Umeå University

Umeå University
Umeå Universitet
Established 17 September 1965
Type Public, research university
Rector Prof. Lena Gustafsson
Academic staff 4,143
Students 15,850 (FTE, 2009)[1]
Doctoral students 1,300
Location Umeå, Sweden
Campus Urban
Affiliations EUA, UArctic
Website www.umu.se/english

Umeå University (Swedish: Umeå universitet) is a university in Umeå in the mid-northern region of Sweden. The university was founded in 1965 and is the fifth oldest within Sweden's present borders.

During the seventies the university became known as the "red university" due to a large number of student strikes and a large share of left-wing politically active students. Since then conditions have normalised and Umeå University now has over 15,500 full-time students, including master students. It has more than 4,000 employees, including 332 full professors.

Internationally, the university is known for research relating to the genome of the Populus tree (Life sciences), contributions to the Gleason problem and function spaces on fractals (mathematics) and its school of industrial design which gives degree programs in English open to students from all of the world. It is also the one of largest providers of distance education courses in the Nordic countries.

Contents

Institution

Organization

Umeå University has four faculties and nine campus schools, with additional campuses in the cities of Skellefteå and Örnsköldsvik. The total number of students enlisted to some of the 50 different study programs and 800 separate courses exceeds 29,000.

The University today has four faculties, listed below in alphabetic order:

Umeå University has nine Campus Schools, listed below in alphabetical order:

Research Centers

University Hospital of Umeå

Notable alumni

Faculty

Honorary doctorates

See also

References

External links