International grants 1
Subject is not scheduled Not scheduled
Code | Completion | Credits | Range | Language Instruction | Semester |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
206EMR1 | credit | 2 | 2 hours (45 min) of instruction per week, 29 to 39 hours of self-study | English | summer |
Subject guarantor
Name of lecturer(s)
Contents
- Geneal conditions and requirements for grant requesters (possibilities according to type of grant requester; according to their personal and financial possibilities, etc.).
- General financial and managerial aspects (accounting, tax, relations with the Finance office, personal burden for students, relation for other grant recipients).
- Finance from EU funds I (types of grants, requirements).
- Finance from EU funds II (examples, implementation).
- Czech-German futures funds, Pro Helvetia.
- EHP and Norska funds.
- Partial grants for artist mobility, Cross-border grant collaboration.
- Partial donation support in individual EU countries.
- Operational grants and subsidies.
- US finance opportunities.
- Cooperation and individual inter-state grant support.
- Overall economic evaluation of contributions for students.
- Summary.
Learning outcomes
- Students attain a bearing in internation calls for grant, their individual particulars and fundamental requirements.
- They attain knowledge of the administration of those grants, including preparations for grant applications and subsequent budgeting.
- Students will be able to judge the position of their project in relation to foreign grant opportunities and an overall evaluation of their contribution.
Prerequisites and other requirements
A fundamental bearing in the Czech grant systems and a basic understanding of accounting and finance-management issues.
Literature
THROSBY, David. Economics and culture. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge university press, 2003.
VOGEL, Harold, L. Entertainment industry economics : a guide for financial analysis. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge university press, 2010.
GATTI, Stefano. Project Finance in Theory and Practice: Designing, Structuring, and Financing Private and Public Projects. Cambridge: Academic press, 2018.
Evaluation methods and criteria
- During the semester class participation is required; min 70% attendance.
- This course is concluded with the practical application of knowledge on a model example of an arts organization.
Further information
No schedule has been prepared for this course