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Hello! Guten Tag! Bonjour!
No
Matter how it is said, it means the same.
The
European Studies Program at Slippery Rock University is a
groundbreaking program to help SRU students understand the unique
and incredible history of the European Continent. By
understanding Europe, students can learn how thier lives have and
will be effected. Today, we see the formation of a new
Europe, one that being formed from many individual countries.
How will this new European Union effect the United States?
How will the lives of Slippery Rock Students be changed by
this new Europe. That is just one of the questions that the
European Studies Program hopes to answer.
The
purpose of the project is to develop a new interdisciplinary area
studies program in European Studies at Slippery Rock University
(SRU) as well as to strengthen both the undergraduate curriculum in
support of a European Studies minor and the teaching of modern
European languages. Such a program will complement existing
programs in Asian Studies and Latin American Studies at SRU, and
will lend further support to the International Studies minor and
the International Business major.
The
European Studies Program is one of the latest interdisciplinary
programs instituted at Slippery Rock University. By combining
several departments, it is the goal of the project to offer
students a unique look into Europe from all aspects of society.
By combining Art, English, History, the Modern Languages, and
Political and Governmental Sciences, the students are immersed in a
European curriculum. This program is also designed to help
the Faculty better their classrooms by offering them the
opportunities to investigate European influences in their own
departments and classes.

Today, "Europe" as a political entity or European culture as
a frame of reference includes those countries of western and
eastern Europe since the break-up of the former Soviet Union, as
well as those regions such as Scandinavia and the Mediterranean
that might be referred to, respectively, as northern and southern
Europe. What is commonly called the European Union actually
consists of fifteen Member States, which include the six founding
members: Belgium, Germany, France, Italy, Luxembourg, and the
Netherlands, plus Denmark, Greece, Spain, Ireland, Austria,
Portugal, Finland, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. The Treaty of
Nice calls for preparations for the enlargement of the European
Union to include countries of central and eastern Europe, the
Mediterranean and the Baltic.
In all, 12 countries are currently negotiating
accession to the European Union: Bulgaria, Cyprus, the Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland,
Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia. In addition, Turkey has been
recognized as a candidate for membership. Indeed, since the
break-up of the Soviet bloc countries of the Warsaw Pact, the
issues of European identity and European integration have become
central to political, social, economic, and cultural debates of the
21st century.
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