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With
his two years as TfC's researcher/writer for the training curriculum
for Third Party Nonviolent Intervention completed, Daniel and
TfC agreed to expand his responsibilities. Daniel will assist
others to use the new curriculum and, in addition, focus on
another growing edge in the training field: strategizing for
social change. He'll be more available for facilitating a range
of workshops and expects to do program development in the area
of assisting people of color to prepare to fight racism more
effectively.
Daniel,
22, is a biracial/African-American who first did nonviolent
intervention when he was five years old, breaking up fights
on his playground. He graduated with the first Conflict Transformation
major from his college (as a Phi Beta Kappa). He is currently
on the international board of the Baptist Peace Fellowship of
NorthAmerica, and has done labor and community organizing and
anti-corporate globalization projects. He has facilitated nonviolent
action trainings around the US as well as in India, Canada,
Burma, and Indonesia.
Daniel's
work with the Third Party Nonviolent Intervention curriculum
included inventing new training tools, extensive research into
what other organizations do in training "human shields,"
weaving together the wisdom of the International Committee of
Nonviolent Peaceforce, drawing from research on trauma and stress,
organizing experimental mini-workshops, and documenting the
field-testing of the curriculum in Chiang Mai, Thailand. The
curriculum, co-written with George Lakey, is being made available
to human rights groups and others who want to intervene to save
lives and open up the political space needed for just resolutions
of deadly conflicts. (12/01/03)
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