University Lille-II
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University Lille-II
Summary
University Lille-II is a university in France[1]. It draws 11 Wikipedia views per month (university_in_france category, ranking #35 of 62).[2]
Key Facts
- University Lille-II's field of work was law[3].
- University Lille-II's field of work was medicine[4].
- University Lille-II's field of work was pharmacy[5].
- University Lille-II's field of work was dentistry[6].
- University Lille-II's field of work was sports science[7].
- University Lille-II's field of work was criminology[8].
- University Lille-II was a member of NSL cluster[9].
- University Lille-II was a member of European University Association[10].
- University Lille-II was a member of Utrecht Network[11].
- University Lille-II was a member of Couperin Consortium[12].
- University Lille-II was a member of Renater[13].
- University Lille-II is in the country of France[14].
- University Lille-II's image is recorded as Université lille2.jpg[15].
- University Lille-II's image is recorded as Lille ancienne faculte medecine pharmacie.JPG[16].
- University Lille-II's instance of is recorded as university in France[17].
- University Lille-II's follows is recorded as University of Douai[18].
- University Lille-II's followed by is recorded as University of Lille[19].
- University Lille-II's headquarters location is recorded as Lille[20].
- University Lille-II's ISNI is recorded as 0000000120977060[21].
- University Lille-II's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 157822516[22].
- University Lille-II's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n80146501[23].
- University Lille-II's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 11865799z[24].
- University Lille-II's IdRef ID is recorded as 026404389[25].
- University Lille-II's child organization or unit is recorded as Institut de Biologie de Lille[26].
- University Lille-II's child organization or unit is recorded as Nuclear receptors, metabolic and cardiovascular diseases[27].
Body
Founding
+1970-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of University Lille-II[28].
Identity
University Lille-II's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'fr', 'text': 'UNIVERSITE DE LILLE 2 DROIT ET SANTE'}[29]. Its part of is recorded as University of Lille[30]. Its follows is recorded as University of Douai[18]. Its followed by is recorded as University of Lille[19].
Leadership
Chairpersons include Henri Warembourg[31], a physician[32], 1905–1993[33], of France[34], awarded the Officer of the Legion of Honour[35]; Étienne Cuingnet[36]; Jacques Vanlerenberghe[37]; José Savoye[38]; Jean Léonardelli[39]; and Christian Sergheraert[40].
Operations
University Lille-II's headquarters location is recorded as Lille[20]. Parent organizations include Lille Nord de France University[41] and University of Lille[42]. Subsidiaries include Institut de Biologie de Lille[26], a mixed service unit[43], in France[44], founded in 1996[45]; Nuclear receptors, metabolic and cardiovascular diseases[27], a facility[46], in France[47], founded in 2010[48]; Center for Infection and Immunity of Lille[49], a French UMR[50], in France[51], founded in 2010[52], headquartered in Lille[53]; LASIRE[54], a French UMR[55], in France[56], founded in 1998[57]; Lille Center for European Research on Administration, Politics and Society[58], a French UMR[59], in France[60], founded in 1976[61]; and Metabolic Functional (epi)Genomics and Molecular Mechanisms Involved in type 2 Diabetes and Related Diseases[62], a facility[63], in France[64], founded in 2010[65].
Industry
University Lille-II's industry is recorded as higher education[66]. Fields of work include law[3], an academic discipline[67]; medicine[4], a field of study[68]; pharmacy[5], an interdisciplinary science[69]; dentistry[6], a medical specialty[70]; sports science[7], an interdisciplinary science[71]; and criminology[8], a field of study[72], founded in 1900[73].
Dissolution
University Lille-II was dissolved in +2017-00-00T00:00:00Z[74].
Why It Matters
University Lille-II draws 11 Wikipedia views per month (university_in_france category, ranking #35 of 62).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[75] It is known by 32 alternative names across languages and contexts.[76]