Education Programs

Introduction to Community Peacebuilding

Cohesive communities are the foundation of society. As such the presence or lack of ‘positive peace’ in a community naturally has an impact on the local level as communities struggle to maintain connection and involvement, as well as impacting the larger society through ongoing polarization and disconnection.

Beginning with the viewpoints and assets of all participants in the room, this learning opportunity will open space for community members to explore together the structural and political causes of conflict at the local level, and the necessity of peacebuilding to address the underlying root causes of conflict within their communities.  Through knowledge sharing and interactive activities grounded in participants’ local context, this learning gathering offers an opportunity to strengthen, integrate, and reflect on the ideas, skills, and principles involved in building positive peace and what those ideas mean to participants personally and as peacebuilders in their communities.

Please note that this workshop is the same one offered in November 2024.

DATES
June 6 – 8, 2025

Registration has closed.

FACILITATOR
Digafie Debalke

DURATION
3 Days

COURSE TYPE
On Campus

Outcomes for community members will include:
  • Increased understanding through engaging in an exercise that is designed to assist community members in identifying their community’s social, cultural, resource, and creative assets that are crucial for peacebuilding and conflict transformation.
  • Through the learning and knowledge sharing process, community members will learn skills to develop an inclusive and community-owned definition of peacebuilding.
  • Community members will identify key aspects and tools of community peacebuilding encompassing the community’s social dynamics, economic setting, and political environment.
  • Community members will become familiar with some peacebuilding literature focused on community peacebuilding.
Who should take this workshop?

 This course is for Canadian residents in a position of leadership in their community, community organizers, non-government organizations, community members, students and those engaged in social justice and sustainable peacebuilding initiatives.

Fees

Accepted participants living in Atlantic provinces will receive full funding covering tuition, continental breakfast, lunch, and accommodation at the StFX Hotel. Participants from outside of the Atlantic provinces are required to pay a fee of $400.00. Hotel rooms are available for participants outside of the Antigonish area, and will be available from June 6 until June 8, 2025.

All participants are responsible for arranging and covering the costs of their own travel to and from the course venue, as well as their evening meals (supper).

This three-day, on campus course is open to Canadian applicants only.

St. Francis Xavier University and Coady Institute stand on the lands of Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and unceded home of the Mi’kmaw. We express our deep gratitude and appreciation to the generations of Mi’kmaw who, since time immemorial, have loved and stewarded these lands and the beings who call them home. Colonization is not just history; it exists in the present tense. While we strive to decolonize ourselves and our University, we know there is still much for us to learn.

We are committed to doing the hard work of self-reflection and to repairing relationships with the Mi’kmaw on whose lands we reside, including embracing the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada Calls to Action and embodying their spirit in our plans to move forward with our University.

Ms~t wiaqpulti’kl ankukamkewe’l
We are all treaty people.

Coady Institute
St. Francis Xavier University
4780 Tompkins Lane
PO Box 5000
Antigonish, NS B2G 2W5
Canada

Phone: (902) 867-3960
Phone: 1-866-820-7835 (within Canada)
Fax: (902) 867-3907

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