Whether you’re managing disputes between young people in a residential programme, de-escalating tensions in a community setting, or mediating between youth and authority figures, the way you handle conflict shapes everything — the safety of the space, the trust of the participants, and the outcomes of the programme. This 5-day course gives you the full toolkit.
Youth workers who haven’t had conflict resolution training often find themselves:
This course addresses every one of these situations with evidence-based frameworks, practical skills, and extensive role-play practice in GCC and African youth programme contexts.
Staff running residential camps, community programmes, and youth centres in the GCC and Africa where conflict between participants is a regular occurrence.
School counsellors, student affairs staff, and youth coordinators in universities and secondary schools managing peer conflict and disciplinary situations.
Community-based youth workers and field staff in NGOs delivering programmes in communities where tensions — social, economic, and intercommunal — run high.
Ministry of Youth and Social Affairs staff, and those in government-run youth centres and community programmes, responsible for managing group dynamics and individual conduct.
Young people themselves who are taking on peer leadership and mediation roles — this course develops both the skills and the confidence to handle conflict constructively.
Leaders of youth organisations who need to build their team’s conflict competence — and who want in-house delivery for their entire staff team.
Skills that create safer, more effective youth programmes from the moment you return to work.
Follow-up feedback 3 months after completing the programme
Understanding Conflict in Youth Contexts — Causes, Types, and Cultural Dimensions
Why Day 1 matters: Most youth workers react to conflict as though all conflict is the same — an emergency to be stopped. Day 1 challenges this. You learn to read conflict: what type it is, what’s driving it beneath the surface, what stage it’s at, and what intervention (if any) is appropriate. Critically, you build understanding of how cultural background — Arab, African, South Asian — shapes how young people experience, express, and expect conflict to be handled.
De-escalation Skills — Stopping Conflicts from Becoming Crises
Why Day 2 matters: De-escalation is the highest-value conflict skill for youth workers — it’s what prevents a disagreement from becoming a physical altercation or a community-wide incident. Day 2 is almost entirely practical: you learn and immediately practise specific de-escalation techniques through role-play with real youth programme scenarios from the GCC and Africa.
Session is predominantly live role-play — this is the most physically and emotionally demanding day of the course
Mediation and Restorative Practice
Why Day 3 matters: De-escalation stops the immediate crisis. Mediation is what resolves the underlying conflict so it doesn’t recur. Day 3 teaches you to facilitate structured mediation conversations between young people — and introduces restorative practice, which is increasingly the evidence-based approach of choice for youth-focused conflict resolution internationally, including in Gulf and African contexts.
Session includes: full mediation simulation across multiple scenarios
Group Dynamics, Bullying, and Peer Conflict Programmes
Why Day 4 matters: Most conflict in youth programmes is not a sudden explosion — it develops over time through group dynamics that go unmanaged. Day 4 gives you the skills to read group dynamics, identify early warning signs of bullying and exclusion, and implement peer support and peer mediation programmes that create a culture of constructive conflict resolution within the programme itself.
Self-Care, Documentation, Safeguarding, and Building a Conflict-Competent Programme
Why Day 5 matters: Working regularly with conflict in youth settings takes a toll — and practitioners who don’t manage this well burn out or develop unhealthy responses. Day 5 addresses practitioner wellbeing alongside the procedural and organisational dimensions: documentation, safeguarding obligations, and how to build a programme culture where conflict is handled constructively at every level.
Investing in conflict resolution training for your youth programme staff delivers measurable improvements across your programme:
We deliver this programme as an in-house intensive for entire youth programme teams — using scenarios from your specific programme context, sector, and location. Contact us to discuss.
| Duration | 5 days (40 contact hours) |
| Locations | Riyadh · Dubai · Amman · Nairobi · Online |
| Investment | USD 1,200 · Group rates available |
| Methodology | 65% live role-play and simulation · 35% instruction and debrief |
| What’s Included | Participant manual, de-escalation toolkit, restorative questions card, documentation templates, certificate |
Is this course appropriate for someone who works in a low-conflict programme environment?
Yes — the skills are most valuable when built before conflict situations arise, not in response to them. Practitioners who complete this course in relatively calm programme environments are significantly better prepared when conflict does occur, and often find they can identify and address early warning signs that they previously missed.
Does the course cover conflict involving physical violence?
Yes — Day 2 covers physical de-escalation (positioning, space management, when to disengage) and Day 5 covers when physical conflict triggers safeguarding and mandatory reporting obligations. The focus is on prevention and de-escalation; we do not cover physical restraint techniques.
Can young people themselves attend this course?
Yes — the course is appropriate for young people in peer leadership roles (16+) who are training as peer mediators. We do tailor the language and scenarios for younger groups; contact us to discuss your requirements.
How does the course address conflict involving religious or cultural sensitivities?
This is one of the most important aspects of the GCC/Africa version of the course. Day 1 includes a dedicated session on cultural and religious dimensions of conflict, and all role-play scenarios incorporate the specific dynamics of conflict in Arab, East African, and West African youth contexts — including family involvement, gender dynamics, and religious authority.
Related reading: Community Building Activities for Youth · Engaging Rural Youth in Leadership Development · Peer-Led Initiatives in Youth Organisations
Join youth practitioners from across the GCC and Africa who’ve built the skills to turn conflict from a crisis into a constructive part of young people’s development.
We run this course as a private programme for organisations. Custom dates, tailored content, group pricing.