Back High Prosecutorial Council of Serbia strengthens internal communication and conflict management skills

Belgrade 5 June 2026
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High Prosecutorial Council of Serbia strengthens internal communication and conflict management skills

Members and staff of the High Prosecutorial Council strengthened their skills in internal professional communication and conflict management during a two-day workshop held on 4–5 June in Belgrade.

Under the title “Internal professional communication and conflict management in the working environment”, the training focused on improving practical approaches to managing intra-institutional communication challenges, with particular emphasis on conflict prevention and resolution in professional environment.

Key areas addressed included assertiveness and advanced professional communication skills, conflict management mechanisms, mediation and responses in cases of crisis communication. The workshop also focused on strengthening capacities for effective internal communication between staff and members of the Councils, recognising different perspectives among individuals, as well as internal communication tools and channels ensuring conflict resolution.

The participants strengthened their skills in internal professional communication, re-thinking the expression methods and managing potential misunderstanding through practical exercised. The workshop contributed to improving the Council’s internal communication methods, fostering inter-institutional cooperation, dialogue and an improved legal culture.

This event was organised within the framework of the Action “Strengthening legal culture in Serbia and capacities of the judicial and prosecutorial councils”, part of the joint European Union and Council of Europe programme “Horizontal Facility for the Western Balkans and Türkiye”, in co-operation with the High Prosecutorial Council.

Work in this thematic area focuses on prisons and police (including human rights in policing, healthcare in prisons and safeguards against torture and ill-treatment), human rights standards in the judiciary (focusing on enhancing the application of case-law of the European Court of Human Rights), migration issues, the efficiency of justice systems (with a focus on analysing judicial statistics to optimise court administrations) and/or legal co-operation (which concentrates on increasing the individual independence of judges and prosecutors and the accountability of the judicial system).

*This designation is without prejudice to positions on status, and is in line with UNSCR 1244 and the ICJ Opinion on the Kosovo Declaration of Independence.