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Theory Into Practice

Volume 44, Issue 4, 2005

Special Issue: Peace Education

Child Soldiers, Peace Education, and Postconflict Reconstruction for Peace

Child Soldiers, Peace Education, and Postconflict Reconstruction for Peace

DOI:
10.1207/s15430421tip4404_10
Michael Wessells

pages 363-369

Available online: 24 Jun 2010

Abstract

Worldwide, children are drawn into lives as soldiers and terrorism as the result of forced recruitment and also by extremist ideologies and their inability to obtain security, food, power, prestige, education, and positive life options through civilian means. Using an example from Sierra Leone, this article shows that peace education is an essential element in a holistic approach to the reintegration of former child soldiers and to the prevention of youth's engagement in violence and terrorism. In the postconflict context, effective peace education has a stronger practical than didactic focus, and it stimulates empathy, cooperation, reconciliation, and community processes for handling conflict in a nonviolent manner. These processes play a key role also in the prevention of children's engagement in violence and terrorism.

 

Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 24 Jun 2010

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Taylor & Francis Group