Prof. Adam Kola attended, among others, a meeting with Commissioner Ekaterina Zaharieva Three people stand (two women and one man). In the background, waves of the European Union Campus life

Horizon for european science

— Editors
share on twitter share on facebook share on linkedin send by email print

The development of research and higher education, including the future of Horizon Europe - these were the most important topics discussed at the European level this week. The discussions on programmes supporting European science were attended by dr habil. Adam Kola, NCU Prof., Vice-Rector for Science and YERUN Vice-President.

A key declaration for the development of research in Europe was made on 20 May by Ursula von der Leyen, at the European Union budget conference: - 'Our framework programme Horizon Europe will remain a stand-alone programme,' the European Commission President announced and stressed that Horizon Europe is a unique brand and the best-known research programme in the world. - However, it will be closely linked to the Competitiveness Fund. We need a seamless flow from basic research to implementation, from start-ups to scale-ups.

For Europe's research universities, the President of the European Commission's announcement is a signal of the way forward, based on combining excellence and competitiveness, sustainable career development and action for the region. The programme is also intended as an opportunity for emerging institutions and researchers across Europe, especially in the face of global competition.

Discussions on the future of research and higher education in Europe also touched on the key role that young research universities play in building inclusive, influential and sustainable research ecosystems. The YERUN Board representatives, including Prof Adam Kola, discussed priorities in the sphere of European research and innovation with Commissioner Ekaterina Zaharieva.

YERUN highlighted the important contribution of young universities to regional development, intersectoral cooperation and the creation of diverse and sustainable research careers, says NCU's Vice-Rector for Science, all of which are essential for building a well-balanced and competitive European research space.

The Young European Research Universities Network (YERUN) was established in 2016 as an alliance of young European universities with similar goals and values, such as openness, responsibility and inclusivity. The association's core mission is to shape a higher education environment in which young universities have a real impact on its role and character. The association is co-founded by 23 European universities and the NCU is the only Polish university in this group.

Rules od sharing information
share on twitter share on facebook share on linkedin send by email print

Related articles

The future of European science

Horizontal cooperation and groundwork


YERUN connects scientific potentials

Article contains a clip

Strategically on the future of YERUN


On Nicolaus Copernicus University web pages „cookies” are used. On use of cookies read in Privacy policy.
Cookies settings
On Nicolaus Copernicus Pages "cookies" are used in accord with our Privacy policy. We use "cookies" to improve functionality of our web page. Collected data are anonymized and are used to statistic and analytic purposes, for better adjusting content to user preferences and increase of quality. To approach this goal we use Google Analytics, CUX i Facebook Pixel to. Below we give you the ability of turning on/off this tools.
  on/off
Google Analitics

We use analytic tool Google Analytics, which give us information about user visits on our service (visited pages, navigation path, time of visit)

CUX

We use analytic tool CUX to regisiter visits on NCU News.

Facebook Pixel

We use marketing tool Facebook Pixel, to collect information about user visits and viewed pages.