Abstracts and Biographies:
Practice theory
When the Disputes not the Primary Problem:
Transforming conflict through conferencing
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David B. Moore
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| People in conflict often take part in some form of dispute
resolution. The process may be adversarial; it may be non-adversarial. Unfortunately, both
options are sometimes the wrong medicine. In many cases of conflict, people dont
need so much to clarify the facts of any specific dispute as much as they need to
acknowledge and transform the general conflict. In their recent book, Transforming
Conflict, David Moore and fellow Transformative Justice Australia Director John
McDonald introduced a theory of conflict transformation and a very practical guide to
using conferencing to transform conflict in workplaces and other communities.
In this conversation, we will visit some of the first principles of conflict
transformation, and results from some of the very successful conferencing programs
internationally.
To full paper
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| David Moore holds degrees in languages, political economy,
and social theory. He taught at Melbourne University and Charles Sturt, where he
coordinated Justice Studies and was centrally involved in the Australian pilot of
community conferencing. David later worked in the Queensland Premiers Department,
before co-founding Transformative Justice Australia in 1995. David now lives with his
family in Sydney, and works internationally promoting transformative justice. |
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This conference is sponsored by the World Mediation Forum,
the University of South Australia, and the Hawke Institute.
Related sites: Ausdispute | Conflict Management Research Group | AAPAE Conference
Disclaimer | Copyright (c) 2001 University of South Australia
Updated 21 February 2003 |