was founded in 1925 as the Civic College in Helsinki teaching public administration, organisation management and journalism. In 1930, a total of 195 students were enrolled at the College and its name was amended to the School of Social Sciences. As the institution grew, it expanded to municipal administration, public law, child protection, and civic education. Faculty of Social Sciences was established in 1949 as the first faculty. By 1960, the number of students had increased to 933 and the School of Social Sciences moved to Tampere. The institution was renamed to the University of Tampere in 1966. Tampere had been the most important industrial center in Finland since the late 19th century. Agathon Meurman, member of the senate of Finland, had expressed the need for a technical higher institution already in the mid-19th century. Yet, even after the continuation war all technical higher education was conducted in Helsinki University of Technology. Urho Kekkonen, the President of Finland, signed an edict for establishing a Tampere-based branch of the Helsinki University of Technology in 1965. The school began operating on the same year. The branch gained independent university status in 1972 and was named as Tampere University of Technology. The two universities always had close relations and co-operation was common in the fields of economics, computer science, biotechnology, and medical technology. Therefore, merging the universities had been suggested multiple times. The Tampere3 merger process began in 2014 when vuorineuvos Stig Gustavson invited the higher education institutions in Tampere to discuss a reform. In 2015, the three universities decided the objectives on creating the new university in Tampere. In 2016, the Ministry of Education and Culture appointed a steering, and a working group to prepare the establishment of a new foundation university. Initially Tampere University of Applied Sciences was planned to merge into the new foundation, similarly to the other two universities. However, this would have required changes to legislation since Universities of Applied Sciences, or polytechnics, are not considered as Universities, in Finland, which can grant licentiate and doctorate degrees. The merger was approved by the Finnish Parliament in December 2017 and came into effect on 1 January 2019. The university commune comprises the new Tampere University and the Tampere University of Applied Sciences, of which Tampere University is the major shareholder.
Organisation
Faculties
Tampere University comprises the following faculties:
A total of 20,600 degree students studied at the Tampere University in 2017, including 9,300 students in bachelor's degree programmes, 7,600 students in master's degree programmes, and 2,400 students in doctoral degree programmes. Additionally 1,400 students are training as medical specialists. In 2019, the university received 28,265 applications of whom 2,977 were enrolled for an admission rate of 11%. During that same year, the university was the second most applied university in Finland only bested by the University of Helsinki.
Research
Tampere University is primarily a research university, whereas, Tampere University of Applied Sciences focuses on development. Pre-merger multidisciplinary collaboration was mainly conducted between the fields of signal processing, biotechnology and medical technology at the Institute of Biosciences and Medical Technology. The University states that it pursues to become a globally recognised research community in the areas of technology, health, and society research. The university has ten Finnish Centres of Excellence:
HEX - History of Experience
SPARG - Spaces of Political Agency
Gamecult - Game Culture Studies
AgeCare - Ageing and Care Research
CoETG - Cancer Research
FinMIT - Mitochondria, Metabolism and Disease Research
CoEBoC - Body-on-Chip Research
ProLipids - Biomembrane Research
COMP - Computational Nanoscience Research
Inverse Problems Research
The University also comprises a single Nordic Centre of Excellence:
NordSTEVA - Security and Safety Research
Furthermore, the University coordinates Academy of Finland's flagship programme on Photonics Research and Innovation.