Seattle Peace Alliance Team

Seattle Peace Alliance Team Creating a culture of peace through advocacy, education, and example. For more info or to join, email [email protected] www.ThePeaceAlliance.org

Welcoming new members in the greater Seattle area. We are affiliated with The Peace Alliance, an alliance of organizers and advocates throughout the United States taking the work of peacebuilding from the margins of society into the centers of national discourse and policy priorities. The Peace Alliance network includes volunteer grassroots teams in cities, towns, colleges and high school campuses across the nation.

12/06/2023

Who else has been following what’s happening in Gaza over the past 2+months?! Please call your Senators and Reps to demand a permanent ceasefire and also that they do NOT approve Funding more weapons for Israel (Biden asked for an additional $14 billion)! Familes/ Children are being carpet bombed with US bombs, funds and technology. And for the 1st time in history- it is being recorded and televised on social media. It’s an absolute genocide. It’s a crime against humanity! A recent poll shows that 60% of US voters support a ceasefire, but only 11% of our lawmakers?! We can take to the streets and post on social media, but that’s not where lawmakers are and they are the ones who need to hear! For Washington friends- Senator Murray’s (206) 553-5545 and Senator Cantwell (206) 220-6400. I’m happy to practice a simple script with you! You can keep it simple. “I’m a constituent living in Seattle and I’m asking that the Senator demands a permanent ceasefire in Gaza now and also that she does NOT approve funding Israel for more weapons.”

https://socialjusticefilmfest.eventive.org/welcome Check out this amazing documentary, "Since I Been Down"-  "In 1993, W...
10/11/2020

https://socialjusticefilmfest.eventive.org/welcome
Check out this amazing documentary, "Since I Been Down"-
"In 1993, Washington State voters passed the three-strikes law and sent children considered irredeemable super-predators to prison for life without parole. Influenced by the national drug war frenzy, escalating crime, and gang activity, during the fear-based political policies of the 1980’s and ‘90’s, Tacoma, Washington sacrificed some of its most vulnerable children.

Join filmmakers, incarceration rights rights activists, and incarcerated citzens for a discussion of the film “Since I Been Down,” which spotlights Kimonti Carter and a wide group of incarcerated people who are breaking free from their situation, and creating a model of education to transform their lives, their communities, our prisons, and our own humanity.

Find out more about Since I Been Down, including how to view it before the live panel.

This event is one of four free filmmaker events occurring as part of the 2020 Social Justice Film Festival.

And let's learn more about this Wa State SB 6164. "In particular, the new law declares that the “purpose of sentencing is to advance public safety through punishment, rehabilitation, and restorative justice.” SB 6164 (2020), § 1. Accordingly, if a sentence includes incarceration, the incarceration should be “proportionate to the seriousness of the offense” and it should also “provide uniformity with the sentences of offenders committing the same offense under similar circumstances.” SB 6164 (2020), § 1. And “after some time has passed,” “the prosecutor and court” should have a legal “tool to ensure” that the “purposes [of punishment] are achieved.” SB 6164 (2020), § 1."

https://socialjusticefilmfest.eventive.org/welcome

We would like to acknowledge that the Social Justice Film Festival was organized on the traditional land of the first people of Seattle, the Duwamish People past and present, and honor with gratitude the land itself and the Duwamish Tribe. Wherever you are, please take a moment to recognize the land...

Peace is possible! We can all take practical actions to   in our lives, families, schools, communities and even the worl...
11/04/2019

Peace is possible! We can all take practical actions to in our lives, families, schools, communities and even the world! Please see below- to learn about the legislation and grassroots action that The Peace Alliance is leading!

RECLAIM ARMISTICE DAY (11/11) FOR PEACE
CALL 11 MEMBERS OF CONGRESS TO COSPONSOR HR 1111
(Department of Peacebuilding)

We stand with Veterans for Peace to reclaim November 11th as a day to work for peace as well as honoring those lost in war -- as the holiday was originally intended. Veterans know that a day devoted to peace, not war, is the best way to honor the sacrifices of veterans.

Over a hundred years ago the world celebrated peace as a universal principle. The first World War had just ended and nations mourning their dead collectively called for an end to all wars. Armistice Day was born and was designated as a "day to be dedicated to the cause of world peace and to be thereafter celebrated." "We want generations after us to never know the destruction war has wrought on people and the earth."

What You Can Do to Reclaim Armistice Day for Peace:

Learn more. Go to www.veteransforpeace.org/take-action/armistice-day.
Call Congress. Before, on and after Armistice Day (11/11/19), call 11 members of Congress and urge them to cosponsor legislation to establish a U.S. Department of Peacebuilding as proposed by Rep. Barbara Lee (CA) in HR 1111. This department will coordinate the work and research of making peacebuilding a priority domestically and internationally. Use and pass on this call action sheet: Reclaim Armistice Day for Peace Action
Join the Peace Alliance call on 11/12/19. This monthly call features Gerry Condon, Board President of Veterans for Peace (VFP), who will discuss Armistice Day and other VFP initiatives. The call is hosted by Dan Kahn (Peace Alliance Field Director) and is co-hosted by Ngozi Akosia (Peace Alliance Cultivating Personal Peace Lead) and the National DoP Campaign. Register for that call: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/f429bcccea232e817c24e00bf0acd2b8
Reach out. Connect with your local VFP organization and you local Veteran's Hospital -- ask about volunteer opportunities or collaborate in planning an event (in 2019 or 2020) to promote peace, reclaim Armistice Day and contribute toward building a culture of peace.
Post your information. Please also post an account of your actions and experiences on Movers & Shakers at www.peacealliance.org or report it to us: [email protected].
We know peace is possible. Together, let us call for an end to all oppressive and violent policies, and for equality for all people.

Brief History of Armistice Day:

In 1918, at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, an Armistice agreement ended the bloodshed of World War I -- thought to be the war that would end all wars
In 1926, Congress passed a resolution urging state governors to observe Armistice Day "with thanksgiving and prayer and exercises designed to perpetuate peace through good will and mutual understanding between nations."
In 1954, President Dwight Eisenhower signed a bill changing Armistice Day to Veterans Day as being inclusive of remembrance of those lost in all wars.
Also in 1954, President Eisenhower issued a proclamation encouraging observation of Veterans Day on November 11th. He wrote: "On that day let us solemnly remember the sacrifices of all who fought so valiantly, on the seas, in the air, and on foreign shores, to preserve our heritage of freedom, and let us reconsecrate ourselves to the task of promoting an enduring peace so that their efforts will not have been in vain."
Yet since then, November 11th has become a day of honoring the military and glorifying war instead of a day for remembering our veterans and rededicating ourselves to peace.
Gerry Condon is a Vietnam era veteran and war resister who spent six years in Sweden and Canada after refusing orders to Vietnam. He has a long history in the veterans peace movement. In 1983-84, Gerry organized the first two veterans delegations to revolutionary Nicaragua, and in 1987, he was a co-coordinator of the Veterans Peace Convoy to Nicaragua. From 1993-96, Gerry worked for IFCO/ Pastors for Peace, organizing humanitarian aid and political solidarity caravans to Cuba. Since 2004, Gerry has been on the front lines of supporting Iraq and Afghanistan war resisters in Canada, Germany and elsewhere. He is the Board President of VFP.

“It is from numberless diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped. Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of ...

08/11/2017

Through the Bi Partisan Legislation, the Youth PROMISE Act, I learned how Mentoring and Opportunities can help in our selves, schools and communities. That's why I founded our all ages crew of creatives! Please take a moment to check out our 2015 vid where the ATB youth share their perspective of Thanks to our friends The Peace Alliance, for all the support! ❤️✌🏽😊https://www.facebook.com/AcrosstheBridgeSeattle/videos/1117789591604984/

08/11/2017

Know of any interesting film, music or creative work opportunities for young people in to explore on the next few Tuesdays from 3-5pm? Planning our next 5 ATB field trips and looking for ideas. Thinking Mohai? SIFF? Probably Pacific Science Theater /IMAX/ Laser Show- maybe even Kendrick Lamar?! Of course, reaching back out to some of our fave community partners too. Seattle Office of Film + Music Seattle Art Museum Clatter&Din, Inc. Crocodile Lovecitylove Zaki•Rose Also, hoping to connect with Artists, PhotoJournalists, Graf artists, Musicians, Composers, Filmmakers, Entrepreneurs, Game Designers, Animators, Editors, Directors, Music Producers, Musicians, Opera, Choir, Ballet, Special FX and Makeup peeps, Actors, Writers, Doodlers, Dreamers! Please share and tag! We're halfway through our 4th year and feeling good.

07/27/2017

05/16/2017

"How to Build International Peace."
You have questions about International Peacebuilding?
What are the Risks, and What are the Opportunities?
Join us for Learning and Empowerment!
This Coming Tuesday, May 16, 2017
6 pm PDT, 9 pm EDT

Join us - Click here to register! http://myaccount.maestroconference.com/conference/register/UF9DGEUWR72G4OTN

Our Special Guest will be Foreign Policy Expert Diana Ohlbaum - Bring your Questions and get ready to Learn and Take Action!

Do you have questions about where our international peacebuilding power may be heading, and what you can do about it? This call aims to address those questions and more!

Dia​na Ohlbaum is president of DLO Global LLC, a senior associate with the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Project on Prosperity and Development, and a principal of Turner4D strategic communications firm. With over 25 years of experience overseeing U.S. foreign assistance programs, primarily on Capitol Hill, she also serves as a member of the executive committee of the Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network and as an expert contributor to TheHill.com.

Register for the call Here. http://myaccount.maestroconference.com/conference/register/UF9DGEUWR72G4OTN

We will also hear an update from a member of the Peace Alliance Department of Peacebuilding Committee, and we hope to hear about peacebuilding in YOUR life.

A bi-partisan group of legislators is about to introduce a bill to strengthen our best diplomatic practices!

After you register for the call you will receive our regular monthly Action Sheet, offering guidance on how we can support this leading edge legislation!

Now’s the time, 60 minutes toward healing your world!…register here. http://myaccount.maestroconference.com/conference/register/UF9DGEUWR72G4OTN

In Solidarity,

Dan Kahn
National Field Coordinator

More about Diana:

From 2009 to 2013, Dr. Ohlbaum worked as a senior professional staff member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, under the leadership of Howard L. Berman (D-CA). In that position, she coordinated the effort to rewrite and reform the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, culminating in the introduction of the Global Partnerships Act of 2012. Previously, she directed the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on International Economic Policy, where she led a successful battle against elimination of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), drafted legislation to streamline the foreign aid system, championed expansion of human rights laws, and rewrote statutory guidelines for monitoring and approval of arms transfers.

In addition to her legislative background, Dr. Ohlbaum has experience in the executive branch and the private sector. From 1999 to 2001, she served as deputy director of USAID's Office of Transition Initiatives, a unit designed to advance peace and democracy in conflict-prone countries. She later worked as director of public policy for InterAction, an alliance of nongovernmental organizations engaged in humanitarian relief and international development, and she ran a successful consulting business with corporate, nonprofit, and government clients. Dr. Ohlbaum holds a Ph.D. in political science from Johns Hopkins University and a B.A. in Russian studies from Amherst College.

"DR. OHLBAUM PLAYED A CENTRAL ROLE IN DESIGNING A COMPREHENSIVE REFORM OF THE FOREIGN ASSISTANCE ACT OF 1961... SHE BRINGS A VAST AMOUNT OF EXPERIENCE OVERSEEING FOREIGN ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS, POLICIES, BUDGETS, AND AGENCIES, AS WELL AS A FIRST-HAND KNOWLEDGE OF THE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS."

-- CSIS



http://myaccount.maestroconference.com/conference/register/UF9DGEUWR72G4OTN

Our Monthly Field Call for The Peace Alliance - Our special guest this month is Diana Ohlbaum, a political consultant and prolific writer with over 25 years of experience overseeing U.S. foreign assistance programs, primarily on Capitol Hill. She also serves as a member of the executive committee of...

05/11/2017

Here's to the Matriarchs!
Let's together!

"This Mother’s Day We Declare that It’s Time for Our Nation to Make Violence Prevention a Priority!

Mother’s Day was originally a call for a day of peace by Julia Ward Howe after she nursed and tended the wounded during the American civil war.

Make this Mother’s Day a call for our nation to prioritize peacebuilding by establishing a U.S. Department of Peacebuilding and by practicing peace in our personal lives, the community, schools, a more humane justice system and internationally.

Does anyone want to rally and take this action with me?

Let's schedule a “Mother’s Day Pie” meeting with our member of Congress and our Senators (and/or their staff members) to tell them peace wants a piece of our federal budget pie and urging them to cosponsor Congresswoman Barbara Lee’s Department of Peacebuilding Act of 2017 (HR 1111) (Congressperson’s office can contact [email protected]

Peacebuilding matters because war and nuclear weapons are not viable options, the deaths and injuries of so many young people on the streets of America are not acceptable and domestic violence is not tolerable. Peacebuilding includes violence-prevention policies and programs that work.

Peacebuilding also saves lives and money. For every dollar invested now, the cost of conflict could be reduced by $16 over the long run.

A DEPARTMENT OF PEACEBUILDING MATTERS

Peacebuilding is multi-faceted. Legislation calling for a cabinet-level Department of Peacebuilding (HR 1111) includes the following offices: 1) Peace & Education Training; 2) Domestic Peacebuilding Activities; 3) International Peacebuilding Activities; 4) Technology for Peace; 5) Arms Control & Disarmament; 6) Information & Research; 7) Human Rights & Economic Rights; 8) Intergovernmental Advisory Council on Peace; and 9) Federal Interagency Committee on Peace.

We can ask our members of Congress to co-sponsor the Act to Establish a U.S. Department of Peacebuidling.

In the 1800's, Julia Ward Howe, original advocate for "Mother's Day" and writer of the "Battle Hymn of the Republic," nursed and tended the wounded during the civil war. She worked with the widows and orphans of soldiers on both sides of the war, and realized that the effects of the war go beyond the killing of soldiers in battle. The devastation she witnessed called her to "rise up through the ashes and devastation" calling out for a day dedicated to peace: Mother's Day. In her various social capacities Julia tirelessly worked for justice throughout her life."

Who's down to help make it happen? We need pie makers and others who believe in Peacebuilding and it's possibilities.

http://peacealliance.org/cms/assets/uploads/2017/05/Federal-Pie-chart2017.pdf

http://peacealliance.org/cms/assets/uploads/2017/05/Federal-Pie-chart2017.pdf

Please join us! The Peace Alliance Monthly Field Call for February will include a special training on effective, compass...
02/20/2017

Please join us! The Peace Alliance Monthly Field Call for February will include a special training on effective, compassion-driven activism. We will also introduce our new national volunteer Leadership Council members, hear an update from the Departmemt of Peace Committee, and welcome news from around the nation about peacebuilding in YOUR lives! https://www.facebook.com/ThePeaceAlliance/posts/10154071476941673:0

Amplify Your Action! 📞
Join our monthly action call this Tuesday and learn impactful and proactive methods to interact personally and politically during these turbulent and uncertain times.

Call info: https://goo.gl/62Jofq

Come joy the fun tomorrow! Swap Meet for Peace to   in ourselves, our families, and our communities!
08/24/2016

Come joy the fun tomorrow! Swap Meet for Peace to in ourselves, our families, and our communities!

08/07/2016

Exciting news!

Social-Emotional Learning: States Collaborate to Craft Standards, Policies

By Evie Blad on August 1, 2016 7:44 AM | 8 Comments

Eight states will work collaboratively to create and implement plans to encourage social-emotional learning in their schools, the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning announced this month.

The organization, which is also known as CASEL, will assist the states through consultation with its own staff and a panel of experts. The participating states are California, Georgia, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Washington. And an 11 additional states that originally applied to join the collaborative will have access to the materials it develops.

Each participating state has a unique plan, and many of those plans include creating developmentally sensitive standards that show how social and emotional skills are demonstrated at each grade level, developing materials to infuse traditional classroom concepts with social-emotional learning concepts, building strategies for state-level support, and implementing professional-development plans for schools about the subject.

Advocates for social-emotional learning hope the work, in particular the standards each state develops, will help answer "the whole question of how to align from the statehouse to the classroom," said Roger Weissberg, the chief knowledge officer for CASEL.

"Having state standards helps inform districts, central offices, and boards of education what might be prioritized," he said. "They can provide more guidance and help inform schools."

Schools Increasingly Emphasize Social-Emotional Learning

The work comes as an increasing number of schools explore social-emotional learning, a field that emphasizes nurturing concepts like students' relational skills, decisionmaking, and self-management to help foster greater life success both inside and outside the classroom. It also comes as the Every Student Succeeds Act, the new federal education law, places a greater emphasis on non-academic concepts and "whole child" issues.

To this point, the boldest, most comprehensive work in social-emotional learning and non-cognitive skills has been done at the school and district level. The state collaborative was inspired in part by CASEL's work with a group of large, mostly urban, school districts that have committed to implementing districtwide SEL plans and allowing researchers to study their results, Weissberg said. And other districts not affiliated with the organization have undergone similar efforts, strategies that include reworking discipline policies, directly teaching social and emotional concepts in the classroom, and working to improve child-adult relationships within schools.

As an increasing number of schools grow interested in the field, more are asking states for standards and assistance, said Linda Dusenbury, a senior research scientist at CASEL. States, in turn, are eager to collaborate to develop research-based approaches, she said. In a nationwide review, CASEL researchers learned that, while all 50 states have social-emotional learning standards for pre-k, just three have state social-emotional learning standards that span all grade levels: Illinois, West Virginia, and Kansas. Twenty-six states applied to join the collaborative.

"We have amassed so much research by this point that we're now ready, I believe, to really be helping to inform education through things like policy and learning standards," Dusenbury said. "And what's really exciting is that the states seem very eager to partner in that effort."

CASEL emphasizes five "competencies" in its approach: self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decisionmaking. Standards show developmentally sensitive ways of explaining those concepts to students from pre-k to high school graduation and how those lessons can blend with traditional curricular instruction. The organization's researchers previously worked with Illinois to create the first such state social-emotional learning standards in the country.

State Social-Emotional Learning Standards

Social-emotional competencies are implied in many traditional state standards, which require skills in areas like teamwork in areas like math and English, Dusenbury said, but few provide the roadmap necessary to nurture those skills.

"We need to be ... articulating these goals around social-emotional learning, as well as academic goals," Dusenbury said. "We assume kids will have the ability to self manage so that they can calm themselves enough to sit still and pay attention, we assume that they will have the relationship skills to participate in collaborative activities ... but we're often not explicit about it."

State education leaders in participating states said the collaborative will give them a chance to build on existing work and develop more formal strategies.

"We really feel a responsibility to create some tools to give to schools," said Mona Johnson, director of student support for the Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

As a result of legislation passed in 2015, Washington already had a social-emotional learning task force, Johnson said. As part of the collaborative, the state plans to develop strategies for statewide implementation, standards, plans for building community and family support for social-emotional learning, an online training module for teachers, and strategies to build the emotional capacity of adults in schools, she said.

Georgia will take a similar approach, said Caitlin Dooley, the state's deputy superintendent for curriculum and instruction. With help from the collaborative, the state plans to create social-emotional learning standards, create a professional development strategy, and update a statewide student survey that largely focuses on school climate to include some questions about students' social and emotional competencies.

"Oftentimes this is what good teachers do anyway," Dooley said. "We are not trying to add another bucket, but, for teachers who need help with it, making it explicit and clear will help guide them in the direction."

Are Social-Emotional Measures Ready for State Accountability Systems?

What about that tricky issue of measuring social-emotional learning? The controversial approach has been heavily discussed lately because the Every Student Succeeds Act, or ESSA, requires states to add an "additional indicator" to their school accountability systems in addition to traditional factors, like student test scores. While the law lists examples like school climate and student engagement, some have suggested that including social-emotional learning in accountability might be an effective way of spreading it to more schools. A group of California districts, known as the CORE districts, have already experimented with the concept.

But many prominent researchers have questioned the validity of self-reported student surveys, which are most commonly used to measure SEL. And some have said it's problematic to use those surveys for high- stakes accountability purposes.

Currently, "perfectly unbiased, unfakeable, and error-free measures are an ideal, not a reality," researchers Angela Duckworth and David Yeager said in a May 2015 essay published in Educational Researcher that detailed an array of flaws with current measures.

While state social-emotional learning standards may eventually provide a framework for accountability, CASEL is not encouraging states in the collaborative to adopt such a strategy at this point, Weissberg said. Rather, states can look at other data, such as surveys about students' perception of school climate, to determine if their strategies are successful, he said.

Photo: Madison Reid, a student in a combined 2nd and 3rd grade classroom, leads a discussion on good listening with her classmates during a morning session at Cleveland's Wade Park Elementary School. Such classroom exercises are part of Cleveland's districtwide social-emotional learning plan. CASEL's district collaborative, which includes Cleveland, inspired its new work at the state level. --Dustin Franz for Education Week

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