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Abstracts and Biographies:
Culture


Conflict, Language and Culture

Di Bretherton

This is a proposal for a short paper, to be followed by a dialogue session.

It is a truism that lack of a common language can give rise to misunderstanding and conflict. Language may be seen as an essential tool for the analysis and resolution of conflict. However, language can also be used to escalate a conflict or damage an adversary. Indeed, so integral is language to cultural identity that language may itself become the object of the conflict, the matter that is fought over. This paper will explore some of the roles that language can play in conflict within and between different cultural groups.

In the discussion we will address questions such as: How do diverse cultures conceptualise and resolve conflict? What attitudes skills and knowledge promote intercultural understanding and constructive conflict resolution within and between cultures? To what extent can Western conflict resolution strategies be applied in other cultural settings?

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Di Bretherton is Director of the International Conflict Resolution Centre and an Associate Professor in the Psychology Department at the University of Melbourne. She is a Member of the Foreign Affairs Council of Australia and Chair of the Committee for the Psychological Study of Peace of the International Union of Psychological Science.

At this conference, she is presenting another paper, with Margaret Clark:Partnerships for Peace. as well as a poster session with Tania Miletic.

 

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This conference is sponsored by the World Mediation Forum, the University of South Australia, and the Hawke Institute.
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Updated 21 February 2003