Healthy Conflict and Constructive Dialogue Classroom (Online)

EventsTHE CIVICS Innovation Hub and NECE campus: Healthy Conflict and Constructive Dialogue Classroom . Speaker: Maja Nenadovic, online, 26 September 2023 from 5:00 am to 6:30 am ADT.

During this workshop, the Educators’ Guide to Depolarisation will be presented, as well as navigating through some of its exercises, designed to encourage and equip teachers with methods for facilitating difficult conversations on controversial or polarising topics with their students. In addition, educational materials from the project Depolarisation Activism for Resilient Europe (DARE) will also be presented.

Maja Nenadovic is a practitioner and educator with 20 years of experience of working in the civic education, critical pedagogy, human rights education, Holocaust education and youth civic engagement fields. Next to designing original civic education and human rights education materials, she coordinated and facilitated several long-term civic education projects in the region of Western Balkans.

The NECE (Networking European Civic Education) Campus is an all-year-round online event series that provides a platform for educators, policymakers, civil society actors, and experts in citizenship education to learn, and exchange practices, research, tools, and methods related to democratic engagement and civic education. The series includes a diverse set of presentations, workshops, and capacity-building activities. It’s organised into functional and thematic tracks to cater to the needs of civic educators, covering a broad range of topics.

THE CIVICS is a a pan-European NGO with hubs in Bonn, Sofia and Zagreb with the goal of strengthening the democratic competences, self-efficacy, and resilience of citizens across Europe.

International Translation Day 2023

EventsInternational Translation Day, established by the United Nations in 2017, occurs on 30 September every year. English PEN is holding an event this year to celebrate.

Join English PEN in London or online from anywhere in the world, 12–7pm BST on Friday 29 September 2023 for a day of workshops, talks and networking opportunities, culminating in a “2023 State of the Translation Nation” plenary discussion. Featuring 30 leading translators, writers, publishers, agents, booksellers and language experts, this year’s sessions include an “ask me anything” with five UK publishers, workshops on negotiating contracts and translating sensitive work, and talks on rights, events and reviews.


International Translation Day is an opportunity to pay tribute to the work of language professionals, which plays an important role in bringing nations together, facilitating dialogue, understanding and cooperation, contributing to development, and strengthening world peace and security. This is an appropriate occasion on which to thank all of the translators who have taken time from other responsibilities to help CID prepare translations of our publications into a remarkable 32 different languages. We could not do this without you! 

NOTE: If you want to translate one of the publications into a language in which you are fluent, please contact us before you start, to learn whether anyone else is already working on that publication in that language.

 

ECCAR: Local Actions Against Anti-Muslim Racism (Germany)

EventsEuropean Coalition of Cities against Racism: Launch of the ECCAR Guidebook on Local Actions against Anti-Muslim Racism. Policy Recommendations for City Administrations and Their Partners, Heidelberg, Germany, but online, 14 September 2023 from 14:00-17:00 CEST. Deadline to participate: 13 September 2023.

CID has been asked to share the following announcement:

In 2020, ECCAR established a Working Group on Anti-Muslim Racism. For the past two and a half years, the working group has focused on producing a comprehensive Guidebook for local authorities working closely with several contributors, including ECCAR member cities, researchers, activists, and NGO representatives. The result is a high-quality policy text that local decision-makers, journalists, researchers and activists can benefit from. With its diverse range of good practice examples produced by 17 European ECCAR member cities from nine countries, policy recommendations, and “lessons learnt,” the Guidebook is a significant and first-of-its-kind publication for local European policies against anti-Muslim racism. We are particularly pleased to announce that the Guidebook has been translated into French, German, Italian, Polish and Spanish. All PDF versions of the Guidebook will be released on the day of the launch.

You can download the preliminary programme of the high-level launch event that will be opened by Gabriela Ramos, Assistant Director-General for Social and Human Sciences of UNESCO, followed by thematic panels with researchers, representatives from ECCAR cities and activists.

Registrations are open until 13 September. To ensure a smooth registration process, please pre-register for the event. The event will be held in English spoken language. If you need interpretation services in German, French or Spanish, please register in advance.

You are welcome to share the registration link with your colleagues, partners, and people who would benefit from this programme. Please note that we kindly ask all participants to register via the link provided above. After you have registered, you will receive a confirmation email with the Zoom access data for the meeting.

If you have any questions, please email Dr Linda Hyökki.

We hope to see you for the event on 14 September to launch this important milestone in the field of anti-Muslim racism together with you.

Best regards,

Danijel Cubelic
ECCAR Vice President

Dr Linda Hyökki
Coordinator Working Group Anti-Muslim Racism

European Policy Dialogue Forum 2023 (Netherlands)

EventsCall for young people to apply for the 5th European Policy Dialogue Forum, Rotterdam, Netherlands, 13-15 November, 2023. Deadline: 31 August 2023.

The theme for the 5th European Policy Dialogue Forum will be “Young People and Social Inclusion in European Cities.” If you are between 18 and 30 years of age, are actively engaged in your community, passionate about social inclusion and willing to bring your contribution and energy, the organizers encourage you to apply to this call. They are selecting up to 30 young people who are residents from one of the 46 European countries to participate to their signature event – the European Policy Forum Dialogue (EPDF) – in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on 13-15 November 2023.

They encourage young migrants and refugees to apply to the call, as other young people from underrepresented groups, including young women. They believe in the transformative power of interreligious and intercultural dialogue, as a tool to make communities more inclusive and resilient. Together with policymakers, religious leaders and actors, civil society organizations and youth representatives, they will explore unexpected partnerships and collaborations to make cities places where everyone feels belonging.

What is the European Policy Dialogue Forum about?

Some 120 policymakers, religious actors, youth representatives, civil society leaders and experts will come together in Rotterdam for the 5th EPDF to discuss the role of young people in social inclusion in European urban spaces, with a focus on the following themes:

o Bridging divisions in European cities – addressing young people’s concerns and joining efforts towards enhanced opportunities for current and future generations.

o Empowerment and participation of young people – enhancing the creation of inclusive spaces and fostering an environment for mutual understanding, recognition and respect.

o Creating spaces for intergenerational dialogue and foster collaborative action between young people, religious actors and policy makers to make diversity and inclusion meaningful in urban areas.

The European Policy Dialogue Forum in Rotterdam will be organized by the International Dialogue Centre (KAICIID) in partnership with the European Council of Religious Leaders / Religions for Peace Europe (ECRL/RfP), the Network for Dialogue and with support of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR).

Exploring Ethics in the Field (Webinar)

EventsExploring ethics in the field: the importance of context and culture, Open University (online), 27 June 2023, 8-9 EDT.

In this discursive session, Tom Power and Professor Jacqueline Stevenson will explore some of the practical realities of undertaking research in the field, highlighting the tensions between ‘procedural ethics’ (Guillemin and Gillam, 2004) and practical ethics. In doing so, they will draw on our research in Bangladesh exploring educational outcomes in rural and remote communities, their previous research with forced migrants, including asylum seekers and refugees, and research in prisons exploring in particular issues around informed consent. They will highlight some of the decisions they have had to make when seeking to be culturally responsive and adaptive to context.

Admission is free. If you sign up, the online the meeting link will be sent to you 2 hours prior to the event.

Inclusive Public Space (Webinar)

EventsInclusive public space: is placemaking the solution?, Council of Europe Intercultural Cities Webinar, 7 July 2023, 11am-12:30pm CEST.

Marta Popiolek and Ramon Marrades from Placemaking Europe will discuss “placemaking”, an approach to urban planning and public space design that places social innovation, the commons, and local communities at the heart of a co-creative process to shape healthier, more resilient, and more equitable public spaces lasting for the future. They will also tell us more about the pilot project “Cities in Placemaking”, aimed at developing a roadmap to a more holistic and sustainable approach to urban development that harnesses placemaking as a city-wide strategy. Six intercultural cities are participating in the pilot and will be happy to share their experience with you/ Get ready to ask questions and be inspired!

You are welcome to register here and forward the link to your colleagues. The webinar is open to everyone!

Please note that this webinar will only be available in English.

International Day for Countering Hate Speech

EventsInternational Day for Countering Hate Speech, as established by the United Nations in 2017, occurs on 18 June every year.

Words can be weaponsThe International Day of Countering Hate Speech was established by the United Nations in July 2021.

Hate speech incites violence, undermines diversity and social cohesion, and threatens the common values and principles that bind us together.

It promotes racism, xenophobia and misogyny; it dehumanizes individuals and communities; and it has a serious impact on our efforts to promote peace and security, human rights, and sustainable development.

Words can be weaponized and cause physical harm.

– António Guterres

 

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.

Collective Healing, Social Justice and Global Well-Being (Online)

EventsRoutes of Enslaved Peoples: Webinar on Collective Healing, Social Justice and Global Well-Being, UNESCO, Paris, France, 3 April 2023 – 4:00-5:00 pm (GMT +2; virtual).

UNESCO’s Routes of Enslaved Peoples Project is starting its series of webinars on collective healing, social justice and global well-being. UNESCO and the University of Wales Trinity Saint David (UK) are jointly hosting the first webinar in an innovative series on “Collective Healing, Social Justice and Global Well-Being.” In this first webinar, Gabriela Ramos (UNESCO’s Assistant Director-General for Social and Human Sciences) will be joined by Zeinab Badawi (BBC Television and Radio Journalist) and Professor Medwin Hughes (Vice-Chancellor of the University of Wales Trinity Saint David) to explore strategies and approaches for valorising the culture and contributions of African-descendent populations as a means of combatting the racism and discrimination which persists as one of the ugly legacies of enslavement and the slave trade. Participants in the webinar will be able to ask questions to the expert panel. The debate will be moderated by Professor Scherto Gill (Director of Global Humanity for Peace Institute at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David). Simultaneous interpretation will be made available in English, French and Spanish.

Developing Across Differences: Learning Labs (Netherlands or Egypt)

EventsLearning Lab and Community Week, Institute for Developing Across Differences, 10-15 July 2023, Groningen, Netherlands OR 27-30 November 2023, Cairo, Egypt. Deadline: varies by program.

The Institute for Developing Across Differences (IDD) is designed to improve on impact by understanding where there are (and are not) intersections among four key areas of study and practice in the differences field: —intercultural communication, global learning, anti-discrimination/diversity & inclusion, and global competence— then borrowing from and expanding on them.

In 2023, all experienced practitioners and scholars (and those who aspire to the field) are invited to join for either or both:

  • European Developing Across Differences in Groningen, NL, 10-15 July, 2023
  • Middle Eastern & African Developing Across Differences in Cairo, EG, 27-30 November, 2023

(A North American program will run in August 2024.)