GIPA INTERNATIONAL TALKS: CULTURAL DIPLOMACY

22 ნოემბერი, 2021
Within the discussion series INTERNATIONAL TALKS on November 22nd, at 17:00, GIPA will host a public lecture on Cultural Diplomacy by Dr. Carla Figueira.
Dr Carla Figueira , BA MA PhD FHEA FRSA, is an academic in the field of international cultural relations and cultural and linguistic policies. She is the Director of the MA in Cultural Policy, Relations and Diplomacy and of the MA in Tourism and Cultural Policy at the Institute for Creative and Cultural Entrepreneurship, Goldsmiths, University of London.
She is the author of:
Languages at War: External Language Spread Policies in Lusophone Africa: Mozambique and Guinea-Bissau at the Turn of the 21st Century, (Peter Lang GmbH, 2013)
Figueira, Carla . 2020. Indigenous Peoples as Non-State Diplomatic Actors in the Public/Cultural Diplomacy of Taiwan: A Case Study of Dispossessions: Performative Encounter(s) of Taiwanese Indigenous Contemporary Art. International Journal of Taiwan Studies, 3(1), pp. 62-92. ISSN 2468-8797
Figueira, Carla . 2018. You may say I am a dreamer. Alliance for Global Cultural Relations,
Figueira, Carla . 2017. Policy Perspective: A Joint Communication to the European Parliament and the Council: Towards an EU Strategy for International Cultural Relations (2016) by the European Commission. Cultural Trends, 26(1), pp. 81-85. ISSN 0954-8963
Figueira, Carla and Fullman, Aimee. 2016. The role of higher education in the professionalization and education of future leaders in international/external cultural relations. "Cultural Management Education in Risk Societies - Towards a Paradigm and Policy Shift?!” Conference Proceedings 2016, pp. 151-167.
Figueira, Carla . 2016. Would you vote for a Eurovision Brexit? The Conversation,
Figueira, Carla . 2015. Persuasion and power in the modern world (Review). Cultural Trends, 24(2), pp. 178-182. ISSN 0954-8963
Figueira, Carla . 2014. Cultural diplomacy and cultural imperialism: European perspective(s) (Review). International Journal of Cultural Policy, 20(4), pp. 513-515. ISSN 1028-6632