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book cover for The Bernal Story

The Bernal Story

Mediating Class and Race in a Multicultural Community

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Pub Date Jul 16 2014 | Archive Date Jun 11 2014

Description

For eight years, the San Francisco neighborhood of Bernal Heights was mired in controversy. Traditionally a working-class neighborhood known for political activism and attention to community concerns, Bernal housed a diverse population of Latino, Filipino, and European heritage. The branch library, beloved in the community, was being renovated, raising the issue of whether to restore or paint over a thirty-year-old mural on its exterior wall. To some of the residents the artwork represented their culture and their entitlement to live on the hill. To others, the mural blighted a beautiful building. To resolve this seemingly intractable conflict, area officials convened a mediation led by Roy, an experienced mediator and Bernal resident. The group, which reflected the wide range of ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds in the community, ultimately came to a strong consensus, resulting in the reinterpretation of the artwork to reflect changing times and to honor the full population of the neighborhood.

The Bernal Story recounts in detail how the process was designed, who took part, how the group of twelve community representatives came to a consensus, and how that agreement was carried into the larger community and implemented. Roy’s firsthand account offers an essential tool for training community leaders and professional mediators, a valuable case history for use in sociology and conflict resolution courses, and a compelling narrative.

For eight years, the San Francisco neighborhood of Bernal Heights was mired in controversy. Traditionally a working-class neighborhood known for political activism and attention to community...


A Note From the Publisher

6 x 9, 200 pages, 2 black-and-white illustrations, notes, bibliography, index

6 x 9, 200 pages, 2 black-and-white illustrations, notes, bibliography, index


Advance Praise

"Rich with lessons. It illuminates the way a seemingly straightforward distributive conflict about public space can be an identitybased conflict rooted in race and class divisions fueled by socioeconomic processes of gentrification."—Heather Pincock, Kennesaw State University

"A case study and a ‘How To’ manual in the practice of intercultural mediation and facilitation. Beth Roy pushes the boundaries of the field of peacemaking and sets the practice of mediation and conflict resolution squarely into the context of our multicultural society."—Roberto M Chene, director, Southwest Center for Intercultural Leadership

"Rich with lessons. It illuminates the way a seemingly straightforward distributive conflict about public space can be an identitybased conflict rooted in race and class divisions fueled by...


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Available Editions

EDITION Hardcover
ISBN 9780815633464
PRICE $29.95 (USD)

Average rating from 1 member