Governance and Leadership Models in the Provincial Museum Network of Lugo
Modelos de gobernanza y liderazgo en la Red Provincial de Museos de Lugo
https://intercom.mini.icom.museum/
El modelo de gestión y el liderazgo inspirador de la Red Museística será presentado en DOHA en DUBAI .
Architectural Means of Expression in the Creation of Contemporary Heritage In...Anna Rynkowska-Sachse
Heritage Interpretation Centres are specially created facilities for evaluation of the cultural and/or natural heritage of a given area and its transformation into an educational, cultural or tourism product. Approach to heritage and architectural means of expression in the creation of contemporary Heritage Interpretation Centres and the impact on users, especially European ones, are presented on the example of buildings from South Africa (The Mapungubwe Interpretation Centre, Alexandra Interpretation Centre, Freedom Park). Field studies of selected buildings allowed an assessment of how effective and easy to read the message of cultural heritage was for people from the outside, and by what architectural means it was possible.
To learn and create among the treasuresVera Boneva
A short story about five Bulgarian museums and an European project, presented at the conference "Contemporary Museum and Gallery Education practices: Local Communities meet Global Narratives", Nicosia, May 22-23, 2015
The final programme of the international workshop Evolution and transformation in tourism destinations: Revitalisation through Innovation?
Organization: RSA and GRATET - URV
10th-13th February 2014, Campus Vila-seca, Catalonia
Architectural Means of Expression in the Creation of Contemporary Heritage In...Anna Rynkowska-Sachse
Heritage Interpretation Centres are specially created facilities for evaluation of the cultural and/or natural heritage of a given area and its transformation into an educational, cultural or tourism product. Approach to heritage and architectural means of expression in the creation of contemporary Heritage Interpretation Centres and the impact on users, especially European ones, are presented on the example of buildings from South Africa (The Mapungubwe Interpretation Centre, Alexandra Interpretation Centre, Freedom Park). Field studies of selected buildings allowed an assessment of how effective and easy to read the message of cultural heritage was for people from the outside, and by what architectural means it was possible.
To learn and create among the treasuresVera Boneva
A short story about five Bulgarian museums and an European project, presented at the conference "Contemporary Museum and Gallery Education practices: Local Communities meet Global Narratives", Nicosia, May 22-23, 2015
The final programme of the international workshop Evolution and transformation in tourism destinations: Revitalisation through Innovation?
Organization: RSA and GRATET - URV
10th-13th February 2014, Campus Vila-seca, Catalonia
Konferences “Radošums. Radošs bibliotekārs radošā bibliotēkā” programmaBibliotēku portāls
Kultūras informācijas sistēmu centrs 24. un 25. maijā Eiropas Savienības izglītības, mācību, jaunatnes un sporta programmas Erasmus+ projekta „Izglītotāji un inovatori bibliotēkās” ietvaros rīko starptautisku konferenci “Radošums. Radošs bibliotekārs radošā bibliotēkā”.
2014 EVA/Minerva Jerusalem International Conference on Digitisation of Cultural Heritage
http://2014.minervaisrael.org.il
http://www.digital-heritage.org.il
The Manhattanville community will have the opportunity to learn about the history of the college during the second annual Valiant Week hosted by the First Year Program and First Year Advisory Committee. Valiant Week begins Monday September 16th and will conclude on Friday September 20th. Here is a complete list of Valiant Week events. For more information please visit http://mville.edu/gps.
Reimagining the Text: English Language & Digital Humanities, MAniben Nanavati...VIBHUTI PATEL
Feminism, Multiculturalism and Virtual Communities
* Vibhuti Patel
ABSTRACT
he most important task before virtual communities committed to promote multicultural ethos with emphasis
on gender justice is to make social and cultural interventions before employing virtual learning environment
for learning and knowledge sharing. Feminist movements has played pivotal role in reaching out to millions
of women from 4 generations by creating virtual communities. Knowledge sharing in a multicultural virtual
(online) learning community has a democratizing influence on individuals and groups of all generations who
are digitally connected. Communication on Plural lifestyles-food habits, dress codes; ideological moorings,
historical and cultural legacies, inter-generational dialogues, best practices, role models of different fields
and of different regions not only broaden our horizons but also prepare us to respect plural lifestyles. It also
has humbling effect as we start appreciating plus points of people from other cultures. Stereotypes and
myths based on ignorance, lack of knowledge about fellow human beings generate ‘fear of the unknown’
syndrome. Virtual communities can play crucial role in combating xenophobia, misogyny and intolerance
towards the ‘other’. Three building blocks of virtual communications on WhatsApp Groups, google/yahoo
groups and other social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Istagram that contribute to transformatory
processes through life stories, verses, slogans, quotations, visuals, multiple art forms that affect people’s
perception. Creative and proactive approaches towards new technology, methods of communication that
affect the immediate environment of a virtual community and plan of action which explain virtual communities
as ‘change makers’ are need of an hour. Virtual world is reaching out to citizens from diverse backgrounds
in terms of class, caste, ethnicity, race, religion, age, gender and skin colour. Over last decade we have
witnessed this is happening in cases of pen-pals, fusion music, online museum and archives, photographic
memories, qualitative research on wide range of subjects- from work-life balance, violence against women,
health awareness, cost effective formal and non-formal education and trading, environmental concernsdifferent
methods of home gardening and organic farming, self-learning real time cookery, healing practices
rooted in different cultures, attitude towards senior citizens and differently abled people.
Reimagining the Text: English language & digital humanities, Manibe nanavati ...VIBHUTI PATEL
Feminism, Multiculturalism and Virtual Communities by Prof. Vibhuti Patel
The most important task before virtual communities committed to promote multicultural ethos with emphasis
on gender justice is to make social and cultural interventions before employing virtual learning environment
for learning and knowledge sharing. Feminist movements has played pivotal role in reaching out to millions
of women from 4 generations by creating virtual communities. Knowledge sharing in a multicultural virtual
(online) learning community has a democratizing influence on individuals and groups of all generations who
are digitally connected. Communication on Plural lifestyles-food habits, dress codes; ideological moorings,
historical and cultural legacies, inter-generational dialogues, best practices, role models of different fields
and of different regions not only broaden our horizons but also prepare us to respect plural lifestyles. It also
has humbling effect as we start appreciating plus points of people from other cultures. Stereotypes and
myths based on ignorance, lack of knowledge about fellow human beings generate ‘fear of the unknown’
syndrome. Virtual communities can play crucial role in combating xenophobia, misogyny and intolerance
towards the ‘other’. Three building blocks of virtual communications on WhatsApp Groups, google/yahoo
groups and other social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Istagram that contribute to transformatory
processes through life stories, verses, slogans, quotations, visuals, multiple art forms that affect people’s
perception. Creative and proactive approaches towards new technology, methods of communication that
affect the immediate environment of a virtual community and plan of action which explain virtual communities
as ‘change makers’ are need of an hour. Virtual world is reaching out to citizens from diverse backgrounds
in terms of class, caste, ethnicity, race, religion, age, gender and skin colour. Over last decade we have
witnessed this is happening in cases of pen-pals, fusion music, online museum and archives, photographic
memories, qualitative research on wide range of subjects- from work-life balance, violence against women,
health awareness, cost effective formal and non-formal education and trading, environmental concernsdifferent
methods of home gardening and organic farming, self-learning real time cookery, healing practices
rooted in different cultures, attitude towards senior citizens and differently abled people.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
MAP India is the Indian museum beyond bordersSwatiMurthy1
MAP India is committed to the preservation of photographs, paintings, sculptures and other artefacts with aesthetic value for Indian art lovers. Our online website is accessible to museum lovers around the world as well as to people with disabilities or special needs.
MAP features digital collaborations with other museums and institutions across the world. The Museum of Art & Photography has also tied up with 60+ institutions and conducted 250 plus free workshops for more than 5000 children.
The technology team at the Museum makes use of cutting edge technological tools and solutions for greater visibility & outreach of MAP’s collection. Audiences interested in Indian art & culture can sign up for a digital membership on the website and attend the various online events that the Museum hosts every month. Click on the link for more details:
https://map-india.org/become-a-member/
Elaich module 6 topic 6.1 - Tourism and monumentselaich
ELAICH - Educational Linkage Approach in Cultural Heritage.
For more information and presentations, please visit: http://elaich.technion.ac.il/
Tourism and monuments
Proposal for an “Anthropocene” Research Program, and its relationship with the “Cultural Evolution” program
Emanuele Serrelli University of Milano-Bicocca CISEPS assembly, October 26, 2016
Anthropocene as a good candidate to REPROPOSE the successful template of the project “The Diffusion of Cultural Traits” (2011-2016)
The Anthropocene defines Earth's most recent geologic time period as being human-influenced, or anthropogenic, based on overwhelming global evidence that atmospheric, geologic, hydrologic, biospheric and other earth system processes are now altered by humans.
* The word combines the root "anthropo", meaning "human" with the root "- cene", the standard suffix for "epoch" in geologic time.
* The Anthropocene is distinguished as a new period either after or within the Holocene, the current epoch, which began approximately 10,000 years ago (about 8000 BC) with the end of the last glacial period.
* Source: The Encyclopedia of Earth, cit. in www.anthropocene.info
Focusing on the rich cultural heritage of the Ghazni region, UNESCO organized a one week capacity building workshop for museum professionals in August 2010. It is to be crowned by an exhibition about Ghazni at the National Museum of Afghanistan, later this month.
Konferences “Radošums. Radošs bibliotekārs radošā bibliotēkā” programmaBibliotēku portāls
Kultūras informācijas sistēmu centrs 24. un 25. maijā Eiropas Savienības izglītības, mācību, jaunatnes un sporta programmas Erasmus+ projekta „Izglītotāji un inovatori bibliotēkās” ietvaros rīko starptautisku konferenci “Radošums. Radošs bibliotekārs radošā bibliotēkā”.
2014 EVA/Minerva Jerusalem International Conference on Digitisation of Cultural Heritage
http://2014.minervaisrael.org.il
http://www.digital-heritage.org.il
The Manhattanville community will have the opportunity to learn about the history of the college during the second annual Valiant Week hosted by the First Year Program and First Year Advisory Committee. Valiant Week begins Monday September 16th and will conclude on Friday September 20th. Here is a complete list of Valiant Week events. For more information please visit http://mville.edu/gps.
Reimagining the Text: English Language & Digital Humanities, MAniben Nanavati...VIBHUTI PATEL
Feminism, Multiculturalism and Virtual Communities
* Vibhuti Patel
ABSTRACT
he most important task before virtual communities committed to promote multicultural ethos with emphasis
on gender justice is to make social and cultural interventions before employing virtual learning environment
for learning and knowledge sharing. Feminist movements has played pivotal role in reaching out to millions
of women from 4 generations by creating virtual communities. Knowledge sharing in a multicultural virtual
(online) learning community has a democratizing influence on individuals and groups of all generations who
are digitally connected. Communication on Plural lifestyles-food habits, dress codes; ideological moorings,
historical and cultural legacies, inter-generational dialogues, best practices, role models of different fields
and of different regions not only broaden our horizons but also prepare us to respect plural lifestyles. It also
has humbling effect as we start appreciating plus points of people from other cultures. Stereotypes and
myths based on ignorance, lack of knowledge about fellow human beings generate ‘fear of the unknown’
syndrome. Virtual communities can play crucial role in combating xenophobia, misogyny and intolerance
towards the ‘other’. Three building blocks of virtual communications on WhatsApp Groups, google/yahoo
groups and other social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Istagram that contribute to transformatory
processes through life stories, verses, slogans, quotations, visuals, multiple art forms that affect people’s
perception. Creative and proactive approaches towards new technology, methods of communication that
affect the immediate environment of a virtual community and plan of action which explain virtual communities
as ‘change makers’ are need of an hour. Virtual world is reaching out to citizens from diverse backgrounds
in terms of class, caste, ethnicity, race, religion, age, gender and skin colour. Over last decade we have
witnessed this is happening in cases of pen-pals, fusion music, online museum and archives, photographic
memories, qualitative research on wide range of subjects- from work-life balance, violence against women,
health awareness, cost effective formal and non-formal education and trading, environmental concernsdifferent
methods of home gardening and organic farming, self-learning real time cookery, healing practices
rooted in different cultures, attitude towards senior citizens and differently abled people.
Reimagining the Text: English language & digital humanities, Manibe nanavati ...VIBHUTI PATEL
Feminism, Multiculturalism and Virtual Communities by Prof. Vibhuti Patel
The most important task before virtual communities committed to promote multicultural ethos with emphasis
on gender justice is to make social and cultural interventions before employing virtual learning environment
for learning and knowledge sharing. Feminist movements has played pivotal role in reaching out to millions
of women from 4 generations by creating virtual communities. Knowledge sharing in a multicultural virtual
(online) learning community has a democratizing influence on individuals and groups of all generations who
are digitally connected. Communication on Plural lifestyles-food habits, dress codes; ideological moorings,
historical and cultural legacies, inter-generational dialogues, best practices, role models of different fields
and of different regions not only broaden our horizons but also prepare us to respect plural lifestyles. It also
has humbling effect as we start appreciating plus points of people from other cultures. Stereotypes and
myths based on ignorance, lack of knowledge about fellow human beings generate ‘fear of the unknown’
syndrome. Virtual communities can play crucial role in combating xenophobia, misogyny and intolerance
towards the ‘other’. Three building blocks of virtual communications on WhatsApp Groups, google/yahoo
groups and other social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Istagram that contribute to transformatory
processes through life stories, verses, slogans, quotations, visuals, multiple art forms that affect people’s
perception. Creative and proactive approaches towards new technology, methods of communication that
affect the immediate environment of a virtual community and plan of action which explain virtual communities
as ‘change makers’ are need of an hour. Virtual world is reaching out to citizens from diverse backgrounds
in terms of class, caste, ethnicity, race, religion, age, gender and skin colour. Over last decade we have
witnessed this is happening in cases of pen-pals, fusion music, online museum and archives, photographic
memories, qualitative research on wide range of subjects- from work-life balance, violence against women,
health awareness, cost effective formal and non-formal education and trading, environmental concernsdifferent
methods of home gardening and organic farming, self-learning real time cookery, healing practices
rooted in different cultures, attitude towards senior citizens and differently abled people.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
MAP India is the Indian museum beyond bordersSwatiMurthy1
MAP India is committed to the preservation of photographs, paintings, sculptures and other artefacts with aesthetic value for Indian art lovers. Our online website is accessible to museum lovers around the world as well as to people with disabilities or special needs.
MAP features digital collaborations with other museums and institutions across the world. The Museum of Art & Photography has also tied up with 60+ institutions and conducted 250 plus free workshops for more than 5000 children.
The technology team at the Museum makes use of cutting edge technological tools and solutions for greater visibility & outreach of MAP’s collection. Audiences interested in Indian art & culture can sign up for a digital membership on the website and attend the various online events that the Museum hosts every month. Click on the link for more details:
https://map-india.org/become-a-member/
Elaich module 6 topic 6.1 - Tourism and monumentselaich
ELAICH - Educational Linkage Approach in Cultural Heritage.
For more information and presentations, please visit: http://elaich.technion.ac.il/
Tourism and monuments
Proposal for an “Anthropocene” Research Program, and its relationship with the “Cultural Evolution” program
Emanuele Serrelli University of Milano-Bicocca CISEPS assembly, October 26, 2016
Anthropocene as a good candidate to REPROPOSE the successful template of the project “The Diffusion of Cultural Traits” (2011-2016)
The Anthropocene defines Earth's most recent geologic time period as being human-influenced, or anthropogenic, based on overwhelming global evidence that atmospheric, geologic, hydrologic, biospheric and other earth system processes are now altered by humans.
* The word combines the root "anthropo", meaning "human" with the root "- cene", the standard suffix for "epoch" in geologic time.
* The Anthropocene is distinguished as a new period either after or within the Holocene, the current epoch, which began approximately 10,000 years ago (about 8000 BC) with the end of the last glacial period.
* Source: The Encyclopedia of Earth, cit. in www.anthropocene.info
Focusing on the rich cultural heritage of the Ghazni region, UNESCO organized a one week capacity building workshop for museum professionals in August 2010. It is to be crowned by an exhibition about Ghazni at the National Museum of Afghanistan, later this month.
Similar to 20230503_INTERCOM_DOHA_PROGRAMME_FINAL_DEF_ONLY_WORD.pdf (20)
VIII Congreso de Educación, Museos y Patrimonio: Compartir, incluir e integr...Encarna Lago
o VIII Congreso de Educación, Museos y
Patrimonio: Compartir, incluir e integrar para el futuro, organizado cada año por varias
organizaciones y liderado por CECA Chile, el que se realizaría el 25 y 26 de noviembre del
2019, en la ciudad de Valparaíso.Conferencia inaugural
La educación en la Red Museística
Provincial de Lugo: una apuesta para la
gestión humanizada del patrimonio por Encarna Lago González
Dice en su presentación Estebán Torres Hormazabal :
Presidente CECA CHILE :Consensuamos que Encarna Lago González, Gerenta de la Red de Museos de Lugo,
en España, era la adecuada para compartir su experiencia, conocimiento y afecto en
la charla magistral inaugural, dado su enfoque que pone en el centro de las prácticas
museológicas a las personas, en consecuencia, a las preocupaciones e intereses de
nuestra convocatoria.
Programa da RMPL no 2023: desigualdades ciclos de vida, xs maiores Encarna Lago
“Xs nosxs maiores”, cantas veces escoitamos estas palabras nos últimos 3 anos?
Trala crise, a xente da terceira idade viuse afectada non só fisicamente polo agravamento das súas
doenzas e as novas enfermidades, senón que sentiron como algo moito máis importante se poñía
en perigo, a saúde mental.
O illamento deste grupo social, quen non mantén contacto social a través do gran fenómeno de
masas actual, as redes, agudizouse nestes tempos.
Débense revisar os coidados ás persoas maiores, non soamente a través do ámbito sanitario senón
colaborando toda unha sociedade non profesional do sector para mellorar o estado emocional e
psicolóxico deste colectivo.
Escoitar e sobre todo ser escoitados, verse valiosos, mestrxs do pasado, transportadorxs de
lembranzas, instigadorxs de proxectos, valedores de maxia, así deben sentirse “os nosos maiores”,
e por iso, dende a Rede Museística Provincial de Lugo, presentamos un programa de
acompañamento para contribuír na recuperación deste colectivo tan afectado trala pandemia.
Os museos acentúan o seu traballo social e traspasan os muros internos para achegarse a súa
comunidade.
ESTATISTICA DO ANO 2022 DA REDE MUSEISTICA PROVINCIAL DE LUGOEncarna Lago
A IMPORTANCIA DOS DATOS PARA ANALIZAR E COÑECER A NOSA COMUNIDADE.
No 2022 tivemos un aumento de 22.761 persoas. O que supón un porcentaxe do 55,6 % en relación as cifras do ano pasado.
PROGRAMA.I.XORNADASDAS.LUGO.DEFINITIVO.pdfEncarna Lago
O grupo de traballo e investigación impulsan estas xornadas organizadas por Vicepresidencia da Deputación Provincial de Lugo a través da Rede Museística. fo
Dorsales para traballar os ODS con obras da RMPLEncarna Lago
A través das obras dos museos impresos e tintas ecoloxicas sobre sabanas de lenzo fixemos estos dorsais para poñer o foco nos ODS.
O grupo convertiuse na UNESCo bus
How to Create Map Views in the Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
The map views are useful for providing a geographical representation of data. They allow users to visualize and analyze the data in a more intuitive manner.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
The Art Pastor's Guide to Sabbath | Steve ThomasonSteve Thomason
What is the purpose of the Sabbath Law in the Torah. It is interesting to compare how the context of the law shifts from Exodus to Deuteronomy. Who gets to rest, and why?
We all have good and bad thoughts from time to time and situation to situation. We are bombarded daily with spiraling thoughts(both negative and positive) creating all-consuming feel , making us difficult to manage with associated suffering. Good thoughts are like our Mob Signal (Positive thought) amidst noise(negative thought) in the atmosphere. Negative thoughts like noise outweigh positive thoughts. These thoughts often create unwanted confusion, trouble, stress and frustration in our mind as well as chaos in our physical world. Negative thoughts are also known as “distorted thinking”.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
2. MAY 6TH
Registration and welcome coffee
MAY 7TH
8:30 AM Registration and welcome coffee
9:00 AM
Opening of the conference - welcome speeches
Ahmad Musa Al Namla, Chief Executive Officer, Qatar Museums;
Her Excellency Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad Al-Thani, Chairperson of Qatar Museums;
Sheikha Maryam Al Thani, Internal Strategical Communication Coordinator, Qatar Museums;
Dr. Goranka Horjan, INTERCOM Chairperson, Director National Castle Trakošćan;
Dr. Ech-Cherki Dahmali, ICOM ARAB Chairperson, Director Morocco Telecom Museum
SESSION I: Presenter of the session and moderator: M. Cristina Vannini - INTERCOM Secretary
9:30 AM
KEYNOTE I
Prof. Dr. Vlatka Ariaana Hlupič - Professor of Leadership and
Management at Hult International Business School
Profiling the leader. Key skills and future mindsets of the museum leader.
10:00 AM Q&A
10:30 AM
Edward Ayres De Abreu - Museu Nacional da Música / INET-
md, Centro de Estudos em Música e Dança, Lisbon, Portugal
Six months of profound transformation: building a team, building a museum.
10:45 AM
Ioannis Markakis - Cretan Open-Air Museum Lychnostatis –
Greece
Becoming a museum manager from scratch.
11:00 AM Abduraheem K - Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India Future of museums and future museums.
11:15 AM
Han Jiang - PhD candidate School of Museum Studies,
University of Leicester, UK
Leadership in co-designing the digital transformation of museums.
11:30 AM
Shin-Chieh Tzeng - Conservation of Cultural Relics and
Museology, Tainan National University of the Arts, Taiwan
Democratizing museums: moving towards an interactive museum
governance model.
11:45 AM
John Wetenhall -The George Washington University Museum,
USA
Charging for charity.
12:00 PM Noel Biseko Lwoga - National Museum of Tanzania
Crafting a museum strategy: from nobility to nationality, popularity and
sustainability.
12:15 PM Anne-Marie Gilis – Cultural Studies, KU Leuven
Qatar's rising museum scene. What museum leaders say. From current
challenges to new museum leadership insights.
12:30 PM Q&A
1:00 PM Lunch
3. SESSION II: Presenter of the session and moderator: Marek Prokůpek - INTERCOM Board member
2:00 PM
KEYNOTE II
Prof. Dr. PierLuigi Sacco - Professor of Economics at
University of Chieti-Pescara, Senior Adviser to the OECD,
Paris, Research Affiliate at the metaLAB (at) Harvard
Museums as platforms of behavioral change for societal challenges.
2:30 PM Q&A
3:00 PM Maria Rosario Estrada - Lasalle College of Arts Singapore
The Cultural Center of the Philippines’ thirteen artists program: a study on
museum criticism, collaboration, and validation.
3:15 PM Lara Corona - University Internaçional de Catalunya - Spain
Accessibility, engagement, digitization, and sustainability: the Boijmans
Museum as a model of leadership.
3:30 PM Antonia Bobik - Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands
Curating towards diversity and inclusion: a snapshot and critical view of the
museum landscape of Rotterdam.
3:45 PM
Marta Šveb Dragija and Daniela Angelina Jelinčić - Institute
for Development and International Relations (IRMO),
Croatia
Museum wellbeing leadership toolkit: leadership mindset and skills for
wellbeing in museums
4:00 PM Isabel Collazos Gottret - PhD student University of Leicester A leader’s compass navigating management change: employee wellbeing.
4:15 PM
Fatma Mostafa - Children Center for Civilization and
Creativity – Egypt
The role of museums in safeguarding the intangible cultural heritage of
refugees.
4:30 PM Amal Hamdy - University of Helwan, Egypt
The Role of Events in Museum Soft Opening Evaluation: Perspectives for the
Museum Leadership Future
4:45 PM Alenka Černelič Krošelj - Posavje Museum Brežice, Slovenia Leading museums and museum life in times of constant change
5:00 PM Q&A
5:20 PM Guided Tour to the NMQ – registration needed
4. MAY 8Th
SESSION III: Presenter of the session and moderator: Anne-Marie Gilis, INTERCOM Board member
9:00 AM
KEYNOTE III
Prof. Dr. Desmond Hui - Professor and Head of Department
of Art and Design at The Hang Seng University of Hong Kong
Visions for the future: a cross-cultural exchange.
9:30 AM Q&A
10:00 AM Stefano Karadjov - Fondazione Brescia Musei, Brescia, Italy
New museum membership frontiers. The cultural identity model of
Fondazione Brescia Musei’s Alliance for Culture.
10:15 AM Cristina Beard - Provincial Museum Network of Lugo, Spain
Governance and leadership models in the provincial museum network of
Lugo
10:30 AM
William Geblerkpor - Museum of Natural and Cultural
Heritage at Shai Hills - University of Ghana
The museum as family home: shaping a new mindset for museum leadership
in West Africa.
10:45 AM
Anna Dentoni - Promotori Musei del Mare, Galata Museum,
Genoa, Italy
Leadership and Patrons.
11:00 AM
Yu Qihe - School of Foreign Languages in Southeast
University, China
The impact of the visit to the U. S. Museum on the management thinking of
the Capital Museum leader Han Yong.
11:30 AM Anqi Li - PhD Candidate at The University of Hong Kong Sustaining Art Museums: a study of corporate governance of M+.
11:45 AM
Esther Kabalanyana Banda - Lusaka National Museum,
Zambia
Challenges and benefits of succession planning: a case of the National
Museums of Zambia.
12:00 PM Manuel Rabaté - Louvre Abu Dhabi, UAE
Louvre Abu Dhabi: a blueprint universal model paving the way for the future
of museums in the region.
12:15 PM Q&A
12:30 PM
OPENING OF THE POSTERS' SESSION CEREMONY
Sheikha Maryam Ali Al Thani – Qatar Museums;
Dr.Goranka Horjan - INTERCOM Chairperson;
Dr. Ech-Cherki Dahmali – ICOM Arab Chairperson
5. POSTER SESSION*
Jalal Alheji, Freelance The sickles blade in the neolithic period.
Kimmo Levä, Finnish National Gallery Strategic management in a digital operating environment, case Finnish National Gallery.
Jean-Paul Koudougou, National Museum, Burkina Faso
From the Ouagadougou Music Museum to the National Museum of Burkina Faso:
experiences of assertive leadership
Christian Nana Tchuisseu, ICOM Cameroon African Museums directors face of new challenge, post COVID 19.
Gahramanli and Sayavush, Azerbaijan National Museum of Art Museum leadership: current challenges.
Ee Bee Gan, NUS Architecture, Singapore
Reimagining traditions: museum governance for Chinese voluntary associations in urban
Singapore.
Rémy Jarry, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Catholic
University of Paris, CIMAM
Does the art market need museums to grow?
Nofa Farida Lestari, Indonesian Hidden Heritage Bringing creative industries to preserve cultural heritage.
Bebewou Aka Adjo, University of Lome, Togo Museum innovation: advantages or disadvantages?
Faeza Meendrakkal Anver Muhammed, Freelance Analysing the mindset and skills of visionary leader.
Jurica Sabol, Museums of the Croatian Zagorje Challenges of managing a regional museum(s).
Rabie Ahmed Sayed Ahmed, Fayoum University, Egypt
Artificial Intelligence and the future of museums: opportunities and threats; and a
projectproposal for an academic program on artificial intelligence and heritage
1:00 PM Lunch
*The poster session will stay open to the end of the conference.
6. 2:00 PM WORKSHOPS
1st
Ethical leadership for the museum of the
future.
Sally Yerkovich - Adjunct Professor of Museum Anthropology at Columbia University in New
York City; Chair of the Standing Committee on Ethics of ICOM
2nd
Museum leadership in between
governance and operations.
Bart De Baere - Director of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp; Chair of the
Museum Watch Committee of CIMAM
3rd
Leading from within and leading outside
the museum.
Lizzy Moriarty - Non-Executive Director of Cultural Innovations Ltd.
4th
Changing mindsets: defining resilient
and agile future for museum
management processes.
Ech-Cherki Dahmali - Director of Morocco Telecommunication Museum, Rabat;
Chair of ICOM Arab
4:00 PM PLENARY AND WORKSHOPS’ WRAP-UP
Dr. Goranka Horjan - INTERCOM Chairperson
7. MAY 9th
ROUND TABLE SESSIONS
Sheikha Maryam Ali Al Thani – Qatar Museums
9:00 AM
Museum Leadership
across MENA
Moderator: Zeina Arida
– Director Arab Museum
of Modern Art
Ebrahim Saleh Al-Khulaifi, Qatar Museums, Role of transformational leadership in improving organizational
performance: - study of Qatar Museum; Insaf Bchina Naouar, University of Kairouan, Museums as source of
inspiration for innovation; Francesca Bacci, Zayed University, DCT’s management of Abu Dhabi’s museums as a
governance and cultural leadership model; Abdulrahman Alrogaiey, ; ﻤﺘﺤفﻞ ﻤﺴﺘﻘﻟ
ب ا; Mohammed Hussam Zahim اقﺮاﻟﻌ ي
ف اﻟﻤﺘﺎﺣﻒ أدارة ﺗﺎﺗﺠﺔ إﺳIrak, Institut Goethe; Maha Alshebani, University of London, The role of museum leadership in
Qatar’s cultural diplomacy strategies
10:00 AM
Museums and Society
Moderator:
Abdulrahman Al Ishaq –
Director of Public Art
Marwa Hamada, Fayoum university, Museum management and society awareness: Kom-Ushim museum Vs
Caricature museum in Fayoum- Egypt; Najla Al Thani, Qatar Museums, Public art, national identity and Islam in
the Gulf: a study of the miraculous journey exhibition and the National Museum of Qatar; Muhammad Y
Gamal, Translation in museums: the director’s dilemma, Amira Abdelkader, Department of International
Cooperation -National Museum of Egyptian Civilization NMEC Mastering the art of leadership in the museums of
the 21st century; Imed Ben Salah, University of Tunis, In order to create a Museum of Olive Tree in Tunisia.
11:00 AM
Museum audiences &
cultural leadership
Moderator: Martha
Ikabongo – INTERCOM
Board member
Sirine Abdelhedi, Embassy of the State of Qatar, Paris, Characteristics of effective leadership and its impact on
implementation of principles of good governance in regional museums; Rania Sawalhi, Dadu, Children Museums
of Qatar, Museum school programs in Qatar: opportunities and challenges; Farah Al Taweel, Qatar Museums,
Our future museum leaders: a co-created framework with children for children; Jenny Brown, Allegra Burnette,
Qatar Museums, Leading digital transformation through product management at Qatar Museums; Moataz
Mahmoud Elmekawy, Children's Civilization and Creativity Center, The future of museums education In the
digital transformation age.
12:00 PM
New museums and new
ideas
Moderator: M. Cristina
Vannini - INTERCOM
Secretary
Shaika Nasser Al-Nassr, Tara Desjardins, Qatar Museums, Making museums: the Museum of Islamic Art, Doha
and the future of museography; Hedhili Hela, University of Sousse, The future of art museums in the Arab world;
Marta Oliveira, Al Yaqdhan Al Harthi, Oman Across Ages Museum, Oman Across Ages Museum: a model for
museum’s capacity building in the Middle East; Jawaher Alkuwari, Qatar Museums, Innovation and
museumleadership, a case study on NMOQ.
1:00 PM CLOSING REMARKS
Sheikha Maryam Ali Al Thani – Qatar Museums;
Dr. Goranka Horjan – INTERCOM Chairperson
1:30 PM Lunch
2:00 PM Qatar Museums cultural activities