Academic content
The master’s program focuses on cultural phenomena and processes, everyday practices, and living environments in modern, complex European societies. The program does not regard Europe as a space that can be clearly defined – or even less, limited – in a geographical sense, but as a historical, empirical, and cognitive frame that includes all ideas, images, experiences, perceptions, and interpretations connected with the construct “Europe.”
The goal is to qualify students to engage in problem-based, practically oriented, theory-driven, and methodologically sound academic work. Students thus acquire skills in analyzing and interpreting the cultural processes and organizations of Europe’s modern societies and consolidate their knowledge of the field-specific skills, methods, and perspectives necessary for professions at and outside of the university.
An empirical study project is an important component of the program.
The goal is to qualify students to engage in problem-based, practically oriented, theory-driven, and methodologically sound academic work. Students thus acquire skills in analyzing and interpreting the cultural processes and organizations of Europe’s modern societies and consolidate their knowledge of the field-specific skills, methods, and perspectives necessary for professions at and outside of the university.
An empirical study project is an important component of the program.
Statutes
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Prüfungsordnung M.A.: Rahmenordnung
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Prüfungsordnung M.A.: Anlage A
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Prüfungsordnung M.A.: Europäische Ethnologie
(Nur bei Studienbeginn zwischen dem 1. Oktober 2013 und dem 30. September 2017; Abschluss des Studiums bis spätestens 30. September 2020)
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Prüfungsordnung M.A.: Europäische Ethnologie
(Nur bei Studienbeginn vor dem 1. Oktober 2013; Abschluss des Studiums bis spätestens 30. September 2016)
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Satzung über ergänzende Regelungen zum Zulassungs- und Prüfungsrecht
The versions of statutes with relevance to teaching and learning provided on this page by the Department of Legal Affairs (in particular admission and selection regulations as well as subject and examination regulations) are primarily for information purposes. This means that all amendments subsequently agreed upon by the University Senate have been integrated into the respective text of the original statutes; in the case of the examination regulations for bachelor's and master's degree programmes, this generally relates to extracts of the respective examination regulations (framework examination regulations, subject-specific provisions, and appendices).
The greatest care has been taken in writing these versions. Nevertheless, it cannot be entirely ruled out that errors may have occurred. Consequently, it is solely the officially announced statutes and statute amendments that are legally binding, i.e. as published in the Amtlichen Bekanntmachungen der Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg im Breisgau [de] or, up to the year 2000, in the official gazette of the Baden-Württemberg Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts.
