Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty: Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement

"Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty - Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement " introduces partners in peacebuilding whose efforts have too often remained unrecognized. People committed to solidarity in Haiti, Madagascar, the United States, Guatemala, and elsewhere help us to understand their efforts — and this understanding in turn supports and encourages not only those named in this book, but all the people around the world who strive to overcome the injustice of poverty. This book is rooted in participatory research that was conducted by ATD Fourth World on the violence of extreme poverty and that showed just how
much people living in poverty do to search for peace, to go beyond violence, and to build a sense of community.
Volume 1 of "Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty" starts with a chapter on the origins of ATD Fourth World, retracing why and how Joseph Wresinski launched this movement in France in 1957. The book then traces ATD's thirty-year history in Haiti, recounting the story of people, beginning in 1984, who looked for ways to cope with fear in their “no-go” district by trying to “become examples for the neighbourhood so there would be peace”. The World Day for Overcoming Poverty also became a touchstone for these efforts. Following the 2010 earthquake, ATD Fourth World members climbed to the furthest reaches of this district to ensure that no one would be forgotten, and answered a United Nations call for “Unheard voices thinking about Haiti's tomorrow”.
People choosing to work towards peace come from all backgrounds: activists, born into poverty and taking responsibility in their own communities; allies, who use the fact that they are accepted to challenge colleagues or neighbours to act differently towards people in poverty; and the Fourth World Volunteer Corps, which shares a collective responsibility for no one to be left behind. No one is too young to make a difference, from young people in France and Senegal, to children in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Through a Forum on Overcoming Extreme Poverty, individuals and non-profits who are not members of ATD Fourth World can also encourage and inspire one another.
Inventing ways to live in peace together: because poverty can isolate people behind stereotypes and reduce them to silence, participation in Fourth World People's Universities is a key way to begin thinking together. A Merging Knowledge approach can make it possible for people of all backgrounds to develop new knowledge, drawing on the hidden intelligence of people in poverty. Concerning training and employment, both the pedagogy of non-abandonment and projects where professionals agree to take risks with the long-term unemployed make possible a new approach to decent work and to excellence. Finally, beyond thinking and working together, creativity can help to overcome poverty because it transforms the way people see themselves and one another. Street Libraries and Story Gardens share the means for creative expression, culture, art, and beauty. This volume concludes with “Dreaming Permit”, a personal essay about creativity and culture.

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Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty: Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement

"Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty - Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement " introduces partners in peacebuilding whose efforts have too often remained unrecognized. People committed to solidarity in Haiti, Madagascar, the United States, Guatemala, and elsewhere help us to understand their efforts — and this understanding in turn supports and encourages not only those named in this book, but all the people around the world who strive to overcome the injustice of poverty. This book is rooted in participatory research that was conducted by ATD Fourth World on the violence of extreme poverty and that showed just how
much people living in poverty do to search for peace, to go beyond violence, and to build a sense of community.
Volume 1 of "Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty" starts with a chapter on the origins of ATD Fourth World, retracing why and how Joseph Wresinski launched this movement in France in 1957. The book then traces ATD's thirty-year history in Haiti, recounting the story of people, beginning in 1984, who looked for ways to cope with fear in their “no-go” district by trying to “become examples for the neighbourhood so there would be peace”. The World Day for Overcoming Poverty also became a touchstone for these efforts. Following the 2010 earthquake, ATD Fourth World members climbed to the furthest reaches of this district to ensure that no one would be forgotten, and answered a United Nations call for “Unheard voices thinking about Haiti's tomorrow”.
People choosing to work towards peace come from all backgrounds: activists, born into poverty and taking responsibility in their own communities; allies, who use the fact that they are accepted to challenge colleagues or neighbours to act differently towards people in poverty; and the Fourth World Volunteer Corps, which shares a collective responsibility for no one to be left behind. No one is too young to make a difference, from young people in France and Senegal, to children in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Through a Forum on Overcoming Extreme Poverty, individuals and non-profits who are not members of ATD Fourth World can also encourage and inspire one another.
Inventing ways to live in peace together: because poverty can isolate people behind stereotypes and reduce them to silence, participation in Fourth World People's Universities is a key way to begin thinking together. A Merging Knowledge approach can make it possible for people of all backgrounds to develop new knowledge, drawing on the hidden intelligence of people in poverty. Concerning training and employment, both the pedagogy of non-abandonment and projects where professionals agree to take risks with the long-term unemployed make possible a new approach to decent work and to excellence. Finally, beyond thinking and working together, creativity can help to overcome poverty because it transforms the way people see themselves and one another. Street Libraries and Story Gardens share the means for creative expression, culture, art, and beauty. This volume concludes with “Dreaming Permit”, a personal essay about creativity and culture.

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Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty: Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement

Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty: Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement

by ATD Fourth World - Diana Faujour Skelton et al.
Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty: Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement

Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty: Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement

by ATD Fourth World - Diana Faujour Skelton et al.

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"Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty - Volume 1: A People-Centered Movement " introduces partners in peacebuilding whose efforts have too often remained unrecognized. People committed to solidarity in Haiti, Madagascar, the United States, Guatemala, and elsewhere help us to understand their efforts — and this understanding in turn supports and encourages not only those named in this book, but all the people around the world who strive to overcome the injustice of poverty. This book is rooted in participatory research that was conducted by ATD Fourth World on the violence of extreme poverty and that showed just how
much people living in poverty do to search for peace, to go beyond violence, and to build a sense of community.
Volume 1 of "Artisans of Peace Overcoming Poverty" starts with a chapter on the origins of ATD Fourth World, retracing why and how Joseph Wresinski launched this movement in France in 1957. The book then traces ATD's thirty-year history in Haiti, recounting the story of people, beginning in 1984, who looked for ways to cope with fear in their “no-go” district by trying to “become examples for the neighbourhood so there would be peace”. The World Day for Overcoming Poverty also became a touchstone for these efforts. Following the 2010 earthquake, ATD Fourth World members climbed to the furthest reaches of this district to ensure that no one would be forgotten, and answered a United Nations call for “Unheard voices thinking about Haiti's tomorrow”.
People choosing to work towards peace come from all backgrounds: activists, born into poverty and taking responsibility in their own communities; allies, who use the fact that they are accepted to challenge colleagues or neighbours to act differently towards people in poverty; and the Fourth World Volunteer Corps, which shares a collective responsibility for no one to be left behind. No one is too young to make a difference, from young people in France and Senegal, to children in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Through a Forum on Overcoming Extreme Poverty, individuals and non-profits who are not members of ATD Fourth World can also encourage and inspire one another.
Inventing ways to live in peace together: because poverty can isolate people behind stereotypes and reduce them to silence, participation in Fourth World People's Universities is a key way to begin thinking together. A Merging Knowledge approach can make it possible for people of all backgrounds to develop new knowledge, drawing on the hidden intelligence of people in poverty. Concerning training and employment, both the pedagogy of non-abandonment and projects where professionals agree to take risks with the long-term unemployed make possible a new approach to decent work and to excellence. Finally, beyond thinking and working together, creativity can help to overcome poverty because it transforms the way people see themselves and one another. Street Libraries and Story Gardens share the means for creative expression, culture, art, and beauty. This volume concludes with “Dreaming Permit”, a personal essay about creativity and culture.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940153047409
Publisher: ATD Fourth World - Diana Faujour Skelton et al.
Publication date: 05/18/2016
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 16 MB
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About the Author

ATD (All Together in Dignity) Fourth World is a movement of solidarity among, and in collaboration with, the most excluded families around the world. Founded in a shantytown in 1957 in France by Joseph Wresinski, who himself grew up in poverty, ATD Fourth World has active members in over 30 countries and correspondents in over 100. Members from different cultures and social backgrounds work together on projects that uphold the human dignity of each person, unleash and develop intelligence and creativity, and merge the knowledge of those in deep poverty with that of others. We hold a vision of a world without poverty, a society where each person is respected. Poverty is an affront to human dignity, and people in poverty have unique knowledge and experience that can lower the barriers separating people and communities. ATD Fourth World is a movement that gathers people from all backgrounds in order to think, act, and live together differently. The violence of extreme poverty, ignorance, deprivation, and contempt isolates people and locks them in silence to the point where they doubt that they are part of the human community. Recognizing the efforts made by people in poverty to ensure that no one is left behind, and combining our strengths to reach out to those still unreached, are essential steps on the path toward overcoming poverty and building peace together. "Wherever men and women are condemned to live in extreme poverty, human rights are violated. To come together to ensure that these rights be respected is our solemn duty." – Joseph Wresinski, founder of ATD Fourth World

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