




The curriculum responds to current labour market challenges, including talent shortages, demographic change, skills gaps linked to the digital and green transition, and the underutilisation of highly qualified migrant and Ukrainian professionals already living in European regions.
Through practical employer-oriented training, the curriculum provides organisations with tools, strategies, and frameworks to:
The curriculum emphasises that inclusive recruitment is not only a social responsibility approach, but also a strategic business response to recruitment pressures, workforce shortages, innovation needs, and long-term organisational resilience.
At the same time, the curriculum recognises the significant contribution that highly skilled migrant women and Ukrainian women can make to European labour markets through their professional expertise, multilingual competences, adaptability, resilience, and international experience.

This module focuses on practical strategies that help employers attract, recruit, onboard, and retain highly skilled migrant women and Ukrainian women. It covers inclusive job advertisements, skills-based recruitment, onboarding practices, legal frameworks, mentoring, flexible recruitment approaches, recognition of international qualifications, and employee engagement strategies.

This module introduces the foundations of inclusive workplace environments and Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) approaches within organisations. Participants explore psychological safety, communication norms, feedback culture, cultural misunderstandings, organisational inclusion systems, and practical tools for creating more supportive and inclusive workplaces for diverse teams, including migrant and Ukrainian employees.

This module explores how employers can collaborate strategically with migrant organisations, Ukrainian community initiatives, diaspora networks, women’s professional groups, and labour market intermediaries to improve access to qualified talent.
It presents practical collaboration models, mentoring initiatives, ecosystem mapping, and partnership-based recruitment approaches that support workforce diversification, talent acquisition, and long-term inclusion.

This module addresses the intersection of digital inclusion, green skills, sustainability, and workforce development. Employers explore barriers embedded in digital recruitment and onboarding systems, unconscious digital bias, inclusive digital practices, and the growing importance of green skills linked to EU sustainability and reporting frameworks.
The module also provides practical tools for improving accessibility, communication, and organisational readiness for the green and digital transition, while ensuring that migrant and Ukrainian women can fully participate in digital and sustainable labour market opportunities.
The curriculum combines:
The modules are designed to support practical implementation and organisational change, rather than theoretical DEI discussions alone.
The curriculum promotes a practical, business-oriented approach to inclusion, recognising highly skilled migrant women and Ukrainian women as an underutilised talent pool with significant professional, digital, multilingual, and green-transition competences that can strengthen European labour markets, innovation capacity, and organisational resilience.


