Ruhr University Bochum - Organization

Organization

The university is organized in twenty different faculties. These are:

  • Faculty of Protestant Theology
  • Faculty of Catholic Theology
  • Faculty of Philosophy, Education and Journalism
  • Faculty of History
  • Faculty of Philology
  • Faculty of Law
  • Faculty of Economics
  • Faculty of Social Science
  • Faculty of East Asian Studies
  • Faculty of Sports Science
  • Faculty of Psychology
  • Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering
  • Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
  • Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology
  • Faculty of Mathematics
  • Faculty of Physics and Astronomy
  • Faculty of Geosciences
  • Faculty of Chemistry and Biochemistry
  • Faculty of Biology and Biotechnology
  • Faculty of Medicine

English education

ECUE - European Culture and Economy

Interdisciplinary institutions

  • Interdisciplinary Centre for Advanced Materials Simulation (ICAMS)

Read more about this topic:  Ruhr University Bochum

Famous quotes containing the word organization:

    ... every woman’s organization recognizes that reformers are far more common than feminists, that the passion to look after your fellow man, and especially woman, to do good to her in your way is far more common than the desire to put into every one’s hand the power to look after themselves.
    Crystal Eastman (1881–1928)

    The Red Cross in its nature, it aims and purposes, and consequently, its methods, is unlike any other organization in the country. It is an organization of physical action, of instantaneous action, at the spur of the moment; it cannot await the ordinary deliberation of organized bodies if it would be of use to suffering humanity, ... [ellipsis in original] it has by its nature a field of its own.
    Clara Barton (1821–1912)

    The newly-formed clothing unions are ready to welcome her; but woman shrinks back from organization, Heaven knows why! It is perhaps because in organization one find the truest freedom, and woman has been a slave too long to know what freedom means.
    Katharine Pearson Woods (1853–1923)