Veteran mediator William Ury displays on how the tremendous artwork of diplomacy is crucial at holding the world collectively.
We live in a time of deep rupture. From Gaza to Ukraine, Myanmar to Kashmir, the US to Europe, polarisation has grow to be the defining rhythm of our age. Dialogue is now not simply troublesome – it’s dangerous. Leaders communicate in absolutes. Humiliation and concern spur violence. On this context, the position of the mediator is extra fragile, extra needed, and extra human than ever.
On the centre of this episode is William Ury, cofounder of Harvard’s Program on Negotiation and one of many architects of recent battle decision. Via his life’s work, we hint the hidden anatomy of peace: How belief is constructed when nobody believes in it, how negotiations survive egos, trauma, and political stress, and the way humanity is preserved when every little thing pushes in the direction of dehumanisation.
Finally, The Possibilist reveals that peace shouldn’t be the area of diplomats alone. It belongs to all of us. In our properties, our workplaces, and our communities, all of us carry a type of energy. Political energy could change legal guidelines – however ethical energy, the facility of empathy, braveness, and presence, can change hearts.
A movie by Fatima Lianes
Printed On 1 Jul 2026
