Welcome

This blog was created as part of the Erasmus Mundus Crossways in Cultural Narratives Masters programme, which is the only one of the EU approved and funded Erasmus Mundus Masters programmes to specialise in traditional humanities with a modern languages background. The Crossways Consortium comprises 6 top-class European universities.

For further information, please check the programme's official website and the universities' websites on the Useful Links section on the left. If you wish to have a specific question answered, please click on Email here and submit your query.

Mundus students, here you will find regular posts regarding the universities of the consortium, tips, activities, events, pictures, etc. Apart from checking it regularly to keep yourself up to date, a good way to use the blog is through the search device. We already have a significant amount of information on some universities of the consortium, so if you want to find information on a specific city, type its name in the search field (top left). You will then see all posts related to that specific city (because each post title contains the city's name in it). You can also type "General" in order to find information concerning everybody.

Friday, 7 December 2007

Lisbon: Applying for the Portuguese visa in the UK

     by Becky Chen


Please find info at 

http://www.tugas.co.uk/consulado_portugues_em_manchester.html


I also copy here the information from my email communication with the consulado:

Please find attached a file with all the required documents and application form.

(Application Form and Information for Visa Schengen)

Additionally, you must also bring:

- Document issued by the institution where you are going to attend classes under the Erasmus Programme;  

- Applicants must also deliver document proving availability of means of subsistence in Portuguese territory or, in case of scholarship-holders, documentary evidence of its existence.


If you are looking for the info of Portuguese Embassies outside UK, please check out:

http://pt.embassyinformation.com/index.php


Personal Experience:

Depending on one’s nationality and sometimes due to unexplained reason, getting a visa could be more complicated than imagined. There are questions from my Mundus colleague who intend to apply for Portuguese visa, and I guess perhaps I could share my experience here.


Before leaving Malaysia, I had got the information from the Portuguese Consulate in Kuala Lumpur regarding what is required in order to obtain a Portuguese student visa. According to the requirement, I should have a Certificate of Good Conduct issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Malaysia. 


Among the 3 countries of my mobility track, this Certificate is not required by the British and French embassy, only by Portuguese. I was relieved to have done it earlier, because even though the Portuguese Consulate in Manchester did not state that I should provide this Certificate, but upon my application, I showed them the certificate and they said they need it- the original copy. They also took the original copy of letter from Universidade Nova de Lisboa. 


My country is not listed as one several weeks are required to process the visa, however upon my application, I was told that at least two weeks are needed because they have to ‘wait until Friday to send all the applications to Lisbon’, and that day was a Tuesday. If in case you need your passport by your side, it is possible to inform them and they would notify you when the visa is ready to be stamped into your passport, as in my case.


NOTE THIS: The one important thing that you may want to check with the Consulate is whether they issue a PORTUGUESE STUDENT VISA, or + SCHENGEN?


Until I happily obtained my Portuguese visa, I was told that even if I am flying to Spain for one day, I need to apply for a Spanish visa! Well, the officer in the Consulate explained to me that for UK-Portugal, Portugal-UK, multiples entries are allowed. But once I step on the soil of Portugal, I need to have a Schengen visa to fly to another EU country. This is once again confirmed by the Portugalia Airlines that even if they allowed me to fly with their company, the Italian frontier will not allow me to enter. Another Mundus colleague from India has mentioned to me his similar experience with the Portuguese Student Visa.


To sum things up:

if you could, get all the information about visa requirements from the embassies at your home country and prepare the documents early.

The Scout motto: Be prepared. 

If you are in Sheffield, the right place to go is the Portuguese Consulate in Manchester, not London.

Getting started in Perpignan - part 4

      by Poonam Ganglani


The next few days were spent equipping myself with a few more household essentials—kitchen utensils, dishes, house appliances, stationery and a few other things. That’s when I discovered (and am still discovering) Lesson number eight: There are a good number of places around the University with a wide range of choices at reasonable prices-Baboo (about 10 minutes away from the main entrance of the University), LeClerc (about 15 minutes away from Quick) and Au Chan (about 10 minutes away by bus). Be sure to check out these places, they have a lot of useful things including electronics, electrical appliances, clothes, shoes and loads of other things.


The week passed quickly and the warm Perpignan sun on Saturday morning lured me to venture out to Centre Ville and discover the place on my own. I asked my way around and finally got into the right bus, a very important Lesson number nine: Take bus number 8 at the bus stop opposite the main entrance of the University to get to Centre Ville, and the same bus at the bus stop beside FNAC at Centre Ville to get back. Buy yourself a bus card for 6,5 Euros that permits you ten trips and don’t forget to ask for a Guide Bus at the Tabac where you buy the card.


The day passed quickly wandering through the ins and outs of Centre Ville, strolling down the small lanes with quaint buildings, each time making a mental note of the places to come back for another day. That finally brings us to Lesson number ten: There’s lots to see here at Perpignan….museums, chateaux, historical monuments, the seaside, the mountainside…Famous favourites include Le Castillet, Musée des Beaux Arts Hyacinth Rigaud, Palais des Rois de Majorque and Colliure among others.


There’s so much more to share about how the whole Perpignan experience has been so far, how things have changed  between that anxious day on my Lufthansa flight and this moment right now, completely settled in and sharing my thoughts with you on the Mundus blog…. but it’d be much more fun for you to discover the rest on your own, so I’ll stop here!


Allez Ciao et A Bientôt!

                                                                                                                       - Poonam Ganglani

Sunday, 2 December 2007

Strike in Perpignan


University professor and postgraduate students held seminar in a disused night-club as they are denied access to the campus of the University of Perpignan, France (November 2007)



 
A so-called students' strike has been going on for four weeks in France and postgraduate students unanimously beg their professors to teach them despite official banning.














Students in Perpignan, please feel free to comment on it - either by adding a Comment here (link below) or by sending me some thoughts to be published.