Czech Academy of Sciences

The Czech Academy of Sciences
Akademie věd České republiky
Established 1784 Royal Czech Society of Sciences
1953 Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences
1992 Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
President Prof. Eva Zažímalová
Administrative staff
7771
4395
Location Prague, Czech Republic
50°04′54″N 14°24′51″E / 50.08167°N 14.41417°E / 50.08167; 14.41417Coordinates: 50°04′54″N 14°24′51″E / 50.08167°N 14.41417°E / 50.08167; 14.41417
Website http://www.avcr.cz/

The Czech Academy of Sciences (abbr. CAS, Czech: Akademie věd České republiky, abbr. AV ČR) was established in 1992 by the Czech National Council as the Czech successor of the former Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences and its tradition goes back to the Royal Bohemian Society of Sciences (founded in 1784) and the Emperor Franz Joseph Czech Academy for Sciences, Literature and Arts (founded in 1890).The Academy is the leading non-university public research institution in the Czech Republic. It conducts both fundamental and strategic applied research.

It has three scientific divisions, namely the Division of Mathematics, Physics, and Earth Sciences, Division of Chemical and Life Sciences, and Division of Humanities and Social Sciences. The Academy currently manages a network of sixty research institutes and five supporting units staffed by a total of 6,400 employees, over one half of whom are university-trained researchers and Ph.D. scientists.

The Head Office of the Academy and forty research institutes are located in Prague, the remaining institutes being situated throughout the country.

Institutes of AS CR

The main building of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague
A radioteleskop of the Astronomical Institute in Ondřejov
Jiří Drahoš, the president of the Czech Academy of Sciences between 2009 and 2017

The official structure of the AS CR consists of three areas (sciences about inanimate nature, life sciences, and humanities), each with three sections. Each of these 9 sections contains from 4 up to 8 institutes. An institut splits further to departments, laboratories, or working teams, depending on the size and the topic of the institute.

The Area of the Sciences About Inanimate Nature

Section 1: Mathematics, Physics, and Informatics

Section 2: Applied Physics

Section 3: Earth Sciences

The Area of Life Sciences and Chemical Sciences

Section 4: Chemical Sciences

Section 5: Biological and Medical Sciences

Section 6: Biological and Ecological Sciences

The Area of Humanities and Social Sciences

Section 7: Social Sciences and Economy

Section 8: History

Section 9: Humanities and Philosophy

Literature

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