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This is a list of research centres and institutes of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) located at the campuses of its Australian (RMIT University) and Vietnamese (RMIT University Vietnam) branches, its European centre and partner sites.
In 1998, the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Australia was invited by the Vietnamese government to establish a fully foreign-owned university in Vietnam. [4] In 2000, it was granted a licence by the Vietnamese Ministry of Planning and Investment to deliver undergraduate and postgraduate education, training and research.
The RMIT School of Health and Biomedical Sciences is the tertiary school of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology for allied health, applied health and biomedicine. It is within the College of Science, Engineering and Health (STEM College).
The university trades under the name "RMIT University" which is a registered business name and trademark. [45] [46] It is composed of the academic colleges and schools, research centres and institutes of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, [47] and is governed by the RMIT Council and is managed by the RMIT Chancellery. [48] [49]
At the turn of the century, RMIT was invited by the Government of Vietnam to establish Vietnam's first foreign-owned university. In 2001, it established "RMIT International University, Vietnam" (now RMIT University Vietnam) near the centre of Ho Chi Minh City, and a second campus in the Vietnamese capital city of Hanoi in 2004. [10]
This is a list of RMIT University people. This list of people includes alumni as well as current and former students and faculty of the Australian (RMIT University) and Vietnamese (RMIT University Vietnam) branches of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT).
RMIT University Vietnam (1 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Engineering universities and colleges in Vietnam" ... Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Vietnam; V.
The antecedent to RMIT's University Library network was established as the library of the Working Men's College of Melbourne (antecedent to present-day RMIT) in 1890. [3] The tiny library was initially housed in a 6 x 9 m room in Building 1 and contained only 152 m of shelf space.