Learning the Language of Justice Through Play
Author(s) -
Carolyn Cunningham,
Heather Crandall
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of hate studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-7442
pISSN - 1540-2126
DOI - 10.33972/jhs.167
Subject(s) - empathy , dynamics (music) , entertainment , cognition , sociology , poverty , social psychology , psychology , public relations , political science , pedagogy , law , neuroscience
Video games are often seen as a medium for entertainment. However, there is an emerging genre of video games that are designed to raise awareness about important social issues like poverty, immigration, and war. These games use persuasive strategies for engaging communities in conversations about human rights issues. This paper provides analyses of the educational strategies of twenty-one human rights video games on the Games For Change website. Our analysis reveals that the ways these games increase cognition, increase empathy and teach affective responses, as well as teach players how to participate in social change processes, serve to educate for behavioral change. Through this medium, players are immersed in simulations which give them a language to not only understand the dynamics at play in issues such as deportation, but also offers players insight into how to change these dynamics and why it is important.
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