Radboud University Nijmegen

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Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen | |
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Latin: Universitas Radbodiana Noviomagensis | |
Motto | In Dei nomine feliciter |
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Motto in English | Happily in God's name |
Type | private (publicly funded) |
Established | 17 October 1923 |
Affiliation | Roman Catholic[1][2] |
Rector | Han van Krieken |
Academic staff | 2,915[3] |
Students | 19,904[3] |
Location | Nijmegen, Netherlands |
Campus | Urban |
Colors | Carmine Red[4] White |
Affiliations | EUA FIUC/FUCE (IFCU) |
Website | www.ru.nl/english |
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Radboud University Nijmegen (abbreviated as RU, Dutch: Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, formerly Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen) is a public university with a strong focus on research located in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. It was established on 17 October 1923 and is situated in the oldest city of the Netherlands. The RU has seven faculties and enrolls over 19,900 students. The university features many student associations which encourage participation in extracurricular activities.
Contents
1 History
2 Campus
3 Academics
3.1 Education
3.1.1 International Master's programs
3.2 Research
3.3 University ranking
4 Radboud Excellence Initiative
5 Coat of arms
6 Notable alumni
7 Notable faculty
8 See also
9 Notes
10 References
11 External links
History

Heyendaal castle (now serving as the Faculty Club of the university) is of old the center of Heyendaal estate, where later on most Radboud University buildings have been established.
The first Nijmegen University was founded in 1655 and terminated around 1680. The Radboud University Nijmegen was established in 1923 as the Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen (Catholic University of Nijmegen) and started out with 27 professors and 189 students. It was founded because the Roman Catholic community wanted its own university. At the time, Roman Catholics in the Netherlands were disadvantaged and occupied almost no higher posts in government. After fierce competition with the cities of Den Bosch, Tilburg, The Hague, and Maastricht, Nijmegen was chosen to house the university. The subsequent Second World War hit the university hard. Many prominent members were lost, among them professors Robert Regout
In 2004, the university changed its name to Radboud University Nijmegen, after Saint Radboud of Utrecht, a bishop who lived around 900.[5]
Campus
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The university's medical department is linked to the Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, a large teaching hospital located on the Heyendaal campus along with the other university buildings such as the Huygensgebouw which contains the Natural Sciences. The Erasmus Tower and the Erasmusgebouw which contain the Faculty of Arts are situated at the south end of the campus next to the sports centre (USC).
Recent building projects included new on-campus residence halls, the sports centre and several science buildings.
The new Grotiusgebouw is recently built and will offer more room to the Faculty of Law.
The university campus is located next to Heyendaal train station. Frequent shuttle buses connect the university to Nijmegen Central Station and the city centre.
Radboud University is noted for its green campus, often listed among the most attractive in the Netherlands.[6] In 2017, a SPAR minimarket was opened which provides students with snacks and accessories. [7]
Academics
Education

Contemporary Radboud University buildings
Radboud University has seven faculties and enrols over 19.900 students in 112 study programs (37 bachelor's and 75 master's programs).[8]
As of September 2013, the university offers 36 international master's programs taught in English and several more taught in Dutch. There are nine bachelor's programs taught fully in English: American Studies, Artificial Intelligence, Biology, Chemistry, Computing Science, International Economics & Business, International Business Administration, English Language and Culture, and Molecular Life Sciences. International Business Communication, Psychology and Arts and Culture Studies offer English-language tracks.
All other bachelors are in Dutch, although most of the required literature is in English. Some exams, papers and even classes may be in English as well, despite the programs being Dutch-taught. All master's programs have been internationally accredited by the Accreditation Organization of the Netherlands and Flanders (NVAO).
International Master's programs
All English-taught Master's programmes are research-based programmes. They are taught within the Faculties of Arts, Law, Social Sciences, Medical Sciences, Sciences and Philosophy, Theology and Religious Studies, besides the Interfaculty Research school and the Nijmegen School of Management.[9]
Research
Radboud University is home to several research institutions, including the Institute for Management Research, NanoLab Nijmegen, the Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, the High Field Magnet Laboratory and the FELIX laboratory. Faculty members Anne Cutler (1999), Henk Barendregt (2002), Peter Hagoort (2005), Theo Rasing (2008), Heino Falcke (2011), Mike Jetten (2012), Ieke Moerdijk (2012), and Mikhail Katsnelson (2013) won the Spinoza Prize. Visiting professor Sir Andre Geim and former Ph.D. student Sir Konstantin Novoselov were awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics.
University ranking
The QS World University Rankings ranked the university 177th in the world in 2015.[10] The university scored 45th in a 2012 ranking of European research universities.[nb 1]
In 2016, the Times Higher Education World University Rankings put the university in 125th place worldwide.[12]
University rankings | |
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Global | |
QS World[13] | 177 (2015) |
Radboud Excellence Initiative
The Radboud Excellence Initiative was created with the dual purposes of attracting talents from every academic field to Radboud University while strengthening international bonds between universities worldwide. The initiative is a joint enterprise of both Radboud University and Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center. It provides two routes by which a researcher may come to Radboud University. Promising researchers who have completed their doctorate between two and eight years earlier at the time of nomination may be nominated for a fellowship whereas those researchers who are more established in their discipline may be nominated for a professorship.[14]
Once selected, fellows may come to Radboud University to undertake research for a maximum of two years. Professors may come to Radboud University for a maximum period of six months.[14]
Coat of arms
The coat of arms was designed at the time of the founding of the university by the goldsmith workshop of the Brom family in Utrecht. The lower part is the coat of arms of the Catholic Church in the Netherlands. The dove is the symbol of the Holy Spirit. The shield is surmounted by the crown of Charlemagne. Underneath is the motto "In Dei Nomine Feliciter."[15]
Notable alumni

O'42 (after its address Oranjesingel 42) of old has played a significant role in the history of the Radboud University, especially of the social and administrative aspects of studying there.
Dries van Agt, 1955 (LLM), former Prime Minister of the Netherlands
Louis Beel, 1928 (LLM), former Prime Minister of the Netherlands
Jo Cals, 1940 (LLM), former Prime Minister of the Netherlands
Wim Crusio, 1984 (PhD), neurobehavioural geneticist
Marijn Dekkers, Chairman of Unilever
Jos Engelen, 1973, physicist
Thom de Graaf, 1981 (LLM), former mayor of Nijmegen
Jolanda Jetten, social psychologist
Agnes Kant, 1989 (MSc), 1997 (PhD), former leader of the Socialist Party
Björn Kuipers, 2001 (Msc), football referee
Louis van de Laar, 1921, state secretary and mayor of Bergen op Zoom
Jos van der Lans, 1981 (MA), former member of the House of Representatives
Gerd Leers, 1976 (MSc), former mayor of Maastricht, former Minister for Immigration and Asylum Affairs
Victor Marijnen, 1941 (LLM), former Prime Minister of the Netherlands
Hans van Mierlo, 1960 (LLM), former Minister of Foreign Affairs
Henri Nouwen, 1964, Catholic priest and writer- Sir Konstantin Novoselov (PhD), awarded 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics
Harald E.L. Prins, 1976, anthropologist, ethnohistorian, documentary filmmaker, and expert witness on indigenous rights in U.S. and Canadian courts, etc.
Louis Reijtenbagh, 1975, Chief Executive Officer of The Plaza Group
Frans Timmermans, 1985 (MA,) Dutch politician and diplomat who currently serves as the First Vice-President of the European Commission and the European Commissioner for the portfolio of Better Regulation, Inter-Institutional Relations, Rule of Law and Charter of Fundamental Rights in the Juncker Commission.
Rita Verdonk, 1983 (MA), former Minister for Immigration and Asylum Affairs, former member of the House of Representatives
Frans de Waal, 1970, biologist and primatologist known for his work on the behavior and social intelligence of primates.
Anna Akhmanova, 1999, cell biologist and winner of the 2018 Spinoza Prize
Notable faculty
Hans van Abeelen, first Dutch behaviour geneticist
Titus Brandsma, co-founder, Nazi opponent murdered in Dachau concentration camp, beatified by the Roman Catholic Church as a martyr of the faith.
Catharina Halkes, first feminist theologian to be a professor in the Netherlands
Ton Lemaire, cultural philosopher and cultural anthropologist, also alumnus, now residing in France
Marc David Lewis, developmental neuroscientist and author of “Memoirs of an Addicted Brain” and “The Biology of Desire : Why Addiction Is Not a Disease”
Renate Loll, physicist
Jos van der Meer, professor of general internal medicine
Ieke Moerdijk, mathematician
Cristina Pumplun, missionary vicar of the Westerkerk, Amsterdam
Kees Versteegh, professor emeritus of Middle Eastern studies, also alumnus
Jan van der Watt, expert in Johannine literature, General editor of Review of Biblical Literature
Carlos Gussenhoven, professor of linguistics, specializes in phonetics and phonology
See also
Hogeschool van Arnhem en Nijmegen, a University of Applied Sciences located in Nijmegen and Arnhem.- List of early modern universities in Europe
N.S.V. Carolus Magnus
Notes
^ RU is cited as Stichting Katholieke Universiteit, the name of the not-for-profit management board for Radboud University and the University Medical Center (UMC) St. Radboud.[11]
References
^ "Een bijzondere universiteit". Archived from the original on 2013-02-22.
^ "Other networks - International Office English". ru.nl. Archived from the original on 2012-09-10.
^ ab "Topuniversities.com profile". Archived from the original on 13 January 2010.
^ "Colour". ru.nl.
^ "History of the Radboud University Nijmegen".
^ "Facilities on the campus - Working at Radboud University". Ru.nl. Archived from the original on 2012-09-10. Retrieved 2013-07-21.
^ "SPAR | SPAR University RU Nijmegen". www.spar.nl. Retrieved 2018-03-15.
^ http://www.ru.nl/publish/pages/566471/ru_jaarverslag_2014_web_def.pdf[permanent dead link]
^ "Overview of Master's programmes and specialisations". Archived from the original on 2013-06-24.
^ "QS World University Rankings 2015 Results".
^ "European Research Ranking 2012". researchranking.org.
^ "World University Rankings 2015-2016". The Times Higher Education. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
^ QS World University Rankings 2018
^ ab "What is the Radboud Excellence Initiative?". Radboud University Nijmegen. Retrieved June 2, 2018.
^ Judith van Beukering (red.) 80 jaar KU Nijmegen - 80 objecten. Tachtig jaar Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen in voorwerpen van wetenschap, geschiedenis en kunst (Nijmegen 2003) 15.
External links
Media related to Radboud University Nijmegen at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website

