UNIRSM News What bureaucratic and administrative changes will there be on San Marino with the EU membership? A course is being offered at the University of San Marino for those who will be involved.

What bureaucratic and administrative changes will there be on San Marino with the EU membership? A course is being offered at the University of San Marino for those who will be involved.

The advanced training course in European Studies begins on January 30th.

What tools and knowledge will be useful for those involved in managing the dynamics surrounding the implementation of European Union legal acts, with which Italy has embarked on a process of association?

This question forms the backdrop to the new advanced training course in European Studies at the University of the Republic of San Marino, organized by the Department of History and Law in collaboration with the Department of Foreign Affairs. This initiative is aimed specifically at public administration officials and managers, as well as professionals such as lawyers, notaries, accountants, and others.

The 80-hour training program will explore topics such as taxation, competition rules, information exchange, administrative cooperation, immigration, and the free movement of people, goods, services, and capital. It will also focus on the institutions, sources, values, and history of the EU.

The lectures will include professors from the University for Foreigners of Perugia and the universities of Urbino, Bologna, Bari, Roma Tre, Milan Bicocca, and Milan Statale. There will also be space for lawyers, experts, and officials working for organizations such as the Emilia-Romagna Region and the European Commission.

The first lecture will take place on January 30th at the university campus at Via Salita alla Rocca 44, in the historic center. The program will continue until June. Two final seminars are planned in September and October.

Public sector employees have the opportunity to attend three lessons of their choice free of charge.

The initiative further enhances the efforts initiated by the University of San Marino to support the association process. Last November, a conference was held in which experts from Switzerland, Liechtenstein, and Andorra contributed to a series of reflections on the work San Marino will undertake to harmonize its regulations with those of the EU.

University of San Marino
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