In this book, Joan C. Lopez and Beth Fisher-Yoshida offer an alternative narrative of youth and peacebuilding, to the popular one about youth and violence.
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"This work has great merit: it speaks of peace from a "discreet and delicate" point of view, which has the advantage of incorporating a wider perspective about the meanings associated with peace, and thereby uncovering overlooked community practices, while deepening and broadening old conceptual boundaries. In the case of Colombia, there is an account of the sufferings of the victims; some of them quite visible such as injuries and deaths, and others deriving from more complex mechanisms such as the dispossession of land. These forms of violence against communities behaved like an endemic cloud that altered the daily life of people who found themselves forced to find in the nearest rifle a way of survival: a radical way of limiting people's liberty. I invite you to read this publication, not only as a collection of painful situations but most importantly, as a hymn of hope."
Humberto De la Calle, Former vice-president of Colombia, Government's lead negotiator during the Habana Peace Accords between the Colombian government and FARC, Senator
"Many Colombians affected by the violent conflict, like myself, have opened spaces to heal the wounds of the war. Just as our work is important for the consolidation of peace in Colombia, the documentation of these processes is pivotal. In spaces for the construction of territorial memory such as CARE in San Carlos, Antioquia, we seek to show the new generations what happened to us and invite them to not allow this to happen again. The authors, with this publication, make a contribution to the recognition of the victims and, above all, to their powerful and incessant search for peace."
Pastora Mira, Coordinator of the Reconciliation and Reparation Center (CARE), in San Carlos, Antioquia, Colombia
"Based on years of fieldwork in Colombia and constant contact with its people, the authors of Peacebuilding in Colombia: From the Lens of Community and Policy, make an important contribution to understandings about how a term as elusive as "peace" is built and appropriated by communities in Colombia. The authors manage to show the diversity of the country, historically hit by violence, while highlighting optimistic and hopeful initiatives that come from underprivileged communities."
Laura Betancur Restrepo, Associate professor of law and coordinator of the master's program in Peacebuilding at Universidad de Los Andes
Humberto De la Calle, Former vice-president of Colombia, Government's lead negotiator during the Habana Peace Accords between the Colombian government and FARC, Senator
"Many Colombians affected by the violent conflict, like myself, have opened spaces to heal the wounds of the war. Just as our work is important for the consolidation of peace in Colombia, the documentation of these processes is pivotal. In spaces for the construction of territorial memory such as CARE in San Carlos, Antioquia, we seek to show the new generations what happened to us and invite them to not allow this to happen again. The authors, with this publication, make a contribution to the recognition of the victims and, above all, to their powerful and incessant search for peace."
Pastora Mira, Coordinator of the Reconciliation and Reparation Center (CARE), in San Carlos, Antioquia, Colombia
"Based on years of fieldwork in Colombia and constant contact with its people, the authors of Peacebuilding in Colombia: From the Lens of Community and Policy, make an important contribution to understandings about how a term as elusive as "peace" is built and appropriated by communities in Colombia. The authors manage to show the diversity of the country, historically hit by violence, while highlighting optimistic and hopeful initiatives that come from underprivileged communities."
Laura Betancur Restrepo, Associate professor of law and coordinator of the master's program in Peacebuilding at Universidad de Los Andes