A curated selection of public diplomacy-relevant news from a global cross-section of English-language media outlets, including independent, corporate-owned, and state-sponsored sources. The stories featured don't necessarily represent CPD's views nor have they been verified by CPD.

Sunnylands, the Western Camp David, Blends Diplomacy with History

When President Obama and leaders of Asian nations meet here Monday they will feel the tug of history and a bit of glamour on an estate where Ronald Reagan wandered around in slippers, Frank Sinatra sipped drinks by the pool and Dwight D. Eisenhower suggested that the nine-hole golf course could use a few palm trees.

Tags: sunnylands, obama, history & theory, government pd, reagan, eisenhower, pacific rim, arts, culture, Cultural Diplomacy

Perfecting Luxembourg's Rich Culinary Traditions

Hans Poppelaars is Chef and Co-Founder of Le Manoir Kasselslay. Hailing from the Netherlands, he became inspired by Luxembourg's food traditions during his family trips to the Grand Duchy when he was a child. [...] it means identity, research, quality and giving the traditions more value. It also helps with nation branding, especially since the visual is very strong from a design perspective.

Tags: luxembourg, nation branding, Cultural Diplomacy, cuisine, made in luxembourg, design, traditions, culture

French Film Festival Returns to NAU

Spread across three weekends, the Tournées French Film Festival is returning to screen a vibrant cross-section of dramas, thrillers, comedies and one animated film surrounding murder, treachery and illicit activities.
Dubbed “C’est une crime!” or “It’s a crime,” audiences will follow the thread through award-winning cinema brought to Northern Arizona University to share in francophone culture.

Tags: france, film, northern arizona university, US, cultural exchange, culture, diversity

Princeton Students Construct Wall to Explore Immigration Issues

Student activists at Princeton University came together last week to construct "The Wall," an intersectional art installation meant to represent both Israel's West Bank barrier and the Mexico–United States barrier. [...] The project is a collaboration between the Princeton Committee on Palestine (PCP) and DREAM Team, both student-run immigrant rights advocacy groups.

Tags: student activist, international advocacy, immigration issue, princeton university, palestine, human rights

How Books for Africa is embracing Nonprofit Efficiency Movement

Nonprofits are important because they fill a role that neither governments nor corporations can. "Corporations almost invariably underinvest in public goods, because they can capture only a small fraction of the rewards," the New Yorker's James Surowiecki wrote recently. "Governments do better at providing public goods (defense, say, or education), but private agendas often derail the public, and governments are far less effective at tackling global problems."

Tags: africa, uganda, nonprofit, non-state pd, book diplomacy, books for africa

North Korea Has a Strange and Surprisingly Effective Campaign in Africa

North Korea today is known as the world’s most isolationist nation, an obdurate outpost of totalitarianism. [...] But the public spaces of Senegal, Ethiopia, Kenya and elsewhere are dotted with reminders of a long-running  often surreal charm offensive that was waged by the North as part of the Korean peninsula’s own Cold War. Since 1969, Pyongyang’s Mansudae Art Studio has exported statues and other monuments to at least 16 African countries.

Tags: north korea, africa, totalitarianism, art, Cultural Diplomacy, cold war, mansudae art studio

Australia's Digital Diplomacy in the Age of the Political Selfie

Beyond the self-promoting social media antics of political leaders, digital diplomacy is important because it gives governments the opportunity to reach people they would struggle to reach otherwise, McClory said, whether to attract foreign students, tourists, or to rally people around a cause. "Australia falls down in that they have a smaller diplomatic network compared to the US or UK, Germany or France, they have to work harder to reach those people." 

 

Tags: australia, digital diplomacy, politics, selfie, social media, smart & soft power

Latvia Opens New Chapter with Korea

The establishment of a diplomatic mission in Seoul has opened a new chapter in bilateral relations with Korea, says the first resident Latvian ambassador to Korea. "We share similar values and attitudes about working hard and reaching out and so it is quite natural for Latvia to be taking steps to actively promote closer relations with strong, like-minded partners such as Korea," Peteris Vaivars said.

Tags: latvia, south korea, EU, seoul, bilateral relations, ambassadors, cultural exchange, tourism, government pd

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