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  MESF Seminar

Why Peace Education Fails:
Problematising Peace Curricula in the Middle East

May 27, 2024

World peace is threatened by unprecedented conflicts and global challenges making peacebuilding and diplomacy urgent. This study focuses on the role of peace education, as one of the most frequently disregarded tools available to us, in promoting enduring peace in the Middle East – a region beset by ongoing geopolitical, religious, and cultural conflicts. In particular, it draws on the body of current literature to examine how peace education is implemented in educational settings in two Middle Eastern countries: Lebanon and Israel.

This study identifies three challenges to the successful and sustainable enactment of peace education in these countries. These include political realities specific to each country, structural forms of violence embedded in the curricula, and a lack of participatory peace-oriented approaches and activities. Based on these findings, this study problematises peace education as a Western construct with broad and utopian values that are not compatible with the non-Western world. The argument then shifts to critical approaches to peace education with more potential to promote lasting peace. Moreover, it emphasises the need for interaction/contact, dialogue and critical analysis of national/global histories and cultures.  

Speaker

Dr. Maliheh Rezaei

Dr. Maliheh Rezaei is a teaching associate in Peace Education at Monash University and Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia. She specialises in critical approaches to peace education, and academic freedom specifically in higher education contexts. She is also interested in Post-Islamism and secularism in Iran and beyond.     

Registration

Date: Monday, May 27 2024, 12:00 – 13:00 (AEST)
Location: Burwood Corporate Centre (BCC)
221 Burwood Highway Burwood, VIC 3125
Catering: Lunch provided at 13:00

Please register for free using the link below.

For any questions, please contact mesf@deakin.edu.au