Informatics Europe

Informatics Europe
Formation 2006
Type Learned Society
Headquarters Zurich, Switzerland
Membership
+ 95 institutions (25 countries)
President
Lynda Hardman, CWI
Website http://www.informatics-europe.org

Informatics Europe is the European association of academic and industrial research institutes in the field of information and computer sciences. Founded in 2006,[1][2] it has grown to represent over 90 members from 25 countries, including industrial research labs such as Google and Intel.

Members are institutes rather than individuals and include PhD-granting university departments of Informatics, computer science, computing etc. as well as public and industrial research institutes in information and software technology in Europe and neighbouring countries.

Informatics Europe liaises with scientific organisations such as the European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics (ERCIM), the ACM Europe Council of the Association for Computing Machinery and the Computing Research Association in North America.

Mission

The charter of Informatics Europe is to "foster the development of quality research and education" in Information and Computer Sciences, also known as Informatics.

Informatics is an international and distinct academic discipline of research and high-level education, characterised by its own concepts, methods and body of knowledge. Acting as the voice of the academic and research community in Informatics, Informatics Europe aims to:

Activities

Activities include:

Reports

Reports and other publications by expert working groups covering topics related to research, education and civersity:

European Computer Science Summits

Through annual European Computer Science Summits (ECSS), the association brings relevant themes and trends in Informatics to the foreground, from a scientific, educational, strategic, professional or policy viewpoint. The Summits held since 2005 include:

References

  1. Bertrand Meyer and Willy Zwaenepoel, European Computer Science Takes Its Fate in Its Own hands, in Communications of the ACM, vol. 49, no. 3, pp. 21-24, March 2006; draft copy available here.
  2. Bertrand Meyer, "Showcasing European Computer Science".
  3. Research evaluation for computer science, Informatics Europe report. Shorter journal version: Bertrand Meyer, Christine Choppy, Jan van Leeuwen and Jorgen Staunstrup, Research evaluation for computer science, in Communications of the ACM, vol. 52, no. 4, pp. 31-34, April 2009.
  4. The Role and Relevance of Experimentation in Informatics Informatics Europe report, Carlos Andujar, Viola Schiaffonati, Fabio A. Schreiber, Letizia Tanca, Matti Tedre, Kees van Hee and Jan van Leeuwen.
  5. Informatics Education in Europe: Institutions, Degrees, Students, Positions, Salaries;Informatics Europe report, Cristina Pereira, Bertrand Meyer, Enrico Nardelli and Hannes Werthner.
  6. Joint Informatics Europe and ACM Europe Report on Informatics Education in Europe
  7. Informatics Doctorates in Europe - Some Facts & Figures, Informatics Europe report, Manfred Nagl
  8. Student Enrollment and Image of the Informatics Discipline, Informatics Europe report, Jan van Leeuwen, Letizia Tanca (Eds.)
  9. Women in Informatics Research and Education Informatics Europe booklet, Cristina Pereira, Lynda Hardman (Eds.)
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