European Students' Forum
Association des États Généraux des Étudiants de l'Europe |

Logo of AEGEE-Europe |
| Motto |
See you somewhere in Europe |
| Formation |
1985 |
| Type |
Network for European students |
| Headquarters |
Brussels, Belgium |
| Location |
Europe |
| Membership |
15,000 |
| Official languages |
English, French |
| President |
Agata Patecka |
| Key people |
Olga Basova, Nico Huurman, Anita Kalmane, Agnes Leyrer, Denis Maksimov, Manos Valasis |
| Affiliations |
European Youth Forum |
| Staff |
6 (in the European board) |
| Website |
http://www.aegee.eu |
AEGEE, or Association des États Généraux des Étudiants de l'Europe, known as European Students' Forum in English, is one of Europe's largest cross-faculty student organisations.
Established in 1985, AEGEE currently has around 15,000 members across 241 local groups (antennae) in university cities across Europe, including Russia, Turkey and the Caucasus, with a European board in Brussels. It promotes an equal, democratic and unified Europe, open to all across national borders. Several hundred conferences, training and cultural events are organised across the network every year, and AEGEE also campaigns and lobbies for the interests of European students, in particular the reduction of visa barriers between European countries.
The short name "AEGEE" derives from the Aegean sea, one of the birthplaces of democracy, and the full name from the first parliament established during the French Revolution, the États Généraux.1
Structure
AEGEE has an elected European board, the Comité Directeur2 with a residential office in Brussels, and a number of European-level working groups3 as well as its autonomous local antennae. Active members meet twice a year at the end of April and October in a general assembly called an Agora, hosted by a different antenna each time. Most candidates for positions at the European level are elected at the Agora, which also ratifies the creation or deletion of antennae, working groups and projects. There is also a smaller annual European Boards' Meeting, intended to develop projects and campaigns and usually held in late winter.
The association has no national level, and, at least in theory, it does not recognise the current national borders within Europe. In practice, however, many antennae maintain close contact with their national governments, and get financial and political support for their initiatives.
Antennae are supported by the Network Commission, a group of experienced members appointed by the Agora to help the network grow and develop. They provide advice, training and practical help, especially with local human resources and event organisation. Network Commissioners each have responsibility for a number of locals across several national borders, which can be reshuffled at each Agora to stop any fixed national or regional divisions from forming.
Each city antenna is a separate legal person under its own local law, not under the direct control of the Comité Directeur. However, to become a part of the AEGEE network, prospective antennae must include the principles of AEGEE's statute within their own, and have them approved by the Comité Directeur and Juridical Commission. This allows AEGEE to have an antenna wound up in case of inactivity or serious misconduct.
Membership of an antenna is normally open to anyone younger than 30 living in the local area, on payment of a membership fee set by the local board. Many antennae concentrate their promotional activities on students at their home university, and are not very visible to outsiders.
The majority of AEGEE events are open to non-members, however this tends to be poorly promoted except to local students. It is quite common for all participants to be from the host city or other AEGEE antennae. Some activities, most notably the statutory Agorae and EBMs and the Summer University project, are explicitly restricted to AEGEE members who must be approved by their home antenna's board.
AEGEE was founded in France and still uses a number of French terms, but the main working language at European level is now English. Most antennae use their own local language, however local board members generally need a working knowledge of English.
Activities
AEGEE is a full member of the European Youth Forum, collaborating with other youth NGOs to deal with issues such as visa barriers and funding for activities. It also has direct contact with the Council of Europe and European Union, working closely with both these bodies on issues of importance to young people.
Fields of Action
AEGEE organises a wide range of projects, most of which relate to one of four main fields of action: Active Citizenship, Higher Education, Peace & Stability, and Cultural Exchange.
Active citizenship
AEGEE is an independent non-party political organisation, working closely with governments, institutions and other NGOs to realise its goals for Europe. AEGEE aims to provide a political voice for its members at every level, organising conferences on a range of topics and using the results to lobby European institutions.
Higher education
AEGEE represents students who care about the European dimension of higher education. As well as encouraging student mobility, AEGEE supports language learning, promotes international cooperation in the academic world, and campaigns for the further development of European education programmes.
Peace and stability
By encouraging democratic ideals, tolerance and mutual understanding between young adults from communities in conflict, AEGEE contributes to conflict resolution in the Balkans, the Caucasus, on Cyprus, and in Greece and Turkey. AEGEE also organises conferences and seminars on international political issues.
Cultural exchange
Building respect and appreciation between people of different cultures is core to all of AEGEE's work. AEGEE sees this field of action as the core of European integration, believing that integration can never be a top-down process, but must be based on friendship among the peoples of Europe. AEGEE groups organise a substantial number of cultural exchange events every year.
History
- April 1985
- The association, originally called EGEE, held its first event: an assembly in Paris of students from Paris, Leiden, London, Madrid, Milan and Munich, organised by founding president Franck Biancheri.
- October 1986
- Three EGEE working groups were formed: Sponsoring, Traineeships and Language Study.
- A conference on cross-border developments in Nijmegen.
- By the start of the academic year, EGEE has 26 branches and 6,000 members.
- November 1986
- In Heidelberg, a conference on relations between the Far East and Europe.
- In Toulouse, the first European Space Weekend.
- December 1986
- In Paris, a conference on the pharmaceutical industry in Europe.
- In Munich, a conference on the European Monetary System.
- 1987
- EGEE persuades French president François Mitterrand to support funding for the Erasmus programme, a student exchange program financed by the European Commission.4
- 1988
- The association changes its name from EGEE to AEGEE following a trademark dispute.5
- 1989
- After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Agora in Salerno opens up AEGEE to local antennae outside the European Community, making it one of the first European organisations to expand beyond the old Iron Curtain.
- May 1990
- Les Anciens d'AEGEE-Europe is founded during the EGEE VI meeting in Paris.6
- A new AEGEE logo is released, representing "Your Key to Europe".
- 1995
- Head office of the organisation moves to Brussels.
- Ankara and later several other Turkish antennae join the network.
- 1996
- More than 1000 students are actively involved in the conference series "Find Your Way..." explaining what students can do in the emerging civil society in Central and Eastern Europe.
- 1997
- AEGEE organises its first visit to Cyprus. Following this, in 2001 an antenna is created in Mağusa.
- April 1999
- Foundation of the AEGEE-Academy for training and human resources at Agora-Barcelona, prompted by preparations for the European School in Gießen.
- 2000
- "Education for Democracy", a new scholarship programme helping students from war-shattered Kosovo to study at universities abroad.
- During the autumn, AEGEE-Beograd members took part in the public assembly that learns of Milosevic's defeat.
- 2001-2002
- AEGEE organises several major projects focusing on peace and stability in southeastern Europe and the Mediterranean region.
- 2002
- Launch of AEGEE-Television by AEGEE-Eindhoven.7
- 2003
- AEGEE's first study trip to the Caucasus.8
- AEGEE organises the first international student conference in the buffer zone on Cyprus.9
- 2004
- 2005
- 2006
- 2007
- AEGEE organised the simulation 'Model European Union' in the presmisses of the European Parliament in Strasbourg.
- Due to the impact of the Bologna Process on students' life, the mandate cycle of the Comtité Direceur has been changed from Spring-Autumn and Autumn-Spring to a full academic year from 1 September - 31 August with a transition period in August, starting from August 2008.
- 2008
- AEGEE-Eindhoven starts AEGEE-travelwiki. 10
- AEGEE launches Y Vote 2009 - European Youth Choice to encourage voting for young people
Presidents of AEGEE so far
| Name |
Antenna |
Period in office |
| Franck Biancheri |
Paris |
April 1985 - April 1988 |
| Vieri Bracco |
Milan |
April 1988 - November 1988 |
| Frédéric Pélard |
Toulouse |
November 1988 - November 1989 |
| Adolfo Dominguez |
Madrid |
November 1989 - May 1990 |
| Achim Boers |
Delft |
May 1990 - November 1990 |
| Georg von der Gablentz |
Berlin |
November 1990 - April 1992 |
| Jeroen Hoogerwerf |
Amsterdam |
April 1992 - April 1993 |
| Pavel Miladinovic |
Prague |
April 1993 - November 1993 |
| Zsuzsa Kigyós |
Budapest |
November 1993 - April 1994 |
| Dorian Selz |
Geneve |
April 1994 - November 1994 |
| Christina Thorsson |
Lund |
November 1994 - April 1995 |
| Egens van Iterson Scholten |
Enschede |
April 1995 - November 1995 |
| Christoph Strohm |
Cologne |
November 1995 - April 1996 |
| Jordi Capdevila |
Barcelona |
April 1996 - November 1996 |
| Gerhard Kress |
Mainz |
November 1996 - April 1997 |
| Peter Ginser |
Karlsruhe |
April 1997 - November 1997 |
| Sergio Caredda |
Gorizia |
November 1997 - April 1998 |
| Hélène Berard |
Aix-en-Provence |
April 1998 - October 1998 |
| Stefan Seidel |
Augsburg |
October 1998 - April 1999 |
| László Fésüs |
Szeged |
April 1999 - November 1999 |
| Faní Zarifopoúlou |
Athens |
November 1999 - May 2000 |
| Oana Mailatescu |
Cluj-Napoca |
May 2000 - November 2000 |
| Karina Häuslmeier |
Passau |
November 2000 - November 2001 |
| Pedro Panizo |
Valladolid |
November 2001 – May 2002 |
| Tomek Helbin |
Warsaw |
May 2002 – November 2002 |
| Mark de Beer |
Enschede |
November 2002 – May 2003 |
| Diana Filip |
Cluj-Napoca |
May 2003 – October 2003 |
| Adrian Pintilie |
Bucharest |
October 2003 – April 2004 |
| Nicola Rega |
Torino |
April 2004 – November 2004 |
| Silvia Baita |
Cagliari |
November 2004 - May 2005 |
| Burcu Becermen |
Ankara |
May 2005 - November 2005 |
| Leon Bakraceski |
Skopje |
November 2005 - May 2006 |
| Alistair De Gaetano |
Valletta |
May 2006 - November 2006 |
| Theijs van Welij |
Utrecht |
November 2006 - December 2007 |
| Laure Onidi |
Cologne |
December 2007 - September 2008 |
| Dragan Stojanovski |
Niš |
September 2008 - August 2009 |
| Agata Patecka |
Poznań |
September 2009 - Present |
See also
External links
References