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CEVRO Institute

Coordinates: 50°4′52″N 14°25′20″E / 50.08111°N 14.42222°E / 50.08111; 14.42222
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CEVRO Institute
CEVRO Institut
CEVRO Institute, Prague
TypePrivate
Established2005
ChairmanIvan Langer
RectorTomáš Jarmara
DirectorLudmila Habadová
Academic staff
163[1]
Students800[1]
Location,
50°4′52″N 14°25′20″E / 50.08111°N 14.42222°E / 50.08111; 14.42222
CampusUrban
Affiliationswww.cevroarena.cz
Websitewww.cevroinstitut.cz/en/
Data as of 2020

The CEVRO Institute (Czech: CEVRO Institut) is a private university in Prague, Czech Republic, established in 2005 by CEVRO, a think-tank affiliated with the Civic Democratic Party (ODS).

History

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The CEVRO Institute was established on 15 September 2005 by CEVRO, a think tank created in 1999 by ODS politician Ivan Langer. The institute's main goal is to provide cross-disciplinary education in the area of social sciences: law, public administration, economics, business, political science, international relations and security. The university's opening ceremony on 1 November 2006 was attended by Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek.[2] The central facility of the CEVRO Institute is a historic building in the centre of Prague.[1]

As of 2020, the current president is economist Josef Šíma, and the chairman of the board of directors is Ivan Langer.

Academics

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The school offers 24 academic programs, 2 of which are in English.[3]

Bachelor programs in Czech include: Political Science and International Relations; Public Administration in Practice; Law in Commercial Relations; Security Policy; and Social Services Management. In autumn 2020, the school launched an international B.A. program in Economics, Business, and Politics.[4]

Master's programs in Czech include: Political Science; Public Administration; Public Administration/Security Studies; Commercial Law Relations; and Social Services Management in the European Context. In autumn 2016, the school launched a philosophy, politics and economics (PPE) M.A. program taught in English by faculty from Europe and the United States.[5]

The university also offers one MBA program, three MPA programs, and three LLM programs, as well as summer programs in cooperation with Florida State University and the Centre International de Formation Européenne.

The institute publishes New Perspectives on Political Economy, a semi-annual, bilingual, interdisciplinary journal. Its main focus is private property, market, and individual liberty, based mostly on the Austrian School.

Prague Conference on Political Economy

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The Prague Conference on Political Economy (PCPE), an interdisciplinary conference focusing on cross-disciplinary research in the tradition of Philosophy, politics and economics, PPE&L or the Austrian School of Economics, has taken place since 2005, with the CEVRO Institute as the main organiser since 2010.[6] The event includes two memorial lectures, the Franz Cuhel Memorial Lecture and Friedrich von Wieser Memorial Lecture.[7]

Franz Cuhel Memorial Prize recipients include: Jörg Guido Hülsmann (2005), Jesús Huerta de Soto (2006), Richard Ebeling (2007), Thomas DiLorenzo (2008), Hans-Hermann Hoppe (2009), Peter Boettke (2011), William White (2015), Benjamin Powell (2016), Jeffrey Tucker (2017), and Randall G. Holcombe (2019).[citation needed]

Friedrich von Wieser Memorial Prize recipients include: Robert Higgs (2006), Boudewijn Bouckaert (2007), Bruno Frey (2008), Richard Epstein (2010), Terry L. Anderson (2011), Michael Munger (2014), Mark Pennington (2016), Bruce Caldwell (2017), Leszek Balcerowicz (2018).[citation needed]

Notable people

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Faculty
Alumni

References

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  1. ^ a b c "CEVRO Institute About Us".
  2. ^ "Website of the Government of the Czech Republic".
  3. ^ "Academic programs - CEVRO INSTITUTE".
  4. ^ "BA – Economics, Business, Politics - CEVRO INSTITUTE".
  5. ^ "CEVRO Institute PPE program".
  6. ^ "History of PCPE - CEVRO INSTITUTE".
  7. ^ "PCPE—Prague Conference on Political Economy - CEVRO INSTITUTE".
  8. ^ Vedder, Richard (21 July 2015). "The Bennett Hypothesis Confirmed -- Again". Forbes. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
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