European studies
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
European studies is a field of study offered by many academic colleges and universities that focuses on the current development of European integration. It basically consists of a combination of several subjects, including European history, European law, economics and sociology. Most universities expand the subject to cover aspects that encompass Europe but not necessarily European integration, for example: European culture, European literature and European languages.
The study is a combination of humanities and social sciences. Disciplines used:
- Cultural studies
- Economics
- European languages
- Geography
- History
- Law
- Linguistics
- Literature
- Public administration
- Political science
- Sociology
It is taught, for example, at the University of Münster in Germany, at the University of Karlsruhe in Germany; at the Bremen University of Applied Sciences in Germany; at the University of Coimbra and University of Lisbon in Portugal; at the University of Amsterdam, University of Twente and Universiteit Maastricht in the Netherlands; at the University of Southern Denmark in Denmark; at Sofia University and Rousse University in Bulgaria; at Hong Kong Baptist University in Hong Kong; at Royal Holloway, University of London, the University of Aberdeen and the University of Bath in the United Kingdom; at the University of Delaware and University of Wisconsin-Madison [1] in the United States; at University College Cork in Ireland; at the Jagiellonian University and University of Warsaw in Poland; at the College of Europe in Belgium and Poland; and at the University of Melbourne in Australia.