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International relations in the second half of 2019-2020

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The second half of the 2019-2020 academic year will have been severely disrupted by the COVID-19 health crisis. What effects has this international pandemic had on our students' mobility and on Inalco's relations with its partners around the world?

Doctoral student welcome day

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On January 28, 2020, the Doctoral School Languages, Literatures and Societies of the World held its traditional Welcome Day on the renovated premises of the Maison de la Recherche.

The Berber or Amazigh diaspora: music, literature, cinema and new media

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The Berber diaspora has been active on many levels. They have contributed to the economic development of their host countries and countries of origin, and to the production of music, literature and films in Berber, as well as in the languages spoken in the various countries where they are present.

When the sea burns

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"The real passage takes place in the middle. Whichever way the swim decides, the ground lies tens or hundreds of meters below the belly or kilometers behind and ahead. Here is the traveller alone. You have to cross to learn solitude. It can be recognized by the disappearance of references. (...) The body that crosses certainly learns a second world, the one towards which it is heading, where another language is spoken, but above all it is initiated into a third, through which it transits." Michel Serres.

Erasmus+ Partnership

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Inalco has 105 inter-university agreements with European universities under the Erasmus Charter awarded to Inalco by the European Commission and an Erasmus policy statement.

2018

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2019

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Events and Cultural Action Department

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Reach out to the world

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Inalco began teaching languages and culture studies in 1795. Ever since, the Institute has cultivated its role in understanding a living heritage outside of any Western references.

Arabic

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This page has been translated automatically. The Arabic taught in this course is modern literal Arabic as used in the media, administrative communications and business. Arab linguistic communities practice two varieties of Arabic, one essentially written, known as literary Arabic, the other essentially spoken, known as dialectal Arabic, which varies from country to country. It is these two varieties of language which, inseparably, make up their identity.