Friday, 8 April 2016
University of Geneva
From
the time of its creation in 1559 by Jean Calvin, right up to the recent
discovery by University astrophysicists of extrasolar planets, the University
of Geneva has continued to grow and develop while maintaining its longstanding
tradition of excellence with an international angle.
The
University of Geneva (UNIGE) is the second largest university in
Switzerland and is a public institution of the Republic and Canton of Geneva.
It pursues three missions: Teaching (classes are, in general, taught in French),
research, and service to the wider community.
The
UNIGE is composed of seven faculties: Sciences, Medicine, Arts, Social Science
and Economics, Law, Theology, Psychology and Educational Sciences and the
School of Translation and Internpretation. There also several interdisciplinary
centres (informatics, neurosciences and environment). Having completed its
transition to the "Bologna System" in 2007, UNIGE is now part of the
European Space of Higher Education. It offers more than 340 types of degrees
and more than 200 Continuing Education programmes covering an extremely wide
variety of fields: exact sciences, medicine and humanities.
UNIGE
develops its priorities along six axes: life sciences (from gene to patient),
physical sciences (from atoms to galaxies), neurosciences (from neurone to
philosophy), historical sciences, environmental sciences and finance and
society. UNIGE is host to three National Centres of Competence in Research:
Frontiers in Genetics, Materials with Novel Electronic Properties (MaNEP) and
Affective Sciences.
Through
its participation in the League of European Research Universities (LERU), UNIGE
stands out as one of the 20 best research universities in Europe. It is also a
member of other international networks: the International Forum of Public
Universities (FIUP), which brings together some twenty universities, that are
recognized within their country for the importance they give to research and
their sound contribution to the development of society, and the Coimbra Group,
an association of long-established European multidisciplinary universities
meeting high international standards and committed to creating special academic
and cultural ties in order to promote internationalisation, academic
collaboration, excellence in learning and research, and service to society.
UNIGE
is active in the European Union Framework Programme for Research and
Technological Development, and regularly collaborates with institutions such as
the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), the European Synchrotron
Radiation Facility (ESRF), the European Southern Observatory (ESO), a European
organization for research in astronomy, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the
NASA. Moreover, it maintains a privileged connection with the European Centre
for Nuclear Research (CERN). Based on its unique international presence in
Europe, UNIGE has continuously strengthened its ties with the international and
nongovernmental organizations established in Geneva, such as the United Nations
Organization (UNO), the World Health Organization (WHO) the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU), or the International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC).
WEBSITE:
https://www.euruni.edu
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