We have extended the deadline for proposals to be submitted for the Ninth International Conference on the Development and Assessment of Intercultural Competence (ICC), the theme of which is:

Intercultural Learning, Global Citizenship and Peacebuilding

ICC 2024 is a hybrid event taking place February 22-25, 2024, in Tucson, Arizona, and online. New proposal submission deadline: August 4, 2023. Visit the conference website for all the details:  http://ICC.Arizona.edu.
 
Larisa Kasumagić Kafedžić, University of Sarajevo
Peace in Language Education: A Romantisized Ideal or an Urgently Needed Educational Paradigm

 

Rebecca Oxford, University of Maryland
Fostering Intercultural Competence for Peace through Transformative Language Teaching
 
The 2024 ICC conference will focus on how intercultural learning might foster peace; what intercultural education for peacebuilding that is cognizant of disparity and pain might look like; connections between intercultural peace and other dimensions that our language curricula and programs could help students to explore; and how language educators can promote respect for all, build a sense of belonging to a common humanity, and help learners become responsible and active global citizens.

In 2015, The United Nations (UN) adopted a 2030 agenda, which included peace at its core. Based on this blueprint, the UN member states agreed to…

Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels.

Peacebuilding here is focused at the macrolevel of government actors and institutions, including educational organizations; however, work within language and culture education (e.g., Oxford et al, 2020) suggests that individuals, including those in conflict-ridden parts of the world, often cite inner and interpersonal dimensions of peace as central. What roles might intercultural learning play in fostering peace across and between these disparate levels? What might an intercultural education for peacebuilding that is cognizant of disparity and pain look like (see Bigelow, 2016; Porto & Zembylas, 2022)? What kinds of connections between intercultural peace and other dimensions including inner peace and ecological peace can our language curricula and programs help students to explore (see Oxford, 2017)? How can language educators promote respect for all, build a sense of belonging to a common humanity, and help learners become responsible and active global citizens (see UNESCO’s definition of Global Citizenship Education)?

We seek presentation proposals that focus upon these questions. We are accepting proposals for papers (in-person and virtual), symposia (in-person and virtual), posters (in-person and virtual), and in-person workshops. Authors will be asked to choose from among the following strands:

  • Theoretical and conceptual approaches
  • Assessment
  • Curriculum design and instructional approaches
  • Materials
  • Technology
  • Policy and institutional initiatives
  • Exchanges (physical and virtual)
  • Service/Community-based learning
  • Professional learning of educators

All proposals must be submitted using the online submission form. See the full guidelines and the link to submit your proposal here. Proposals are due by the extended deadline of August 4, 2023.

Registration scholarships will be available for K-12 teachers and graduate students. More details to come.

For all the conference information, visit the ICC Website.

This ninth iteration of the  biennial Intercultural Competence conference is organized by the Center for Educational Resources in Culture, Language and Literacy (CERCLL), a Title VI Language Resource Center at the University of Arizona. 

Questions? Please contact CERCLL at cercll@arizona.edu

Co-sponsored by:

  • College of Humanities, University of Arizona
  • The Second Language Acquisition and Teaching (SLAT) Program at the University of Arizona
  • College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of Arizona
  • Arizona International
  • Center for East Asian Studies (CEAS) at the University of Arizona
  • Center for Latin American Studies (LAS) at the University of Arizona
  • Center for Middle Eastern Studies (CMES) at the University of Arizona
  • Center for Advanced Language Proficiency Education and Research (CALPER) at Pennsylvania State University
  • Center for Applied Second Language Studies (CASLS) at the University of Oregon
  • Center for Urban for Language Teaching and Research (CULTR) at Georgia State University
  • National Foreign Language Resource Center (NFLRC) at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.