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European University Institute

Coordinates: 43°48′10″N 11°16′58″E / 43.80278°N 11.28278°E / 43.80278; 11.28278
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European University Institute (EUI)
TypeIntergovernmental organisation
Established1972
Budget€93,700,000[1]
PresidentPatrizia Nanz
Secretary GeneralMarco Del Panta
Annually 130 postgraduate researchers for four years
Address
Via dei Roccettini, 9 - 50014
, ,
Tuscany, Italy
CampusSan Domenico di Fiesole
Websitewww.eui.eu

The European University Institute (EUI) is an international postgraduate and post-doctoral research-intensive university and an intergovernmental organisation with juridical personality, established by its founding member states to contribute to cultural and scientific development in the social sciences, in a European perspective. Its main campus is located in the hills above Florence in Fiesole, Italy.

The EUI is funded by its 23 Contracting States, the European Union (Erasmus+), and its own revenue, drawn from competitive research funding, partnerships with public and private actors, and executive education.

One of the flagships of the EUI is its doctoral programmes. Each year, it welcomes approximately 130 new PhD researchers at its departments of Economics, History, Law, and Political and Social Sciences. It also offers a selection of master’s programmes and executive education courses. The international student and early-stage researcher body is composed of approximately 1000 scholars representing over 100 countries.

Since 1993, the Institute has been home to the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSC), which focuses on the critical issues facing Europe, fostering problem-centred research and serving as a bridge between academia and policymaking. In 2017, the EUI established the Florence School of Transnational Governance (STG) with its graduate, fellowship, and executive education programmes.

The European University Institute is a member of The European University of Social Sciences, or CIVICA.[2]

History and member states

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The European University Institute (EUI) was founded in 1972 by the member states of the European Community.[3]

The EUI finds its origins in the advocacy for a European institute at the 1948 Hague Conference and the European Conference on Culture the following year in Lausanne. At the 1955 Messina Conference, when the members of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) gathered to assess that organisation's progress, the German secretary of state, Walter Hallstein, called for the establishment of a training centre for nuclear sciences.[4]

The idea remained largely dormant until 1969 when European leaders[who?] met in The Hague and resolved to fund a European University Institute (EUI) in Florence.[citation needed] By this point the idea had evolved from a centre for nuclear sciences to one focused on the human sciences, promoting a cultural exchange between member states.

Plans were put into motion with conferences in Florence and Rome in 1970 and 1971, when it was decided that the institute would be reserved for post-graduate studies and not directly a Community institution.[citation needed]

The six member states – Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg and the Netherlands – signed a convention in 1972 establishing the EUI as a pillar for research and development.[5][6] The EUI Convention entered into force in 1975, and the institute opened its doors to its first 70 researchers in 1976. Its mission, laid down in the 1970s, is to "foster the advancement of learning in fields which are of particular interest for the development of Europe".

Denmark, Ireland and the United Kingdom joined the European Community in 1973, and subsequently acceded to the convention establishing the EUI. In 1992, a new convention revising the 1972 convention establishing the EUI was signed by the then 12 Community member states.[7] It entered into force in 2007 when the last contracting state ratified the convention.

EUI contracting states must be European Union member states. As of December 2023, contracting states include all EU member states except Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, and Lithuania.[8][9]

Academic Departments

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Department of Economics

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The EUI Department of Economics provides PhD researchers and MRes students with course-based training.

Department of History

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The Department of History offers a programme of transnational and comparative European history supported by an international and multicultural faculty.

The Department’s research focuses primarily on the history of Europe within a global context from the late medieval period to the present.

Department of Law

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The Department of Law offers a PhD programme and an LLM.

Department of Political and Social Sciences

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The research programme of the EUI Department of Political and Social Sciences (SPS) places emphasis on political and social change within Europe at the national, sub-national, and transnational level.

Florence School of Transnational Governance

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The Florence School of Transnational Governance (STG) was launched in 2017

Historical Archives of the EU

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Fonds from the HAEU being moved.

The Historical Archives of the European Union (HAEU) was established following the 1983 decision of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) and the 1983 regulation by the Council of the European Communities to open their historical archives to the public.

A 1984 agreement between the Commission of the European Communities and the European University Institute located the Archives in Florence, at the EUI, and in 1986 the HAEU opened its doors to the public. It is the single, official archival repository of the institutions, bodies, and agencies of the European Union, and also holds more than 160 private archives of European personalities, politicians, movements, and associations that played an important role in European integration. It has been in its current seat, in Villa Salviati, since 2012. Users may consult the Archives' online database for descriptions of the documents, audiovisual materials, and artefacts in its deposits. Archival materials may be consulted in the HAEU reading room according to the thirty-years rule, or online where possible. The HAEU supports research on European integration through the administration of several grant programmes.

Doctoral and Master's Programmes

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Doctoral Programme

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The EUI offers structured doctoral programmes in the field of economics, history and civilisation, law, and political and social sciences.

Languages

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The EUI's Centre for Academic Literacies and Languages (CALL) provides language training in oral and written academic communication skills and facilitates social interaction in academic environments.

Major events

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The State of the Union

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The State of the Union is an annual forum for high level reflection on the European Union organised by the EUI since 2011.[10] The conference acts as a bridge between academia and policy making at the highest level in Europe, bringing together heads of state, EU representatives, academics, policy-makers, business and opinion leaders and civil society representatives to discuss and debate the key challenges and opportunities facing Europe and Europeans each year. Presidents, prime ministers, foreign ministers, as well as presidents of the European Commission and European Parliament have taken part in the event over the years.[11][12]

Rankings

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The EUI is one of the leading social science research institutions in Europe, and with around 1,000 researchers at various levels in their careers, it is also one of the largest graduate schools with around 90 international partners in research, exchange, and educational initiatives.

In 2024, the EUI was ranked 6th in the world in political science and among the first 100 in sociology, public administration, and economics on the Shanghai Ranking.[13] It was also ranked 31st in the world for Politics and International Studies, 51st in the world for History, and 89th in the world for Law in the QS World University Rankings.

The EUI Political and Social Science department was ranked 1st in Europe and 5th worldwide in the Hix ranking of such departments (which was published in 2004 and covered the period 1998–2002).[14] In November 2009, the same department was included in the Die Zeit 'CHE Excellence Ranking' for political science.[15]

Campus

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Badia Bell Tower

The European University Institute is seated in Fiesole on the Tuscan hillside overlooking Florence. The headquarters are at the Badia Fiesolana.

The campus is spread across 12 villas in the area, many of which date back to the Renaissance period and have been restored along with their landscaped gardens. The EUI campus also includes Palazzo Buontalenti in the historic centre of Florence at the Casino Mediceo di San Marco, which has been home to the STG since 2021.

Organisation

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The main governance bodies are the High Council (composed of the Member State delegates) and the Academic Council.[16] The President of the Institute is Professor Patrizia Nanz, who is assisted in her duties by the Institute's Secretary General, Marco Del Panta, and the Chief Operating Officer, Roberto Nocentini.

Institutional and research publications

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Corporate publications produced by the EUI include:

  • EUI Activity Report[17]
  • Annual Directory of EUI Academic Publications[18]

The EUI Research Repository contains the academic publications by the members of the EUI, with open-access, full text-versions of publications (working papers, books, contributions to books, e-Books, articles, and theses).[19]

Former presidents

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Notable former faculty

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Notable alumni

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References

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  1. ^ See The President's Annual Report for 2015. Florence: European University Institute. 2016. p. 98. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  2. ^ "CIVICA Campuses". www.civica.eu (in German). Retrieved 1 December 2024.
  3. ^ "European University Institute". Farnesina. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  4. ^ "A Brief History of the EUI". European University Institute. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
  5. ^ "Convention setting up a European University Institute". Official Journal of the European Union. С (29). 1976.
  6. ^ "Convention setting up a European University Institute". Government of the Netherlands. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
  7. ^ "Convention revising the Convention setting up a European University Institute". Government of the Netherlands. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
  8. ^ "A Brief History of the EUI". European University Institute. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  9. ^ "Convention setting up a European University Institute as revised by the 1992 amending Convention" (PDF). European University Institute. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  10. ^ (2011). May 2011. Florence, capital of Europe Comparing Europe at Palazzo Vecchio Festival d'Europa. Retrieved 10 March 2021
  11. ^ (2017). State of the Union 2017 conference by the European University Institute: Building a people's Europe European Union Newsroom. Retrieved 15 March 2021
  12. ^ "The 2019 EUI State of the Union will take place in Florence, 2-4 May 2019 (RSCAS, EUI, Italy)". Trans European Policy Studies Association (TEPSA). 25 February 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  13. ^ "Shanghai Ranking 2024". 2024.
  14. ^ Simon Hix (2004) 'A Global Ranking of Political Science Departments', Political Studies Review 2(3) 293-313. Archived December 21, 2004, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "CHE Excellence Ranking 2009". Archived from the original on 22 June 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2009.
  16. ^ "Convention setting up a European University Institute" (PDF). European University Institute. 2 December 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2024.
  17. ^ European University Institute. (2024). EUI Activity Report 2023 (PDF). Publications Office. doi:10.2870/185157. ISBN 978-92-9466-548-5.
  18. ^ European University Institute. (2024). EUI Academic publications and data (PDF). Publications Office. doi:10.2870/342421. ISBN 978-92-9466-544-7.
  19. ^ "Library futures: European University Institute, Italy". The Guardian. 7 August 2013. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
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43°48′10″N 11°16′58″E / 43.80278°N 11.28278°E / 43.80278; 11.28278