|
NEWSROOM
CROSSING
NEW BORDERS
By George Washington Today

Collaboration with Italian university will bring GW’s
political know-how to European students.
July 5, 2011
Lorenzo Montanari had a career as a political analyst
and journalist in Italy, writing on foreign policy
topics relating to Latin American and the Middle East.
But he wanted to learn about lobbying—a field that
is newly emerging in Italy. So Mr. Montanari quit
his job and came to Washington in 2009, where he enrolled
in the master’s degree in political management program
at GW’s Graduate School of Political Management. In
the two years since, he has not only become GSPM’s
first Italian graduate, but also helped broker an
agreement between GW and IULM University in Milan
for a collaborative graduate program focusing on political
management and communication.
“When I came to GW, I saw there
were no partnerships with Italy, though the school
has lots of partnerships with much of Latin American,”
Mr. Montanari explained. “Lobbying and political marketing
is a new field in Italy; a lot of young professionals
are looking into this field and working on political
campaigns.” Knowing that many Italian students would
be interested in the kind of practical graduate education
that GSPM specializes in, Mr. Montanari began researching
universities in Italy that could become educational
partners with GW. IULM University was a natural fit
because it focuses exclusively on communication degrees.
Representatives from IULM University came to GW during
fall 2009 to discuss plans for a potential program,
and GW eventually hired Mr. Montanari to manage it.
In April, representatives from both universities signed
an agreement outlining the new program, which is modeled
after GW’s existing GSPM partnership with the University
of Navarra in Spain.
“Higher education needs to respond to the interests
of people who want to work in democratic politics,”
said Christopher Arterton, a GW professor of political
management and the founding dean of GSPM. “We’re a
school of applied politics, and we’re working to help
other institutions of higher education start similar
programs.”
The new Milan program has three components: institutional
collaboration, faculty exchange and student exchange.
The institutional collaboration component of the agreement
will allow the two universities to work together to
plan joint seminars and conferences on political management
topics, as well as collaborate on developing curricular
materials, case studies, articles and other publications.
The faculty exchange portion of the program kicked
off during several weeks in May, when four GW professors
traveled to Milan to teach intensive two-day seminars
on topics like political game strategies, digital
political communication, crisis communication and
campaign organization to 28 Italian students enrolled
in IULM University’s social, political and institutional
communication management program.
Roberto Izurieta, a GW assistant research professor
of political management who is also involved with
GSPM’s Latin America program, was one of the visiting
professors. He was impressed by the Italian students’
quick adaptability to the U.S. style of teaching,
which tends to be much more interactive than the lecture-style
classes that predominate in Europe. “All the questions
and comments the students made were at a very high
level,” Mr. Izurieta said.
Dr. Arterton, who taught a seminar on political game
strategies in Milan, said the students showed “an
enormous amount of engagement and excitement” during
a simulation of conflict within a political campaign
that they participated in during the class.
Next spring, the student exchange component of the
program will bring approximately 25 Italian students
to GW to take classes and collaborate on research
projects with GSPM graduate students and faculty for
several weeks. In the future, GSPM students may also
travel to Milan to study on IULM University’s campus.
Mr. Montanari, who worked with faculty members both
at GW and at IULM University to advocate for the program,
said that political management and lobbying are becoming
increasingly important in Italy, especially as they
relate to European Union matters in the EU capital
of Brussels. “In Italy, they recognize that knowing
how to advocate for your interests is crucial for
democracy,” he said. “In Brussels, everything works
through lobbying action and public affairs.”
And although Italy currently has no national lobbying
act—lobbyists cannot register and work at the national
level as in the United States—regional lobbying regulations
exist, and numerous proposals for national lobbying
laws are working their way through Italy’s government.
Italian students who train in the U.S. through the
IUML University-GW partnership will be well-prepared
to become lobbyists in Italy when the laws are passed,
Mr. Montanari said. “The students really want to learn
from practitioners in the field. They’ll learn the
American way to work in the field—GW has a specific
program of political communication and issue management
that is new for Italy, in terms of techniques.”
Mr. Izurieta stressed that the Milan program’s success
will lie in its collaborative spirit. “We can’t go
there and tell them, ‘This is how you do it—do it
as we do,’” he said. “We say, ‘This is how we do it’
and we start a conversation that requires the participation
of the students. It’s up to them to know what will
be useful, the adjustments they need to make, and
what parts of campaigning that we use are relevant
to their politics and culture.”
|