University of California Education Abroad Program: Academic Specialist (USA)

“JobAcademic Specialist, Global Programs, University of California Education Abroad Program, Goleta, CA, USA. Deadline: 18 July 2025.

The Academic Specialist is an experienced professional who applies theory and puts it into practice with in-depth understanding of the professional field; independently performs the full range of responsibilities within the function; possesses broad job knowledge; analyzes problems/issues of diverse scope and determines solutions. Applies knowledge and skills as a seasoned, experienced academic professional. Provides advice and recommends solutions which may apply to unique (not-clearly-defined) programs and issues without prior precedent. Reporting to the Academics Managing Supervisor, the Academic Specialist serves as the primary interface for academic matters within an assigned portfolio and is responsible for the accurate distribution of academic program information between the Systemwide Office of the University of California Education Abroad Program (UCEAP) and (a) UCEAP Study Center staff worldwide; (b) UC Campus Study Abroad Offices; (c) UC students participating in UCEAP; and (d) the UC campus registrars’ offices. Communications with students primarily take place remotely (online and phone) rather than in person. Performs complex research, review, and analysis of host institution academic opportunities appropriate to UC undergraduate and/or graduate students and of UC, UCEAP, and host institution academic policies and procedures; and disseminates advising and recruitment information to indicated UC campus offices and academic departments. Manages the process by which credit earned abroad is applied to a student’s UC record; advises Study Centers, Campus Study Abroad Offices, registrar offices, and students about UC and UCEAP policies pertaining to students’ academic work and records in programs worldwide; and works to ensure that automation of these processes is as advanced and efficient as possible. Responsible for all academic information pertaining to a specified portfolio group within the approximate 6,000 student UCEAP participants each year, in over 40 countries worldwide. Works closely with the Associate Dean in implementing and archiving academic policies and procedures. Promotes UCEAP programs at occasional student fairs and campus events. Assembles and maintains program information, manages student registration information, and generates reports in a complex in-house database. Collaborates with IT and Marketing units on academic web and database issues and requests.

U North Carolina: Assistant Director of Education Abroad (USA)

“JobAssistant Director of Education Abroad, University of North Carolina Wilmington, NC, USA. Deadline: 16 July 2025.

The Assistant Director of Education Abroad will liaise with campus academic departments for course articulations and international credit transfer. Additionally, they will oversee the coordination, marketing, promotion, and execution of education abroad events, programs, and outreach, while also advising on a small portfolio of education abroad opportunities. This position will also manage UNCW’s Education Abroad scholarship processes, and will coordinate programming, fundraising, assessment, and career-related activities for education abroad alumni and returnees.

The Office of Global Partnerships and International Education is dedicated to developing and increasing the international dimension of the UNCW campus. This is accomplished by fostering programs and services for international students; helping UNCW students to participate in education abroad programs; assisting UNCW faculty in their teaching, research, and scholarship abroad; developing and strengthening educational linkages with international partners so as to create opportunities for student, faculty, and staff exchanges; identifying and obtaining resources to further the internationalization of UNCW, and by enhancing and expanding international and global opportunities and resources on campus and in the surrounding community.

CFP ICA 2026: Communication and Inequalities in Context (South Africa)

ConferencesCall for papers: Communication and Inequalities in Context, International Communication Association, Cape Town, South Africa, 4-8 June 2026. Deadline: 1 November 2025.

The ICA 2026 conference theme invites critical reflection on the dynamics between communication and inequality and its tensions across different social, cultural and geographical backgrounds. As such, it is a call to engage with research exploring the deep divisions and existing interpersonal, institutional, and structural inequalities in our societies.

In a world shaped by the unequal distribution of political, economic, societal, cultural, and communication resources, considering the complex architecture of global inequalities remains a critical issue. Communication scholars have long recognized how structural divides shape all communication processes, from persistent barriers rooted in historical inequities to emerging forms of digital exclusion and fragmentation. Today, as disinformation, extremism, polarization, hate, oppression, and algorithmic discrimination pose global challenges, the specific contexts in which people encounter these phenomena–including political institutions, media systems, regulatory capacity, and social norms—may fundamentally shape their lived experiences. Thus, it becomes crucial to examine how and under what conditions these forces unevenly affect different communities and individuals across multiple domains of life and in various geographical and cultural settings. For example, communication barriers may impact disaster preparedness and response in vulnerable individuals; the increasing complexity of digital literacy requirements constitutes a significant threat to inclusion, and global internet governance and infrastructure decisions create and amplify disparities between and within different nations and communities.

Such inequalities and power dynamics are also expressed within/across communication research. From gender gaps in publications and language barriers for scholars from non-English-speaking countries to the invisibility of knowledge produced in the Global South and calls to de-Westernize communication research, several divides in communication in terms of the subject of study, the body of evidence, analytical frameworks, and academic cultures limits our ability to gain insights relevant to the current global social and political condition.

In this spirit, organizers invite submissions for papers and panel proposals that address the conference theme along the lines outlined here. Submissions may address, but are not limited to, the following issues and topics:

*The evolving landscape of the relationship between communication and inequality.
*Conceptualizations and theorizations of communication inequality and inclusion/exclusion.
*The dynamics and implications of enduring inequalities and new divides for communication scholarship in different settings.
*Broader social and communicational outcomes of communication divides.
*Tensions and intersectionality of power hierarchies in communication.
*Algorithmic biases and marginalization (e.g., algorithmic decisions reinforcing disparities faced by marginalized groups; societal implications of algorithmic; data inequality, algorithmic fairness).
*Cross-border communication inequalities.
*Inequalities across and within communication research, including power imbalances in knowledge production within the field, and differences in opportunities, resources, and capacities among researchers, institutions, and regions.

CFP Interculture: Photography & (Post-)Coloniality

“Publication

Call for submissions: Photography and (Post-) Coloniality: Visual Representations of Colonial Encounters in Intercultural Perspective, Interculture Journal. Deadline: 30 August 2025.

Special issue editors: Romuald Valentin Nkouda Sopgui, (University of Maroua, Cameroon)
Christoph Vatter (Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany)

Interculture Journal is looking for contributions in German, English or French for issue 02/2026 on the topic of “Photography and (Post-)Coloniality: Visual Representations of Colonial Encounters in Intercultural Perspective”. This special issue explores the role of photography as a central medium of (post-)coloniality and welcomes contributions examining visual representations of colonial encounters from an intercultural perspective. Contributions may examine both historical and contemporary photographic practices to locate the medium of photography in (post)colonial and intercultural discourse. The bracketed prefix “(post-)” indicates that the colonial as an ongoing historical power structure is not always obvious, but is always present and must be deconstructed to achieve the decolonization of society and culture. This thematic issue explores the intersection of photography, (post)coloniality and interculturality offering a research perspective that has not yet been adequately examined and aligning with current German and international discussions about the insufficiently addressed cultural “legacy” of colonialism.

Intercultural Competences for Peacebuilding in Africa: Road to Global Peace (Webinar)

EventsIntercultural Competences for Peacebuilding in Africa: Road to Global Peace, a webinar presented by George Mutalemwa and sponsored by the UNESCO Chair on Intercultural Competences, 24 July 2025, 15:00 CAT.

This free webinar series provides a dynamic platform for scholars, practitioners, and thought leaders to explore the role of intercultural competence in fostering understanding, inclusion, and collaboration across diverse societies. Each session delves into critical global issues, sharing research, best practices, and innovative approaches to climate action, peacebuilding and gender equity​​. This session is presented by George Mutalemwa founding director of the Africa Peace and Development Network and Senior Research Fellow at St. Augustine University of Tanzania (SAUT).

Taos Institute: Co-Creating Futures – An Introduction to Social Construction (USA but Online)

Professional OpportunitiesSelf-paced online course: Co-Creating Futures – An Introduction to Social Construction, Taos Institute, Dallas, TX, USA. (no deadline, but available as of April 2025)

Provocative, unsettling, liberating, inspiring … all have been applied to the dialogues on the social construction of knowledge. The ideas have swept across the academic world and into personal and professional life. For many, they contain the ingredients for a promising life together on this planet.

In this new self-paced online course, Ken Gergen introduces the transformative ideas of social construction, challenging traditional notions of objectivity, truth, and knowledge. Emphasizing that our views of reality emerge through our relationships, the course explores the powers and limitations of language, the design of dialogues, and the transformation of conflict.

Through 6 modules, each featuring 3 short videos by Ken Gergen, you will explore and critique approaches that prioritize claims to truth, prediction and control. You will develop a curiosity and appreciation for multiple perspectives, stories, and values. Applications range from therapy, consulting, coaching, education, healthcare, research, governance, community development, to your personal life. In addition, you will learn how adopting a constructionist stance offers significant resources for transforming political, religious and organizational divides.

This self-paced course will challenge your current worldview, inspire innovation in your profession, and point to means of moving more harmoniously in every-day relationships.

The course is composed of 6 modules in 18 parts. Each part features a short video and lecture as well as questions for reflection. Topics include:

Module 1: Multiple Realities
Module 2: Facts & Values
Module 3: Language
Module 4: Making Knowledge
Module 5: Social Construction in Action
Module 6: Peace and Conflict

Sign up now to take part in a next live group meeting with Ken Gergen and Loek Schoenmakers on July 8, 2025, 10-11am EST! (Open to all registered participants.)

The Science Behind the Human Library (Denmark)

Applied ICD

The Science Behind the Human Library’s Methodology, Human Library Organization, Copenhagen, Denmark.

The Human Library creates a safe space for dialogue where topics are discussed openly between human “books” and their readers. The human books are volunteers with personal experience with a topic. Here’s a brief introduction.

Recently researchers at the University of Glasgow investigated the impacts of social interaction with stigmatized people in the learning space provided by the Human Library. The study, called Reducing stigma and discrimination: A case study of a ‘Human Library’ Reading event, includes extensive literature review where three types of strategies to dismantle stereotypes are introduced: educational, interpersonal and activism.

By employing the educational strategy, one attempts to reduce stigma by presenting facts. However, such an approach appeals mainly to the intellect and appears to be efficient when applied on adolescents. When working with adults, a more efficient strategy to dismantle stigma seems to be direct interpersonal contact with representatives of the stigmatized groups. This approach is at the center of the methodology used in the Human Library.

Organizing events to provide safe space for open discussions, this format creates learning experiences remembered for the rest of one’s life. At the Human Library, it is the combination of experience and new knowledge that give this approach such an impact.

For more information about the entire movement, see here. Over the last 24 years, the Human Library has hosted events virtually and in libraries, museums, festivals, conferences, schools, universities and for the private sector, in over 85 countries. They are currently opening libraries in Switzerland, and are looking for volunteers to help.

Earlham College: Assistant Director Japan Programs (USA/Japan)

“JobAssistant Director of Japan Programs, Earlham College, Richmond, IN, USA (partly based in USA, partly in Japan). Deadline: open until filled; posted 18 June 2025.

The Assistant Director of Japan Programs (ADJP) is a full-time, 12-month position that is a hybrid of Administrative Faculty and Teaching Faculty. It is classified as an Administrative Faculty position (and is therefore not eligible for tenure).

The position has two different bases of operation dividing the calendar year:

* From the start of the year (after the U.S. winter holidays) to early August: based on the main Earlham campus in Richmond, Indiana, with some travel to visit colleges and universities partnered with Earlham for Japan Programs and/or other programs

* From mid-August to mid-December: based in Morioka, Japan, in residence with the fall semester-only Japan SICE Program (beginning in fall 2026)

The ADJP assists the Director and other team members with program administration, events planning and management, and maintaining program partnerships. In addition, the ADJP also serves every fall semester as the Faculty Leader of the Japan SICE Program, providing two courses on comparative international education and related areas. In addition, the ADJP also serves as a resource person for the participants in Earlham’s full-time post-bac EC-ALT Program, in which recent college and university graduates serve as assistant English teachers in Morioka.

The ADJP reports to the Director and assists other Japan Programs team members in the administration of various Earlham programs related to Japan, including mainly on-site programs in Japan and programs serving incoming students, staff, and faculty members from Japan. Specific duties will be assigned by the Director.

Educate Together: Global Citizenship Education Officer (Ireland)

“JobGlobal Citizenship Education Officer, Educate Together, Dublin, Ireland. Deadline: 7 July 2025.

The role of the Global Citizenship Education Officer is to support, strengthen and develop Global Citizenship Education and active citizenship in Educate Together’s equality-based schools, through a three-year project, funded by Irish Aid. The Global Citizenship Education Officer will work with other national office staff to support the implementation of Ethical Education as a core element of the Educate Together ethos across the network of Educate Together schools. This is a new part-time role (21 hours-a-week) within Educate Together’s national office, working with the Education Officer (Primary).

CFP Heritage Reimagined: Multilingualism, Identity, and Belonging across Family, Faith, and Digital Worlds

“Publication

Call for chapter proposals: Heritage reimagined: Multilingualism, identity, and belonging across family, faith, and digital worlds. Deadline: chapter proposal and biography by 15 August 2025.

Editors: Fatma F.S. Said (Zayed University, UAE), Kristin Vold Lexander (University of Inland Norway), Åsa Palviainen (University of Jyväskylä, Finland)

Editors invite proposals for chapters for an innovative edited volume that interrogates and redefines the concept of “heritage” in multilingualism studies. Titled Heritage reimagined: Multilingualism, identity, and belonging across family, faith, and digital worlds, this volume will explore how heritage is constructed, challenged, and reimagined in everyday multilingual experiences. They welcome empirical, theoretical, and reflexive contributions from across disciplines, including sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology, education, digital culture, anthropology, and religious studies.

In an era marked by global migration, digital transformation, and increasing cultural fluidity, heritage, often linked to language transmission, cultural continuity, and religious practice, can no longer be understood through static, nationalistic, or ethnocentric frames. Instead, we view heritage as dynamic and socially constructed, shaped by complex interactions within families, communities, and digital environments.

This volume addresses urgent questions about the meaning and politics of heritage in multilingual contexts, considering the lived realities of individuals navigating heritage across spaces of belonging, faith, and technological mediation.