“Convincing students of the need to take a position against the death penalty is not easy, particularly at an age when the notion of justice is confused with that of vengeance.”
Marianne Rossi, Teaching Abolition Coordinator, ECPM, France

In order to move towards universal abolition, it is essential to teach younger generations about the meaning of the death penalty and the absolute necessity of ending it. That is why human rights organisations are developing advocacy for education about abolition within the Teaching Abolition International Network, and working to develop appropriate and innovative pedagogy aimed at young people, presented in this workshop. The participants discovered a variety of teaching tools which can be used in a formal or informal context. An example of successful mobilisation in Tunisia was also presented.

At a time when numerous States bear witness to great violence, discussion of abolition of the death penalty is not, or is no longer, obvious to everyone, particularly young people, even in abolitionist States. We must bear in mind the fact that the young people of today are the activists, magistrates and politicians of tomorrow. It is therefore important that they become aware of the reality of the death penalty, the importance of abolishing it and, for countries where it has already been abolished, the importance of preventing its return.

It is from this perspective that educational initiatives run by human rights organisations for children and young people aged 5 to 18 have appeared in various countries, including France, Taiwan, Lebanon, Tunisia, Morocco and Tanzania. They are being developed in both formal contexts (schools) and informal ones (citizenship clubs, youth clubs). This workshop was an opportunity for members of the Teaching Abolition International Network (ECPM, IADH, LACR and the Moroccan Coalition), as well as the Children Education Society and Taiwan Alliance to End the Death Penalty, to present their tools and methodologies aimed at raising awareness and mobilising young people around abolition of the death penalty.

As regards work in more formal situations, the organisations meet young people in schools and cooperate with teachers by providing them with lesson modules adapted to the school curriculum (ECPM and CHESO), or encouraging them to create teaching tools themselves (TAEDP). Within that framework, the work with young people is diverse and varied: debates with pupils from middle and high schools as well as participation by “abolition witnesses”, particularly prisoners previously sentenced and exonerated or pardoned the families of prisoners, enabling young people to give the death penalty a human face (ECPM, Moroccan and Tunisian Coalitions); the creation of citizenship clubs in primary and secondary schools where young people lead action themselves to learn about issues and sensitive subjects such as the death penalty (IADH). In Lebanon, Tanzania and Morocco, activities mix education with fun through discussion about the death penalty followed by role play, such as the hot air balloon presented at the workshop.

These awareness-raising activities take place in schools but they can also overflow into informal areas thanks to the creation of specific educational tools. In Morocco for example, the cartoon “Sentenced to Die”, designed by the Moroccan Organisation for Human Rights, was presented in schools but it is a tool that young people can read at home and give to their friends and families. Similarly, ECPM has developed a bilingual (French/English) collaborative board game called Abolition Now! It allows young people to learn about a variety of strategies to abolish the death penalty in 10 countries across the world, while taking on the roles of all the institutional, voluntary sector and media actors committed to universal abolition of the death penalty.

Creating these teaching tools could be full of pitfalls: the level of design, their distribution and their use. It is not just about creating such tools but working with the teachers who are inclined to use them with their pupils.

Jiazhen Wu, Deputy Director of Taiwan Alliance to End the Death Penalty, shares her experience of mobilising young people and working with teachers in Taiwan (see sidebar: Jiazhen Wu’s story).

 


For more information


Interview with Jiazhen Wu