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International Networks

The University of Tuscia takes part into a series of international networks.

The principal association groups and networks of which the University of Tuscia is a member are:

 

EUA - European University Association

Created in 2001 as a result of a union between the Association of European Universities (CRE) and the Confederation of European Union Rectors' Conferences, the EUA seeks to promote the development of a coherent system of research and European higher education by offering support to its member and encouraging constructive interaction among the individual universities.

Rete delle Università per lo Sviluppo Sostenibile RUS 

The Italian University Network for Sustainable Development (RUS) is the first experience of coordination and sharing between all Italian universities committed to the topic of environmental sustainability and social responsibility.

Agenzia per la Promozione della Ricerca (APRE)

APRE, the Agency for the Promotion of European Research, is a non-profit research organization.
For over twenty-five years, APRE, in close collaboration with the Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR), has provided its members as well as businesses, government agencies, and private individuals, information, support and assistance for participation in national and European programmes and collaborative initiatives (today, with particular reference to Horizon 2020) in the field of Research, Technological Development and Innovation (RTDI) and in the transfer of research results.

The European Fusion Education Network (FuseNet)

This Association is a platform for the coordination of European fusion education and is driven by the notion that the students of now will be the researchers, engineers and pioneers of the future. By connecting and facilitating educators and students across Europe, it builds on this understanding and is the place to be for bright and motivated people. It stimulates students to get in touch with the work field connecting academia with industry and supporting student mobility.

Hydrogen Europe Research

Hydrogen Europe is the European Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Association. It currently represents more than 160 industry companies, 78 research organizations as well as 21 National Associations.
The association partners with the European Commission in the innovation programme Fuel Cells and Hydrogen Joint Undertaking (FCH JU).

Global Compact Network Italia

The Global Compact Network Italy (GCNI) was established with the primary purpose of contributing to the development of the UN Global Compact in Italy, an initiative for the promotion of a culture of corporate citizenship fostered and managed by the United Nations on a global scale.

European Public Law Organization (EPLO) – Atene – Grecia

The EPLO is an international organization dedicated to the creation and dissemination of knowledge in the area of Public Law lato sensu and Governance, including but not limited to, inter alia, national, comparative and European public law, human rights law and environmental law and the promotion of European values for a better generation of lawyers and democratic institutions worldwide.

The EPLO was established in 2007 in Athens, Greece, as the continuation of the European Public Law Center (EPLC), a non-profit institution of international character, established in 1995 under the Law of the Hellenic Republic. To this date, it has developed, organized, promoted and supported more than 200 educational, research, training, institution building and other activities and has provided assistance to democratic institutions in more than 70 countries. In order to accomplish its purposes, the EPLO promotes the cooperation with other institutions, organizations and bodies in particular within the United Nations system. The EPLO has been granted the Observer Status at the General Assembly of the United Nations, at the World Intellectual Property Organization, the International Labor Organization and the International Organization for Migration.

 

Consorzio Universitario Italiano per l’Argentina (CUIA)

Il CUIA nasce nel 2002 come progetto d’internazionalizzazione del sistema universitario italiano, grazie al finanziamento del Ministero per l’Istruzione, l’Università e la Ricerca (MIUR), inizialmente tra 14 Università pubbliche italiane. Sotto il coordinamento dell’Università di Camerino, nel 2004 il progetto diventa un “consorzio” che ha come obiettivo quello di favorire i rapporti inter-universitari tra Italia e Argentina. Oggi il Consorzio conta 27 Università associate ed è presieduto dal Rettore di UniCam, prof. Flavio Corradini.

Il CUIA è operativo in Italia e in Argentina, sostiene attivamente progetti di ricerca congiunti, così come la mobilità di studenti, docenti e ricercatori, ed in particolare, dei dottorandi. Quest’ultima attività, la promozione e sostegno della mobilità dei dottorandi italiani ed argentini, è stata infatti riconosciuta nel Protocollo esecutivo tra il governo italiano e il governo argentino di collaborazione culturale ed educativa per gli anni 2014-2018.