BEYOND THE FIRE - 4 views
Building Peace In Our Backyards, and Around the Globe | Human Rights | Change.org - 1 views
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Former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan put quite the punctuation mark on what it means to work for peace. Speaking during the International Day of Peace, shortly before the dawn of the 21st century, Annan said that working for peace can be complicated, complex, and messy. But it's quite possibly the most necessary thing we can do, both in our personal lives and around the globe.
South Sudan creates Peace Ministry in new cabinet | Agricultural Commodities | Reuters - 0 views
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The list included seven female ministers and created a number of new ministries including Investment and Humanitarian Affairs combined with Disasters Management.
Peace Education in UNICEF - 4 views
Assessing the learning process - 3 views
Investing in Women and Girls | Women for Women International - 0 views
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Investing in Women and Girls Development experts agree that investing in women and girls is critical to achieving broader development goals.
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It’s true. After one year of intensive training in rights awareness, health and life skills, vocational training, and social networking, we have seen extraordinary results in the least likely of places. At least 80% of young women in Afghanistan, Nigeria, Kosovo, and Rwanda reported higher confidence and more awareness of their rights, which are critical resources to future political and economic participation in their families and communities. Afghanistan, DRC, Nigeria and Rwanda all had over 75% of young women report a better economic situation. 89% of our young participants in Afghanistan reported their general and family health to be better after graduation, and 87% of young women in Rwanda reported health improvements.
enm-study-guide-2007-09-07.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views
Peace education - Google Books - 0 views
AFGHANISTAN: Avoid using schools in elections, say agencies - 0 views
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KABUL, 17 June 2010 (IRIN) - Putting a polling station in a school would be run-of-the-mill in most countries, but in Afghanistan it can be an invitation to an attack by Taliban insurgents, opposed to the government and western-style democracy. Taliban rocket, grenade, gun and arson attacks on schools averaged about 50 a month last year. During the August 2009 elections, which the Taliban vowed to disrupt, the number hit 250 in that month alone, according to data compiled by aid agencies.
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Since the fall of the Taliban in late 2001, student numbers have surged from less than one million in 2001 to about seven million in 2010. More than 30 percent of the students are female, according to the Ministry of Education (MoE).
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According to research by Care International, in 2006-2008 about 1,153 attacks on educational facilities were reported. Some 230 people were killed in armed attacks on schools in 2006-2007, according to the MoE. Schools are an easy target for the Taliban, looking to demonstrate the government's impotence. "Girls' education is clearly targeted more than boys," stated Care's report of September 2009, which blamed the insurgents and other community members for the attacks.
Peace Education Theory - 1 views
Peace Education in an Era of Globalization - 1 views
"Peace Education" -- Betty Reardon - 1 views
The price of peace | openDemocracy - 1 views
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