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A bet on the future and a process of integration To support their political will, Ministers also called for the full participation of the members of the higher education and research communities: governments can create the conditions of integrated behaviour; the needs and content of such patterns of work, however, are best explained and understood by the universities themselves. Thus, academic institutions have to become full partners in the design of an integrated Europe of knowledge. In a way, the Bologna Declaration calls universities to put their act together, public authorities ensuring the conditions of development for a European Higher Education Area, while the universities – as providers of learning – can make it all happen. To meet this challenge, higher education institutions need to reaffirm their capacity to initiate, adapt and transform; they are asked to show responsibility for new social endeavours – brought together under the term of the Europe of knowledge. To be relevant partners in the evolution of society, however, universities need autonomy and the freedom to create, i.e., they need to abide by the principles of the Magna Charta. In other words, the Bologna Declaration adds to the importance of the Charter, as both documents reinforce each other on the way to an integrated Europe whose citizens can choose fully their professions, residence, work places, training and ideas – anywhere they live or come from in the area. Indeed, their “European-ness” already transcends their national identity. Bologna as a common label seems to confuse the two papers – the
academic and the intergovernmental ones; yet, they are the two sides
of the same coin, Europe unveiled, i.e., a reference to shared values
and principles founding an integrated continent.
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