Date & Time: March 4 4:30pm – 5:30pm
Location: Virtual

Peace is needed more than ever, and many musicians are eager to contribute to building a more just and peaceful world.

Violent conflicts in the Ukraine, the Middle East, and South Sudan have brought the reality of war into sharpened focus. Currently, there are more than 110 active armed conflicts being monitored around the world, many of which never reach the headlines. Peace is needed more than ever, and many musicians are eager to contribute to building a more just and peaceful world. In this talk, I will share my recent research on musicians building peace and offer a new approach to thinking about the ways that musicians contribute to peacebuilding, the practices they engage, and the types of peace they can help to foster.

Creative spaces in post-war settings

Dr. Gillian Howell is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne, Australia, where she leads a portfolio of research investigating the contributions of community music to post-war transitions and recovery including peacebuilding, community dialogue, and music restoration. Her applied research and creative practice have taken her around Australia and the world, including to Bosnia-Herzegovina, Sri Lanka, Timor-Leste, Kosovo and North Macedonia, and she has delivered research consultancies for Save the Children Middle East, Musicians Without Borders, and Tura New Music. Closer to home, Dr. Howell’s long-term research and songwriting collaboration with First Nations language educators in remote north-west Australia has produced two albums of original songs and a community songbook in three endangered Aboriginal languages.

Resources

Sponsored by Artivism: The Power of Art for Social Transformation.

For more information, please email artivism@adelphi.edu.

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