Using Sport for Development in Conflict and Post-disaster Situations
…Operating in a Multicultural World
Next Step 2014: Using Sport for Good
10-14 February 2014, New Delhi
India
‘Us’ and ‘them’ in a Diverse World
Building Global Competency to Operate amidst Diversity
Approaching Positive Peace in its complex whole
Drawing upon Community Resources to build in inclusion
Utilising Sport for large scale impact
Elements of a Post Conflict Society
Breakdown of relationships: cultural, social and economic
Mistrust and alienation: Hardening of Stereotypes and self-Exclusion
Constructing the anti-state narrative: Paving way for structural discrimination
Ghettoising the Gendered Space: Women as passive receptors and non-initiators
How can we use Sport for Building Multicultural Citizens
‘Starting’ where it matters most: Playing with children and ‘transgressing borders’
Influencing where it can ‘impact’: Working with parents
Creating ‘buy in’ where it is ‘sustainable’: Building Capacities of Leaders
Creating ‘access’ where it makes meaning: Influencing and Building Capacities of Teachers in Schools
Building ‘resources’ through sustainable spaces: Advocating with Governments and creating global coalitions for Sport and Peace
Literate citizens in a diverse democratic society should bereflective, moral, and active citizens in an interconnectedglobal world.
- James Banks
The Next Step…Is Sport Enough?
Identity Development in a global interconnected world
Beyond Sport: Paving the way for integrating tools
Deepening the Local, Impacting the Global: Strengthening community development through sport to build global experiences and illustrations for change
We live in a political world and we are ‘political’. Can we really detach from what’s happening around us?
Gender mainstreaming: Moving beyond tokenism of participation and into shaking up the status quo