Fall 2023 Negotiation and Conflict Resolution PS5212 section D01

CONFLICT, SOCIAL NETWORKS AND COMMUNICAT

CONFL SOCIAL NETWKS/COMM

Call Number 13266
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Ted Perlmutter
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction On-Line Only
Course Description

Conflict and communications technologies are inextricably connected  and this relationship  is increasingly mediated by social networks. Individuals and organizations face many challenges in using online technology for collaboration and conflict mediation purposes. Recent software innovations can facilitate knowledge acquisition, network building, and the analysis and presentation of conflict-related data. For professionals working in the field of conflict resolution, it is imperative to understand the role developments in communications technologies has  played in exacerbating and/or resolving conflicts.

This course will analyze the relationship between conflict and communications technologies. It will explore the challenges that individuals and networks face in using online technology for collaboration and conflict mediation purposes. It will demonstrate how recent software and social media innovations can facilitate knowledge acquisition, network building, and the analysis and presentation of conflict-related data. Finally, it will analyze contemporary cases where developments in communications technologies have played a critical role in exacerbating and/or resolving conflicts.

The course focuses on international peacebuilding and business and human rights cases. The former cases include Israel-Palestine, refugees, African peacebuilding, genocide prevention, and election violence monitoring. The latter cases include online harassment, cross-national email conflicts, sex trafficking, new business models such as Uber and AirBnB, and extractive resource conflicts.

The course will also instruct students in the use of social software (such as blogs, social media curation, and networking/visual mapping) and improve their “digital literacy” on a range of technologies. The course will provide practical (and often provocative) examples and challenge students to reflect on how these experiences and tools will be useful in their professional development and work environments.

Web Site Vergil
Department Negotiation & Conflict Resolution
Enrollment 15 students (25 max) as of 3:06PM Saturday, April 27, 2024
Subject Negotiation and Conflict Resolution
Number PS5212
Section D01
Division School of Professional Studies
Open To Business, Engineering:Graduate, GSAS, SIPA, Law, Medicine, Professional Studies, Social Work, Teachers College
Campus Morningside
Note Online asynchronous
Section key 20233NECR5212KD01