100 People
100 People is a flexible global citizenship learning framework that can be adapted for classrooms, schools, universities, conferences, youth programs, civic-learning initiatives, and community dialogue spaces.
The project can be experienced in multiple formats depending on the age group, setting, and goals of the learning community.
Webinars & Online Sessions
Short online experiences introducing learners to global systems, interdependence, inequality, identity, and planetary citizenship through the “village of 100” framework.
Workshops
Interactive workshops ranging from:
- 1-hour introductions
- half-day sessions
- full-day intensives
- multi-day or week-long programs
Workshops combine simulation, dialogue, systems thinking, inquiry, storytelling, and reflective activities.
100-Person Simulations
Large-group participatory experiences where learners collectively represent the world/country/province/city as a village of 100 people. These simulations help participants encounter global demographics, inequality, language, migration, climate realities, and shared futures at human scale.
Citizen Assemblies
Facilitated dialogue and deliberation experiences where participants move from understanding global realities toward discussing possible futures, responsibilities, and collective action.
Smaller Group Adaptations
The framework can also be adapted for smaller classrooms, seminars, leadership cohorts, teacher trainings, and community groups.
“Who Are Your 100?” Research Projects
Inquiry-based projects inviting learners to investigate and represent their own communities, networks, schools, neighborhoods, or countries through the “village of 100” lens.
Partner Learning Communities
The GIEI is actively seeking schools, universities, NGOs, educators, researchers, youth organizations, museums, and globally-minded learning communities interested in collaborating, piloting, or co-developing new formats and learning experiences.
At its core, 100 People uses compression, simulation, dialogue, and imagination to help learners encounter global systems through human-scale experience.