Listening
“Listening” was not a keyword in my research until it surfaced repeatedly in interviews. Interviewees thought listening—not influencing, not debating, not raising awareness—was important for refugee dialogue. But each person interpreted the importance of listening differently.
So what do migration experts in Vancouver think are the significances of “listening” for refugee dialogue in Canada?
Watch the full 10-minute montage below. Or scroll down to view short interview clips.
Listening 1
Passing the mic
Listening 2
Admitting we don’t know
Listening 3
Getting beyond the myths
Listening 4
Creating a culture of listening vs. campaigning
Listening 5
Listening across cultures
Listening 6
Choosing when to listen
Listening 7
Asking the right questions
Listening 8
Engaging each other vs. abstract ideas
Listening 9
Imagining our ideal world
Listening 10
Being human, not professionals
Listening 11
Listening as curiosity vs. transactional
Listening 12
An example of curious listening
Listening 13
Listening when you don’t know each other’s language
Listening 14
Listening as collaboration, not neutrality