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Centre for Intercultural Studies |
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Academic Course: Intercultural Project Management (IPM) Interethnic and intercultural relationships have moved to the top of the agenda in the past decades. Due to the outbreak of armed conflicts in various parts of the world and due to the increasing tendencies of racism and xenophobia, intercultural communication and confidence building measures between different groups of the population are widely discussed and urgently needed. In this context the initiatives promoting these relationships are crucial ones. The course is designed to improve the professional skills of people working on projects in multilingual and multicultural contexts, e.g. NGOs working in education, media, social welfare or managers in development projects (NPOs, private and governmental initiatives) in Europe as well as in North-South cooperation. Intercultural issues are treated as a cross-curricula topic in each workshop. The workshop is not based on a culture-specific approach, but rather on raising cultural and linguistic awareness. Therefor it is open for participants from different backgrounds and geographic regions. Diversity of participants backgrounds is an important resource for process oriented work within the whole course. In addition to the intercultural experiences within the summer school courses participants will have the opportunity to apply their skills in three different intercultural projects on site. They cover the following dimensions:
Presently, intercultural organisations and institutions and NGOs are active in a great variety of sectors such as education, social assistance, culture, media, transfrontier co-operation and health care. They support the development of societies by their sectorial activities as well as by their integrative function between different groups of society. To be able to fulfill this demanding tasks and to achieve sustainable results, these organisations and NGOs not only need substantial support (e.g. financial, legal, ...), but also support to improve their professional management skills. Very often these skills are underestimated by members of these groups. In general their competence lies within interpersonal and intergroup communication, combined with high commitment. On the other hand this often goes along with organisational and administrative deficiencies. To maintain the interpersonal qualities it seems to be essential to increase the capability on the management side as they depend strongly on each other. Especially intercultural settings function well only when interpersonal and organisational items are well linked. To find out more about the most urgent deficiencies, we organised a pilot workshop in February 2000 at the University of Klagenfurt. As participants, representatives from intercultural projects from Southeastern and Eastern Europe as well as NGOs working in a north-south context were invited. It was set to be a pilot workshop in order to elaborate - according to the needs of the participants - a curriculum for Intercultural Project Management. During the workshop the following difficulties concerning organisational issues were identified:
Based on the assessment of this workshop we developed a curriculum for a summer school on intercultural project management. The basic idea of the IPM Summer School is to create a training program that provides professional support to all who are in charge of intercultural projects. Originally the SC was designed for project managers within the Council of Europe´s confidence building measures program, but of course it will be open to all participants interested in intercultural and multilingual issues. The program will provide technical skills of project management such as project management tools, project controlling, project evaluation, fundraising and public relations skills as well as project management skills, such as leading and steering projects, dealing with conflicts and conflict management, mediation, team development, dealing with organisational issues, coping with multilingual settings and environments. Intercultural aspects will be a main topic in every course. The program is conceived as an academic course that will be offered at the University of Klagenfurt, IFF (Institute for Interdisciplinary Research and Continuing Education). The program consists of three parts:
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