In the province of Ganzourgou, an ancestral ludomotor activity is practised: the warba, a traditional dance on which Moaga society has engraved its mechanisms for preventing and resolving conflicts that often pit its members against each other. It is a dance that uses bodily gestures to convey profound messages whose objectives include the quest for social cohesion. In order to grasp the various aspects of this traditional dance used to prevent and resolve conflicts, a visit was made to the Ganzourgou region, where participant observation was carried out on the intangible cultural heritage of this people. Analysis of the results showed that Warba dance steps such as the Laadem-lacre or Kar-valga, performed to instrumental music during sacred or secular dance ceremonies, convey messages that consolidate social relationships. However, the results also show that this social practice of reference is under the sway of modern and African-inspired dances, leading to its gradual disappearance. To counter this, the research suggests revitalising this local knowledge of the Ganzourgou Moose people, which conveys endogenous values of conflict regulation, and including it in school curricula and in the practice of maintenance sport
warbaarbaarbaarba dance, local knowledge, prdance, pr dance, prevention, regulations, conflict evention, conflictevention