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Decoding the Language of Power: Understanding Global Conversations

Decoding the Language of Power: Understanding Global Conversations Setting: Ms. Rivers’ classroom. Five WikiExplorers sit in a circle, notebooks open. Ms. Rivers walks to the board and writes: ADVOCACY POLICY ACCOUNTABILITY “Class,” she begins, “these are not just words. These are tools.” Jamal raises his hand. “Tools for what?” “For shaping the world,” Ms. Rivers replies. Activity 1: Translation Exercise Ms. Rivers divides the board into two columns: Institutional Language -  Everyday Meaning Advocacy Speaking up and pushing for change Policy Rules that guide decisions Accountability Being responsible for outcomes Global Governance How the world organizes power “Your job,” she says, “is to translate these words into real life.” Aaliyah writes: “Concrete action = actually doing something, not just talking.” Ms. Rivers smiles. “Exactly.”   Activity 2: Who Is Speaking? Ms. Rivers writes: “People speaking for themselves” “Why is this important?” she asks. Malik responds, “Becau...

The Language They Speak at the Table”

    “The Language They Speak at the Table” They said advocacy and the word echoed like a drum steady measured approved They said policies like blueprints drawn in rooms far from the people they were meant to hold They said international community and I wondered— who is inside that circle and who is still knocking at the door? They said global governance and I saw a map lines drawn across land and water but not across hunger not across pain They said sovereignty and I felt the weight of a nation standing tall while a woman somewhere still whispered her truth in silence They said awareness concerns issues soft words like cushions placed under hard realities But then— someone said concrete action And the room shifted. Because action does not hide behind microphones Action walks outside and changes a life They said “not just symbolism” And I wanted to stand up and ask— then why does it still feel like a performance? They said “for the people to say what they want” And I listened c...