Faculty of Social and Human Sciences explained

Faculty of Social and Human Sciences (NOVA FCSH)
Native Name:Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas
Established:1977
Dean:Luís Baptista[1]
Administrative Staff:99[2]
Students:5154
Undergrad:2693
Postgrad:1583
Doctoral:878
Country:Portugal
Campus:Av. de Berna, center Lisbon
Colours: Green and blue
Other Name:NOVA FCSH

The Portuguese Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas (Faculty of Social and Human Sciences - FCSH) is an organic unit of the Universidade NOVA de Lisboa (NOVA). According to its statutes, “the Faculty of Social and Human Sciences of NOVA University of Lisbon is an institution dedicated to education, scientific research and cultural creation".[3] The Faculty's own identity stems from the coexistence of social sciences with humanities, allowing an unusual interdisciplinarity in the Portuguese higher education panorama.

General description

NOVA FCSH was established in January 1977 by Decree-Law No. 464/77, following the development of the area of Human and Social Sciences that existed at NOVA at the time, led by a group of faculty members and researchers, namely J. S. da Silva Dias, Leonor Buescu, João Morais Barbosa, Artur Nobre de Gusmão, Fernando Gil, Augusto Mesquitela Lima, A.H. de Oliveira Marques, José Augusto França, Vitorino Magalhães Godinho, José Mattoso, Raquel Soeiro de Brito, Teolinda Gersão, Leonor Machado de Sousa, Yvete Kace Centeno and Teresa Rita Lopes. The Faculty began its activity on 2 January 1978.

The FCSH is located at Av. Berna, in the centre of Lisbon, next to the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation. Based on a barracks that belonged to the military, the Faculty's facilities are divided into B1 and B2 buildings (classrooms and departments), Tower A (classrooms and head office of the Languages Institute of the Universidade NOVA de Lisboa - ILNOVA]), Tower B (departments, and the Mário Sottomayor Cardia Library), boards of management, administrative services, cafeteria, Students Association and, since 2009, the ID building (Research and PhD degrees). This building, known as the former DRM (Military District Recruitment), has recently undergone a major change in order to be adapted to the new objectives it has been assigned. The core of the administrative support for PhD degrees, the research units associated with NOVA FCSH and classrooms for the PhD programmes located in the ID building.

In addition to teaching areas (classrooms, lecture halls and auditoriums), the NOVA FCSH also has various spaces for socialization, a printing centre and a large courtyard. To solve logistical issues created by recent growth, new facilities are scheduled for the NOVA FCSH in the plans of the Campolide Campus, where other Faculties of the Universidade NOVA de Lisboa (NOVA) are already installed, such as the Nova School of Law (NOVA SoL), the Nova Information Management School (NOVA IMS) and the Instituto Superior de Estatística e Gestão de Informação (ISEGI). The Rectory of NOVA and the university residence Alfredo de Sousa are also located in the Campolide Campus.

Faculty structure

The Faculty Structure, according to the RJIES,[4] has the following bodies:

Composition and election of the Faculty Council

The Faculty Council is a representative University body composed of 13 members: eight faculty members or researchers (Ana Paiva Morais, António José Duque da Silva Marques, João Sàágua, Margarida Acciaiuoli, Maria Helena Trindade Lopes, Maria Regina Salvador, Nuno Severiano Teixeira, Salwa Castelo-Branco), one student (Ana Assunção), and four external personalities (Francisco Pinto Balsemão, Nazim Ahmad, António Vieira Monteiro e Francisco Seixas da Costa).[5] Faculty members or researchers are elected for four years (with one possible renewal), whereas external individuals, chosen by the elected counsellors in their first meeting, are nominated by the Rector.[6]

The Faculty Council has the power to:[7]

The dean

The dean, a position currently held by Luís Baptista, is elected for four years and may be renewed only once through an electoral process that begins three months before the mandate expires.[8] The Dean may designate up to four Vice-Deans, positions currently held by Rui Pedro Julião, Carlos Clamote Carreto, Teresa Araújo and Maria Cardeira da Silva, and associate deans Cristina Brito, Daniel Alves and Ana Santos Pinto.[9]

Leaders

Presidents of the FCSH Installation Committee

FCSH’s deans

Departments

The NOVA FCSH delegates the operation of its educational offer to its 12 Departments, as well as the support for scientific and technological development and dissemination of culture in the fields taught. The development of this mission is secured by the faculty members associated each Department - tenured and visiting - supported by a secretariat. The coordination of each department is taken up by a Coordinator appointed by the Dean from the tenured faculty members.[10]

Research centres

thumb|left|350px|ID building houses the FCSH research centres

FCSH houses a total of 16 Research Centres, whose primary mission is the development of scientific research in different cultural areas of the social sciences and humanities, the education of researchers and the rendering of services to the community.

The Faculty is the only higher education institution in the Social Sciences and Humanities field with its own facilities dedicated to research centres and to PhD's (ID building), strengthening the desired association between research and PhD programmes.

Out of the 16 research centers, 13 were evaluated by international panels of FCT/MCTES - four with an "Excellent" grade and eight with a "Very Good" grade - launching the FCSH to a position of great importance in the national University panorama. Taken together, these centres captured 1.4 million [11] in funding in 2009.

Study cycles

Today, the FCSH is the second largest unit of NOVA, both in student numbers, and in financial budget. It has more than 300 faculty members, almost all of them holding a PhD degree or with recognized prestige in their scientific area. It also has about 100 staff members. During the academic year 2015/16, the Faculty admitted a total of 4725 students, 2587 undergraduate, 1488 masters and 650 students for doctoral programs.[2]

The FCSH teaching programme for the academic year 2016/2017 includes 14 undergraduate degrees, 46 masters programs and 28 PhD's, the latter two being exclusively developed during a night schedule.

The study cycle cover the traditional Social Sciences and Humanities fields, but also several thematic and interdisciplinary courses. In addition to a Summer School, the FCSH/NOVA also offers specialization degrees, free courses and, since 1997, a programme on Portuguese Language and Culture. This program is structured according to the six proficiency levels of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages. It can be intensive (30 hours - 5 times per week), a semester (64 hours two times per week) or taught individually.

Annually, more than 400 students participate in the Mobility Programmes, of which the Erasmus Programme is the best known example. This is one of the examples of the FCSH/NOVA's internationalization strategy.

The BMSC is also a deposit for private donations given by inheritors of former teachers of FCSH: The Leonor Buescu Library (BLB) - 3000 volumes of broad scope, with greater relevance to the area of Linguistics and English Literature; the Luis Krus Library (BLK) - 2200 volumes on Portuguese and European Medieval History, Anthropology and Sociology; the António G. Mattoso Library (BM) - 8500 books of broader scope, with particular importance to the field of History, and the Mário Sottomayor Cardia Library (BMSC) – 70,000 volumes, still not fully treated, that deal with issues of a general nature, with a particular emphasis on Philosophy and Political Science.

The BMSC also includes the bibliographic collection of the American Ladies Club (ALC) - 1000 volumes dedicated to Literature, as well as some personal libraries, as in the case of the Dragomir Knapic Library (BK) - 250 works on Geography; the Rodrigues Michaels Library (BRM) - 1400 works dedicated to the History of Literature and the António Rita Ferreira Library (BRF) - 850 books related to Anthropology, African Colonization, Ethno history of Africa and the John Catarino Library (BJC), containing 700 works on Archaeology.

The BMSC has integrated the properties of the departmental libraries of Anthropology, Art History and Musicology thus increasing its collection by an additional 10,000 books and acquiring the bibliographic collection of musicologist Macario Santiago Kastner.

Undergraduate programmes

thumb|right|350px|Auditorium 1 at FCSH/NOVA, inside Tower B

Master's Programmes

PhD programmes

Postgraduate studies

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Management . 2024-06-24.
  2. http://www.fcsh.unl.pt/media/factos-e-numeros FCSH - Facts and numbers
  3. Diário da República Portuguesa, series II, No. 128, 4/6/1990
  4. Article 8, II Chapter of the Despacho Reitoral No. 3849/2009
  5. Web site: Conselho de Faculdade . 2016-08-02 . 2014-07-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140703081417/http://www.fcsh.unl.pt/faculdade/orgaos-de-gestao/conselho-de-faculdade . dead .
  6. Article 9 and 10 of the FCSH Statutes
  7. Article 10 of the FCSH Statutes
  8. Article 13 of FCSH Statutes
  9. Web site: Direção . 2024-06-24 . NOVA FCSH . pt-pt.
  10. Articles 24 and 25 of the Statutes of FCSH
  11. Speech by Professor João Sàágua, Dean of FCSH at the 32nd anniversary of the Faculty, April 28, 2010