Unicamp, one of Brazil's leading public universities, has marked a significant milestone in its internationalization efforts with the inaugural International Partners' Days event held from April 8 to 10, 2026, on its main campus in Campinas, São Paulo. For the first time, the university brought together representatives from more than 20 foreign partner institutions, fostering dialogue on collaboration opportunities in research, teaching, and student mobility. This gathering underscores Unicamp's strategic push to enhance its global presence amid Brazil's growing emphasis on higher education internationalization.
The event arrives at a pivotal moment for Unicamp, celebrating its 60th anniversary and building on its reputation as Brazil's second-best university in the Times Higher Education (THE) Latin America Rankings 2026, with strong performances in teaching, research environment, and industry income. With over 600 international partnerships worldwide, Unicamp exemplifies how Brazilian institutions are navigating post-pandemic recovery to reclaim global competitiveness in higher education.
Opening Ceremony: A Cultural and Strategic Welcome
The event kicked off on April 8 in the auditorium of the Faculdade de Ciências Médicas (FCM) with a captivating performance by the String Quartet of Unicamp's Symphony Orchestra. The repertoire featured timeless Brazilian classics such as 'Tristeza do Jeca,' 'Luar do Sertão,' 'Chalana,' and 'Menino da Porteira,' setting a tone of cultural exchange and national pride. This artistic opening symbolized the blend of Brazil's rich heritage with its academic ambitions on the world stage.
Key university leaders addressed the audience, including Rector Paulo Cesar Montagner, DERI Executive Director Rafael Dias, Pro-Rector for Research Ana Frattini, Chief of Staff Oswaldo Taranto, Executive Director of Administration Flávio Aguiar, and COCEN Coordinator Raluca Savu. Their speeches highlighted the human-centered nature of international relations, emphasizing trust-based partnerships essential for addressing global challenges like inequality, environmental crises, and health issues.
Visionary Leadership and Strategic Goals
Rector Montagner positioned the event as a launchpad for major projects, stressing Unicamp's readiness to lead in the Global South while sustaining ties with Europe and North America. 'Today, as Unicamp reaches 60 years, I am fully convinced that the university is prepared for this. We have a consolidated trajectory in Latin America and want to expand it to universities in Southern countries,' he stated.
Dias noted the representative nature of the attendees, drawn from Unicamp's robust network. Coordinator-General Fernando Coelho added a broader perspective: 'In a world facing conflicts that deepen divisions, higher education internationalization plays a fundamental role in developing tolerance and resilience, promoting understanding of the other and recognizing diversity as essential for lasting peace.' These visions align with Brazil's national trends, where CAPES's Global.edu program approved 33 institutional networks in 2026 to boost internationalization across 112 institutions.
Key Milestone: MoU Signing with Universidad Andrés Bello
A highlight was the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Chile's Universidad Andrés Bello (UNAB). The agreement paves the way for joint research projects and exchanges of undergraduate/postgraduate students and faculty. UNAB Rector Julio Castro praised Unicamp's research relevance and its role in Latin American integration: 'UNAB has historically worked for Latin American integration, and Unicamp is one of Brazil's most important universities.'
This MoU exemplifies tangible outcomes, building on Unicamp's recent agreements like those with Sciences Po (France), University of York (Canada), and Beijing University of Chinese Medicine. Such pacts are crucial for Brazil, where international mobility remains below pre-pandemic levels but shows recovery, with programs like Santander DERI funding 48 postgraduates in 2026.
Represented Institutions and Unicamp's Vast Network
Attendees hailed from prestigious partners including the University of Bologna (Italy), University of Potsdam (Germany), University of Birmingham (UK), and Indiana University (US), alongside Chinese and Latin American counterparts from Argentina and Chile. Strategic partners listed by DERI include Universidad de Buenos Aires (Argentina), Universidad de la República (Uruguay), UNAM (Mexico), Purdue University (US), Freie Universität Berlin (Germany), Université Paris-Saclay (France), Cardiff University (UK), and TU Delft (Netherlands).
- Europe: Bologna, Potsdam, Birmingham, Paris-Saclay, TU Delft
- Americas: Indiana, UNAB (Chile), Buenos Aires (Argentina)
- Asia: Multiple Chinese universities
Unicamp belongs to networks like AUGM, AULP, CINDA, Erasmus+, GCUB, and UDUALC, amplifying its reach. For more on partnerships, see the DERI conveniadas list.
Diverse Program: Panels, Tours, and Fair
The three-day agenda featured expert panels on internationalization, campus tours, a visit to the Rare Works Library Fausto Castilho (BORA), and a student fair at Ciclo Básico on April 10. Partners showcased academic opportunities, engaging Unicamp's international faculty, students, and researchers. An international delegation toured COCEN centers, learning about interdisciplinary research nuclei.
This hands-on format facilitated direct networking, vital for mobility programs where Unicamp selects students for exchanges via DERI editals, targeting partners like UBA and Purdue.
Unicamp's Global Standing and Achievements
Ranked 351-400 in THE World University Rankings 2026 (top 20% globally) and #233 in QS 2026, Unicamp excels in research quality and citations. Its Hospital de Clínicas ranks among the world's best, enhancing collaborative appeal. Internationalization metrics show growth in researcher exchanges, though student mobility lags pre-COVID levels, per 2022 reports—with 2026 initiatives accelerating recovery.
Read the full English coverage on Unicamp's site for deeper insights.
Brazil's Higher Education Internationalization Landscape
Brazil's push mirrors global trends, with Semesp's 2026 report highlighting internationalization amid AI, EAD regulation, and quality evaluation. CAPES Global.edu fosters 112 institutions' networks for equitable knowledge production. Unicamp leads, but challenges include funding cuts and visa hurdles, per FAUBAI data. Events like this align with GCUB's cooperation goals, positioning Brazil competitively against rising Asian hubs.
Benefits for Students, Faculty, and Research
For students, enhanced mobility via DERI/Santander (48 spots 2026) offers short-term exchanges, boosting employability—91% virtual intl in Latin America per Semesp. Faculty gain joint projects; researchers access networks like T.I.M.E. Outcomes include BEPE-FAPESP stages abroad. Step-by-step: apply via DERI editals, select partner, secure funding, engage in collabs—yielding publications, skills, networks.
- Increased intercultural competence
- Joint publications (Unicamp's QS citations strength)
- Career advancement via Global South ties
Challenges, Opportunities, and Future Outlook
Challenges: post-pandemic mobility gaps, geopolitical tensions, funding (e.g., Capes PNPG 2025-29 stresses intl). Opportunities: Sul Global focus counters Northern dominance; Semesp notes microcredentials, regional pacts. Future: annual Partners' Days, more MoUs, dual degrees (e.g., recent EPF France talks). Unicamp aims top Latin rankings, per THE trajectory.
Explore Semesp's 2026 Higher Ed Trends report for Brazil-wide insights.
Related Initiatives and Brazil's Path Forward
Unicamp joins USP/UNESP in SP intl meetings; GCUB expands BRICS ties. Actionable: students check DERI editals; faculty propose MoUs. As Brazil eyes Vixit Bharat-like reforms, events like this propel universities toward sustainable global impact.
Photo by Gustavo Sánchez on Unsplash
