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Conflict Regulation
March 31, 2025
Reminder: Times are all EDT/EST
Webinar Access Links will be sent 1 hour prior to the start of the webinar. If you are registering after 3pm ET on 3/31 please email membership@ndeo.org after registering for the access links.
ASL/Closed Captioning Available
Registration for this event is free for members and non-members, however if you'd like to support NDEO please consider a small optional registration fee of $5, $10, or $15 if you can.
'Conflict Regulation' supports shared language generation for navigating conflict within ourselves and with others. Within a harm reduction model, we synthesize flow state techniques, conflict resolution, de-escalation and leadership practices, to offer concise tools to reveal the 'understories' of conflict inside of us and around us. This awareness can lead to a greater appreciation of the ongoing processes involved in 'regulating' conflict, over simply valuing the resolution of symptoms with quick fixes. Participants can pass these techniques on to students, faculty and family members by modeling and intentionally co-creating frameworks to reference, normalize and legitimize ‘conflict regulation’ moving forward. By advocating for ourselves first, we create conditions that humanize us all, value contradictions and complexity as valuable information towards thriving, and embrace conflict as a movement catalyst for our continued innovation as the artists that we are.
Agenda
Speakers
Name | Organization | Speaking At |
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Amy Miller
<p>Amy Miller is driven by translating the inherent reciprocity necessary for moving together in the studio in ways that can inspire 'movement' in our daily lives. Formerly with the Ohio Ballet, Miller was also a founding member of Cleveland-based GroundWorks DanceTheater. After performing with and directing Gibney Company for 10 years, she now focuses on education as Gibney’s new Director of Learning & Leadership. She has invested deeply in Gibney’s Community Action initiatives by working alongside survivors of gender-based violence, by conducting social action trainings with activists around the world, and by facilitating healthy relationship workshops raising awareness about the role of the arts in violence prevention - all which now deeply inform her overall approach to equity in dance education.</p>
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Gibney |
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