Silver World: Science in International Policy Making
The Edwards Aquifer
Pablo-Burford Sustainable Water Quality Network
DeBola: A Prisoner's Dilemma Simulation-Game for NGOs
The Whittier Sewer Project Case
Cross-sector Collaboration and Urban Revitalization in Buffalo, NY
Corruption in Atlantikk Simulation
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch Simulation
Building a Healthy Community
A Struggle for Power and Control over Service Delivery in the Nonprofit Sector
Implementing the Earned Income Tax Credit at AccountAbility Minnesota
When a Highway Divides a City: Improving Decision Making in Syracuse, New York
Practicing Textbook Tools and Confronting Challenges That Textbooks Don’t
Adoption of Technology Open Standards Policy by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Collaboration for Civic Change: Connecting High-Tech Growth and Community Well-Being
Oltre La Norma! Collaborating for the Reconstruction of Teatro Petruzzelli in Bari
Combat and Collaboration in Seattle’s Historic Minimum Wage Debate
City Park: Community Collaboration and Rotating Facilitator Exercise
Explore by:
Conflict Management Center Workshop: Cross-Cultural Communication
204 Maxwell Hall
Add to: Outlook, ICal, Google Calendar
Despite decades of globalization and
multiculturalism, misconceptions about those deemed “culturally different”
prevail, often leading to conflict. Yet, cross-cultural interactions are
ubiquitous, making the need for positive and effective communication more
pressing than ever. But how do we get there? This workshop will help you develop
skills to foster better communication across cultural differences. It will
provide you with an opportunity to reflect about the meaning of “culture,” a
word often invoked but little understood, and its role in shaping our
perceptions and interactions. Building on anthropological notions, real world
examples, and practical exercises, the workshop will promote an understanding
of cultural differences as a rich element of the human experience rather than
as barriers that divide us. These reflections will be the foundation for
concrete practices of communication that are respectful of differences but also
productive for finding common ground to achieve mutually satisfactory goals.
Presenter: Dr. Carolina
Arango-Vargas, Director of the Conflict Management Center
The workshop is FREE and open to all, but registration is
required. To register, please fill out this quick form or send us an email to cmc@maxwell.syr.edu with your name,
status, department/community organization, and dietary restrictions. Let us
know if you require special accommodations. Morning coffee and light lunch will be provided!
For more information, please contact Carolina Arango-Vargas at cmc@maxwell.syr.edu or 315.443.2367.
Sponsored by the Conflict Management Center
Open to
Public
Contact
Accessibility
Contact to request accommodations