INTERNATIONAL MEDIATORS COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE (IMCP) PEER-TO-PEER CONSULTATION BUILDING A COMMUNITY...
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Transcript of INTERNATIONAL MEDIATORS COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE (IMCP) PEER-TO-PEER CONSULTATION BUILDING A COMMUNITY...
INTERNATIONAL MEDIATORS COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE (IMCP)
PEER-TO-PEER CONSULTATION
BUILDING A COMMUNITY MEDIATION PROGRAM 1.14.15
AgendaRoundtable Introductions Community Mediation Program Framework Case Study: El Salvador Question and Answer Working Groups Conclusions Networking
Julie WaltonCommunities in Transition
Amy Rymer Friends Peace Teams Jayne Nucete
Center for International Development and Conflict
Management, University of Maryland
Building a Community Mediation Program
SU
STA
INA
BIL
ITY
Building a
Community
Mediation
Program
PA
RTIC
IPA
NT
S
CO
UR
SE
CO
NTEN
T
AP
PR
EN
TIC
ES
HI
PM
ON
ITO
R &
EV
ALU
ATIO
N
Med
iati
on
Follow
-up
SUSTAINABILITY
Funding
Local Staff
Local Partner Ownership
Build Trust with Local Organizations
Social Media, Events, Press
Local, International
Scheduling, M&E
Government, Education, Faith Based, Businesses, Local /I NGO’s
Identifying Organizations, Get Referrals, Network
Messaging
PARTICIPANTS
COURSE CONTENT
• Location
• Mediation Model
• Instructors
• Class Content
• Class Materials
• Food
APPRENTI
CESHIP
• All Mediation Training incudes observation and mentored mediation
• Where? - government, education, youth detention centers, prison, community centers
• Challenges Private room
Transportation
Timing
• Create the Train-the-Trainer program
MONITORING & EVALUATION (M&E)M&E Self Learning
• Design Monitoring & Evaluation (DME)http://dmeforpeace.org/discuss/forums/thursday-talks
http://dmeforpeace.org/learn/training-modules-design-monitoring-and-evaluation-peacebuilding
• Develop your TOChttp://www.theoryofchange.org
• USAID http://www.usaid.gov/what-we-do/working-crises-and-conflict/technical-publications
Theories and Indicators of Change (THINC) - full version, with primers (March 2013).Theories and Indicators of Change (THINC) - Briefing Paper (March 2013).
• Free Courses – Courserahttp://dmeforpeace.org/learn/free-online-courses-me-winter
Theory of Change
• Develop indicators
• Establish Baseline
• Measure initial outcomes
• Make required adjustments
• Periodic survey for measuring future results • Don’t reinvent the wheel
Inputs Outputs Outcomes Impacts
MEDIATION FOLLOW-UP
Social Services - Identify what is available:
Counseling
Anger Management
Mentoring
Youth programs
Follow-up on agreement action items
CASE STUDY: EL SALVADOR
Case Study: El Salvador
QUESTIONS FOR WORKSHOP
Section ONE - Sustainability
1. What are the strengths and weaknesses of starting a peer mediation program in a youth detention center (15-22 years old) versus a school versus a community center for youth like the ones linked to Creative Associates?
2. What are ways to generate commitment among participants so that if one director or mentor leaves the center, the program continues?
3. When working with peer mediation programs, what are strategies to get buy-in from guards, administrators, and youth participants?
Section TWO - Participants
4. What are strengths and weaknesses of starting a peer mediation program (in which youth mediate for other youth)?
5. What are strengths and weaknesses of starting a mediation program that focuses on training adult mediators who would do all types of mediations that could also include youth (youth-parent, youth-teacher, etc)?
6. What are the strengths and weaknesses of training mediators who are professionals working with youth in schools, youth organizations, and health services organizations versus the general adult population that might include parents and other adults who don’t work with youth professionally?
QUESTIONS FOR WORKSHOP
Section THREE - Course Content
1. What are considerations for how to adjust training materials to different cultures?
2. Julie mentioned facilitative mediation as the approach they used to train mediators. Why do you think this approach was important or successful in Belize and how is the mediation style chosen before getting started? What is the dominant mediation style currently used in countries around the world (if there I
3. What alternatives might exist in formatting the mediations to accommodate a more informal space? For example, do mediations have to take place in a private room or could an environment of respect be created so that mediation could take place in a quiet corner or room that might still be exposed to other youth in the center?
Section FOUR – Apprenticeship
4. How do you allow youth mediators who leave the center to continue practicing and using the skills they learned inside?
5. How do you create an apprenticeship program without needing to involve people from outside the center?
Section FIVE – M&E
6. How much time is generally needed for all the preparatory work to establish strong monitoring for the program before it is, or as it is, implemented? Weeks, months?
7. How is success measured – by number of agreements, by changes in behavior after agreement, by recidivism rates?
Section SIX-Follow-up programs
8. What follow-up activities, if any, will take place after the mediation has concluded?