Academics
The international office
The International Office exists to facilitate the international mobility of both students and teaching staff and to coordinate the international activities of the Faculty at all levels. It is the Faculty's administrative center for a whole range of international programmes (undergraduate and graduate degree programmes, ERASMUS+, inter-faculty exchange agreements, etc.).
For more information, please visit the International Office.
Links
News
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Workshop of project InKoNa (Interkulturní kompetence mladých vědkyň a vědců z Česka a Bavorska)
On 6-7 May, the workshop of the project "InKoNa 2.0" took place under the guidance of Magdalena Burger and Jörg Wolstein (Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg).
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Call for Applications for the Annual Plurality of Memories: 4EU+ Fellowship at Charles University
We are pleased to share a Call for Applications for the Annual Plurality of Memories: 4EU+ Fellowship at Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic, for post-docs and advanced
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Eliška Ullrichová: "Issue Hierarchization: The Case of the European Council Agenda"
Eliška Ullrichová, a student of the doctoral programme International Area Studies, published her article "Issue Hierarchization: the Case of the European Council Agenda" in the multidisciplinary journal JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies. -
Doctoral conference of 2nd year students (June 2, 2022)
On Friday, June 2, the annual doctoral conference of our institute took place. At the conference, second-year students present and discuss their Ph.D. theses. This year we debated two theses in modern history and political science dissertation. -
Johana Kłusek: "‘Our Second Capital on the Banks of the Thames’: The Evolution of the Anglophilia of Czechoslovak Exiles..."
Johana Kłusek, a Ph.D. student in Modern history, examines Anglo-Czechoslovak relations during the second world war in her new study in English historical journal "Central Europe." -
Martina Kerlová: "Erich Heller’s Disinherited Mind: A Bohemian Jewish Germanist in Anglo-American Exile"
Martina Kerlová, a student of our doctoral program in Modern history, has just published the study “Erich Heller’s Disinherited Mind: A Bohemian Jewish Germanist in Anglo-American Exile.”