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4/16/2020 Teaching Tolerance: How to Educate Against Extremism | Institute for Global Change

COUNTER-EXTREMISM

Teaching Tolerance: How to Educate Against Extremism


Commentary Posted on: 14th November 2019

Tony Blair
Former Prime Minister of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and Executive Chairman of the Tony Blair Institute for Global
Change

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The world is divided in many dimensions today. Rich and poor. East and West. North and
South. Divisions of culture, identity and faith. Some people are frightened of globalisation.
Others welcome it. Some see diversity of population and society as a strength, while others
see it as  a threat to traditional ways of life and thinking.
Yet one thing stands out. The future belongs to the open-minded. Globalisation is driven by
people –through technology, through travel, through the possibility of migration. The world
works through being able to take advantage of these trends to enlarge the scope of an
individual’s horizons.
To navigate this meaningfully requires a mind which is open and not closed. By this, I mean
that those who can make the future work for themselves are those who are connected,
creative, and capable of understanding change and living with it.
Some are lucky enough to live in wealthier countries or to have better- o parents. Very
often, the problem for millions of young people is a lack of education, a lack of ability to get
connected or the absence of opportunity to make the most of their potential.
So, now we recognise the essential importance of education to opportunity. The United
Nations has made universal education a Global Goal and, around the world, governments are
trying to expand education systems, enrol children, particularly girls, and trying to correct
what is one of the world’s biggest injustices: the failure to educate.
However, enrolment, building schools and taking on more students is only a first step. The
next crucial step is quality of education. Education has to be such that it enables creative
thinking, encourages reflection and discussion, and allows young people not just to learn but
to think for themselves.
And here is where the challenge of extremism and the challenge of education intersect.
If young people are not taught an open-minded approach to the world but one that is
bigoted, narrow or closed – and if they are taught that uniformity is more important than
diversity – then they risk believing that there is only one true way to live and that those who
live di erently are lesser human beings.
Sometimes such teaching is to be found in State and public school systems, sometimes in
informal systems or private schooling. Sometimes it is from a malign purpose – to radicalise
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young people. But sometimes it is derived from ignorance or tradition, fashioned in di erent
times when knowledge of the ‘other’ mattered less.
Globally, we spend hundreds of billions of dollars every year on security measures to protect
the public against terrorism, but only   a tiny fraction of that on e orts that tackle the
underlying ideology. This is all expenditure on the consequences of extremism.
What we are looking for is investment in dealing with the causes of extremism, one of which
is undoubtedly the spread of hate thought through, amongst other things, systems of
education.
Many countries know they have a problem within their education system. But the interests
standing in the way of reform can be significant and di cult to overcome.
We see a parallel here with the environment and the development of what is now a global
approach to climate change. With few exceptions, it is now accepted that countries have a
global responsibility to act to reduce harmful emissions. What was once considered the sole
domain of the sovereign State is now enlarged to include an understanding that we all win or
lose depending on the collective determination to act on the climate threat. Therefore, there
is a duty to take action within national boundaries to combat an international menace.
We want the same approach to education. We have been working with UNESCO, the Global
Partnership for Education, the OECD and others to develop a set of policy principles which
would form the basis of a global agreement for education reform. These principles would have
as their objective the rooting out of prejudice and the promotion of cultural tolerance and
respect within education systems, both formal and informal. Nations would commit to this
process as part of fulfilling the UN Global Goals on the education of young people to
promote critical thinking and dialogue.
Over the past ten years, our Institute has been developing programmes designed for such a
purpose in over 30 di erent countries. We have developed pedagogical materials for teachers
to use in multiple languages and run interactions online and through live streaming to
connect young people of di erent cultures and faiths around the world. These programmes
have been evaluated and found to have a positive impact on open-mindedness of young
people. We use them as a demonstration of what can be achieved. But obviously this needs to
operate at scale.
Early next year, we hope to launch this Global Commitment to Education and set a new
direction for international cooperation in this arena.  I'm fine with this
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Ultimately, we can take all the security action we like. But if young people are vulnerable to
hateful ideologies, some of them will turn to violence. They do not naturally tend towards
such sentiments. It is something that is taught. And it can be untaught.
A vital component of an enlightened security approach is to treat open-minded education as
an imperative. We cannot a ord for young children, at the moment of maximum impression
in their lives, to be denied an education which will equip them for success in the modern
world. It is in our interests. It is in theirs. It requires collective will and international action.
And the right time to act is now.

Authors
Tony Blair
Former Prime Minister of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland and Executive Chairman of the Tony Blair
Institute for Global Change

Tags: GLOBAL CHALLENGES, COUNTER-EXTREMISM

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