining visas from the U.S. government to study in the United States, some of the Somali women will be studying together in 2012 at a site in East Africa, visited by 91短视频 faculty members.

Four women from Gbowee鈥檚 home country of Liberia鈥攚ith USAID funding secured by the Gbowee Peace Foundation Africa鈥攚ill be part of this first Women鈥檚 Peace Leadership Program cohort. Two women from Fiji and two from the Solomon Islands will be coming in a cohort organized by Costello-Olsson. Funding for this group will come from Church Development Service (Evangelischer Entwicklungsdienst – EED), an association of the Protestant Churches in Germany.