In view of the transnational nature of studies, students will be constantly urged to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the University and the Department to undertake a period of training abroad (Erasmus, binational degrees, traineeships, grants for dissertations abroad).
The Department of Law where the degree course is based offers its own international mobility service through the Director's delegates for Internationalization and Erasmus Mobility (Prof. Vittoria Berlingò, Prof. Marcella Distefano, Prof. Dario Latella), and the Director's delegate for International Relations (Prof. Stefano Ruggeri).
The mobility assistance activity also benefits from the support of the Director's delegate for orientation and tutoring (Prof. F. Rende) and the relative Orientation and Tutoring Commission (composed of Prof. F. Rende, G. D'Amico, M. Tigano, A. La Spina, E. Fazio, V. Bilardo, F. Franchina and two student representatives).
Both the contact persons for international mobility and the students are supported by the Erasmus Mobility Operational Unit.
In supporting international mobility, the Commission carries out the following activities: it publicises opportunities for study and training abroad; it guides candidates in their choice of host location and in identifying the examinations to be taken so that the training obtained abroad is in line with the course of study; it communicates useful information to facilitate participation in mobility programmes; it monitors the progress of training abroad; it carries out consultancy and support activities with a view to the useful use of the mobility experience in subsequent training and/or employment developments. In this regard, it is worth mentioning that students and recent graduates of the Department are offered the opportunity to carry out internships, within the Erasmus + Traineeship programme, at European universities, professionals and organisations based abroad.
The Department of Law has two main objectives. The first is to promote student and lecturer mobility, so as to foster an ever greater operativeness of existing and recently concluded agreements with other universities, even beyond the Erasmus network. The second objective is to expand the network of Erasmus agreements and also to promote agreements outside this system, in order to foster the mobility of the Department's students and lecturers also towards universities outside the EU area. In this context, the framework cooperation agreements for mobility, entered into by the University with foreign universities [Erasmus Agreements], deserve special consideration.
The Course Council may recognise as curricular activities of 'training and orientation traineeship' any activities carried out abroad, even outside the Erasmus conventions.
The opportunities provided by international mobility programmes are publicised on the Course website (as well as the University website) and are specifically promoted and publicised by the Course Coordination.