About the University
Founded in 1559 by Jean Calvin, the University of Geneva
(UNIGE) is dedicated to thinking, teaching, dialogue and
research. With 16’000 students of more than 140 different
nationalities, it is Switzerland’s second largest university.
UNIGE offers more than 280 types of degrees and
more than 250 Continuing Education programmes covering an extremely wide
variety of fields: exact sciences, medicine and humanities. Its domains of
excellence in research include life sciences (molecular biology,
bio-informatics), physics of elementary particles, and astrophysics. UNIGE is
also host and co-host to six National Centres of Competence in Research:
Frontiers in Genetics, Materials with Novel Electronic Properties (MaNEP),
Chemical Biology, Affective Sciences, Synaptic Bases of Mental Diseases and
LIVES-Overcoming vulnerabilities in a life course perspective.
Just like the city of Geneva itself, the
university enjoys a strong international reputation,
both for the quality of its research (it ranks
among the top institutions among the League of European Research Universities)
and the excellence of its education. This acclaim has been won in part due to
its strong ties to many national and international Geneva-based organizations,
such as the World Health Organization, the International Telecommunications
Union, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and the European
Organization for Nuclear Research.


