International Finno-Ugric Students' Conference

IFUSCO (International Finno-Ugric Students' Conference) is an annual international conference for and by the students of Finno-Ugric languages and peoples.[1]

IFUSCO conference contains presentations and workshops on linguistics, ethnography, folkloristics, archaeology, history, museology, literature, translation theory, sociology, law, music, mythology, regional issues, education, economics etc., that are connected to the lives of speakers of Finno-Ugric languages.[2][3][4] In addition, IFUSCO offers different events related to the Finno-Ugric cultures and the host country.

IFUSCO has always been a multilingual conference, featuring the Uralic languages as well as English, Russian and German. One of IFUSCO's long-standing traditions is the three-language rule, according to which every presentation must consist of three languages – one for the abstract of the presentation, one for its handouts or slides, and one for the speech itself.[5]

Every hosting students’ committee is also presenting a unique emblem of the year's event that serves as a logo for the whole conference.

History

IFUSCO was created in 1984 in Göttingen by local students of Finno-Ugric studies, to facilitate contact between other students. The conference was initially a small gathering that mainly served as a forum and as a way of exchanging information. The first IFUSCO had 26 participants from the Netherlands (Groningen) and Germany (Göttingen, Hamburg). Later it has turned into a conference format where lectures are given by and for students.

IFUSCO is organized in a different city and by a different university every year. Since the first conference there have been 38 IFUSCOs held in 22 different cities and 11 different countries. Russian universities have organised the largest number of conferences, the first of which was held in 1999 in Syktyvkar.

The conference has been cancelled twice in its history. First cancellation happened in 2001, when the conference was supposed to be held in Izhevsk, Russia.[6] In 2020 the conference was meant to be held by Riga, Latvia, but got postponed until the following year due to COVID-19. IFUSCO in 2021 was held fully online.[7][8] The conferences after that in Prague and Turku offered a chance for partial online participation.[9][10]

In 2016 IFUSCO was originally supposed to be held in Khanty-Mansiysk on 7–9 April. It was postponed twice before finally being cancelled.[11] However, the Finnish students of Finno-Ugric studies organized its small version at the University of Helsinki in order to keep the tradition.

Locations and dates

YearHost cityDates
1984 Göttingen25–27 May
1985 Hamburg[12]
1986 Groningen[13]
1987 Budapest[14]24–28 May
1988 Helsinki[15]22–26 May
1989 Vienna[16]14–18 May
1990 Tartu[17]
1991 Greifswald[18]19–23 May
1992 Munich
1993 Prague
1994 Poznań
1995 Szeged
1996 Hamburg[19]24–28 April
1997 Turku[20]20–24 May
1998 Pécs20–25 May
1999 Syktyvkar10–14 May
2000 Tallinn3–7 August
2001Cancelled
2002 Helsinki11–15 September
2003 Syktyvkar24–26 September
2004 Budapest3–8 May
2005 Izhevsk12–15 May
2006 Yoshkar-Ola12–15 May
2007 Saransk15–19 May
2008 Helsinki14–18 May
2009 Petrozavodsk14–16 May
2010 Kudymkar14–16 May
2011 Budapest9–11 May
2012 Tartu8–11 May
2013 Syktyvkar6–8 May
2014 Göttingen[21]9–11 April
2015 Pécs16–19 April
2016 Helsinki15–18 September
2017 Warsaw18–22 September
2018 Tartu[22]2–5 May
2019 Vienna23–27 April
2020Cancelled
2021 Riga11–12 May
2022 Prague23–27 May
2023 Turku15–19 May
2024 Budapest27–31 May

References