Conflict: Communication, Culture and Change
Transcription
Conflict: Communication, Culture and Change
21st ANNUAL CONFLICT RESOLUTION SYMPOSIUM Conflict: Communication, Culture and Change Keynote Address: Conflict, Communication and Change in the Middle East Professor Patrice Brodeur, Canadian Chair, Islam, Pluralism and Globalization, Université de Montréal Thursday, February 2, 2012, 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm. Saint Paul University, 223 Main, Ottawa, Canada Main Event: Friday, February 3, 2012, 8:00 am – 7:00pm R.A. Centre, 2451 Riverside Drive, Ottawa, Canada Program SCHEDULE OF EVENTS Thursday February 2, 2012, 6:30pm – 8:30 pm Please note that the keynote will be held at Saint Paul University 6:30 pm 7:30 pm Registration and Light Refreshments Keynote Address: Professor Patrice Brodeur Friday February 3, 2012, 8:00am – 7pm Please note that the main event is being held at the RA Center 8:00 - 8:40 am 8:40 - 9:00 am 9:00 - 10:30am 10:30 - 11:00 am 11:00 - 12:30 pm 12:30 - 2:00 pm 2:00 - 3:00 pm 3:00 - 3:30 pm 3:30 – 4:30 pm 4:30 - 5:30 pm 5:30 - 7:00 pm Registration – Main Lobby Opening Session – Clark Hall Concurrent Session 1 – Various Rooms Refreshment Break – Clark Hall Concurrent Session 2 – Various Rooms Lunch (included in registration fee) – Clark Hall Concurrent Session 3 – Various Rooms Light Break – Clark Hall Concurrent Session 4 – Various Rooms Panel Discussion– Clark Hall Wine and Cheese Reception – Clark Hall THANK YOU The Department of Law, Carleton University Common Law Program, University of Ottawa Conflict Studies Program – Saint Paul University For your generous support for the Annual Symposium on Conflict Resolution 21th ANNUAL CONFLICT RESOLUTION SYMPOSIUM Conflict: Communication, Culture and Change Overview of Symposium 8:00 – 8:40 REGISTRATION – Main Lobby Opening Session 8:40 – 9:00 OPENING SESSION - Clark Hall (You are free to attend any workshop) Concurrent Session 1 9:00 – 10:30 First Stream: Clark Hall Second Stream: Canada Room A Third Stream: Canada Room B 1 Power and Intervention 2 Creating Community 3 Alternative Dispute Resolution 10:30 – 11:00 Concurrent Session 2 11:00 – 12:30 12:30 – 2:00 Concurrent Session 3 2:00 - 3:00 REFRESHMENT BREAK – Clark Hall 4 Communication in Context 6 Land Conflict BUFFET LUNCH – Clark Hall (included in registration) 7 Framing 8 Insight 3:00 – 3:30 Concurrent Session 4 3:30 – 4:30 5 Policing 9 Bridge-Building LIGHT BREAK – Clark Hall 10 Framing (cont’d) 11 Perspectives théoriques et culturelles dans l’achèvement d’une paix durable 12 Interpersonal Relations 4:30 – 5:30 Panel Discussion 5:30 – 7:00 WINE AND CHEESE RECEPTION OPENING SESSION 8:40 – 9:00 Clark Hall CONCURRENT SESSION 1 9:00 – 10:30 1) Clark Hall: Power and Intervention Chair: Professor Megan Bradley, Saint Paul University Child Soldiers and The Communicative Value of Post-Conflict Accountability, Kirsten Fisher, Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Helinski. Sharing Power after Deadly Conflict: Do Inclusive Institutions Work After the Fighting Stops?, Philip Martin, M.A Candidate, Norman Patterson School of International Affairs. The Causes of Conflict Management: National Interests or Humanitarian Will?, Jean-Christophe Boucher, Laval University. 2) Canada Room A: Creating Community Chair: Professor Marina Pavlovic, University of Ottawa Ethnicity and Community Mediation in Ottawa, Christopher Tan, LLM Osgoode, York University, LLB University of Ottawa. Creating Community: The Insight Theory and Community Development, Doretta Charles, Policy Analyst for the Government of Canada. Le port du niqab au Québec: liberté ou bien contrainte religieuse?, Amina Hufane, M.A Candidate, Saint Paul University. 3) Canada Room B: ADR Mediation Chair: Professor Heather Eaton, Saint Paul University Communicating and Exploring Options in an Evaluative Dispute Resolution Process: Settlement Conference at the Public Service Staffing Tribunal, Serge Roy, Director of Public Service Staffing Tribunal. What is in a Name: Dispute Resolution Terminology, Ianik Lalancette & Amy Campbell, Dispute Prevention and Resolution Division, Department of Justice. No Longer an Alternative: Changes to Rules of Court that Encourage Dispute Resolution, Bevin Worton, Department of Justice & Alesia Nahirny, Law Student. 10:30 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. BREAK Refreshments served in Clark Hall CONCURRENT SESSION 2 11:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m 4) Clark Hall: Communication and Context Professor Neil Sargent, Carleton University Conflict Communication Patterns in Intractable Conflicts in Georgia’, Renee Gendron, M.A, and Margriet Goos, M.A. L’écoute compassionnelle dans un contexte de réconcilliation entre Juifs et Palestiniens, Brigitte Gagnon, Doctorante, Université de Montréal. Put to the Test: Nonviolence as a Tactic and Communication Strategy in Burma and Iran’, Jay Heisler, M.A Candidate, Saint Paul University. 5) Canada Room A: Policing The Conflict Within – Do Police Ethics Influence Reactions to Protesters?, Michelle Yu, M.A Candidate, Saint Paul University The People are the Police: Post-Conflict trust building in Canada and South Africa, Robert Chrismas, MPA, Staff Sergeant, Winnipeg Police Service. Beyond Bad Apples: Developing A Pan-Canadian Methodology for Appropriately Policing Protests, Krista Schneider, M.A Candidate, Saint Paul University. 6) Canada Room B: Land Chair: Professor Peter Pandimakil, Saint Paul University All Peoples Are Indigenous To the Land Somewhere on This Planet, Dr Paula du Hamel, Graduate Studies Supervisor, Carleton, Saint Paul University and Queen’s University. Democratic Republic of Congo: Ethnonationalism, Land & Identity, Priya Saibel, M.A Candidate, Saint Paul University. Many Shades of Green: Painting Ecological Dimensions of Conflicts, Professor Heather Eaton, Saint Paul University. 12:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m. BUFFET LUNCH (buffet served in Clark Hall) CONCURRENT SESSION 3 2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. 7) Clark Hall: Framing L’approche exhaustive: une nouvelle doctrine ou un changement de paradigme lié à l’ère de l’information?, Richard Garon, Doctoral Student, University of Laval. Integrative Bargaining, Jennifer Jones-Patulli, Practioner, Conflict Management, Departmental Oversight Branch. 8) Canada Room A: Insight Community of Practice: A Coaches’ Viewpoint, Linda Gunning, Janet Barclay & Diana MacTier, Carleton Coaching for Excellence Program. Learning Through Deepening, Marnie Jull, Associate Director of Carleton’s Centre for Conflict Education and Research. 9) Canada Room B: Building Bridges Feminists Researching Fathering: What do we see through a reconciliation lens?, Deborah Conners, M.A, Saint Paul University. Conflits intergénérationnels dans un milieu professional : analyse et approache, Vincent Labrosse, M.A Candidate, Saint Paul Uiversity and Brian Strom, Director of the Canadian Institute for Conflict Resolution. 3:30 – 4:00 p.m. LIGHT BREAK CONCURRENT SESSION 4 Clark Hall 4:00p.m. – 3:30 p.m. 10) Clark Hall: Framing Insight, Learning and Change, Professor Neil Sargent, Carleton University Popular Culture: Settlement and Mediation in Canadian Legal Television, Dr. Jennifer Shulz, University of Manitoba. Cultural Conflict and Hegemonic Structures, Val Sosa, M.A Candidate, Saint Paul University. 11) Canada Room A: Perspectives théoriques et culturelles liées à l’achèvement d’une paix durable Chair: Professor Geneviève Parent, Saint Paul University Éthiques de la discussion et resolution pacifique des conflicts violent en Afrique: Théories pratiques, perspectives, Gervais Désirés, Chercheur Postdoctoral, Center de Research Sur le Conflict, Université d’Ottawa. L’apport de la culture organisationnelle comme outil pour étudier les approches pan gouvernementales : le cas de l’équipe provinciale de reconstruction canadienne, Caroline Leprince, Candidate à la maîtrise, Université du Québec à Montréal 12) Canada Room B: Interpersonal Relations Socionics: Information Exchange as a Key to Interpersonal Relations, Dmitry Lytov. The Emotional Conversation: What Are They Really ‘Saying’ to Each Other, Peter Bishop. Analyse des facteurs qui agissent sur le choix du mode de négociations, Pierre Binette, Pierre Binette, Professor, School of Applied Politics, Sherbrooke University Closing Panel Session 4:30 – 5:30 Clark Hall Wine and Cheese Reception 5:30 – 7:00 Clark Hall 21 st ANNUAL CONFLICT RESOLUTION SYMPOSIUM 2012 Registration Form Keynote Address: Professor Patrice Brodeur nd Thursday, February 2 , 2012, from 6:30pm– 8:30 pm Saint Paul University, 223 Main Ave, Ottawa 3rd Main Event: Friday, February , 2012, from 8:00am 7:00pm R.A. Centre, 2451 Riverside Drive, Ottawa, Canada Name: Organization: Address: Phone: Fax: E-mail: Registration Fees: th Registration Fee (after January 30 and at the door) Early Bird (payment received by January 30, 2012) Presenter or Session Chair Students Student Subsidy – for full time students only upon request, as funding permits $160.00 $135.00 $ 70.00 $ 60.00 $ 30.00 The registration fee includes: all health breaks, buffet lunch, wine and cheese reception, Symposium program AMOUNT ENCLOSED: $ *Please note any food restrictions or allergies: __________________________________________________________. **Will you be attending the keynote address on February 2, 2012 @ Saint Paul University ?: Y / N Cancellation policy: Should cancellation of your registration be necessary, please advise in writing by January 22 nd Registrations cancelled after January 22 , 2012 cannot be refunded, regrettably. nd for a full refund. Payments may be made by credit card (VISA or MasterCard), cash or cheque. Please make cheques payable to Saint-Paul University. For Credit Card payments please fill out section below: I, authorize Saint-Paul University to charge my registration fee in the amount of $ to my credit card as follows: VISA Signature: MC Card number: Expiry Date: Date: PLEASE RETURN COMPLETED FORM BY JANUARY 30, 2012 TO: Vern Redekop, Research Center on Conflict A/S Krista Schneider, Saint-Paul University, 223 Main Street, Ottawa, On, K1S 1C4 Or [email protected]