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List of universities and colleges in Macau

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Macau is a city of tourism with a multicultural blend which provides a broad sense and international perspective for its college students. The free academic atmosphere and its profound and unique foundation in culture have also created favorable conditions for higher education. Most of the curricula, teachers and the general quality of teaching have reached an internationally accepted level.

Mainly English or Chinese (or both) are the languages of instruction in universities; some courses or programs are conducted in Portuguese.

The following is a list of universities, polytechnics and other advanced level (higher) education and research institutions in Macau.

Name Portuguese Chinese Type
University of Macau Universidade de Macau 澳門大學 Public[1]
Macao Polytechnic University Universidade Politécnica de Macau 澳門理工大學 Public[2]
Macao University of Tourism Universidade de Turismo de Macau 澳門旅遊大學 Public[3]
Academy of Public Security Forces Escola Superior das Forças de Segurança de Macau 澳門保安部隊高等學校 Public[4]
Macau University of Science and Technology Universidade de Ciência e Tecnologia de Macau 澳門科技大學 Private[5]
City University of Macau Universidade da Cidade de Macau 澳門城市大學 Private[6]
University of Saint Joseph Universidade de São José 聖若瑟大學 Private[7]
Kiang Wu Nursing College of Macau Instituto de Enfermagem Kiang Wu de Macau 澳門鏡湖護理學院 Private[8]
Macau Institute of Management Instituto de Gestão de Macau 澳門管理學院 Private[9]
Macau Millennium College Instituto Milénio de Macau 中西創新學院 Private[10]
Institute of European Studies of Macau Instituto de Estudos Europeus de Macau 澳門歐洲研究學會 Private organization[11]
United Nations University Institute in Macao Instituto de Macau da Universidade das Nações Unidas 聯合國大學國際軟件技術研究所 United Nations University[12]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • How Many Countries Are There?
  • Montgomery College & Macau Millennium College - Partnership of Educational Development
  • Parrots pass classic test of intelligence

Transcription

# How Many Countries are There? How many countries are there? Easy: just grab a map and start counting, yes? No. Not all maps are created equal -- borders will differ depending on who you got the map from. So if individuals disagree, then surely a committee will save the day. Go to the United Nations, find the room where countries sit -- each with a little name tag -- start counting and get an answer. Now of course, countries come and countries go, but at the time this video was made the answer is 193. Fastest video ever, right? Except: you know this isn't over. The United Nations list is less a complete class roster than a club membership that doesn't include everyone. Take, Vatican City who is a country but is too cool for school when it comes to being a member of the United Nations. And while Vatican City's exact situation is… complicated he's straightforward compared to other non-United Nations countries… or places -- the terminology is going to have a be a bit, unclear here. Take Kosovo, who want's to join the UN club, but membership requires none of these five countries to reject you. And while the United States, The United Kingdom and France think Kosovo is a country, Russia and China think she's just a rebellious part of Serbia and so veto her membership. As for everyone else, just over half recognize Kosovo as independent and Kosovo, adorably, has a website where she thanks each one in their own language. But Kosovo, is not there only other… place that wants to be considered a real country. There's Transnistria, Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia. Which might, or might not, be part of Moldova, Azerbaijan or Georgia depending on who you ask. Two of these… countries, no UN members recognize as countries, and other two have only five supporters. Though all four of these... places recognize each other as countries. There's also The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic and Northern Cyprus each with their own supporters. At this point you might be thinking 'OK, srsly, what's the deal? I don't care who these guys think are countries, are these places countries or not?' If I fly to one for a Holliday, will it *look* like a country when I get there? The answer is, 'maybe'. These... countries are all autonomous, to some extent, with governments that issue passports though these may be of rather limited use and depending on which ones you're visiting they may have more or less control of the territory they claim as theirs. You won't always find a clear border. What makes many of these places... fuzzy is they're *usually* born of conflict in the recent-ish past. That answer is probably less helpful than you want so think of it like this: while The United States is clearly a country now, in 1776, not so much. Then she was just an idea in minds of rebel scum. She wasn't recognized as a country instantly and without diplomatic effort to change that Young America would never have made it on her own. Much like what happened a century later when she got her own rebel who, unlike elder sister, failed in the diplomacy department so… yeah. And so it goes today with many of the maybe countries in the world. Maybe they're future United States and maybe they're future Confederacies -- but in the moment it's hard to say -- because these things can take decades to settle. By the way, these maybe-countries are super awkward for countries to deal with. While your tiny island nation might not want to get involved in the affairs of distant lands you still have to decide to send a diplomat, or not -- meaning even inaction forces you to pick a side in *every territorial skirmish in the world*. A notably awkward case being: Taiwan… errr, sorry, Chinese Taipei which is *totally* part of China and no one would ever think otherwise… Is China gone? OK: by any reasonable definition, Taiwan is a separate country and has been for years, but China won't let go and insists you call her Chinese Taipei and don't forget who makes all your clothing and utensils and TVs and phones and computers and everything. So almost all countries -- including the mighty United States -- plays along even though they unofficially acknowledge Taiwan's independence and do things that wouldn't make any senses otherwise -- like sending aircraft carriers to protect one part of China from another part of China. Thus the innocent question 'how many countries?' has led us straight to a big 'World War III: Press Here to Start' button which is getting depressing so lets move on to... Ohhhh, right. ::sigh:: No more politics: on to higher ideas: The Olympics. Surely from their perch among the gods they have a disinterested view of the countries below. "How many are there, Olympics?" Two hundred and four? Huh. So Olympics is a bit… special. She defines Puerto Rico as a 'country' even though it's unambiguously part of the United States as well as Bermuda and Aruba which are connected to the UK and The Netherlands along with a bunch of other places that are happy to play in her Olympic Games as Nations but make no claims to independence. Presumably, Olympics includes these to bump up the number so she can say 'more than 200 countries compete!' Though even her inflated list doesn't include Vatican City -- because, given his demographics, divine intervention would be required to take home a gold. And Vatican City brings us right back to the core of the difficulty with this question: a consistent definition of 'country' is impossible because your checklist needs to both include Vatican City the least country-like country that's still a country -- and that also exclude the Anti-Vatican City: Hong Kong: -- the most country-like country that isn't. Also don't forget from previous episodes the seemingly endless territories which look and act like independent countries, but just sort of aren't. And this isn't even brining up the various Nutters who plant a flag on an Island, or an oil rig, start printing currency on their fancy inkjet and declare Deludtopia a new nation. So with no checklist to follow where does that leave us? The best answer to the question 'how many countries' for the forceable future is probably to say 'around 200' and leave it at that. An answer with more significant figures implies more agreement than there really is -- because ultimately, what makes a country a country is if other countries think that country is a country.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Home". um.edu.mo.
  2. ^ "Home". mpu.edu.mo.
  3. ^ "Home". utm.edu.mo.
  4. ^ http://www.fsm.gov.mo/esfsm/[bare URL]
  5. ^ "Home". must.edu.mo.
  6. ^ http://www.aiou.edu Archived 2005-02-10 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Home". usj.edu.mo.
  8. ^ "Home". kwnc.edu.mo.
  9. ^ "Home". mma.org.mo.
  10. ^ "Home". mmc.edu.mo.
  11. ^ "Home". ieem.org.mo.
  12. ^ "Unu-Iist". Archived from the original on 2007-11-15. Retrieved 2005-08-30.
This page was last edited on 2 April 2024, at 12:27
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