Collegium Polonicum

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Collegium Polonicum
logo
founding 1992
Sponsorship Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan with European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder)
place Slubice , Poland
management Administrative Director Krzysztof Wojciechowski ,
Vice-Rector of the AMU for the CP Tadeusz Wallas
and Vice-President of the EUV for the CP Janine Nuyken
Students 1,680 (2004), 760 (2016)
Employee 27 (55 with library, technology and administration)
including professors 9
Website cp.edu.pl
Collegium Polonicum

The Collegium Polonicum is a joint institution of the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan ( Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu ) and the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder) for interdisciplinary scientific research and teaching on German-Polish, European, intercultural and border areas -Topics. At the same time, Collegium Polonicum is also a branch (Polish: filia ) of the Adam Mickiewicz University in Słubice , in whose building this community facility is located. This building was built for joint teaching and research with the European University Viadrina from 1992 to 2001. The Collegium Polonicum as a branch of the Adam Mickiewicz University is one of four branches of this university outside the home town of Poznan and, in particular, the seat of the General Education University in Słubice ( Uniwersyteckie Liceum Ogólnokształcące w Słubicach ).

Founding history

General view from Frankfurt (Oder)

The re-establishment of the Viadrina University in Frankfurt (Oder) as a European University after the fall of the Wall in 1989 was largely derived from the founding mandate to “fulfill special tasks in the German-Polish relationship in foreign policy and culturally with a view to Europe”. In order to secure the requirement of close scientific networking with Poland and the targeted allocation of a third of the student places to Polish applicants, cooperation with four Polish universities, including the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, took place in the founding phase. The project was initially only created from dormitories for Polish students at the European University in Słubice. However, the agreement on cooperation between the Minister for National Education of the Republic of Poland and the Minister for Science and Culture of the State of Brandenburg, signed on September 6, 1991, the day the European University Viadrina was inaugurated, already contains the statement that in Słubice, in addition to student dormitories, a joint teaching and research facility with a library and laboratory base is to be built.

Plaque in front of the Collegium Polonicum

As a result, the Adam Mickiewicz University developed the idea of ​​a “Collegium Polonicum” as an institution intended for joint teaching and research activities with the European University Viadrina. Its foundation on May 25, 1992 by the Senate of the Adam Mickiewicz University University decided. After political approval on both the Polish and German sides, a joint commission from Adam Mickiewicz University and European University Viadrina developed a concept for the Collegium Polonicum, which was approved by the Senate of European University Viadrina on December 19, 1992 and on December 22 1992 by which the Adam Mickiewicz University was decided. This was preceded by a symbolic laying of the foundation stone on October 16, 1992 as the founding act for the Collegium Polonicum. From 1994, the first lectures for students at the Viadrina European University took place in rented premises in Słubice. In 1995 the library of the Collegium Polonicum was founded in rented rooms. The first part of the Collegium Polonicum building was opened on June 10, 1998 and the entire building with library on February 1, 2001. With its opening, the Collegium Polonicum received the status of a branch (Polish ośrodek zamiejscowy ) or branch (Polish filia ) Adam Mickiewicz University; this also includes the library. On October 2nd, 2002 the cooperation between Adam Mickiewicz University and European University Viadrina at the Collegium Polonicum was signed with the signing of the agreement between the Ministry of Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg and the Ministry of National Education and Sport of the Republic of Poland placed on a legally binding basis via the Collegium Polonicum in Słubice . The basic consensus reached between the two universities in 1992 and confirmed at the state level in 2002 is that the construction and operation of the building will be financed by the Polish side and the establishment and maintenance of five chairs by the German side.

building

For the building of the Collegium Polonicum, the design of the Poznan architect Tomasz Durniewicz was selected in a restricted competition procedure organized by the Adam Mickiewicz University. Construction began in 1995. The first part of the building was opened on June 10, 1998 and the entire building on February 1, 2001. The Collegium Polonicum has a total floor space of 20,546 square meters. Of this, 14,579 square meters are allocated to the main building with around 32 seminar and laboratory rooms, two event halls and the large auditorium with around 1,000 seats, a cafeteria and the offices for scientific, technical and administrative staff; 5,967 square meters are allotted to the library part connected to the main building via a bridge. The construction costs were around 170 million PLN, the equivalent of 85 million DM.

Inner courtyard of the student residence campus in Słubice
Tourist information sign pointing to the Collegium Polonicum

In parallel to the building of the Collegium Polonicum itself, the Adam Mickiewicz University in Słubice built several dormitories. In October 1993 the first Polish students enrolled at the European University Viadrina in Słubice were able to move into a student dormitory built by the Adam Mickiewicz University called Amicus , which represented the completion of the abandoned shell of a nursing home. From 1994 onwards, based on a design by the Warsaw architecture firm Pracownia Architektoniczna BNS Warszawa, a student campus was built on a former barracks site, which in addition to seven residential buildings also includes areas for a student club, services and sports activities. The first rooms were ready for occupancy in 1998, and the entire project was completed in 2003 with the handover of a dormitory for doctoral students and university staff. In total, more than 1,100 dormitory spaces were created, mostly in single and double rooms, plus 40 two and three-room apartments for university members and around 40 temporary overnight spaces in single and double rooms. The construction of the Collegium Polonicum and the student campus was financed 65% from the budget of the Republic of Poland, 20% from European funds under the PHARE program and 15% from the Foundation for German-Polish Cooperation. According to the joint concept of 1992 and the inter-ministerial agreement of 2002, the Adam Mickiewicz University alone is the owner of the real estate and is obliged to bear “the ongoing maintenance and repair costs for the buildings as well as the costs of the ongoing equipment with material resources”. In 2013 Adam Mickiewicz University began to reduce its real estate portfolio in Słubice. In addition to several vacant lots that had been reserved for expansion of the dormitory capacity and sports infrastructure, the Adam Mickiewicz University sold the Amicus student dormitory to the city of Słubice, which set up 50 municipal apartments in it. The building, which was built as a dormitory for doctoral students ( Dom Doktoranta ), has been offered for sale by Adam Mickiewicz University since 2017 as a residential building with a usable living area of ​​1,951.4 sqm, land area 3,530 sqm.

Management and cooperation structure

In line with the 1992 conception for the Collegium Polonicum, both universities appointed a management team for the Collegium Polonicum in 1993, which consisted of a scientific director and an administrative director. They also took part in all meetings of the Joint Commission ( Komisja Mieszana ) , which also met regularly and consisted of the rectors, prorectors (from 1999 on the European University Viadrina: the President and Vice-Presidents) and chancellors of both universities all aspects of the cooperation between Adam Mickiewicz University and European University Viadrina were discussed. After the resignation of the Scientific Director in 1997, no new appointment was made. Since then, the management of the Collegium Polonicum has consisted of the administrative director and the prorector or vice-president responsible for the Collegium Polonicum on the side of the Adam Mickiewicz University or European University Viadrina. This is also maintained in the 2002 agreement, in which the mixed commission is replaced by a permanent commission ( Komisja Stała ) that is explicitly responsible for the Collegium Polonicum . This consists of the President or Rector of both universities, the Chancellors and the management of the Collegium Polonicum.

Head of the Collegium Polonicum

Administrative Director

Scientific Director

  • 1993–1997 Waldemar Pfeiffer

Vice President with responsibility for the Collegium Polonicum of the European University Viadrina

Vice-Rector with responsibility for the Collegium Polonicum at Adam Mickiewicz University

  • 1997–2002 Stanislaw Lorenc
  • 2002–2008 Janusz Wiśniewski
  • 2008–2016 Krzysztof Krasowski
  • 2016-2018 Beata Mikołajczyk
  • since 2018 Tadeusz Wallas

The statute of the Adam Mickiewicz University provides for a branch of the university, as represented by the Collegium Polonicum, to be managed by a branch director (Polish: Dyrektor filii ). There is no such position at the Collegium Polonicum.

Scientific staff at the Collegium Polonicum

Scientific staff of the European University Viadrina at the chairs financed by the State of Brandenburg for the Collegium Polonicum

In the 1992 conception for the Collegium Polonicum developed jointly by Adam Mickiewicz University and European University Viadrina, the financing of five chairs at the Collegium Polonicum was agreed by the European University Viadrina, while the Adam Mickiewicz University was responsible for the construction and operation of the Building and student dormitories. In the inter-ministerial agreement for the Collegium Polonicum of 2002, the state of Brandenburg undertakes to bear “the personnel costs for five professors and seven research assistants” in accordance with the regulations in force in Brandenburg, which also receive material initial equipment and annual administrative resources. According to the concept adopted by Adam Mickiewicz University and the European University Viadrina in December 1992, interdisciplinary academic work at the Collegium Polonicum was committed to three overarching goals:

  • the addition of research and teaching at the Viadrina European University, particularly in the field of Polish history, language and culture (hence the name Collegium Polonicum),
  • supporting the idea of ​​a united Europe
  • and the development and support of cross-border, regional and supra-regional cooperation.

On this basis, an agreement was reached on the establishment of chairs for:

  1. Polish language and culture,
  2. History of Polish-German relations,
  3. Regional integration under cultural and economic aspects,
  4. Regional research on environmental protection,
  5. Integration processes in Northeast Europe.

In fact, the establishment of the chairs did not proceed in accordance with these specifications without a new content-related guideline having been drawn up. In the course of the inter-ministerial agreement of October 2, 2002, the framework for the Collegium Polonicum as an interdisciplinary institution that is still valid today was set. It moved away from focusing on the Polish language, history and culture, but retained the name Collegium Polonicum. According to this, the spectrum for teaching and research encompasses all subject areas represented at the Adam Mickiewicz University and the European University Viadrina, but "with special consideration of the problems of European integration, the border regions and comparative research under international and intercultural aspects".

The budgets for five professors and seven research assistants financed by the state of Brandenburg for the Collegium Polonicum are spread over eight chairs:

  • Professorship for Entangled History of Ukraine,
  • Comparative Central European Studies,
  • German-Polish literary and cultural relations and gender studies,
  • Professorship for Monument Studies,
  • Multicultural Communication (Slavonic and English Linguistics and Language Use),
  • Professorship for Polish and European Private Law and Comparative Law,
  • Professor of Polish Public Law, including European and Business Law,
  • Professor of Polish Criminal Law.

The holders of these chairs hold a full professorship in two cases and half a professorship in six cases. Three professorships hold a full professorship or a chair at a university in Poland. In addition, a total of six post-doctoral and six non-post-doctoral research assistants are employed at the eight chairs on the seven funded budgets, most of whom have half or third positions. There are also doctoral students and assistants. The chairs financed by the State of Brandenburg for the Collegium Polonicum are not presented on the Internet pages of the Collegium Polonicum, but in German on those of the cultural and legal faculty of the European University Viadrina. Three pages of the chair also provide information in Polish. According to the 2002 agreement, the chairs financed by the State of Brandenburg for the Collegium Polonicum have an obligation to apply for participation in research programs of the European Union. Corresponding projects have not yet been carried out at the Collegium Polonicum.

Other academic staff from the European University Viadrina

The chair for culture and history of Central and Eastern Europe, which emerged from an endowed professorship of the Zeit Foundation, is the only chair at the European University Viadrina, located in the Collegium Polonicum, not financed by funds from the State of Brandenburg that were earmarked for the Collegium Polonicum. Various chairs of the European University Viadrina, for example that of the Center for Interdisciplinary Polish Studies, give the postal address of the Collegium Polonicum as their address in Poland, but are not spatially or structurally present there. A connection set up between the post offices of the European University Viadrina and the Collegium Polonicum can be used to ensure that correspondence from Poland to the European University and mail from Germany to the Collegium Polonicum can be sent as domestic mail. Collegium Polonicum and European University Viadrina can also be reached from the other country via national calls due to a radio link between the telephone systems of both institutions .

In August 2019, the European University Viadrina received funding from the state of Brandenburg (a total of EUR 4.16 million 2019-23) for four professorial positions and material resources as part of the European New School of Digital Studies project . These will be based in the Collegium Polonicum, which will also form the spatial focus of the events as part of the Master of Digital Entrepreneurship course , which is also financed . The special funding from the State of Brandenburg for a department that has not yet been represented at the European University Viadrina or the Collegium Polonicum is justified by the fact that the European New School of Digital Studies “will initially be established as a scientific institution of the Viadrina and, in the future, become an international faculty Participation of foreign universities is to be further developed ”. The Prime Minister Dietmar Woidke , who is also the Federal Government's Polish Coordinator, paid particular tribute to: “This step is the result of the deepened and good cooperation between the universities of Poznań and Frankfurt (Oder). I am pleased about the accompanying strengthening of the German-Polish scientific cooperation, which will have an impact on the region. ”On the other hand, the European University Viadrina, according to“ Leader ”, and the Adam Mickiewicz University were hardly involved in the development of the project.

Academic staff from Adam Mickiewicz University

With the opening of the Collegium Polonicum in 2001, the number of academic staff at Adam Mickiewicz University working there was stated to be around 65, including 25 professors. However, the majority of these were employees who had their workplace in the faculty buildings of the University in Poznan and who only came to the Adam Mickiewicz University during the lecture period to hold courses, predominantly in the initially extensive range of courses. Around two to four research assistants, including no professors, worked at the Collegium Polonicum for each course at Adam Mickiewicz University. The Collegium Polonicum did not differ in this regard from other branch offices of the Adam Mickiewicz University at the time. When the German-Polish Research Institute was founded jointly with the European University Viadrina in 2012, the Adam Mickiewicz University created ten positions for scientific research, five of them for professors and five for post-doctoral staff. According to its institute rules, the institute's task was to carry out research projects "in the field of European integration, border regions and comparative problems in the international and intercultural aspect". This was therefore identical to the research focus set out in the 2002 agreement for the Collegium Polonicum, to whose scientific profile it was intended to contribute. With the decline in the number of courses offered and the closure of the German-Polish Research Institute in 2018, the academic staff at the Adam Mickiewicz University at the Collegium Polonicum currently consists of six post-doctoral staff, including two who have completed their habilitation in the course “Polish Philology as a Foreign Language "Or teach in the general education university lyceum. A creation of positions at the Collegium Polonicum by the Adam Mickiewicz University is also not planned in connection with the implementation of individual courses as part of the Master of Digital Entrepreneurship course at the Viadrina European University. The quick release of human resources for a digital institute was the official reason for the closure of the joint German-Polish research institute with its 10 scientists at Adam Mickiewicz University in 2018 .

Europe Fellows

The opening of the Collegium Polonicum is linked to the “International Program for the Promotion of Young Scientists in the Field of European Studies - Europe Fellows ”. In this graduate program , which is funded annually with EUR 0.8 million by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research , 48 doctoral and post-doctoral students received a first edition (2000–2003) and 30 in the subsequent edition (2003–2005) other doctoral students receive a scholarship and material funds from the European University Viadrina to carry out their research and qualification projects supervised at the faculties of the European University or at the Adam Mickiewicz University. Jan C. Joerden was head of the graduate project until 2002 , then Janine Nuyken. Interdisciplinary research was carried out in the subject areas represented by chairs or courses at the Collegium Polonicum at the time:

  • Enlargement of the EU,
  • Urban development and management,
  • Protection of European cultural assets,
  • Management and Marketing in Central and Eastern Europe,
  • Cross-border environmental policy,
  • European legal approximation and comparison of European legal systems,
  • Cross-border economic and cultural cooperation (Central European studies from a comparative perspective).

Cooperation of the scientific staff

The most important scientific product of the Collegium Polonicum is the interdisciplinary series Thematicon, published by its management since 1995 . Their first five volumes were published by the Adam Mickiewicz University publishing house ( Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu im Adama Mickiewicza ) in Poznan. The series has been published by Logos Verlag in Berlin since 2002 . By 2019, 34 volumes had been published, including four by the management of the Collegium Polonicum itself on the topic of cross-border university cooperation. Of the remaining volumes were edited:

  • 5 from members of the chairs financed by the State of Brandenburg for the Collegium Polonicum,
  • 3 as part of the European Fellows doctoral program financed by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research from 2000 to 2005 ,
  • 9 from members of the German-Polish Research Institute that existed at the Collegium Polonicum from 2012 to 2018 and
  • 13 from other employees.

Six volumes deal with problems in law, six more deal with language and translation, seven with borders from a political point of view and eleven are devoted to aspects of interdisciplinarity, interculturality, transnationality and cultural transfer.

In addition, the Collegium Polonicum does not appear as an identifiable scientific institution with a specific research profile. Research projects such as publications, for example on the Internet, are not presented as projects at the Collegium Polonicum, but can be found on the chair pages of the respective university. In addition, there is no visible cooperation between the chairs at the Collegium Polonicum that would go beyond that with other chairs at the respective university. A constant practical problem in the cooperation between the academic staff of both universities is, among other things, the continuing wage gap between employees in Germany and Poland. For example, a research assistant with a bachelor's degree at the European University Viadrina earns around 920 EUR net working half a week , which corresponds roughly to the gross earnings of PLN 3,800 of a full-time PhD academic employee at Adam Mickiewicz University. The European New School of Digital Studies project, which began in the winter semester 2020-21, has its own website that does not refer to the Collegium Polonicum. The inclusion of the eight chairs financed by the State of Brandenburg for the Collegium Polonicum in the project is not explicitly planned.

Courses offered at the Collegium Polonicum

Degree programs from the European University Viadrina

Due to its location, the Collegium Polonicum is in close proximity to the university buildings of the European University Viadrina in downtown Frankfurt. It can thus be used as an event location by various courses offered by the European University Viadrina for individual lectures or seminars, mostly those with a Polish reference. For this reason, before Poland joined the Schengen area, lecturers and students at the European University even had the option of receiving a special document from the Federal Border Guard , which entitles them to "preferential clearance" at the border crossing. There are therefore no courses of study at the European University Viadrina that are spatially anchored at the Collegium Polonicum. Accordingly, the information on the number of students at the European University at the Collegium Polonicum represent interpretative assessments; For example, they are given as 100 students for 2004-05 and 250 for 2015-16. Currently, almost all of the extra-occupational, fee-based study program “Protection of European Cultural Assets” and the master’s program “Culture and History of Central and Eastern Europe” hold most of their events Collegium Polonicum, which is also the seat of the lead chair. The events of the temporarily existing, fee-based master’s course MBA Management for Central and Eastern Europe also mainly took place at the Collegium Polonicum. In the winter semester 2020-21, the European University Viadrina will start teaching the Master of Digital Entrepreneurship course , which is offered as part of its project of the European New School of Digital Studies . The events are mainly held at the Collegium Polonicum as the seat of the four newly created chairs.

Degree programs at Adam Mickiewicz University

In Poland, a boom in student numbers began in the 1990s, which far exceeded the spatial capacities of the existing state universities. As a result, numerous private universities and a wide range of distance learning courses ( studia zaoczne ) with attendance only on weekends were established. Numerous universities also began to offer certain courses of study both at their headquarters and in branch offices at other locations. These branch offices mostly consisted of rooms rented by local authorities; in some cases, however, construction investments were also made. In addition to the Collegium Polonicum, the Adam Mickiewicz University temporarily had seven other branches in the Poznan metropolitan region, four of which were in rented lecture buildings in the cities of Kościan and Ostrów Wlkp. , Śrem , Wągrowiec and three in purpose-built university buildings in the cities of Gniezno , Schneidemühl (Piła) and Kalisz . These branch offices had a total of 5,461 students in the 2008-09 academic year, for example. Seven courses were offered at the Collegium Polonicum, which could also be studied at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan - some with other specializations:

  • Applied Computer Science (Faculty of Physics),
  • Environmental protection (Faculty of Biology),
  • Space Economics (Faculty of Geology and Geography),
  • Philology (German Studies) (Faculty of Modern Philology),
  • Polish Philology (Faculty of Modern Philology),
  • Political Science (Faculty of Political Science and Journalism),
  • National Security (Faculty of Political Science and Journalism).

Some of the courses were offered at times as both face-to-face and distance learning. With the decline in the number of students in Poland (from 1.93 million in the 2008-09 academic year to 1.23 million in 2018-19) and the expansion of the spatial and personnel capacities at the headquarters (in the case of Adam Mickiewicz University especially on the new Morasko campus in the north of Poznan), the demand for degree programs in branch offices fell, which also often had a reputation for being of lower quality than those offered at the headquarters. With the reform of the Higher Education Act in 2011, further courses offered at branch offices were made dependent on the availability of academic teaching staff on site and the formation of corresponding units. A parallel offer of a course already being carried out at the headquarters of a university thus became impossible. As a result, numerous branch offices in Poland were closed or, in some cases, converted into corresponding units (so-called basic units, Polish Jednostka podstawowa ) with sufficient staff and independent study programs. This did not take place at the Collegium Polonicum because, as a branch operated in cooperation with a foreign university, it was not threatened with closure. The only permanent course offer of the Adam Mickiewicz University at the Collegium Polonicum is the course Polish Philology as a Foreign Language of the Faculty of Modern Philology; In addition, there are occasional offers from part-time courses (e.g. International Relations - Regional and Transborder Cooperation of the Faculty of Political Science and Journalism). The number of students in courses at Adam Mickiewicz University peaked at 1,150 in the 2004-05 academic year and has steadily declined since then (200 in 2015-16).

Joint degree programs from the European University Viadrina and Adam Mickiewicz University

There are three courses with double degrees from the European University Viadrina and the Adam Mickiewicz University, in which the teachers who have traveled from the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan as well as the members of the chairs financed by the State of Brandenburg for the Collegium Polonicum have their own hold respective lectures and seminars in the Collegium Polonicum:

  • German-Polish Law Studies / Polsko-Niemieckie Studia Prawnicze,
  • Master of Intercultural Communication,
  • Intercultural German Studies.

The German-Polish legal training, which has been offered since 1992, represents a successful model for how German and Polish students get to know their own and other areas of law together and in interaction and acquire the substantive and formal possibilities of being able to work professionally on the German and Polish sides . The number of students in joint courses is relatively constant between 430 (academic year 2004-05) and 310 (2015-16).

General education university college in Słubice

For the 2018-19 school year, the General Education University Liceum in Słubice (Uniwersyteckie Liceum Ogólnokształcące w Słubicach ULO) started operations in the building of the Collegium Polonicum. It is a private school run by the Adam Mickiewicz University, whose activities, according to the statute, are mainly financed from school fees paid by parents and other fees as well as grants from the Słubice district; Funds from Adam Mickiewicz University are not provided. In the school system in Poland , a lyceum is the secondary school leading to higher education entrance qualification. It encompasses grades 9 to 12. If you have three classes and three profiles (humanistic, biological-chemical and mathematical-physical), the fully developed Lyceum will occupy around half of the 32 seminar and laboratory rooms in the Collegium Polonicum.

Trivia

On Frankfurter Platz (Plac Frankfurcki) in Słubice , a few steps away from the Collegium Polonicum, a monument for Wikipedia was erected by the city of Słubice on the initiative of its administrative director Krzysztof Wojciechowski and unveiled in 2014. As the reason for this location, he stated that he saw “the same motive, the same spark in Słubice and Frankfurt as with the Wikipedians”: “May this monument remind us that thanks to the effort, the desire for knowledge and the Overcoming one's own borders a better future for the border area, Europe and all of humanity is possible. "

In the ten years of its establishment and the first years of operation of the Collegium Polonicum from 1996 to 2006, it was a popular setting for German, Polish and European politicians who created its aura as a supposedly emerging special place of German-Polish and European reconciliation and cooperation for media-effective appearances used. This was again observed between 2010 and 2013 as part of the initiative launched by the President of the European University Günter Pleuger and his Poznan counterpart to raise the profile of the Collegium Polonicum. Altogether there were two Presidents of the European Parliament ( J. Buzek , J. Borrell ), two Federal Presidents ( R. von Weizsäcker , J. Gauck ) and two Polish Presidents ( A. Kwaśniewski , B. Komorowski ), one President of the Bundestag ( W. Thierse ) and a Sejm Marshal ( J. Oleksy ), a Federal Chancellor ( H. Kohl ) and four Polish Prime Ministers ( T. Mazowiecki , W. Cimoszewicz , J. Buzek , M. Belka ), three EU Commissioners ( G. Verheugen , M. Barnier , C. Crețu ) as well as four federal ministers ( C. Nolte , H.-D. Genscher , J. Fischer , G. Westerwelle ) and five Polish ministers ( W. Cimoszewicz , M. Handke, W. Dąbrowski, W. Bartoszewski , R . Sikorski ) at the Collegium Polonicum. On the other hand, the Polish President Andrzej Duda chose the City Library as the venue during his stay in Słubice in 2019.

Web links

Commons : Collegium Polonicum Słubice  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Collegium Polonicum: Administration , accessed June 1, 2020
  2. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 76, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  3. cp.edu.pl: About us. , accessed on June 1, 2020
  4. ^ Agreement between the Minister for National Education and Sport of the Republic of Poland and the Ministry of Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg on the Collegium Polonicum in Słubice of October 2, 2002 , accessed on August 23, 2020 (PDF, 0.03 MB )
  5. ^ Statute of the Adam Mickiewicz University Unified version of April 27, 2020, § 188 No. 4, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF, 0.73 MB, Polish)
  6. Wydziały UAM , accessed on August 23, 2020 (Polish). The other three locations are the Institute for European Culture ( Instytut Kultury Europejskiej ) in Gniezno , the Netze Institute ( Nadnotecki Instytut ) in Schneidemühl (Piła ) and the Faculty of Education and Art ( Wydział Pedagogiczno-Artystyczny ) in Kalisz )
  7. Uniwersyteckie Liceum Ogólnokształcące , accessed on August 23, 2020 (Polish)
  8. ^ European University Viadrina: On the establishment of the supporting foundation , accessed on June 1, 2020
  9. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 18, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB). This date was referred to with the 25th anniversary of the Collegium Polonicum in 2016.
  10. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 40, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  11. Regulamin Biblioteki Collegium Polonicum w Słubicach , May 15, 2020, Chapter 1, No. 1, accessed on August 23, 2020 (PDF, 0.24 MB, Polish)
  12. ^ Agreement between the Minister for National Education and Sport of the Republic of Poland and the Ministry of Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg on the Collegium Polonicum in Słubice of October 2, 2002 , accessed on August 23, 2020 (PDF, 0.03 MB )
  13. Tomasz Durniewicz Architect sp. z oo , accessed August 23, 2020 (Polish)
  14. ^ Collegium Polonicum in Slubice opened as a joint institution , Science Information Service of June 11, 1998, accessed on June 1, 2020
  15. Student House UAM Slubice , accessed August 23, 2020
  16. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 54, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  17. Agreement between the Minister for National Education and Sport of the Republic of Poland and the Ministry of Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg on the Collegium Polonicum in Słubice of October 2, 2002 , Art. 6, accessed on August 23, 2020 (PDF, 0.03 MB)
  18. Burmistrz kupuje akademik za ponad 2 mln zł. (German: Mayor buys student residence for over 2 million PLN. ) In: Gazeta Lubuska from June 19, 2013, accessed on June 1, 2020 (Polish)
  19. UAM Oferta Sprzedaży Nieruchomości 2017 , accessed on August 23, 2020 (Polish)
  20. ^ Statute of the Adam Mickiewicz University Unified version of April 27, 2020, § 64, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF, 0.73 MB, Polish)
  21. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 40, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  22. ^ Agreement between the Minister of National Education and Sport of the Republic of Poland and the Ministry of Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg on the Collegium Polonicum in Słubice of October 2, 2002 , Art. 4 No. 1 and 2, accessed on August 23, 2020 (PDF, 0.03 MB)
  23. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 40, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  24. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 40, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  25. Agreement between the Minister for National Education and Sport of the Republic of Poland and the Ministry of Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg on the Collegium Polonicum in Słubice of October 2, 2002 , Art. 2 No. 4, accessed on August 23, 2020 (PDF, 0.03 MB)
  26. Collegium Polonicum: Professorships , accessed June 30, 2020
  27. Collegium Polonicum: Professorships , accessed on June 30, 2020. The mentioned page is linked to the individual pages of all chairs on which the mentioned information can be found.
  28. Agreement between the Minister for National Education and Sport of the Republic of Poland and the Ministry of Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg on the Collegium Polonicum in Słubice of October 2, 2002 , Art. 2 No. 4, accessed on August 23, 2020 (PDF, 0.03 MB)
  29. Center for Interdisciplinary Polish Studies , accessed on August 23, 2020
  30. ^ European New School of Digital Studies , accessed on August 24, 2020
  31. State funds 'European New School of Digital Studies' , Digitales Brandenburg from August 29, 2019, accessed on June 1, 2020
  32. ^ Nancy Waldmann, A First Step to the Fourth Faculty. In: Märkische Oderzeitung from August 29, 2019, accessed on August 24, 2020
  33. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 57, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  34. Regulations of the German-Polish Research Institute at the Collegium Polonicum in Słubice from August 15 , 2012 , announcements of the European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder), Volume 18, No. 3 from September 28, 2012, § 3 No. 2, accessed on December 24, 2012. August 2020 (PDF, 0.82 MB)
  35. ^ Nancy Waldmann, A First Step to the Fourth Faculty. In: Märkische Oderzeitung from August 29, 2019, accessed on August 24, 2020
  36. ^ Dietrich Schröder, Two universities - one digital institute. In: Märkische Oderzeitung from September 8, 2018
  37. Federal Minister for Education and Research supports Europa-Fellows , Science Information Service of April 14, 2000, accessed on August 24, 2020
  38. ^ Collegium Polonicum: Publications , accessed June 1, 2020
  39. WHK (BA) remuneration , valid from April 1, 2020, accessed on August 24, 2020 (PDF, 0.1 MB)
  40. Regulamin wynagradzania pracowników UAM from June 15, 2018 , p. 13, accessed on August 24, 2020 (PDF, 0.39 MB, Polish)
  41. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 76, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  42. ^ Wydział Rozwoju Miasta Urząd Miasta Poznania, Filie poznańskich szkół wyższych. , Poznań 2009, accessed on May 4, 2020 (PDF, 0.9 MB, Polish)
  43. CIS Szkolnictwo wyższe w roku akademickim 2018/2019 , Informacje sygnalne, 14.06.2019., Accessed on 24 August 2020 (PDF, 0.4 MB, Polish)
  44. Paulina Jęczmionka, Katarzyna Sklepik, Ośrodki zamiejscowe uczelni pójdą pod młotek? (German: University branch offices are going under the hammer? ) In: Polska The Times of October 11, 2010, accessed on August 24, 2020
  45. Urszula Mirowska-Łoskot, Uczelnie wyższe będą likwidować zamiejscowe ośrodki dydaktyczne. (German: Universities will close branch offices for teaching. ) In: Gazeta Prawna from April 28, 2011, accessed on August 24, 2020
  46. Collegium Polonicum never great likwidacja. (German: Collegium Polonicum does not threaten to close. ) In: Gazeta Lubuska from July 14, 2010, accessed on August 24, 2020
  47. Collegium Polonicum: Our courses of study , accessed on November 12, 2019 and August 24, 2020. In contrast to what is shown in the call-up dates, this is not a course offered jointly with the European University.
  48. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 76, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  49. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 77f., Accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  50. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 76, accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  51. Uniwersyteckie Liceum Ogólnokształcące , accessed on August 23, 2020 (Polish). The link can only be found on the Polish and not on the German-language homepage of the Collegium Polonicum
  52. Statute Uniwersyteckiego Liceum Ogólnokształcącego , accessed on August 24, 2020
  53. Dariusz Baranski: Pierwszy na świecie pomnik Wikipedii stanął w Słubicach . (German: The world's first Wikipedia monument was erected in Słubice .) In: Gazeta Wyborcza from October 23, 2014.
  54. Experiment and Knowledge. 25 Years Collegium Polonicum , October 2016, p. 117f., Accessed on June 1, 2020 (PDF; 3.43 MB)
  55. Nancy Waldmann: Słubice welcome the President from a distance . In: Märkische Oderzeitung from April 9, 2019, accessed on August 24, 2020

Coordinates: 52 ° 20 '54.9 "  N , 14 ° 33' 28.8"  E