“…3,4 Developing intercultural competence, therefore, depends on the personal attitudes of individuals, which allow them to develop the knowledge and skills, which when internalised lead to a new way of thinking and behaving, the collective of which is intercultural competence. 3,5 As migrants arrive in the host country, they enter a 'third' space or zone of 'in-betweenness' 6 where differences in the migrant's own heritage culture and that of the dominant host culture are observed.…”