European Higher Education Area
Formation | March 2010 |
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The European Higher Education Area (EHEA) was launched along with the Bologna Process' decade anniversary, in March 2010, during the Budapest-Vienna Ministerial Conference.
As the main objective of the Bologna Process since its inception in 1999, the EHEA was meant to ensure more comparable, compatible and coherent systems of higher education in Europe. Between 1999 - 2010, all the efforts of the Bologna Process members were targeted to creating the European Higher Education Area, which became reality with the Budapest-Vienna Declaration of March 2010.
Denmark was the first country to introduce the 3+2+3 system at the universities outside GB and USA. See Bologna Process.
Public international law standards
- Lisbon Recognition Convention (Lisbon, 4 July 1997)
- Article 2 of the first Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights (Paris, 20 March 1952)
- Article 10 of the European Social Charter (revised, Strasbourg, 3 May 1996)
Documents
Colleges and universities in Europe
List of colleges and universities in Europe
See also
- Directorate-General for Education and Culture
- Bologna process
- Diploma Supplement
- Erasmus programme
- European Credit Transfer System (ECTS)
- Homologation
- Category:Lists of universities and colleges
- European Research Area (ERA)
- TEMPUS
- Lisbon Recognition Convention
External links
Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
- The Official European Higher Education Area website 2010-2020
- The Bologna Declaration
- European Cultural Convention (Paris, 19 December 1954)
- EUNIS (European University Information Systems)
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