University of Priština (North Mitrovica)
The University of Priština with a temporary seat in North Mitrovica is a public university in Kosovo.
It is the higher education institution that emerged after the disestablishment of the University of Pristina as a result of the Kosovo War. Despite its official name it is also referred to as the University of Kosovska Mitrovica after its temporary relocation to North Mitrovica in 2001.
History
The original university was established in the city of Priština, SAP Kosovo, Socialist Republic of Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia, for the academic year 1969–70 and functioned until 1999. In 1999, it consisted of 14 faculties with around 18,000 students and over 1,300 faculty and staff members. However, owing to political upheaval, war, successive mutual expulsions of faculty of one ethnicity or the other, and resultant pervasive ethnic-based polarization, currently, there are two separate, disjoint institutions, both using the same name, albeit each notated idiosyncratically, to reflect their polarized ethnic identity and divergent physical locations, separate Albanian and Serbian entities.The University of Priština headquartered in Kosovska Mitrovica is a Serbian entity displaced from the city of Priština in 1999, conducting education in Serbian language, backed by the Government of Serbia having taken up physical residence in North Mitrovica, a city in the northern ethnically Serbian region of Kosovo. The other entity bearing the name of the original university is University of Pristina with headquarters in Pristina, run by Government of Kosovo.
Following the end of the Kosovo War in 1999, the Kosovo Serb University of Priština relocated to Central Serbia and around 6,000 students transferred to other universities in Serbia. From 1999 to 2001, around 2,000 students graduated from the University of Priština, 50 students was awarded Magister degrees, and 20 earned their doctorates.
In 2001, the university relocated to its present-day location in North Kosovo. After moving back to Kosovo only 6,500 students continued their education at the university. In 2004, the university had 10 faculties with about 8,000 students and enrollment quota of 1,200 students. In August 2007 it had 9,320 students, over 700 faculty and about 200 staff members. Its enrollment quota was 2,726 students. About 45% were from Kosovo, 30% from Serbia, 25% from Montenegro. There was also a smaller number of students from North Macedonia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The university is a member of the Conference of the Universities of Serbia and European University Association and has established cooperations with the Balkan Universities Network and numerous institutions worldwide.
Currently, there are 10,264 students, 730 faculty, and 320 staff members. For 2018–19 school year, a total of 1,013 students enrolled on the first year of studies at the university.
Organization
Faculties
The academic year runs from 1 October through 30 September, organized in two semesters, with 30 weeks of teaching per year. There are 10 faculties within the university, of which six are located in North Mitrovica, three in Leposavić and one in Zvečan.Faculty | Location | Academic staff | Students |
Technical Sciences | North Mitrovica | n/a | 1500 |
Natural Sciences & Mathematics | North Mitrovica | n/a | n/a |
Philosophy | North Mitrovica | n/a | 1350 |
Pedagogy | Leposavić | n/a | n/a |
Law | North Mitrovica | n/a | n/a |
Sports & Physical Education | Leposavić | n/a | n/a |
Economics | North Mitrovica | n/a | n/a |
Medicine | North Mitrovica | n/a | 1030 |
Arts | Zvečan | n/a | n/a |
Agriculture | Lešak | n/a | n/a |
Total | 730 | 10,264 |
Notable alumni and faculty members
- Radmila Bakočević, Yugoslavian opera singer
- Ljuba Brkić, president of Jeunesses Musicales Serbia
- Izudin Čavrković, Bosnian-Serbian trumpeter
- Vladimir Koh, Serbian violinist
- Vojna Nešić, Serbian-Bosnian composer
- Peko Nikčević, Montenegrin sculptor
- Jasmina Novokmet, Serbian conductor
- Marko Savić, Serbian pianist and piano teacher
- Haris Silajdžić, President of Bosnia and Herzegovina, former professor of Arabic
- Milenko Stefanović, European clarinetist
- Sanja Stijačić, Serbian-Bosnian-Montenegrin flutist
- Jovan Šajnović, Yugoslavian conductor
- Tomislav Trifić, Serbian graphic artist
- Andrijana Videnović, Serbian theater and movie actress
- Jorgovanka Tabaković, Serbian politician and the current Governor of NBS
- Goran Rakić, politician and the current Deputy Prime Minister of Kosovo.