Peace and Collaborative Development Network

Building Bridges, Networks and Expertise Across Sectors

Nox Ntuli
  • Female
  • Cape Town
  • South Africa
  • Lawyer/Mediator
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Profile Information

What motivated you (or your organization) to become involved in peace and conflict resolution?
Got a referral from a person on the NYDR Listserve
Please feel free to provide a short bio about yourself or the work of your organization (no more than 3 paragraphs)
I have a legal background and have work in Employment Law for 5 years. Part of my skill is mediation between employer and employee/ Unions.

I have trauma counselling skill and plenty of training experince.
Please list the countries and/or regions in which you (or your organization) have direct and significant expertise
South Africa
What is your current country of residence (or location of your organization)?
South Africa
What is your current job (and organization) and/or where and what field are you studying?
Lawyer/Mediator
What is your personal or organizational website?
http://www.nth2.co.za
Which are your primary sectoral areas of expertise (or the primary sectoral areas of your organization) ?
Alternative Dispute Resolution, Conflict Resolution, Gender
Which are your primary skills areas(or the primary skill areas of your organization)?
Training, Advocacy, Research
What are some of your current areas of research (if any)?
Human Rights Violation in Liberia workplace

Comment Wall (13 comments)

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At 9:18am on September 5, 2009, Andrew Benson Greene said…
Hi Nox, peace and friendship from Sierra Leone. my experienes in Capetown was so nice that i have ever longed to go back to that Rainbow nation since attending the international education conference in 2001. warm wishes and I invite you to collaborate on peace and development. warm wishes, andrew
At 8:27pm on January 25, 2009, Waheed Ahmad said…
Dear Friend,

I have this opportunity to extend my heartfelt Greetings and Best wishes
on the occasion of HAPPY NEW YEAR 2009.

May the New Year brings global peace, prosperity, happiness with most
eventful occasions to celebrate together. And may the Year 2009 also pave
the way to bring complete solution of the World crisis.

I wish for World Peace

I wish for health and prosperity for all human kind

I wish for our nature to recover

Waheed Ahmad
Advocate High Court
Contact Person AIJA, International Association of Young Lawyers for
Pakistan
Chairman Middle East Citizen Assembly Pakistan Chapter
Address; 2/136-A , Aman Park Baghbanpura Lahore , Pakistan.
+92-333-4639652 & +92-300-4254329
Fax # 0092-42-6844293
waheed2010@hotmail.com
waheed2000@yahoo.com
At 6:31pm on January 18, 2009, Ashad SENTONGO said…
I was working as the Education Coordinator for the SADN, and was a teacher at Verulam. But now I am at Arlington, Virginia - USA.
At 10:01pm on January 17, 2009, Ashad SENTONGO said…
Well, you seem to have figured it out well already. Since you know where you want to go, you will get there. I will be glad to help wherever I can, but you may want to think about some course because approaches through law and conflict resolution practices tend to deffer, leave alone parties to the conflict viewing them differently. But you can be gain greatly if you combine both into your practice. Where about in South Africa do you stay?? I lived in Durban - SA for 5 years.
At 9:04am on January 16, 2009, Craig Zelizer said…
Thanks. Great questions. There are many examples of areas of the world where peacebuilding has been taking place for years and the demonstrated level of macro level success has been somewhat limited. However there are also many examples of quantifiable success both at the micro, meso and macro levels. I do have a co-edited book coming out in May on Success in Peacebuilding which has 13 chapters written by practitioners from teh field and demonstrates impact across contexts/levels.
At 5:40pm on January 15, 2009, Ashad SENTONGO said…
Well, I am doing a PhD in Conflict Analysis and Resolution here in the USA, and involved in some international mediation processes. What do you do yourself?
At 8:23am on December 1, 2008, THUSHARA WITHARANA said…
hi Nox,

I think U intrest in peace.i'm a graduate in Peace & conflict Resolution in University of Kelaniya In Sri lanka.Then i studied in Internatioan Relations,Human Rigts,Counselling Psycology Diplomas.my last job is Youth national coordinator in anty war front in Sri Lanka.
Now i work in Human rights NGO.We help marginalized people in Sri lankan Conflict.
So we can share our peace knowledge

So I like read Ur view bbout peace.If U have any free time plz join my discussions in my page.
U R welcome

Thushara
At 10:45am on November 27, 2008, Waheed Ahmad said…
Thanks to be my Friend , hope to learn from you

have a nice time

waheed2000@yahoo.com
At 8:17am on November 27, 2008, Dikendra Dhakal said…
Dear Nox,
I invite you to become my friend.
yours Dikendra
At 3:57pm on November 20, 2008, Rene Wadlow said…
Need for Concerted Action: Elimination of Violence Against Women

Rene Wadlow

November 25 is the UN-proclaimed International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women. Violence against women is a year-round occurrence and continues to an alarming degree. Violence against women is an attack upon their bodily integrity and their dignity. We need to place an emphasis on the universality of violence against women, the multiplicity of its forms, and the ways in which violence, discrimination against women, and the broader system of domination based on subordination and inequality are inter-related. The value of a special ‘Day’ is that it serves as a time of analysis of the issue and then of rededication to take both short-term and longer-range measures.

The UN Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women, adopted by States in the General Assembly of 1993, gives a broad definition of violence as “ any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual or psychological harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life.”

The Declaration highlights violence within the family, violence within the broader community, and violence perpetrated or condoned by the State. We will deal briefly with these three areas of violence against women.

The Family: Although the family should be a safe haven with relations among its members guided by respect and love, it is often within the family where the most psychologically devastating forms of violence take place — devastating because such violence goes against the expectations of a safe and harmonious haven. We see battering, sexual abuse of female children in the household, dowry-related violence, marital rape, female genital mutilation and other traditional practices harmful to women and violence related to exploitation carried out by family members and intimate partners.

Within this family setting, we also need to look at the conditions of domestic workers, often working under totally unregulated conditions. Live-in maids can be subjected to slave-like treatment at the hands of the members of the family employing them. They can encounter humiliation, work and sexual exploitation and violence, often with no access to justice.

The Wider Community: As the preamble to the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women states clearly “Violence against women is a manifestation of the historically unequal power relations between men and women, which have led to domination over and to discrimination against women by men and to the prevention of women’s full advancement, and that violence against women is one of the crucial social mechanisms by which women are forced into a subordinate position compared with men.” This universal phenomenon is embedded in a patriarchal structure which legitimates mechanisms of enforcing and sustaining the system of domination.

As Adrienne Rich wrote in Of Women Born “Patriarchy is the power of the fathers; a familial-social ideological, political system in which men — by force, direct pressure, or through ritual, tradition, law and language, customs, etiquette, education, and the division of labor, determine what part women shall or shall not play, and in which the female is everywhere subsumed under the male. It does not necessarily imply that no woman has power or that all women in a given culture may not have certain powers… The power of the fathers has been difficult to grasp because it permeates everything, even the language in which we try to describe it. It is diffuse and concrete; symbolic and literal; universal, and expressed with local variations which obscure its universality.”

Many of the tenets of patriarchal gender order concerns male power to control women’s sexuality and reproductive capacity. The honour and prestige of a man, in many instances, are intrinsically associated with the conduct of a women related to sexuality, leading in some cases to ‘crimes committed in the name of honour’.

Within the wider community, we also see physical, sexual and psychological violence, including rape, sexual abuse, sexual harassment, and intimidation at work and in educational institutions, trafficking in women and forced prostitution.

Education, psychological care and sociological change are important to combat violence within the family and the community.

The State and Armed Insurgencies: There is physical, sexual and psychological violence perpetrated or condoned by the State. The State has a clear duty to control the behaviour of its police, prison, and other agents of justice. Victims of violence by the agents of the State should have clearly set out mechanisms by which they can appeal to the State for redress and compensation. Violence against women in custodial and prison conditions is still a widespread phenomenon which requires a review of national legislation but especially a real investigation of national practice. In many ways ‘law and order’ can be a ‘war on the poor’ and the misfits or a ‘war of segregation’ which can translate into arrests of members of specific social, ethnic or religious groups.

We see violence against women used as a systematic weapon in conflicts as these days in eastern Congo by both governmental forces and the armed insurgencies. Women, children and the elderly are the most vulnerable in war-torn societies.

There are also real but less visible psychological and personality disorders left by a conflict. Therefore the role and needs of women in post-war reconstruction and reconciliation require immediate special attention.

Thus, this November 25, we need to look carefully at the causes of violence against women and to develop further the policies and institutions leading to human dignity .
Drawing :Cecile Wadlow
René Wadlow, Representative to the United Nations, Geneva, Association of World Citizens
 
 

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