Our Vision and Mission

VisionTo prevent and mitigate violence, stimulated by underlying social issues in the US, in the pursuit of positive peace.

MissionTo build a national cohesion and peacebuilding infrastructure for the US, including an Early Warning Early Action system to prevent violence. Founded before the US 2020 elections and committed for the long term.


 

Key Principles

Local: Efforts to mitigate violence, solve problems and promote positive peace are effective only when local organizations are deeply involved.

Trustable: Data-gathering and inter-network communication are useful only when networks of trustworthy people are in place.

Reliable, Accurate, Timely: Effective intervention is made possible by getting the right information, at the right time, to the right people, for the right response. This requires thoughtfully-constructed protocols that are both functional and flexible.


 
 

Goals

Goal 1: Create a sustainable Early Warning / Early Action system 

  • The technical and human resource capacity for Early Warning Early Action

  • Included are online tools for reporting and tracking evidence of hate speech, incitement, and other forms of violence via text, images, voice, and video 

Goal 2:  Train and prepare responders

  • In a range of skills including unarmed civilian protection, de-escalation strategies, Inter-positioning, joint monitoring mechanisms, building safety teams, navigating high-level threats, facilitating difficult dialogues, and more 

Goal 3: Prepare messages for dissemination across platforms

  • Involve experts in social media and mass texting with targeted messages from respected leaders

Goal 4:  Leverage existing infrastructures

  • Within non-partisan civic organizations society looking to improve the civic space, to benefit from the competencies this network offers, through the coordination of the community-based dispute resolution members of NAFCM

Goal 5: Coordinate with key groups 

  • Such as journalists, municipal and faith leaders, police and community safety professionals, civic organizations, all to sustain a vibrant voting process in which all voices are heard

Goal 6Engage in violence interruption while building on local capacity

  • To address tensions and threats of violence

Goal 7: Ensure a lasting framework 

  • For use well after the elections as a permanent and vibrant resource for citizens, governments, and communities


 
 

We are melting the silos

We believe that the U.S. needs an urgent, coordinated multi-sectoral peacebuilding approach to address the causes of conflict and violence at home. This means building an infrastructure that includes organizations with the ability to focus on: 

  • community/cohesion building

  • countering radicalization

  • democracy & governance

  • digital peace technology

  • environmental and health justice

  • media and messaging

  • mediation and restorative practices

  • prevention of violence

  • security sector transformation

  • truth, transformation & reparation

  • unarmed civilian protection

  • violence interruption


 
 

FAQs

A broad network/platform designed to prevent and mitigate violence stimulated by underlying social issues in the US.
For all inquiries, please email us here: info@thetrustnetwork.net

What is EWER, or EWEA?

EWER stands for Early Warning and Early Response. Together with many of our colleagues in the international field, we are moving towards using the phrase EWEA for Early Warning and Early Action, to reflect the fact that the system is responsive to long-term and underlying issues, not only reactive to incidents and emergencies. On both levels, an EWER or EWEA system picks up signals that violence may be brewing in a particular time and place, and communicates those signals to persons who may be able to mitigate or prevent the violence. 

EWER or EWEA at a local level has proven to be effective in preventing violence in multiple countries going through complex social upheaval. 

Every country -- in fact every region and even every community -- has its own social norms and structures. It follows that any EWEA system must be customized to the setting in which it is used. 

What is the TRUST Network doing?

We are doing several things that intersect and enhance each other. We act as a networking hub to develop collaboration across what might otherwise be siloed fields: peacebuilding, social justice, and democracy work. That includes connecting national-level expertise and advocacy to local initiatives, convened by community mediation and justice centers on the ground, so that communities are supported in generating their own solutions to their local needs. It also includes helping independent individuals find the best way to contribute their skills and energies to their communities. To inform the entire effort we are creating and customizing an Early Warning and Early Action system that will help collect and disseminate the information that people need in order to address issues at the needed time.

We are growing this EWEA system with the long-term future in mind.  We believe that addressing the divisions in our country and developing and sustaining positive peace — peacefulness based in community, justice and stability — require attention and commitment for the long haul, not just to get through moments of crisis.

How does the Early Warning system work, and what does it accomplish?

Individuals trained to deliver trustworthy information send information about rising tension and violence to a central hub. Data gatherers and conflict analysts also support the central hub with the information needed to identify hotspots. 

From the hub, the information is used to alert responders. One key component is to have skilled responders who are local and trusted, who have relationships in the community such that they can help to soothe tensions before those tensions escalate to violence. Another is that, if violence is already occurring, proper and positive community relations can make an important difference in how the situation evolves. A third is that in a parallel but linked action stream, leaders from across social sectors and party lines can spread messages of calm and nonviolence. 

The tasks of the message-spreader, monitor, and responder may be fulfilled by the same or different people, and their impacts intersect. Each effort centers on local support — connected, when possible, through a community mediation center.

The information, response, and outcome must be monitored in a continuous feedback loop to improve both the system and its results. 

Where do you find the people?

Our partners’ existing networks, taken together, comprise hundreds of organizations and thousands of individuals all across the country. We are reaching out to expand on those networks, and we welcome independent individuals.

What can I do to help?

Your impulse to help is priceless, and there is no one else who has exactly the same skill set you have. We value you.

Do you fit any part of these descriptions? Do you know anyone else who might, as well?

  • calm, thoughtful, informed observer

  • peacebuilder: de-escalator, mediator, negotiator, facilitator; and/or trainer of those skills

  • media person

  • community leader: clergy, business leader, teacher, head of local organization

Just One Example

Nov 6:  How the Detroit PD TRUSTed Peace

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In an unusual coming together in peace during a time of huge potential unrest, the Detroit police came out on Friday Nov 6th not in riot gear, but in baseball caps.  Meeting them at the site of protests were TRUST Network partners from the Wayne County Dispute Resolution Center who were equally dressed for peace.  According to TRUST Network partners on the scene, the police were cautious as they approached protestors.   Instead of herding them, the officers let peaceful people go on their way.  Why was this event different?

Because TRUST Network partners had previously built bridges with the Detroit police using their own channels as well as TRUST Network resources.  When TRUST Network partners from the Wayne County Dispute Resolution Center (a member of NAFCM) got to the location, they spoke with an officer on the line separating the two protesting groups and let them know the TRUST Network was on the scene.  Confirming the message that they had been conveying to the police department for days beforehand, they reaffirmed that they were available and on the scene to help keep the peace.  And that is exactly what happened.

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