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[[:Category:Historical Acts of Cultural Diplomacy|Acts of Cultural Diplomacy]]
 
[[:Category:Historical Acts of Cultural Diplomacy|Acts of Cultural Diplomacy]]
 
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|[[File:Nixon_Act_CD.jpg|330px]] [[File:Pic3jazz.jpg|341px]] [[File:olimpics.png|330px]]
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| colspan="2" rowspan="4" style="width: 100%; padding:5px; border:1px solid #ddd; font-size:65%; background-color: #f9f9f9; text-align:left; font-weight:normal; vertical-align:top;"| In this section, readers can find a list of historical examples of successful acts of cultural diplomacy practiced by different actors since the end of the Second World War using different aspects of culture and other elements to represent and demonstrate what humanity shares in common through our cultures. These acts have served throughout the years as a catalyst to promote cooperation and to ease conflicts.  [http://www.i-c-d.de/index.php/Category:Historical_Acts_of_Cultural_Diplomacy More...]
 
| colspan="2" rowspan="4" style="width: 100%; padding:5px; border:1px solid #ddd; font-size:65%; background-color: #f9f9f9; text-align:left; font-weight:normal; vertical-align:top;"| In this section, readers can find a list of historical examples of successful acts of cultural diplomacy practiced by different actors since the end of the Second World War using different aspects of culture and other elements to represent and demonstrate what humanity shares in common through our cultures. These acts have served throughout the years as a catalyst to promote cooperation and to ease conflicts.  [http://www.i-c-d.de/index.php/Category:Historical_Acts_of_Cultural_Diplomacy More...]
 
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<gallery mode="packed-overlay" heights="120px">
<gallery mode="packed-overlay" heights="180px">
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Image:Acts-of-Music-as-Cultural-Diplomacy.jpg|''[[:Category:Acts of Music as Cultural Diplomacy|Acts of Music as Cultural Diplomacy]]''
Image:Moscow.jpg|''[[:Category:Acts of Music as Cultural Diplomacy|Acts of Music as Cultural Diplomacy]]''
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Image:Monuments-and-Sculptures-as-Cultural-Diplomacy.jpg|''[[:Category:Monuments and Sculptures as Cultural Diplomacy|Monuments and Sculptures as Cultural Diplomacy]]''
Image:780_MOSQUE-CATHEDRAL_OF_CORDOBA.jpg|''[[:Category:Monuments and Sculptures as Cultural Diplomacy|Monuments and Sculptures as Cultural Diplomacy]]''
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Image:Film-as-Cultural-Diplomacy.jpg|''[[:Category:Film as Cultural Diplomacy|Film as Cultural Diplomacy]]''
Image:1942_Casablanca.jpg|''[[:Category:Film as Cultural Diplomacy|Film as Cultural Diplomacy]]''
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Image:Photography-as-Cultural-Diplomacy.jpg|''[[:Category:Photography as Cultural Diplomacy|Photography as Cultural Diplomacy]]''
Image:Albert_khan.jpg|''[[:Category:Photography as Cultural Diplomacy|Photography as Cultural Diplomacy]]''
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Image:Examples-of-Inter-faith-Dialogue-Achievements.jpg|''[[:Category:Inter-faith_Dialogue|Examples of Inter-faith Dialogue Achievements]]''
 
Image:Govern.jpg|''[[:Category:Governmental Institutions|Institutions dedicated to Cultural Diplomacy]]''
 
Image:Govern.jpg|''[[:Category:Governmental Institutions|Institutions dedicated to Cultural Diplomacy]]''
 
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[[:Category:Human Rights & Global Peace|Human Rights & Global Peace]]
 
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|[[File:Universal_Declaration_of_HR.jpg|400px]]
 
| style="width: 100%; padding:5px; border:1px solid #ddd; font-size:65%; background-color: #f9f9f9; text-align:justify; font-weight:normal; vertical-align:top;"| In August 1798, born from the tumult of the French Revolution, the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen took the first step towards enshrining in law the concept that the individual and collective rights of man were universal and subject to protection. Although a product of the philosophical developments of the eighteenth-century enlightenment and limited in its scope to protecting the rights of male, French citizens, the Declaration can be considered the first attempt to politically redress the denial of man's natural freedoms. In the two centuries since the French Revolution, the attempt to expand the conception of human rights to encompass a universal standard and to protect those rights from abuse is ongoing. Internationally, we have witnessed moments of advance, but also of regression in the protection of personal freedoms and civil liberties throughout the world.
 
  
Spanning a century and the Atlantic Ocean, the fight to abolish slavery shaped the nineteenth-century. From 1815, when the Congress of Vienna condemned the international slave trade, to 1865, when the thirteenth amendment was finally passed into law in the United States of America, individuals and organisations sought to gain support for the abolition of an institution that denied the very humanity of those labelled 'slave'. In England, William Wilberforce worked tirelessly for the support of the British government in banning the slave trade in the British Empire, a motion approved by the British Parliament in 1807...  [http://www.i-c-d.de/index.php/Category:Human_Rights_%26_Global_Peace More...]
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| colspan="4" | [[:Category:Inter-faith Dialogue|Examples of Inter-faith Dialogue Achievements]]
 
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|[[File:2009-b.jpg|200px]]
 
| style="width: 100%; padding:5px; border:1px solid #ddd; background-color: #f9f9f9; text-align:justify; font-weight:normal; vertical-align:top;"| In this section, readers can find a list of historical examples of Inter-Faith dialogue as Cultural Diplomacy practiced by different actors and groups. Using different aspects of interfaith and religious relations in order to promote acceptance of religion and tradition, these efforts have, throughout the years, served as a catalyst in developing cooperation and understanding.  [http://www.i-c-d.de/index.php/Category:Research_on_Cultural_Diplomacy More...]
 
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| colspan="4" | [[:Category:The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary|The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary]]
 
| colspan="4" | [[:Category:The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary|The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary]]
 
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| style="width: 100%; padding:5px; border:1px solid #ddd; background-color: #f9f9f9; text-align:justify; font-weight:normal; vertical-align:top; "|“The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary is aimed at introducing governmental & diplomatic officials, academics & scholars, young professionals & students, artists,  [[Civil Society|civil society]] & private sector representatives, to contemporary and evolving concepts of cultural diplomacy.” The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary items have been gathered from a diverse range of literature, including English, American, French, Spanish, Chinese and German. The essential idea was to compile a list of terms that do not already possess a precise definition, and describe them in a way that is more relevant to global politics today.
 
| style="width: 100%; padding:5px; border:1px solid #ddd; background-color: #f9f9f9; text-align:justify; font-weight:normal; vertical-align:top; "|“The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary is aimed at introducing governmental & diplomatic officials, academics & scholars, young professionals & students, artists,  [[Civil Society|civil society]] & private sector representatives, to contemporary and evolving concepts of cultural diplomacy.” The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary items have been gathered from a diverse range of literature, including English, American, French, Spanish, Chinese and German. The essential idea was to compile a list of terms that do not already possess a precise definition, and describe them in a way that is more relevant to global politics today.
 
This Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary also contains references to influential people and organizations that have made significant contributions to cultural diplomacy and related fields, including Cultural Studies, International Relations, Sociology and Anthropology.[http://www.i-c-d.de/index.php/Category:The_Cultural_Diplomacy_Dictionary More...]  
 
This Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary also contains references to influential people and organizations that have made significant contributions to cultural diplomacy and related fields, including Cultural Studies, International Relations, Sociology and Anthropology.[http://www.i-c-d.de/index.php/Category:The_Cultural_Diplomacy_Dictionary More...]  
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Revision as of 10:25, 23 October 2014

Welcome to iCulturalDiplomacy
The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary that is Free to be edited by Anyone
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Politicians & Parliamentarians' Contributions to the Field of Cultural Diplomacy

Photos stripe Parliamentarians iCD.JPG
This section provides the public with biographies of all MP's of European Union nations. The project aims to increase transparency and promote the practice of cultural diplomacy at the parliamentary level. Parliamentarians will have the opportunity to update any relevant information into their personal biography, therefore keeping the public up to date with the practices of their parliamentarians.

Acts of Cultural Diplomacy

Photo stripe Historical acts iCD.JPG
In this section, readers can find a list of historical examples of successful acts of cultural diplomacy practiced by different actors since the end of the Second World War using different aspects of culture and other elements to represent and demonstrate what humanity shares in common through our cultures. These acts have served throughout the years as a catalyst to promote cooperation and to ease conflicts. More...


The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary
Diccionary.jpg “The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary is aimed at introducing governmental & diplomatic officials, academics & scholars, young professionals & students, artists, civil society & private sector representatives, to contemporary and evolving concepts of cultural diplomacy.” The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary items have been gathered from a diverse range of literature, including English, American, French, Spanish, Chinese and German. The essential idea was to compile a list of terms that do not already possess a precise definition, and describe them in a way that is more relevant to global politics today.

This Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary also contains references to influential people and organizations that have made significant contributions to cultural diplomacy and related fields, including Cultural Studies, International Relations, Sociology and Anthropology.More...