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Glossary›Compassionate Communication

Glossary

Compassionate Communication

A communication framework developed by Marshall Rosenberg emphasizing empathy, needs awareness, and collaborative connection through structured observation and dialogue.

What is Compassionate Communication?

Compassionate Communication—also known as Nonviolent Communication (NVC)—is a structured communication process developed to increase empathic understanding and reduce conflict in human interaction. Developed by clinical psychologist Marshall Rosenberg in the 1960s and 1970s based on the principles of nonviolence and humanistic psychology, it aims to increase empathic understanding and reduce conflict in everyday interactions. The framework foregrounds four components—observation (distinguishing concrete observation from evaluation), feelings, fundamental needs, and requests—and encourages expressing observations and needs without judgment in order to foster voluntary cooperation.

Alternative names have become common, most importantly giraffe language, compassionate communication, or collaborative communication. The term “Compassionate Communication” has become the preferred designation for practitioners who find “Nonviolent Communication” unnecessarily negative in framing, though both refer to the same method.

Origins & Lineage

Marshall B. Rosenberg, Ph.D. (1934-2015) was the founder of the Center for Nonviolent Communication, an international peacemaking organization. In 1961, Rosenberg received his Ph.D. in clinical psychology from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he studied under Carl Rogers. NVC evolved from concepts used in person-centered therapy.

Marshall Rosenberg’s motivation for developing NVC was based on his own experiences during the Detroit race riot of 1943, as well as the antisemitism that he experienced in his early life. The roots of the NVC model developed in the late 1960s, when Rosenberg was working on racial integration in schools and organizations in the Southern United States. Influenced by the work of Carl Rogers and inspired by the non-violence of Mahatma Gandhi, he began developing a new approach to resolving conflict, which he tested in his work with the civil rights movement in his home city of Detroit.

The earliest version of the model (observations, feelings, and action-oriented wants) was part of a training manual Rosenberg prepared in 1972. The model had evolved to its present form (observations, feelings, needs and requests) by 1992. Rosenberg did not elaborate or publish them in book form until 1999’s Nonviolent Communication: A language of compassion, later revised as Nonviolent Communication: a language of life (2003). He created the Center of Nonviolent Communication (CNVC) in 1984, using his work during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement, and developed training methodologies for NVC while mediating riots between students and colleges over segregation.

How it’s Practiced

There are four components to practice nonviolent communication: Observation (facts as distinct from evaluation), Feelings, Needs (Marshall Rosenberg refers to Max-Neef’s model where needs may be categorised into 9 classes: sustenance, safety, love, understanding/empathy, creativity, recreation, sense of belonging, autonomy and meaning), and Requests (distinguished from demands in that one is open to hearing a response of “no” without this triggering an attempt to force the matter).

In practice, Compassionate Communication looks like articulating what you observe without evaluation (“When I see the dishes left in the sink overnight”), identifying your feeling (“I feel frustrated”), connecting it to an underlying need (“because I need shared responsibility in our home”), and making a specific, positive request (“Would you be willing to wash your dishes before bed tonight?”).

There are three primary modes of application of NVC: Self-empathy involves compassionately connecting with what is going on inside us. The heart of empathy is in our ability to compassionately connect with our own and others’ humanity. Offering our empathic presence is a gift to another person and to ourselves of our full presence. The framework is employed in both clinical psychotherapy settings and in public workshops addressing relationship harmony and workplace communication.

Rosenberg started to use two animals. Violent communication was represented by the carnivorous Jackal as a symbol of aggression and especially dominance. The herbivorous Giraffe on the other hand, represented his NVC strategy. The Giraffe was chosen as symbol for NVC as its long neck is supposed to show the clear-sighted speaker, being aware of his fellow speakers’ reactions; and because the Giraffe has a large heart, representing the compassionate side of NVC.

Compassionate Communication Today

Nonviolent Communication is both used as a clinical psychotherapy modality and also offered in workshops for the general public, particularly in regard to seeking harmony in relationships and at workplaces. It can also be applied in daily life to reduce stress. Currently, over 200 hundred certified trainers and many more non-certified trainers around the world are sharing NVC in their communities.

There are a large number of workshops and clinical materials about NVC, including Rosenberg’s book Nonviolent Communication: A Language of Life and a companion workbook. Marshall Rosenberg also taught NVC in a number of video lectures available online; the workshop recorded in San Francisco is the most well-known. The complete series of NVC trainings by Marshall Rosenberg, plus lectures, workshops and interviews with him, are available as a podcast on Spotify.

One of Satya Nadella’s first acts after becoming CEO of Microsoft, in February 2014, was to ask the company’s top executives to read Marshall Rosenberg’s Nonviolent Communication, a treatise on empathic collaboration. The gesture signaled that Nadella planned to run the company differently from his well-known predecessors. The method has been applied in conflict zones including Israel, Palestine, Rwanda, Serbia, and Nigeria, as well as in educational institutions, prisons, and healthcare settings worldwide.

Common Misconceptions

Compassionate Communication is not about being “nice” or avoiding difficult conversations. Most conflicts between individuals or groups arise from miscommunication about their human needs, due to coercive or manipulative language that aims to induce fear, guilt, shame, etc. These “violent” modes of communication, when used during a conflict, divert the attention of the participants away from clarifying their needs, their feelings, their perceptions, and their requests, thus perpetuating the conflict. The framework does not eliminate anger or disagreement; rather, it provides a structure for expressing them without blame.

Marshall did not like that name since it described what NVC is not, rather than what NVC is. The “nonviolent” designation has led some to dismiss it as irrelevant to their communication style, assuming violence only refers to shouting or insults. The method addresses subtler forms of judgment, evaluation, and coercion embedded in everyday language.

Compassionate Communication is not a script to be recited rigidly. The four-component structure is a learning scaffold; experienced practitioners internalize the consciousness it represents rather than mechanically applying the formula. It is also not a tool for controlling others’ responses or guaranteeing agreement—it is a practice for showing up with honesty and clarity about one’s own needs.

How to Begin

Begin with Marshall Rosenberg’s foundational text, Nonviolent Communication: A Language of Life (2003, PuddleDancer Press). The book includes practical examples, exercises, and lists of feelings and needs to support self-study. There are a large number of workshops and clinical materials about NVC, including Rosenberg’s book Nonviolent Communication: A Language of Life and a companion workbook.

For visual learners, seek out Rosenberg’s San Francisco workshop recordings, widely available on YouTube and through the Center for Nonviolent Communication (CNVC.org). Many regional NVC practice groups offer free or low-cost introductory sessions. The CNVC maintains a directory of certified trainers offering workshops, intensives, and online courses. Daily practice with self-empathy—pausing to identify your own feelings and needs in moments of reactivity—is the most accessible entry point for integrating the consciousness of Compassionate Communication into lived experience.

Related terms

active listeningempathynonviolent resistanceemotional intelligenceconflict resolutionconscious communication
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