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Дата изменения: Fri Jul 9 11:10:27 2004 Дата индексирования: Mon Oct 1 20:24:46 2012 Кодировка: |
D. Smirnova
Yekaterinburg
"Globalization" is rapidly shrinking the
differences between foreign and domestic concerns in areas such as business, environmental
protection, health, education and other fields. It is highly important for any nation to
function successfully in and be able to meet the challenge of an increasingly
interdependent world.
The leadership positions and roles of the country also depend on
building ties with those who will guide the political, cultural and economic development
of their countries in the future. The increasing engagement with other counties and
nationalities requires a greater awareness and broad understanding of cultural diversity
and recognition of shared values and challenges as well as the differences between nations
and peoples.
Increasingly, the achievement of educational, economic, political,
scientific, and cultural goals requires that efforts be collaborative, crossing national
borders and involving broad networks of partners and variety of international expertise.
To start to compete successfully in the global economy and be able to
maintain and sustain national security, it is important:
The necessity to develop and recognize the need to
see the world through another person's eyes and to understand the international dimensions
of the problems most countries confront is evident. Hence western governments, foundations
and non-profit organizations over the last 10-15 year have been flooding the universities
and institutions of the former soviet countries with recourses, both material and human
and the United States are among those countries with Agency for International Development
(USAID); Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (BECA); Department of Education and
Department of Defense Programs as four leading federal agencies which have had and
continue to have significant sponsored educational and cultural exchanges. Because
international exchange and training are critical to all sectors of society, above twenty
federal departments and agencies administer over sixty specialized programs besides those
mentioned above.
Thus, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the United States
Department of State funds different exchange programs and training for American and
international students, scholars, and businessmen to study and do research in different
countries and the United States. They are administered by well-known organizations such as
ACTR/ACCELS, IREX, OSI and others. During its 21 year Bureau (former USIA) has aimed to
promote the international interest of/to the United States through understanding,
informing, and influencing foreign publics and broadening the dialogue between different
countries.
Overall U.S. government funding for international exchanges has shrunk
over the past few years. For example, in constant dollars, State Department program
funding for exchanges has declined 31% since 1993, from $243.3 million to $166.6 million
in 2000.
While the budget for the some programs was decreased (i.e. Fulbright
program), federal funds have been invested in several new initiatives that are largely
oriented to the former Soviet Union and the New Independent States. The Regional Scholars
Exchange Program selects scholars and university faculty in the social sciences and the
humanities from all NIS countries and Ph.D. candidates and scholars in the U.S and matches
them with the host institutions in the U.S and NIS. A similar set of Freedom Support Act
Fellowships in Contemporary Issues allows government officials, leaders of nongovernmental
organizations, and other professionals to receive fellowships in the U.S Universities and
other organizations. More than half a dozen of other acts, including Edmund S. Muskie
Graduate and Edmund S. Muskie Ph.D. fellowship programs, extend higher educational
opportunities to students and scholars from former Soviet Union and eastern and central
Europe.
The proliferation of such programs, when other exchange funds have
fallen off, signals the change in global focus that has occurred with the ending of the
Cold War. Now, in a changed world, people have the opportunity to take a new look at the
history and just those years that had put both Russia and the United States as enemies and
total allies. Now, as a new Administration has just taken office in the U.S and they have
its own priorities and policy toward the NIS but hopefully there is a reason to believe
that the research, scientific, cultural and educational programs sponsored by the U.S
State Department and other private funds will not be any less important for shaping policy
under the new Administration than under the past one.