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War and the Environment: Jan 17 - Feb 27, 2022 online course registration

Start: Monday, January 17, 2022  12:00 PM  Eastern Standard Time (US & Canada) (GMT-05:00)

End: Sunday, February 27, 2022  12:00 PM  Eastern Standard Time (US & Canada) (GMT-05:00)

Host Contact Info: Phill: Dit e-mailadres wordt beveiligd tegen spambots. JavaScript dient ingeschakeld te zijn om het te bekijken.

 

Course fee: $100 (Pay less if you have to, more if you can.) There will be a limit of 150 tickets sold for this course.

Grounded in research on peace and ecological security, this course focusses on the relationship between two existential threats: war and environmental catastrophe. We will cover:

• Where wars happen and why.
• What wars do to the earth.
• What imperial militaries do to the earth back home.
• What nuclear weapons have done and could do to people and the planet.
• How this horror is hidden and maintained.
• What can be done.

This course is 100% online and interactions are not live or scheduled, so you can take part whenever works for you. Weekly content includes a mix of text, images, video, and audio. Instructors and students utilize online discussion forums to go over each week's content, as well as to provide feedback on optional assignment submissions.

The course also includes three 1-hour optional zoom calls which are designed to facilitate a more interactive and real-time learning experience.

Week 1: Where Wars Happen and Why, January 17-23

Facilitator: Tim Pluta

Tim describes his path to peace activism as a slow realization that this is a part of what he ought to be doing in life. After standing up to a bully as a young teen, then getting beaten up and asking his attacker if he felt better, having a gun pushed up his nose as an exchange student in a foreign country and talking his way out of the situation, and getting out of the military as a Conscientious Objector, Tim found that the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 finally convinced him that one of his focuses in life would be peace activism. From helping to organize peace rallies, speaking and marching at conferences around the world, co-founding two chapters of Veterans For Peace, the Veterans Global Peace Network, and a World BEYOND War chapter, Tim says that he delights in being invited to help facilitate the first week of World BEYOND War's War and the Environment, and looks forward to learning. Tim represented World BEYOND War in Glasgow Scotland during COP26.


Week 2: What Wars Do to the Earth, January 24-30

Facilitator: Rukmini Iyer

Rukmini is a leadership and organization development consultant and a peacebuilder. She runs a consulting practice called Exult! Solutions based in Mumbai, India and has been working with clients around the world for over two decades. While her work straddles the corporate, educational and development spaces, she finds the idea of eco-centric living a common thread that binds them all. Facilitation, coaching and dialogue are the core modalities she works with and she is trained in a variety of approaches including human process work, trauma science, non-violent communication, appreciative inquiry, neuro linguistic programming, etc. In the peacebuilding space, interfaith work, peace education and dialogue are her main areas of focus. She also teaches interfaith mediation and conflict resolution at Maharashtra National Law University, India. Rukmini is a Rotary Peace Fellow from Chulalongkorn University, Thailand and has Master's degrees in Organizational Psychology and Management. Her publications include 'A Culturally Sensitive Approach to Engage Contemporary Corporate India in Peacebuilding' and 'An Inner Journey of Casteism'. She can be reached at Dit e-mailadres wordt beveiligd tegen spambots. JavaScript dient ingeschakeld te zijn om het te bekijken..


Week 3: What Imperial Militaries Do to the Earth Back Home, January 31-February 6

Facilitator: Eva Czermak

Eva Czermak, MD, E.MA. is a trained physician, has a Master’s degree in Human Rights and is Rotary Peace Fellow besides being a trained mediator. In the last 20 years she has mainly worked as medical doctor with marginalized groups such as refugees, migrants, homeless people, people with substance abuse problems and without health insurance, 9 of those years as manager of an NGO. Currently she works for the Austrian ombudsman and for Caritas’ aid projects in Burundi. Other experiences include participation in dialogue projects in the US, international experience in the development and humanitarian fields (Burundi and Sudan) and several training activities in the medical, communication and human rights fields.


Week 4: What Nuclear Weapons Have Done and Could Do, February 7-13

Facilitator: Emma Pike

Emma Pike is a peace educator, a specialist in global citizenship education, and a determined advocate for a world free of nuclear weapons. She is a firm believer in education as the surest means for building a more peaceful and equitable world for all. Her years of experience in research and academia are supplemented by more recent experience as a classroom teacher, and currently works as an education consultant with Reverse The Trend (RTT), an initiative that amplifies the voices of young people, primarily from frontline communities, who have been directly affected by nuclear weapons and the climate crisis.

As an educator, Emma believes that her most important job is to see the vast potential in each of her students, and to guide them in the discovery of this potential. Every child has a super power. As an educator, she knows it is her job to help each student bring their super power to shine. She brings this same approach to RTT through her firm conviction in the power of the individual to effect positive change toward a world free of nuclear weapons.

Emma was raised in Japan and the United States, and has spent much of her academic career in the United Kingdom. She holds a Master of Arts in International Relations from the University of St Andrews, a Master of Arts in Development Education and Global Learning from the UCL (University College London) Institute of Education, and a Master of Education in Peace and Human Rights Education from Teachers College, Columbia University.


Week 5: How This Horror Is Hidden and Maintained, February 14-20

Facilitator: Deniz Vural

Deniz Vural is based in Istanbul, Turkey. She is a life-long learner who graduated with a degree in Marine Engineering, focusing on environmental sustainability, followed by a Master's in Geosciences, studying climate change, but also how to transfer this knowledge to a wider public. She has worked since 2015 on various projects and activities on the polar regions, the effects of the climate crisis, and possible steps to be taken to diminish individual footprints (i.e. carbon, water, ecological etc.). Vural has traveled virtually around the Arctic circle to study the deepest unknown, frozen ground, permafrost. She now focuses on permafrost research, particularly investigating thermokarst lakes, which are also known as ice-rich permafrost, and the relationship between waterbody differentiation and changes in the Arctic ecosystems. She is also leading the Education and Outreach leg under the Polar Research Institute at the The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey and is both learning and teaching different disciplines such as ecological gardening and capacity building workshops.


Week 6: What Can Be Done, February 21-27

Facilitators: Greta Zarro and Rachel Small

Greta Zarro is World BEYOND War Organizing Director. She has a background in issue-based community organizing. Her experience includes volunteer recruitment and engagement, event organizing, coalition building, legislative and media outreach, and public speaking. Greta graduated as valedictorian from St. Michael’s College with a bachelor’s degree in Sociology/Anthropology. She previously worked as New York Organizer for leading non-profit Food & Water Watch. There, she campaigned on issues related to fracking, genetically engineered foods, climate change, and the corporate control of our common resources. Greta and her partner run Unadilla Community Farm, a non-profit organic farm and permaculture education center in Upstate New York. Greta can be reached at Dit e-mailadres wordt beveiligd tegen spambots. JavaScript dient ingeschakeld te zijn om het te bekijken..

Rachel Small is World BEYOND WAR Canada Organizer. She is a community organizer based in Toronto, Canada, on Dish with One Spoon and Treaty 13 Indigenous territory. She has organized within local and international social/environmental justice movements for over a decade, with a special focus on working in solidarity with communities harmed by Canadian extractive industry projects in Latin America. She has also worked on campaigns and mobilizations around climate justice, decolonization, anti-racism, disability justice, and food sovereignty. She currently organizes in Toronto with the Mining Injustice Solidarity Network and has a Masters in Environmental Studies from York University. She has a background in art-based activism and has facilitated projects in community mural-making, independent publishing and media, spoken word, guerilla theatre, and communal cooking with people of all ages across Canada. She lives downtown with her partner, kid, and friend, and can often be found at a protest or direct action, gardening, spray painting, and playing softball. Rachel can be reached at Dit e-mailadres wordt beveiligd tegen spambots. JavaScript dient ingeschakeld te zijn om het te bekijken.


World BEYOND War Education Director Phill Gittins and other World BEYOND War staff, board members, and partners will be online throughout the six weeks helping to facilitate.

Time commitment/expectations: How much time you spend and how deeply you engage is up to you. At a minimum, you can expect to spend between 1-2 hours a week if you only review the weekly content (text and videos). We hope, however, you’ll want to engage in the online dialogue with peers and experts. This is where the real richness of the learning occurs, where we have the opportunity to explore new ideas, strategies, and visions for building a more peaceful world. Depending on your level of engagement with the online discussion you can expect to add another 1-3 hours a week. Finally, all participants are encouraged to complete optional assignments (required to earn a certificate). This is an opportunity to deepen and apply the ideas explored each week to practical possibilities. Expect another 2 hours a week if you pursue these options.

Accessing the course. Prior to the start date, you will be sent instructions for how to access the course.

Earn a certificate. To earn a certificate, participants must also complete optional weekly written assignments. Instructors will return the assignment to the student with detailed feedback. Submissions and feedback can be shared with everyone taking the course or kept private between a student and the instructor, at the student’s choice. Submissions must be completed by the conclusion of the course.

The cost of the course is the same for someone completing all, some, or none of the assignments.

Questions? Contact: Dit e-mailadres wordt beveiligd tegen spambots. JavaScript dient ingeschakeld te zijn om het te bekijken.

To register by check,

1. Email Phill and tell him. 2. Make the check out to World BEYOND War and send it to World BEYOND War 513 E Main St #1484 Charlottesville VA 22902 USA.

Registrations are not refundable.


Facebook Event to Promote This:
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Bron; https://actionnetwork.org/ticketed_events/war-and-the-environment-jan-17-feb-27-2022-online-course-registration?clear_id=true&link_id=4&can_id=6f798449183e3e4e9586abab6d7a8030&source=email-wbw-news-action-desmond-tutu&email_referrer=email_1404218&email_subject=wbw-news-action-war-and-environment