Children have the potential to make meaningful contributions to peacebuilding, fostering constructive relationships across different social groups. The Helping Kids! lab, led by Dr Laura K Taylor, has collected data with thousands of children in six countries to explore when and why children help and share with people across social boundaries.
Collaborating with local stakeholders through advisory committees, Dr Taylor and colleagues have shared their findings widely, via mainstream media, social media, newsletters and public outreach events, raising awareness of the role that children can play in promoting peace. The team and collaborators are also taking steps to ensure the research findings inform relevant Government policies, like the Shared Island initiative. These findings have significant implications for improving intergroup relations, deepening social cohesion, and promoting peace across the island of Ireland and around the world.
Research description
Peacebuilding activities aim to resolve injustice and build constructive relationships across different social groups. When successful, peacebuilding can reconcile opponents, foster social cohesion, and prevent further conflict. Children play an important role in the peacebuilding process, but to date there is little research on the ways in which children can help heal divided societies.
To address this, Dr Taylor founded the (opens in a new window)Helping Kids! lab in 2015, which conducts cross-cultural, international research to understand the various factors that encourage children to help members of social groups other than their own (across different geographic regions, nationalities, religions and ethnicities).
Prioritising children’s agency and voice, Dr Taylor and colleagues have worked with thousands of children, aged between 4 and 11, in 6 countries: Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland, Kosovo, Republic of North Macedonia, Croatia and Israel. They used (opens in a new window)innovative methods, including drawings and interactive games, to better understand when and why children help, share with and care for others.
They identified several factors which shape children’s helping behaviours towards former “(opens in a new window)conflict rivals” and ethnic minorities. For instance, they found that children in Northern Ireland, Kosovo and Macedonia could recognise religious and political symbols from as young 5; and even though children preferred symbols associated with their own group, they still shared with peers from the conflict rival group. Despite peace agreements in all three settings, the research highlights that tensions remain, with children socialised in the history of conflict. The research suggests that primary school is an important time to develop prosocial behaviour – helping, sharing and caring, or actions that benefit others.
To explore this further, The Helping Kids! lab developed a (opens in a new window)storybook intervention for school children. Children who read the book about refugee children coming to their country showed more empathy and helping intentions toward a (fictious) refugee who would be coming to their school. The results highlight how host-society children can welcome refugees, which is important because over half of refugees are school-aged children.
Toward wider social inclusion in the Republic of Ireland, Dr Taylor’s team explored children’s awareness of symbols associated with the Traveller community. They found that settled Irish children could only identify Traveller symbols that were visibly obvious. This research lends support to the “Traveller Culture and History in Education Bill 2018”, which aims to tackle systemic anti-Traveller racism through primary and post-primary education.
In alignment with the government’s Shared Island initiative, Helping Kids! focuses on the next generation of peacebuilders across the island of Ireland, supporting a more inclusive, shared future.
Research impact
Political impact
To share their findings with the wider public and relevant policymakers, Dr Taylor and colleagues set up and actively collaborate with a Local Advisory Committee, comprised of key individuals from relevant organisations: the Think-tank for Action on Social Change, the Northern Ireland Council for Integrated Education, the Cross Border Orchestra of Ireland, and the Migrant and Minority Ethnic Council. The Committee give feedback on the research and suggest ways in which the findings can inform practice and policy (like the Government’s Shared Island initiative). Outreach through social media, newsletters, and community events help to disseminate findings to policymakers and practitioners on the island.
In 2021, the team worked with the Southside Travellers Action Group and the Irish Traveller Movement to ensure that their research accurately reflected Traveller culture. Through these organisations, Dr Taylor and colleagues further shared the project’s findings to support calls for greater equality and inclusion of Travellers within Irish society, such as the Traveller Culture and History in Education Bill, the National Traveller and Roma Inclusion Strategy, and the Yellow Flag Programme.
I think this exploration that Helping Kids! are doing with younger children could be really important. It could lead us towards better informed practice and interventions, and could lead us to understand more about how prejudice and preferences are formed, and what factors influence the formations of those prejudices and preferences.
— Dr Lynn Johnson, Northern Ireland Council for Integrated Education
In line with their child-centred ethos, the team host a variety of free, family-friendly events. Most recently, their UCD Festival event, (opens in a new window)The Art of Identity, was highly successful, with dozens of families attending the interactive art exhibition. The displays included drawings and quotes from children aged 5-11 from the team’s research in Northern Ireland, Croatia, Kosovo and Macedonia. Children at the event contributed their own drawings representing the topics of “Europe”, “Peace” and “Where I Live”. One parent commented, “It was so fun to see how researchers are engaging with children about these issues. My child loved the event.”
Helping Kids! has published 18 peer-reviewed journal articles and chapters since 2015, most of which have at least one student author, demonstrating Dr Taylor’s mentorship of early career researchers. This research has global academic impact, with two papers among the top cited in their journal in 2021. Helping Kids! research has been shared widely via over 40 conference presentations and public outreach events all over the world (South Korea, Kosovo, USA, Colombia, Switzerland, Sweden, UK).
Research team
Dr Laura K Taylor, Assistant Professor, UCD School of Psychology; founded Helping Kids! in 2015
Dearbháile Counihan, Research Assistant, UCD School of Psychology; joined Helping Kids! in 2020
Laura K Taylor, International Society of Political Psychology, Jim Sidanius Early Career Researcher Award, 2022
Laura K Taylor, International Society for the Study of Behavioural Development, Young Scientist Award, 2022
Laura K Taylor, Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, Otto Klineberg Award for Best Paper on Intercultural and International Issues, 2022 (Taylor et al., 2021, Developmental Psychology)
Selected academic outputs
Taylor, L.K. (2020). The Developmental Peacebuilding Model (DPM) of children’s prosocial behaviors in settings of intergroup conflict. Child Development Perspectives, 14(3), 127-134. (opens in a new window)https://doi.org/10.1111/cdep.12377
O'Driscoll, D., Taylor, L. K., & Dautel, J. B. (2018). Intergroup resource distribution among children living in segregated neighborhoods amid protracted conflict. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 24(4), 464–474. (opens in a new window)https://doi.org/10.1037/pac0000348
Counihan, D. et al. (2022). Children's awareness of ethnic outgroup symbols: Piloting a task in the Republic of Ireland. International Journal of Psychology. Advance online publication. (opens in a new window)https://doi.org/10.1002/ijop.12870
Taylor, L. K., & Glen, C. (2020). From empathy to action: Can enhancing host-society children’s empathy promote positive attitudes and prosocial behavior towards refugees? Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 30(2), 214-226. (opens in a new window)https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.2438
Taylor, L. K., et al. (2021). Children’s outgroup giving in settings of intergroup conflict: The developmental role of ingroup symbol preference. Developmental Psychology, 57(8), 1350–1358. (opens in a new window)https://doi.org/10.1037/dev0001222
Shamoa-Nir, L., et al. (2021). Out-group prosocial giving during childhood: The role of in-group preference and out-group attitudes in a divided society. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 45(4), 337–344. (opens in a new window)https://doi.org/10.1177/0165025420935619
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