The University of Glasgow has launched its first-ever course to be supported by the European Commission’s prestigious Erasmus Mundus programme.

The two-year International Masters in Russian, Central and East European Studies (IMRCEES) programme received funding to support up to 20 student scholarships and 35 academic exchange visits. The value of the funding for the 2012/14 edition of the IMRCEES course is around €800,000.  30 students will take part in the programme this academic year.

The IMRCEES is offered by a University of Glasgow-led consortium consisting of 10 partner universities and a network of international non-academic partners stretching from Canada to Azerbaijan.

The Erasmus Mundus double-degree course, the only one of its kind available at a UK university, is intended for students wishing to pursue a career in government policy-making, the business world, diplomatic service, international organisations and media.

It offers students a year of study in Glasgow followed by a second year at one of five partner universities. Each of the universities, in Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Poland or Kazakhstan, offer a unique specialist study track as well as tailored language training. Dissertation research opportunities are available at the Consortium’s associate universities in Azerbaijan, Canada, Georgia, Russia and Ukraine. Opportunities for student internships also exist within the IMRCEES consortium’s network of non-academic partners.

The Erasmus Mundus programme, launched in 2004, is administered by the European Commission and provides financial support for higher education institutions as well as scholarships for individuals.

Dr Clare McManus, IMRCEES Academic Director at the University of Glasgow, said: “Less than one in 10 applications for Masters courses to receive Erasmus Mundus recognition are successful, so we’re very pleased that the IMRCEES programme has achieved this recognition.

“The history of the former socialist region of Russia and Central and Eastern Europe has had a huge impact on the shape of the world and it will continue to do so in the 21st century.

“Graduates from the course will be equipped with the skills to address the socio-economic, political and security challenges of the EU and its neighbours in Central Asia, the Caucasus and Caspian Sea Basin, Russia, and Central and Eastern Europe including the Baltic Sea region.”

Find out more

 


For more information contact Cara MacDowall in the University of Glasgow Media Relations Office on 0141 330 3683 or email Cara.macdowall@glasgow.ac.uk

The IMRCEES Consortium is composed of five European Universities and six non-European universities and seven non-educational associate partners.

 

Double degree University partners:

The University of Glasgow

Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary

The Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland

The University of Tartu, Estonia

The University of Turku, Finland

KIMEP University, Kazakhstan

 

Associate University partners:

Lobachevsky State University of Nizhni Novgorod, Russia

Western University, Ontario, Canada

National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine

Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy, Azerbaijan

Ilia State University, Georgia

 

Non-educational associate partners:

The Scottish Government

The Georgian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Georgia

The Budapest Institute for Public Policy, Hungary

The Eurasia Foundation of Central Asia, Kazakhstan

Albion Overseas Ltd., UK

The Scotland-Russia Forum, UK

The Confederation of Employers of Ukraine, Ukraine

 

First published: 12 September 2012