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Workshops & Conferences
2009 Dialogue In/As Action Conference
On June 12 & 13, 2009, The Network for Peace through Dialogue, in cooperation with Marymount Manhattan College, presented: “Dialogue In/As Action," a conference focused on the rich intersections of the methods, processes and actions of dialogue that lead to change. The 2009 conference exploree the ground rules for practicing good dialogue, as well as the parameters for putting constructive dialogue into action.
»see Marymount Manhattan conference report
» see conference information
» see conference session descriptions
» check back soon for conference session reports
2009 Dialogue Facilitators Networking Group
A Skill Building Workshop for Dialogue Facilitators
The Dialogue Facilitators Networking Group (DFNG) is a monthly, six-session program designed to run October 2009 - March 2010. DFNG II will bring together fifteen New York City-area dialogue practitioners drawn from the United Nations, its agencies and accredited non-governmental organizations as well as the New York City-based professional dialogue community. DFNG II is a hybrid training ground and support group which prepares practitioners better to navigate their professional lives and to understand more clearly the importance of their work to society as a whole. It will include skill-building reviews and exercises, discussions about different methodologies and meaty consultation on how to have disagreement and confrontation without being destructive. A professional writer will be contracted who will develop a book based on the sessions.
» See information on book published from 1st DFNG Group
2007 Conference on Dialogue
Why Dialogue? (and when, and how, and where?)
Presented by the Network for Peace
» See 2007 Conference Report
2002 International Workshop
Neighborhood by Neighborhood: How can we have a Sustainable World?
In the winter of 2002, CIL/USA gathered participants from around the world to meet face-to-face for eleven days to pursue this topic which they had been considering with each other for the previous year. The group consisted of two from Zimbabwe, three from the Philippines, three from Germany and from the US, one from Colorado, four from Harlem, two from the Bronx, and five from other parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn.
A detailed account of the activities, deliberations and outcomes of their meeting is given in the forty-four page book:
HOW CAN PEOPLE FROM DIFFERENT CULTURES COME TOGETHER TO MAKE SENSE OF OUR WORLD?
» see book info
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