World Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development 2023

EventsWorld Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development, as established by the United Nations in December 2002, occurs on 21 May every year. In the following meditation on the meaning of this day, Yves Winkin describes the ERASMUS program as a good example of cultural diversity and dialogue.

One practical demonstration of meeting the goals of the World Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development is ERASMUS, the European Region Action Scheme for the Mobility of University Students. When the European Union launched the program in 1987, European education ministers were not sure it would work. It was incredibly innovative: university students could spend three to nine months in an EU country of their choice and earn degree credit in their own country for successfully completing courses.

At the time, I was teaching at the University de Liège (Belgium). One of my courses was titled “Intercultural relations and processes of acculturation.” I remember getting a call from my president asking for help in distributing special funding obtained from the Minister of Education. The idea was to go anywhere in Europe and quickly set up Erasmus partnership contracts, so that students could get moving, and Belgium could be a good European partner. As a result, I went to the University of La Réunion (a French Island in the Indian Ocean), and colleagues came to me from the UK and Finland. A delegation from Jyväskylä spent a few days in Liège distributing brochures and t-shirts: come to us! Initially people in Liège didn’t recognize that Finnish town, yet within a few years, Erasmus became the most popular program of the EU.

Extended to all 27 EU countries, and later to many other countries in the world, it allowed literally millions of students not only to learn another language and explore new disciplines but also, and more importantly, to engage day-to-day in demanding intercultural dialogue.

The most celebrated illustration of the Erasmus experience is a 2002 French film by Cedric Klapisch, L’Auberge espagnole [The Spanish Apartment] about the tribulations of six students living in the same apartment in Barcelona. As Xavier, the French student who is the lead character, observes: “I am like Europe, I am a real mess.” But a creative and maturational mess: as they struggled with their cultural affinities and differences, the six Erasmus students learned to live together and to build long-term relationships.

In 2023, Klapisch is offering a sequel called Salade grecque [Greek Salad], in which the protagonists are the children of the Spanish apartment residents. Indeed, it is said that Erasmus facilitated marriages: a study by the EU suggested that one million “Erasmus babies” were born between 1987 and 2014.

Now, it must be stressed that structural matters, and not simply good intentions, were needed to facilitate the intercultural exchange. The Erasmus program would not have been possible had European universities not accepted the notion of course credits across nations (European Credit Transfer System). In a way, it can be seen as an academic euro, a shared means of commerce.

In the early years of implementation of the Erasmus program, many professors considered such accounting logic detrimental to the quality of education. Students were alleged to accumulate credits toward their degrees through easy electives. Ultimately it was shown that students did not play that game at all: the experiential effects of their Erasmus sojourn would counter attempts at beating the system. Indeed, the personal growth process that an Erasmus experience abroad triggers is one of the most frequently mentioned benefits of the program, and academic benefits are often considered secondary when compared to relational benefits. For that reason, listing an Erasmus experience on a CV is much valued by employers.

A longer version of this article appears today on the Reiss-Davis Graduate School website; published here with permission.

Asian U for Women: International Relations (Bangladesh)

“JobAssistant Professor/Associate Professor of International Relations, Asian University for Women, Chattogram, Bangladesh Deadline: 30 May 2023.

The Asian University for Women seeks to appoint an Assistant/Associate Professor of International Relations to the Undergraduate Politics, Philosophy and Economics Program. The term of the appointment will be for 3 years, renewable for a further period, subject to satisfactory performance. The successful candidate will have demonstrable expertise in International Relations and will be expected to teach related courses under the PPE course categories as appropriate. She/he will be expected to make a significant contribution to research, identify new opportunities and sources of funding for research and also play an active role in University operations, for example, by taking on a significant administrative role in relation to research and/or teaching.

CU Denver: Communication (China)

“JobInstructor of Communication, Department of Communication, International College of Beijing , China. Deadline: Review begins 1 June 2023 and continues until filled.

NOTE: Search for position number 29835 and choose the CU Denver portion of the portal.

The University of Colorado Denver Department of Communication invites applications for a full-time, non-tenure-track teaching position at the International College of Beijing (ICB). The job will commence in Beijing in either Fall 2023 or Spring 2024, pending visa issues. Depending on the performance of the individual hired, multi-year renewals are possible.

They seek to hire a colleague who can teach a wide array of Communication courses ranging from introductory level communication courses required for the major to upper-division courses supporting one or more of the Department’s pathways and certificates in global and intercultural communication, media and cultural studies, health communication, and strategic communication. The ability to teach courses related to digital media is preferred.

Above all else, they seek a dynamic teacher committed to best practices in student-centered pedagogy and advancing the internationalization of communication via hands-on, skills-based, experiential, and problem-based learning. The ICB is a unique international collaboration embodying best practices in international and intercultural communication, so the ideal candidate will function not only as a classroom teacher and student advocate, but as a cultural ambassador helping to merge U.S.-style pedagogy with Chinese cultural practices.

Meridian: Program Officer, IVLP (USA)

“JobProgram Officer, International Visitor Leadership Program, Meridian International, Washington, DC, USA. Deadline: open until filled; posted 6 May 2023.

The Program Officer is responsible for designing, planning and implementing short-term professional exchanges in the United States for U.S. Department of State-sponsored participants in the International Visitor Leadership Program. Spanning a wide range of subject areas and sectors, these high-level exchanges connect emerging foreign leaders with their American counterparts to encourage long-lasting relationships. This position is located in Washington D.C. and Meridian requires Maryland, Washington, DC, or Virginia residence for all employees. The position may work partially remotely until further notice.

Planning for Multiculturalism in Architecture

Applied ICD

Anju George. (25 April 2023). Planning For Multiculturalism: The Case For Equity And Justice In Communities. Canada Architecture News.

Intercultural dialogue that provides a platform for authentic dialogue, which engages marginalized people, individually and as a collective force, should normatively take into account critical multiculturalism as a social movement that provides opportunities for minority groups to live together in a diverse society symbolized by mutual respect and understanding.

“Multicultural planning has slowly but steadily been growing in importance. There have been arguments that speak to the failure of multicultural planning advocacy translating into effective multicultural planning practice. Multicultural planning has been discussed with respect to marginalized and/or disenfranchised groups predominantly, but not so much on pluralistic planning pertaining to multi-ethnic groups. As minority groups have often been pushed to the sidelines, inclusive physical and/or spatial planning may actually be the answer to effecting change. But the research on inclusive physical planning within multicultural planning literature is limited at best. The concepts of equity and justice have not been analyzed as much either within the realm of multicultural planning. This article (and my future research) will help to have those discourses within multicultural planning, and can aid in formulating a policy framework for multicultural spaces in Canadian communities than can incorporate the tenets of equity and justice.”

This is an interesting article combining intercultural dialogue with spatial planning that may be of interest to CID followers.

CFP South Asia Communication Association @ AEJMC 2023 (USA)

ConferencesCall for papers: South Asia Communication Association @ AEJMC, Washington, DC, 7-10 August 2023. Deadline: 3 June 2023.

Submissions are invited for “Fostering Freedom & Defending Democracy: Media Research on South Asia & Its Diaspora Worldwide,” the 2023 South Asia Communication Association (SACA)’s refereed-research session at the 106th annual conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC), which will be held in Washington DC at the Marriott Marquis Hotel. There will be two interactive research sessions, August 7 and August 9. Organizers invite you to submit your research on media and communication in South Asia or its diaspora worldwide across a wide range of perspectives and approaches.

Royal Roads U: Creating a Multicultural Learning Community Online (Canada)

Intercultural Pedagogy

Intercultural Dialogues: Creating a Multicultural Learning Community Online. (14 October 2020). Royal Roads University.

Professors Dr. Juana Du, Dr. Zhenyi Li, and Dr. Deniz Unsal from the MA in Intercultural and International Communication program within the School of Communication and Culture, at Royal Roads University, posted a video of their workshop on how to create a multicultural learning community online, with the assumption that the goal is teaching online, and creating intercultural dialogues in the process. The video is intended for instructors rather than students.

CFP IALIC 2023 (Cyprus)

ConferencesCall for papers: IALIC: Rethinking intercultural communication beyond verbal language: affect, materiality and embodiment in times of ‘crises,’ European University Cyprus, 1-3 December, 2023. Deadline: 10 June 2023 (extended to 20 June).

The International Association for Languages and Intercultural Communication (IALIC) is calling for papers on the topic of Rethinking intercultural communication beyond verbal language: Affect, materiality and embodiment in times of ‘crises.’ Western epistemologies have traditionally valued rationality and the verbal above other aspects of discourse and communication. Verbal language has been primarily seen as the key instrument for developing rationality and the cornerstone of human thought. As a result, these ideas have dominated the field of intercultural communication, often silencing alternative visions of intercultural encounters and their semiotic entanglements, beyond the European male sensorium and a human-centred worldview.

However, recent social and political developments call for new ways of understanding social and political phenomena, including intercultural communication. Indeed, in the last few years, public and academic arenas have been inundated by discourses of ‘crises’ and threats forcing us to rethink both the notion of interculturality, as well as communication itself. Energy crises, ongoing wars and the (so-called) refugee crisis, climate change and ecological crises, financial crises, and of course, health crises, such as the covid19 pandemic – to name just a few – bring to the foreground notions such as precarity, marginality, transition and liminality and raise questions such as:

    • What other ways of communicating (or failing to) do discourses and experiences of threat bring about?
    • How are discourses of crisis and threat semiotically constructed and circulated?
    • What is the role of affect/emotions in times of crises and threats, and what new openings do they create in the study of intercultural communication? (e.g. how are they enregistered as part of crises-discourses and what are their communicative dynamics across and beyond languages and cultures?)
    • What kind of subjectivities do crises and threats produce, and how are these embodied (e.g. the embodiment of fear, the “contaminated” body etc.)?
    • What is the role of technology, and more generally, materiality in intercultural communication in times of crises?

All these call attention to a variety of semiotic repertoires and semiotic resources that are not restricted to language and discourse, and which often require working across disciplines. The affective turn, the material turn, and posthumanism in the social sciences and humanities indicate the ongoing efforts to make sense and theorise social reality and communication beyond verbal language. Besides, the increasing use of the notion of (in)securitisation outside the field of security studies is an example of scholarly attempts to capture the ways in which discourses and experiences of threat permeate everyday spaces and interactions, calling for methodological innovation and interdisciplinarity.

Responding to current challenges, and in line with contemporary discursive and academic developments in the social sciences and humanities, this conference aims to foreground different ways of making sense of cultures, languages, social relations and intercultural communication in an anxious and constantly changing world. At the same time, it calls for a critical examination of the notion of ‘crisis’ and its impact on intercultural communication.

KAICIID Fellows Programme 2024 (Portugal)

Fellowships

International Fellows Programme, The International Dialogue Center (KAICIID), Lisbon, Portugal. Deadline: 21 May 2023.

The KAICIID International Fellows Programme is an ongoing capacity and professional development Programme that brings together religious leaders, educators, and interreligious dialogue practitioners from Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim, and other religious backgrounds from around the world. The Programme offers training (in-person and online) in dialogue facilitation, intercultural communication and promoting social cohesion to people who advance and integrate their knowledge, skill, and experience within their respective communities. Since 2015, more than 500 individuals from more than 85 countries have participated in the Programme.

In 2024, an International and Latin American Cohorts will be launched. The Latin American cohort will be implemented in partnership with Religions for Peace – Latin America and the Caribbean.

The training modules equip the Fellows with an in-depth understanding of subjects such as Interreligious Dialogue, Conflict Management and Peacebuilding, Gender and IRD, Climate crises and IRD, Combating Hate Speech, and Common citizenship in addition to valuable skills like Project design, Fundraising and Monitoring and Evaluation. As part of their dialogue training, Fellows receive humble funding to implement grassroots interreligious dialogue projects in their own communities. During the training, Fellows also have the opportunity to participate in and organise real-time dialogue sessions, academic lectures, field visits to religious and cultural sites, and thematic conferences.

U College London: Two Positions in Intercultural Communication (UK)

“JobTwo positions in intercultural communication currently available in the Department of Culture, Communication and Media, University College London, London, UK. Deadline: 25 May 2023.

The Department of Culture, Communication and Media (CCM) is a department of the Institute of Education at University College London. It is committed to excellence in teaching, research and consultancy in the areas of: Media and Cultural Studies, Art, Design and Museology; Academic writing; English Education; Applied Linguistics; Language Learning and Intercultural Communication, Music Education; Multimodality studies; Learning with Digital Technologies. They are currently advertising two positions.

  1. Lecturer in Language Learning and Intercultural Communication

You will contribute to Masters, PhD programmes and other programmes in the Centre, while also contributing to research, knowledge exchange, and consultancy activies in the department. Alongside the demonstration of a broad theoretical and practical understanding of intercultural communication, you will have knowledge and expertise in language learning and intercultural communication and will contribute to the further development of this aspect of the MA Intercultural Communication. You will also play a significant role in the planning and development of the International Centre for Intercultural Studies.

2. Lecturer in Professional Communication

You will contribute to Masters, PhD and other programmes in the Centre, while also contributing to research, knowledge exchange and consultancy activities in the department. Alongside the demonstration of a broad theoretical and practical understanding of intercultural communication, you will have knowledge and expertise in the development of intercultural competence in professional settings and will take a lead in developing this aspect of the MA Intercultural Communication. You will also play a significant role in the planning and development of the International Centre for Intercultural Studies.