Research Spotlight: New Perspectives on Healing Collective Trauma

How do we heal history’s deepest wounds? In her new Open Access book, “New Perspectives on Healing Collective Trauma,” Prof. Scherto Gill brings together global voices to explore the intersection of structural justice, intergenerational dialogue, and collective healing. Featuring insights from Professors Myriam Cottias, Ana Lucia Araujo, and Lord Alderdice, Drs Joy DeGruy, Ali Moussa Iye, Esther Armah, Gail Christopher, Thomas HĂĽbl, Indigenous leader, Lewis Cardinal, and more.

đź“– Read it for free by clicking on this open access book link: New Perspectives on Healing Collective Trauma: Towards Social Justice and Communal Well-Being

In an era marked by deep global divisions, how do societies move beyond the paralysis of historical wounds? This groundbreaking new volume, “New Perspectives on Healing Collective Trauma,” edited by Prof. Scherto Gill, offers a transformative roadmap. Moving the conversation beyond individual psychology, this book establishes collective healing as a systemic, structural, and intergenerational imperative necessary for achieving genuine social justice.

Why This Research Matters Now

Historical injustices—enslavement, colonialism, and systemic racism—are not just events of the past; they are lived realities that continue to shape economic disparities, political polarization, and cultural fragmentation. This book argues that traditional approaches to peacebuilding often fail because they neglect the deep spiritual and psychosocial wounds that communities carry across generations.

This research highlights that healing is political. It connects the inner work of trauma integration with the outer work of structural change, proposing that we cannot have one without the other.

Key Innovations & Frameworks

The book introduces and expands upon several cutting-edge concepts that redefine the field of trauma studies and peacebuilding:

  • Intergenerational Dialogue and Inquiry (IDI): A flagship methodology featured in the book (and piloted by the UNESCO Collective Healing Initiative), IDI creates safe spaces for youth and elders to break the silence on past atrocities, facilitating a transfer of wisdom and resilience rather than just trauma.
  • The Politics of Dignity: Prof. Gill challenges current governance models, proposing a “politics of dignity” where institutions are intentionally designed to affirm the intrinsic value of every person, actively dismantling the structures of dehumanization.
  • Emotional Justice: Contributor Esther A. Armah introduces a language to navigate the unspoken emotional economies of racism, arguing that policy changes are insufficient without addressing the “emotional currency” of oppression.
  • Healing Architecture: The volume explores how our physical environments and public spaces can be designed to foster relational health and communal repair, rather than enforcing separation.

Global Case Studies

The research is grounded in diverse, real-world applications, offering a truly global perspective:

  • The Americas: Examining the enduring legacies of the Transatlantic Slave Trade and the demand for reparations (featuring contributions from Joy DeGruy and Ana Lucia Araujo).
  • Canada: Centering Indigenous voices in the processes of Truth and Reconciliation (Lewis Cardinal).
  • Global South & Beyond: Insights from community-led healing circles in Africa and racial healing initiatives in the US (Gail C. Christopher).

Who Should Read This?

This volume is an essential resource for researchers, policymakers, community organizers, and peace practitioners. It bridges the gap between academic theory and grassroots practice, offering tools for those working in:

  • Conflict Transformation & Peacebuilding
  • Public Health & Trauma Studies
  • Social Policy & Governance
  • Indigenous Studies & Decolonial Practice

Read the Full Research

As a commitment to global knowledge equity, this title is available as an Open Access publication. Read the book for free here

#CollectiveHealing #SocialJustice #TraumaResearch #OpenAccess

Simone Weil on love, justice and collective healing.

New Peer-Reviewed Open-Access Article.

Read the full paper here:

Dehumanisation as spiritual harm: Simone Weil on love justice and collective healing

This paper examines the spiritual dimension of dehumanisation and argues that confronting this neglected aspect is essential to healing historical and structural harms. Drawing on the philosophical and theological writings of Simone Weil, it offers a relational interpretation of her insights into the sacred roots of human dignity, the soul-wounding effects of dehumanisation, and love as an antidote to brutality. Through Weil’s concepts of affliction, social degradation and structural injustice, the paper demonstrates that dehumanisation operates not only through material and psychological violence but also through spiritual violation that severs persons and communities from the good.

Building on Weil’s ethical vision, the paper advances a four-fold intergenerational approach to addressing spiritual harm: (1) acknowledging dehumanisation and the reality of affliction; (2) reclaiming human dignity rooted in the sacred; (3) strengthening spiritual belonging through community and intergenerational continuity; and (4) imagining a culture of love oriented to justice and co-flourishing.

Illustrated through contemporary examples, including UNESCO’s Collective Healing Initiative, the paper argues that Weil’s wisdom contributes both philosophically and practically to collective healing, social justice and the regeneration of communities impacted by slavery, colonialism and other enduring forms of inhumanity.

Beyond Inhumanity – Open-Access book published by DeGruyter

Edited by Prof Scherto Gill, Beyond Inhumanity is a book that emerges from the ongoing intellectual dialogue as part of the UNESCO Collective Healing Initiative. The Initiative focuses on healing the wounds of inhumanity, co-creating just societies and enhancing the flourishing of current and future generations.


About this book

Collective efforts to address the legacies of slavery and colonialism tend to orient solely towards dealing with material compensation, such as reducing economic disparity, and levelling access to public services. However, communities directly impacted by the dehumanizing legacies have insisted on a broader reckoning—one that recognizes all dimensions of the harms, including the spiritual injury and the relevant psychosocial trauma inflicted across the generations. They remind us that harms of structural injustice extend beyond the material, the physical and the psychological, also entangling the moral, relational, and spiritual fabric of human life. Understanding harms of inhumanity brings to light the layers of damage and is key to identifying interdisciplinary approaches to collective healing, social transformation and the well-being of all.

This book emerges from the ongoing intellectual dialogue as part of the UNESCO Collective Healing Initiative. The Initiative focuses on healing the wounds of inhumanity, co-creating just societies and enhancing the flourishing of current and future generations.

  • Brings together under-explored questions and provides succinct answers to them in one volume.
  • Includes multi-disciplinary perspectives.
  • Connected to a UNESCO global initiative.

Author / Editor information

Scherto Gill, University of Wales Trinity St David, Lampeter, UK.

GHfP Institute at UNESCO HQ – Collective Healing Handbook

On 10th October 2024, UNESCO Assistant Director General, Mrs Gabriela Ramos, launched the Collective Healing Handbook for Facilitators in Paris, to mark the 30th Anniversary of UNESCO Routes of Enslaved People’s Programme.

The research and development of this Handbook was supported by grants from the Guerrand-Hermès Foundation for Peace. The Handbook is intended to support the efforts of facilitators and other professionals who are interested in hosting Collective Healing Circles (CHCs) in their local community. The intellectual insights underpinning the CHCs proposed in this Handbook are drawn from contemporary research on historical atrocities, such as the transatlantic trade of enslaved Africans, colonialisation, and mass killing and violent displacement of Indigenous peoples, as well as the legacies of dehumanisation, such as racism and structural injustice.



The practical ideas for implementing the CHC Programme featured throughout the Handbook are inspired by existing proven approaches of similar programmes, and those which have emerged from a one-year pilot of the Programme in five countries (Kenya, Nigeria, the UK, the USA and Colombia) on four continents. Click the link below to download the CHC Programme Handbook for Facilitators.

The launch was followed by reports and testimonies from community partners and participants of the UNESCO Collective Healing Initiative on the process and impact of our CHC activities on four continents.

Amongst those in the audience at UNESCO HQ were global leaders, national delegations, and civil society representatives.