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The Bologna Declaration
Below you will find the complete text of the Joint Declaration on the European Higher Education Area of the European Ministers of Education, convened in Bologna on 19 June 1999, and a list of the signatories.
THE EUROPEAN HIGHER EDUCATION AREA
Joint declaration of the European Ministers of Education Convened in Bologna on the 19th June 1999
The European process, thanks to the extraordinary achievements of the last few years, has become a increasingly concrete and relevant reality for the Union and its citizens. Enlargement prospects together with deepening relations with other European countries, provide even wider dimensions to that reality. Meanwhile, we are witnessing a growing awareness in large parts of the political and academic world and in public opinion of the need to establish a more complete and far reaching Europe, in particular building upon and strengthening its intellectual, cultural, social and scientific and technological dimensions.
A Europe of Knowledge is now widely recognised as an irreplaceable factor for social and human growth and as an indispensable component to consolidate and enrich the European citizenship, capable of giving its citizens the necessary competences to face the challenges of the new millennium, together with an awareness of shared values and belonging to a common social and cultural space.
The importance of education and educational cooperation in the development and strengthening of stable, peaceful and democratic societies is universally acknowledged as paramount, the more so in view of the situation in South East Europe.
The Sorbonne declaration of 25th of May 1998, which was underpinned by these considerations, stressed the Universities' central role in developing European cultural dimensions. It emphasised the creation of the European area of higher education as a key way to promote citizens' mobility and employability and the Continent's overall development.
Several European countries have accepted the invitation to commit themselves to achieving the objectives set out in the declaration, by signing it or expressing their agreement in principle. The direction taken by several higher education reforms launched in the meantime in Europe has proved many Governments' determination to act.
European higher education institutions, for their part, have accepted the challenge and taken up a main role in constructing the European area of higher education, also in the wake of the fundamental principles laid down in the Bologna Magna Charta Universitatum of 1998. This is of the highest importance, given that Universities' independence and autonomy ensure that higher education and research systems continuously adapt to changing needs, society's demands and advances in scientific knowledge.
The course has been set in the right direction and with meaningful purpose. The achievement of greater compatibility and comparability of the systems of higher education nevertheless requires continual momentum in order to be fully accomplished. We need to support it through promoting concrete measures to achieve tangible forward steps. The 18th June meeting saw participation by authoritative experts and scholars from all our countries and provides us with very useful suggestions on the initiatives to be taken.
We must in particular look at the objective of increasing the international competitiveness of the European system of higher education. The vitality and efficiency of any civilisation can be measured by the appeal that its culture has for other countries. We need to ensure that the European higher education system acquires a world-wide degree of attraction equal to our extraordinary cultural and scientific traditions.
While affirming our support to the general principles laid down in the Sorbonne declaration, we engage in coordinating our policies to reach in the short term, and in any case within the first decade of the third millennium, the following objectives, which we consider to be of primary relevance in order to establish the European area of higher education and to promote the European system of higher education world-wide.
- Adoption of a system of easily readable and comparable degrees, also through the implementation of the Diploma Supplement, in order to promote European citizens' employability and the international competitiveness of the European higher education system
- Adoption of a system essentially based on two main cycles, undergraduate and graduate. Access to the second cycle shall require successful completion of first cycle studies, lasting a minimum of three years. The degree awarded after the first cycle shall also be relevant to the European labour market as an appropriate level of qualification. The second cycle should lead to the master and/or doctorate degree as in many European countries.
- Establishment of a system of credits - such as in the ECTS system - as proper means of promoting the most widespread student mobility. Credits could also be acquired in non-higher education contexts, including lifelong learning, provided they are recognised by receiving Universities concerned.
- Promotion of mobility by overcoming obstacles to the effective exercise of free movement with particular attention to:
- for students, access to study and training opportunities and related services.
- for teachers, researchers and administrative staff, recognition and valorisation of periods spent in a European contest researching, teaching and training, without prejudicing their statutory rights.
- Promotion of European cooperation in quality assurance with a view to develop comparable criteria and methodologies.
- Promotion of the necessary European dimensions in higher education, particularly with regard to curricular development, inter-institutional cooperation, mobility schemes and integrated programmes of study, training and research.
We hereby undertake to attain these objectives - within the framework of our institutional competences and taking full respect of the diversity of cultures, languages, national education systems and of University autonomy - to consolidate the European area of higher education. To that end, we will pursue the ways of intergovernmental cooperation, together with those of non governmental European organisations with competence on higher education. We expect Universities to again respond promptly and positively and to contribute actively to the success of our endeavour.
Convinced that the establishment of the European area of higher education requires constant support, supervision and adaptation to the continuously evolving needs, we decide to meet again within two years to assess the progress achieved and the new steps to be taken.
Caspar EINEM Minister of Science and Transport
(Austria)
Gerard SCHMIT Director General of French Community
Ministry of Higher Education and Research
(Belgium)
Jan ADE Director General
Ministry of the Flemish Community
Department of Education
(Belgium)
Anna Maria TOTOMANOVA Vice Minister of Education and Science
(Bulgaria)
Eduard ZEMAN Minister of Education, Youth and Sport
(Czech Republic)
Margrethe VESTAGER Minister of Education
(Denmark)
Tonis LUKAS Minister of Education
(Estonia)
Maija RASK Minister of Education and Science
(Finland)
Claude ALLEGRE Minister of National Education, Research and Technology
(France)
Wolf-Michael CATENHUSEN Parliamentary State Secretary
Federal Ministry of Education and Research
(Germany)
Ute ERDSIEK-RAVE Minister of Education, Science, Research and Culture of the Land Schleswig-Holstein
(Permanent Conference of the Ministers of Culture of the German Landers)
Gherassimos ARSENIS Minister of Public Education and Religious Affairs
(Greece)
Adam KISS Deputy State Secretary for Higher Education and Science
(Hungary)
Gudridur SIGURDARDOTTIR Secretary General
Ministry of Education, Science and Culture
(Iceland)
Pat DOWLING Principal Officer
Ministry of Education and Science
(Ireland)
Ortensio ZECCHINO Minister of University and Scientific and Technological Research
(Italy)
Tatjana KOKE State Minister of Higher Education and Science
(Latvia)
Kornelijus PLATELIS Minister of Education and Science
(Lithuania)
Erna HENNICOT-SCHOEPGES Minister of National Education and Vocational Training
(Luxembourg)
Louis GALEA Minister of Education
(Malta)
Loek HERMANS Minister of Education, Culture and Science
(The Netherlands)
Jon LILLETUN Minister of Education, Research and Church Affairs
(Norway)
Wilibald WINKLER Under Secretary of State of National Education
(Poland)
Eduardo Marcal GRILO Minister of Education
(Portugal)
Andrei MARGA Minister of National Education
(Romania)
Milan FTACNIK Minister of Education
(Slovak Republic)
Pavel ZGAGA State Secretary for Higher Education
(Slovenia)
D.Jorge FERNANDEZ DIAZ Secretary of State of Education, Universities, Research and
Development
(Spain)
Agneta BLADH State Secretary for Education and Science
(Sweden)
Charles KLEIBER State Secretary for Science and Research
(Swiss Confederation)
Baroness Tessa BLACKSTONE of Stoke Newington Minister of State for Education and Employment
(United Kingdom)
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