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.

FC Barcelona Sends Footballs To Palestinian Children

Palestinian schoolchildren in the village of Kafr Sur in Tulkarem this week received footballs from Spanish giant FC Barcelona. The balls are apparently replacements for those lost over the separation fence between the West Bank and Israel over the years, the Guardian reported. A Spanish journalist, Anna Alba, who spoke about the “gift” said she hoped that it would encourage other teams to come to the area and support local athletes.

Tags: corporate diplomacy, corporate social responsibility, fc barcelona, middle east, palestine, soccer diplomacy, spain, sports diplomacy

Four More Artists Withdraw From Biennale

This brings to nine the number of artists who have pulled out of the Biennale because of its partnership with Transfield, which manages the offshore detention of asylum seekers. Agnieszka Polska, Sara van der Heide, Nicoline van Harskamp and Nathan Gray announced today they would not participate in the prestigious exhibition. They have asked the Biennale to leave their spaces blank so their protest will be obvious.

Tags: art, art diplomacy, australia, corporate diplomacy, Cultural Diplomacy, protest, sydney biennale, transfield

In Mexico, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti's Spanish Goes Far

If Garcetti had been speaking French on a diplomatic mission to Paris, he might have been harangued — or even hanged — for his errors. But Mexicans tend not to be such purists, and they have built up decades of tolerance for visitors from El Norte mangling their mother tongue.

Tags: city diplomacy, enrique pena nieto, eric garcetti, language, los angeles, mexico, spanish, united states

The New Jews Of L.A.: A Muslim-Jewish Partnership Breaks New Ground In Los Angeles

Even in the easygoing, laid-back environment of modern-day Los Angeles, bringing Muslims and Jews together to talk about the Arab-Israeli conflict is viewed as playing with fire. For decades, “the Muslim-Jewish dialogue that existed in L.A. only took place at the leadership level, among a handful of left-leaning Muslim and Jewish leaders,” recalls Edina Lekovic, policy and programming director for the Muslim Public Affairs Council.

Tags: activism, faith diplomacy, islam, israeli-palestinian conflict, judaism, los angeles, religion, united states

U.N. Envoy Forced Out Of Crimea By Hostile Pro-Russian Crowd

A U.N. special envoy was forced to abandon a mission to Ukraine's Russian-occupied Crimea region on Wednesday after being detained and besieged inside a cafe by a hostile crowd shouting "Russia! Russia!" Dutch diplomat Robert Serry flew to Istanbul after the incident and, according to the United Nations, would head from there back to Kiev.

Tags: conflict, crimea, europe, robert serry, russia, ukraine, united nations

Ukraine Is Damaging Russia's $50 Billion Olympic Makeover

Remember the Sochi Olympics? Yeah. Me, neither. There’s been so much focus on Ukraine, we almost forget that just a short time ago we were talking about the “twizzles” of ice dancing. Those were good times. The Sochi Olympics were widely considered a success. They helped introduce a new image of Russia to the world.

Tags: 2014 sochi winter olympics, crimea, image, media, nation branding, russia, soft power, ukraine, vladimir putin

The Everyday Psychology Of Nationalism

It was a good old-fashioned Olympic scandal in Sochi, when South Korean figure skater Kim Yuna, known as “the Queen,” lost to a less experienced Russian. The judgment spurred millions of angry Tweets, and a Change.org petition protesting the result was the fastest growing one on site record—reportedly more than 1.2 million signatures in about 12 hours.

Tags: 2014 sochi winter olympics, hard power, history, identity, nationalism, psychology, russia, soft power, south korea

Los Angeles On The Global Stage

L.A. is a global city and so is our city's economy, which is why I'm in Mexico City right now on my first trade mission as Mayor. I am joined here by representatives of our Port, Airport, and Tourism & Convention Board as well as a business delegation organized by the L.A. Area Chamber of Commerce.

Tags: city diplomacy, eric garcetti, global cities, los angeles, mexico, mexico city, substate diplomacy, tourism, trade diplomacy, united states

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