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- Description
- Transcript
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About the talk
00:00 Intro
00:45 About Rachel Brown
03:30 Importance of organization and work and violence
07:05 Communication/Digital work
13:30 Experience of helping the community. Social aspects
16:23 Importance of identity
20:08 The tools are used for communicating
24:08 The main things that should be learned
27:00 Different social roles/types. Identity
32:02 Favorite success story
36:55 Connection after solving problems.
39:14 Using data/Technologies/Focusing
43:00 Final words
About speaker
"Rachel Brown is the Founder and Executive Director of Over Zero, an organization that merges research and practice to prevent identity-based violence and other forms of group-targeted harm. She is a recognized expert on confronting hateful and dangerous rhetoric, and for the past decade has worked to address the role of communication in violent conflict. She is the author of Defusing Hate: A Strategic Communication Guide to Counteract Dangerous Speech and a former Fellow at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide. Rachel's work has been profiled at conferences, events, and publications globally, including on CBS and at the United States Institute for Peace, United States Airforce Academy, UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, the Harvard Institute of Politics, and the stuhv |rowz| nee |aar| chowz Stavros Niarchos * Foundation International Conference on Philanthropy. Rachel previously founded and was the CEO of Sisi ni Amani-Kenya (SNA-K), an internationally recognized organization that pioneered new strategies to build local capacity for violence prevention and civic engagement in Kenya. This work has been profiled in a documentary film, articles, academic reports, and global conferences. Rachel has also provided trainings and strategy support to organizations and programs in the U.S., Europe, Asia, and Africa and consulted for organizations including the World Bank, DAI, and Internews."
View the profileHello and welcome to the Civic hacker Summit. I'm your host Lori McNeil on the founder and director of the Civic hacker Network and also the creator of this awesome online Summit. And I'm so excited to kick off this session in this track actually with Rachel Brown of / 0. Let me introduce you to Rachel. Rachael Brown is the founder and executive director of lower zero and organization that merges research and practice to prevent identity, based violence and other forms of group targeted harm. She's recognized expert on
jibachi hateful and dangerous rhetoric. And for the past decade has worked to address the role of communication and violent conflict. She's the author of diffusing hate strategic communication guide to counteract dangerous Beach and a former fellow at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Simon's Scott center for the prevention of genocide. Rachel's work has been profiled at conferences, events and Publications globally, including on CBS and at the United States Institute for peace, United States, Air Force Academy, un Department of political and
peace-building Affairs, the Harvard Institute of politics and the Stavros niarchos Foundation International Conference on philanthropy. Rachel previously found it and was the CEO of CeCe. Me Amani, Kenya and internationally recognized organization that pioneered new strategies to build Global, local capacity for violence, prevention and Civic engagement in Kenya. This work has been profiled in a documentary film articles academic reports and Global conferences. Rachel has also provided training strategy supports organizations and programs in the US Europe,
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