Crossroads Fall/Winter 2020-21

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TURNING TO EACH OTHER

"It was terrific sharing ideas with peacebuilders globally. Racism is structural and systemic. For us, as peacebuilders, we feel that we are immune to the situation, but the reality is that we carry our bias which might influence us. Recalling the concept of white fragility, it is easy not to acknowledge or appreciate our role in the situation. The discussion was an excellent tool for selfreflection on our role in the scheme of things!" COLINS IMOH MA '12 teaches in the criminal justice department at California State University, Sacramento.

ONE OF THE CENTER FOR JUSTICE AND PEACEBUILDING'S FOREMOST STRENGTHS is its alumni network – peacebuilders

scattered across the globe, each with their own areas of expertise in building up the communities around them. This summer, these practitioners and scholars convened virtually via the software QiQoChat to discuss the most pressing issues of 2020: racial and environmental justice and the COVID-19 pandemic. They were joined by participants of the Summer Peacebuilding Institute.

"I think this Open Space process provided an opportunity to both expand and deepen connections across the CJP network, in an experimental way. It was one step towards ongoing efforts to foster a sense of shared identity, contribution, mutuality, and reciprocal modification of the network across geographies." BRIDGET MULLINS MA '15 is a process design and facilitation consultant with Amizade in Pittsburgh.

"I imagine that, together, we can do more than we can do separately, and it's a way of really helping to bring forth more of the world that we're wanting to create." CATHERINE BARNES teaches strategic peacebuilding and public policy at CJP.

8 | CROSSROADS | FALL/WINTER 2020-21


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