VP of international Relations Dr. Dalal Iriqat and Head of Human and Social Sciences Dr. Hanadi Dwiekat at Faculty of Graduate Studies at AAUP Ramallah welcomed the Representative of the Republic of Cyprus Mr. Savas Vladimiro in a workshop about the Cyprus conflict for postgraduate students.
Dr. Dalal Iriqat gave a presentation about the course in Peace process and Comparison for students in conflict resolution master program, which includes study cases of the peace process in Cyprus and Northern Ireland in addition to the Palestinian situation.
She also discussed the ways analyzing conflicts and understanding conflicts in different aspects that includes several factors from the parties, causes, approaches and trends.
The Faculty of Graduate Studies at the University Campus in Ramallah organized a workshop about the Cyprus conflict and the Cyprus peace process hosting the representative of the Republic of Cyprus Mr. Savas Vladimiro, as part of the "Peace Process Comparison" plan course which is taught by Dr. Dalal Erekat. Where the course contains study case for peace processes in Cyprus and Northern Ireland reaching to the Palestinian situation.
Dr. Dalal gave a brief overview of the course and focused on the methods of conflict analysis and how to put an outline to understand conflicts in different aspects, which includes theoretically several factors, reasons, approaches and directions. The representative of Cyprus skillfully applied the theory to reality by performing a presentation about Cyprus, He began with a historical view of the conflict and then the peace process and its stages.
AAUP Ramallah headquarter hosted Cyprus’s Consul Savas Vladimiro in a lecture he gave for comparative studies in negotiating and peace-building process course students’ within master's program in conflict resolution and development.
Dr. Dalal Erekat, course tutor, started the lecture welcoming the Cypriot Consul saying, “This lecture is part of the course outline that focuses on studying negotiations and peace processes cases through comparing Irish, Cypriot and Palestinian experiences”