Toolkit Library/

You don’t have to be nice to political opponents. But you do need to talk to them.

In this Washington Post commentary on the 2016 election, Oxford professor Teresa Bejan draws on her historical research to describe how civility is not about silencing disagreement or simply being “nice.” Rather, she writes, it is a willingness to speak out without resorting to violence and to live and work together despite the animosities that divide us.

   Article

   12 minutes

   By: Teresa Bejan, Washington Post

   Educator-prep | Leader-prep


Making connections:

Principled Innovation asks us to work with others and recognize the limits of our own knowledge so that we can better understand and tackle the complex issues our communities face.

More on this topic:

The 5 rs of trustworthiness

  Video

  10 minutes

  By: Principled Innovation® (PI)

How to talk politics when you disagree

  Video

  12 minutes

  By: Ciaran O'Connor, TEDx

Five Science-Backed Strategies to Build Resilience

  Tool

  5 minutes

  By: Greater Good Science Center

Should you be civil to a racist? Yes, but you should still call them out.

  Article

  10 minutes

  By: Robert Danisch, Wiliam Keith

Rules of engagement

  Tool

  30 minutes

  By: Principled Innovation® (PI)

Access our collection of +200 learning materials

PI toolkit library