Not a babelian yet?
More and more young people around the world are setting their feet on European soil, and seem to fit in well despite bureaucratic complications. We hear from Russian, Angolan and Peruvian students living in Italy and France on their idea of Europe
But not the UK – a lookback on how the European exchange programme is doing, twenty-one years after its creation
Integration problems mean being born in a European country is not always enough to be a part of the eurogeneration. We speak to Mahdi and Ali, two second generation immigrants in France and Germany
They travel across planet 'Erasmus' and speak 'foreign' without getting tongue-tied. Young, free and equal? Facing multiculturalism and the monster job world, there are still walls to climb. Testimonies from an identity in progress
One voice amidst the 100, 000+ other Socrates students who traverse Europe and its borders
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Here we are with a lot of info on another Erasmus city: Bratislava, capital of Slovakia.Francisco Chica García will show you all the tips you must know to spend a wonderful Erasmus year!
How's to be an Erasmus in Sevilla? Gabriela Azevedo (first from the right in this photo taken in La Carboneria), from Seville cafebabel.com, will tell you all that you must know before coming in Andalusian capital for a student exchange program.
Here we are again talking, this time not only about (as we did in the previous post) but also with Fiorella about Erasmus, borders and periods of life. Fiorella welcome on Eurogeneration. If you had to summarize in five words your Erasmus experience, which ones would you choose? Hi Adriano ...