Peace Education and the Empathy Dimension of Tolerance in Indonesian Higher Education
A Cross-Institutional Predictive Study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26034/fr.jehe.2026.10023Keywords:
Indonesia, religious ethics, ethics of moral sentiments, interreligious, higher education, human flourishing, empathy, tolerance, Peace educationAbstract
Peace education serves as a critical intervention against the rising tide of religious intolerance and polarization in Indonesia, forces that directly threaten societal well-being and peace, particularly within the higher education context. This quantitative study investigates how students’ perceptions of peace education predict their reported levels of tolerance. Utilizing regression analysis of survey data collected from undergraduate students at both a Christian university (Universitas Kristen Duta Wacana) and an Islamic university (Universitas Islam Negeri Sunan Kalijaga) in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Results demonstrated that peace education significantly predicts tolerance, showing the strongest association with empathy (R-squared = 0.547), far outpacing its predictive power on fairness (29.7%) and reasonableness (48.1%). This reinforces the value of interactive and experiential pedagogies as strong statistical predictors of affective relational change. This high-capacity empathy constitutes the critical nexus for recognizing and honouring the inherent dignity of the religiously other, thereby fulfilling the theological imperative for reconciliation, depolarization, and co-creating holistic peace in a pluralistic society. The article concludes by emphasising the imperative for higher education to adopt empathy-centred curricula intentionally, thereby equipping graduates for relational human flourishing.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Imanuel Geovasky, Tabita Kartika Christiani, Dicky Sofjan

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