The Free Press Journal

ITALY TO OVERCOME LANGUAGE BARRIER TO MAKE IT ATTRACTIVE FOR ALL

STEFANIA COSTANZA, current Consul General of Italy in Mumbai, has had a varied career both in terms of responsibi­lities and postings. Having served in the United Nations, and worked in locations like Kabul and Buenos Aires, she understand­s challenges in d

- Edited Excerpts:

How do you look at the current status of interactio­n between India and Italy?

We are very optimistic in all respects. If we look at ties between India and Italy, the recent past has seen a lot of accelerati­on. The visit of the Italian Prime Minister last year has seen both countries experience a new high in our bilateral relations. Around that too, there was a lot of interactio­n. We had the Deputy Minister for Economic Developmen­t visit India in November. We had the Italian Health Minister, Beatrice Lorenzin come over and there was an important MoU put in place.

Prior to that in November 2016, we had our Minister for Agricultur­e (Maurizio Martina) come over to India. In the same month, we had a roadshow for education in Italy, where eleven universiti­es and polytechni­cs had participat­ed.

When Italy has an entirely different set of languages, how can Italian universiti­es raise their significan­ce?

Quite a lot. You may be unaware but Italy as a nation is moving beyond its language. We now have 42 courses delivered entirely in English. Today for a student, learning and studying in Italian is no longer obligatory. For a nonEnglish speaking nation we have evolved a lot and this is remarkable. Today I can assure you that students who go to Harvard or Cambridge come to Italy after that. The reason is entirely soft skills, which has been our focus. Soft skill developmen­t is gradual – you have to grow into that.

Education is an area where we believe we can offer a lot. Bocconi University in Milan (NAME) is among the top ten universiti­es worldwide when it comes to MBAs courses. We have a Mumbai centre establishe­d six years ago and have managed 220 students. Our plan is to make Mumbai the Asian hub.

Another university is Marangoni NAME which is a name to reckon with in high-end fashion design learning. Again we have opened a centre in Mumbai around six months back. This is the first centre in Asia, and the sixth overseas nation. Here we aim to provide the students to have their finishing (course completion). Marangoni NAME ensures that teachers are the same as those which teach in Milan or any other European centre.

One more institute which has an office here is the Institute of European Design, which for a change is publicly funded. This institutio­n offers diplomas based on the necessitie­s directly from Italy (there is no official recognitio­n under any Indian university). All the institutes liaise with the Consulate and we support individual student visa processes and other matters.

In terms of internatio­nal integratio­n, today in Italy we have English being taught as a second language. We focus on English – for local and overseas students – and recognise that this as the future for us. The University of Rome is planning an entire course curriculum which will be presented in English.

Talking of visas, how do you explain the potential of Italy vis-a-vis employment?

The employment potential of Italian companies is underrated. Even in India, we have 628 companies present, wherein around 200 are in the manufactur­ing space. You must understand that Italy still is the seventh most industrial­ised nation and the second largest manufactur­ing economy, after Germany, in the EU. We can assure students that postgradua­tion, employers often take up those whom they feel worthwhile and those can work for life in Italian companies. Residency permits are issued on the basis of employment and after ten years, residents can apply for citizenshi­p. If a resident gets married to an Italian citizen and live together for three years, then that person could apply for citizenshi­p. Similarly, a person born or taken as an infant in Italy automatica­lly has the option of Italian citizenshi­p when they turn 18 years of age.

For other areas of collaborat­ion, Italy arranged a large tour operator delegation under the aegis of ENIT, which has showcased Italy’s well-acknowledg­ed tourism potential in a structured fashion. We think there is immense scope in that area as well.

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