At Maastricht University (UM), students get the opportunity to develop themselves as global citizens—individuals who can make a positive contribution to society, both locally and globally. We offer a culturally diverse, inclusive learning environment where differences in ideas, perspectives and backgrounds enrich the learning process.

Global Citizenship Education

At Maastricht University, we integrate Global Citizenship Education (GCEd) into the curriculum, encouraging students to reflect on their social responsibility and consider how they can address societal challenges. 

GCEd, Problem-Based Learning and our international classroom complement each other and create a learning environment where students develop the knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to collaborate effectively in international teams and compete in local, regional or global labour markets. Students become critical thinkers who can make meaningful contributions to solving the complex problems we are facing in the world. 

International students in a common room

International study programmes

Many of the programmes at Maastricht University are taught in English, making them accessible to international students. Our programmes often have a distinctive international or European focus, and all programmes incorporate global issues and perspectives.

  View the full list of our programmes
 

A truly European experience with YUFE

Maastricht University is a proud member of the Young Universities for the Future (YUFE) alliance, a collaboration of ten young European universities. This partnership allows our students to broaden their educational horizons by studying at partner institutions across Europe, focusing on their specific areas of interest. Through YUFE, students can enrich their education in the following ways:

  • OpenYUFE: Students can enhance their degree with additional academic courses, language learning and professional skills, available online, onsite or in a blended formath.
  • YUFE Minors: These are 30 ECTS modules that require physical mobility and include online courses from other YUFE universities, capped by a YUFE Challenge course—a hands-on project that connects students with local communities.
  • BioYUFE: For life sciences students, BioYUFE offers a broad selection of elective courses across the YUFE network, the majority of which are online and in English.  
  • YUFE Bachelor: Set to launch in the 2025/26 academic year, the Urban Sustainability Studies bachelor's programme offers an interdisciplinary, open-curriculum approach with opportunities for minor studies at other YUFE universities abroad.

Each component of YUFE is designed to equip students with a richer, more diverse educational experience, preparing them for a globally interconnected world.

 

Joint and double degree programmes

We offer more than 15 joint and double degree programmes, where students split their studies between Maastricht University and one of our partner universities abroad.

These programmes are available at the bachelor’s, master’s and PhD levels. They are a key pillar to our internationalisation policy, promoting quality education, global collaboration and enhancing students' cross-border mobility and employability.

Examples include:

Yufe Logo

Center for European Studies

Each year, approximately 700 international students participate in Center for European Studies (CES) programmes, which range from three weeks to a full year. These programmes are dynamic and interactive, offering field trips, cultural weekends and study tours.

  See the universities and colleges that partner with CES

The Faculty of Law of Maastricht University has taken over The Hague Prize for International Law. Thereby, the prize is renamed the Maastricht Prize for International Law. With a view to continuing the prize, the university will collaborate with the municipality of Maastricht. The prize will be placed under the Limburg University Fund / SWOL, a foundation connected to Maastricht University.

Head of department

People

R. Della Pia

European Law
Placeholder profiel photo

C.L.A. Gulikers

European Law
Placeholder profiel photo

L.B. Knuth

European Law

J. Luque Lora

European Law
Placeholder profiel photo

J.M.P.H. Noortmann

Organisation,Strategy & Entrepreneurship

S.M.V. Sivonen

European Law

X. Xu

European Law

The department’s research covers a wide range of areas and policy fields of European Union institutional and substantive law, as well as the interaction between the EU, domestic, and international legal orders. It is organized and developed most notably in the context of the Maastricht Centre for European Law (MCEL), but the Department’s researchers contribute also to the activities of other Faculty and interfaculty centers, including MCfHR, CERiM, IGIR, MACIMIDE, Studio Europa, and the Globalisation and Law Network. The department contributes to the national research schools of Human Rights and Ius Commune. Several research projects carried out in the context of these programmes are funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) and the European Union.

Maastricht Centre for European Law
The Maastricht Centre for European Law is a large research community in EU law and consists of over 50 scholars. The Centre covers a broad range of areas of research in both institutional and substantive EU law, and the relation between EU law and national law.

The teaching for which the Department of European law is responsible is closely aligned with the research carried out by its staff. Along with the compulsory courses Internationaal & Europees Recht/International & European Law (Dutch and English versions), Law of the European Union in the bachelor’s programmes in Dutch Law/European Law School, a number of English-language electives (on e.g. EU citizenship, EU law and inequality) are offered. Many international exchange students also take part in these courses and electives. 

The Department takes special responsibility for the European Law School Master’s programme and its specializations European Business Law, European Public Law, and Law for a Sustainable Europe. It also contributes to the master’s International Laws, Globalisation and Law, and International and European Tax Law, as well as to the Dutch-spoken masters’ in Nederlands Recht and Recht & Arbeid. 

In addition, the Department plays a part in educational programmes organized by other UM faculties. The department offers courses on EU institutional and substantive law at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASoS) in Maastricht and at the University College Maastricht (UCM), and participates in the teaching activities of the BA Global Studies programme.

In addition, with its shared responsibility for the Internationaal & Europees Recht course and full responsibility for Legal English, EU Law: Foundations, and Internal Market Law, the department plays a significant role in the bachelor’s education in law at Hasselt University. 

Every year the staff of the Department of European Law coaches the UM moot court for the European Law Moot Court Competition (ELMC).

Welcome to the department of European Law
The Department of European law has become a key academic player thanks to the top quality of its teaching and research outputs. Its work focuses on both EU institutional and EU substantive law and covers a wide range of EU policy areas, including digital rights, protection of the environment, fundamental rights and internal market law, which all play a prominent place in the Faculty of Law’s teaching and research programmes.

The Department offers a wide and comprehensive range of courses, both at undergraduate and graduate level, as well as moot court trainings and summer schools. The courses are taught in English or in Dutch. As part of their studies, students are also offered the possibility of an internship.

Researchers participate actively in faculty and interfaculty Research Centres and Institutes, first and foremost to the Maastricht Centre for European Law (MCEL), but also MCfHRCERiMIGIRMACIMIDEStudio Europa, and the Globalisation and Law Network. They also contribute to several disciplinary and interdisciplinary research networks, both national and international. The Department has developed extensive connections with partner institutions around Europe. These relationships provide for the exchange of students and staff between Maastricht and other leading institutions, and offer opportunities to share knowledge, develop understanding and enrich the research and academic life of the Faculty as a whole.

The Department provides facilities for visiting researchers from around the world to further their own research. While in Maastricht, they meet with other scholars in the field and gain encouragement and direction from the many distinguished European lawyers associated with the Department. Visiting scholars are encouraged to participate fully in the activities of the Department and the Research Centres.

The Department is committed to the advancement of scholarship in European law through research, documentation, dialogue, and publications. Regular programmes of lectures and seminars are run by its associated research centers on topical issues featuring leading academics and practitioners.

The Faculty of Law of Maastricht University has taken over The Hague Prize for International Law. Thereby, the prize is renamed the Maastricht Prize for International Law. With a view to continuing the prize, the university will collaborate with the municipality of Maastricht. The prize will be placed under the Limburg University Fund / SWOL, a foundation connected to Maastricht University.