University of Cartagena

The University of Cartagena (Spanish: Universidad de Cartagena), also called Unicartagena, is a public, departmental, coeducational, research university based primarily in the city of Cartagena, Bolívar, Colombia. The university offers education at undergraduate and postgraduate levels, which includes 2 doctorates.

University of Cartagena
Universidad de Cartagena
MottoSiempre a la altura de los tiempos
TypePublic, Departmental
Established1827 (1827)
Location, ,
ColorsBlack and Gold  
NicknameUnicartagena
AffiliationsASCUN, AUIP, SUE
Websitewww.unicartagena.edu.co

The university is member of the Association of Colombian Universities (ASCUN),[1] the Iberoamerican Association of Postgraduate Universities (AUIP),[2] and the State University System (Spanish: Sistema Universitario Estatal, SUE).On March 26, 2014, the University of Cartagena, received from the Ministry of Education Institutional Accreditation of High Quality becoming the first and only public university in the Caribbean region with this type of accreditation.

History

founders of the University of Cartagena
University of Cartagena historical marker

In 1826, General Francisco de Paula Santander decree cleared the way for the creation of a university in the Caribbean Region of Colombia and was chosen to host Cartagena de Indias. On October 6, 1827 the Liberator Simon Bolivar formalized, thus was born the University of Magdalena and the Isthmus, because at that time Panama was part of Colombia. Subsequently, due to changes in territorial and political type, and University of Central Magdalena became the University of Cartagena in the Cloister of St. Augustine, then had only two undergraduate: Law and Medicine.

In the 1950s, officially adopting the current shield University. In 1989 the University inaugurated the Health Campus, which moved the faculties of Medicine, Nursing, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Chemistry. In 2001 he moved to Stone Bolivar Campus Faculty of Science and Engineering and in 2003 he moved to the same venue the faculty of Economics.

In 1993, the University established distance learning through the Regional Centers for Distance Education (CREAD). The U of C has programs in the municipalities of Simiti, South Santa Rosa, Carmen de Bolivar, San Estanislao, Turbaco, Carmen de Bolivar, and San Marcos Magangué.

Undergraduates

  • Faculty of Economic Sciences: Economics, Business, Industrial Management, and Accounting.
  • Faculty of Humanities: Philosophy, History, Linguistics and Literature.
  • Faculty of Engineering: Civil Engineering, Food Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Systems Engineering.
  • Faculty of Social Sciences: Social Communication, Social Work, Foreign Languages.
  • Faculty of Natural Sciences: Mathematics, Biology, Chemistry, Metrology.
  • Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences: Pharmaceutical Chemistry
  • Faculty of Law and Political Science: Law
  • School of Nursing: Nursing
  • School of Medicine: Medicine
  • School of Dentistry: Dentistry
  • School of Languages

Masters

Master's degrees are offered in the fields of: Nursing, Mathematics, Chemistry, Physics, Education, Pharmaceutical Sciences, Environmental Sciences, Environmental Engineering, Biochemistry, Clinical Toxicology, Microbiology, Pharmacology, Clinical Epidemiology and Immunology, Philosophy.

Other studies

The University of Cartagena offers other graduate programs that do not meet the range of expertise and therefore do not give access to any PhD ( in Colombia to these types of programs are called specializations).

Campus

  • Zaragocilla Campus (Health Sciences)
  • Piedra de Bolívar Campus (Engineering and Economic Sciences)
  • Cloister of St. Augustine Campus (Main Campus)
  • Cloister of La Merced Campus (Historic town)

Institutes

  • Immunologic Research Institute.
  • International Institute of Caribbean Studies.
  • Institute of Water and Environmental Sanitation (IHSA).

Notable alumni

Politics

Literature and Journalism

References

  1. "ASCUN – Universidades Afiliadas" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on November 22, 2008. Retrieved February 22, 2009.
  2. "Instituciones Asociadas a la AUIP" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on October 2, 2009. Retrieved February 22, 2009.

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