2018
DOI: 10.3389/feduc.2018.00056
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Cultivating a Professional Culture of Peace and Inclusion: Conceptualizing Practical Applications of Peace Leadership in Schools

Abstract: Beyond the role of educating students across all academic domains, school leaders are tasked with the monumental responsibility of creating positive, engaged systems and cultures that embrace the growing cultural, economic, linguistic, and cognitive diversity in the United States landscape. With collective goals to create peaceful learning environments with capacity to serve diverse learners, many school leaders have embraced school-wide prevention and intervention efforts, such as Multi-Tiered Systems of Supp… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 89 publications
(121 reference statements)
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“…Atwi et al (2022) adds that the need for integral peace leadership comes from the nexus between leadership studies, peace studies and conflict transformation. Miller and Abdou (2018) state that peace leadership is a growing element of leadership, where leaders are supposed to cultivate a professional culture of peace and inclusivity. They confirm the need for integral perspectives of peace leadership initiatives in building positive school cultures and establishing climates that are conducive to learning.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Atwi et al (2022) adds that the need for integral peace leadership comes from the nexus between leadership studies, peace studies and conflict transformation. Miller and Abdou (2018) state that peace leadership is a growing element of leadership, where leaders are supposed to cultivate a professional culture of peace and inclusivity. They confirm the need for integral perspectives of peace leadership initiatives in building positive school cultures and establishing climates that are conducive to learning.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the basic demands of peace leadership is to enhance positive cultural change to support the organisation. Peace leadership should also affect the development of learners into peace-loving adults, who have been capacitated to achieve success by educators who work diligently to close achievement gaps among their learners (Miller and Abdou 2018). Yet school leadership cannot achieve a peaceful educational context on their own-there is a vital role for communities, parents and various other networksincluding neighbouring schools to play (Atwi et al 2022;Miller and Abdou 2022).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This definition builds from Galtung’s (1996) distinction between positive peace, which focuses on building peace, and negative peace, which focuses on existing challenges to peace. While there are numerous emergent perspectives of peace leadership (Amaladas, 2018; Chinn & Falk-Rafael, 2018; Dinan, 2018; Ledbetter, 2016; Schellhammer, 2016, 2018), this article focuses on integral peace leadership first discussed by McIntyre Miller and Green (2015) and further explored in subsequent works (McIntyre Miller & Abdou, 2018; McIntyre Miller & Alomair, 2019).…”
Section: Peace Leadershipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While many of the concepts embedded in integral peace leadership are not new, what integral peace leadership provides is a framework to illuminate how change is made by engaging in all quadrants. To better reflect the work of peace leadership, the I quadrant was renamed Innerwork, the WE quadrant, Community, the IT quadrant Knowledge, and the ITS quadrant, Environment (McIntyre Miller & Abdou, 2018; McIntyre Miller & Alomair, 2019). Figure 1, below, demonstrates how the concepts and practices of integral peace leadership appear within the four-quadrant framework…”
Section: Peace Leadershipmentioning
confidence: 99%
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