Key facts

The colloquium opened with an intercultural communication workshop that helped participants bridge linguistic and cultural differences—an essential foundation for collaborative research across borders. A compact German language course added another layer of practical competence, preparing the cohort to navigate daily life in Freiberg and future stays in German-speaking labs.
Introductory sessions about the EURECA-PRO alliance set the stage: faculty members outlined ongoing joint degrees, shared research architectures, and the alliance’s roadmap for embedding sustainability into every program and project. For many doctoral candidates, it was a first glimpse into how their individual theses fit a wider European agenda.
Highlight
This year’s highlight was the 34th Krüger Colloquium titled “Being Human in the Age of AI: Farewell to Uniqueness?” – an engaging reflection on humanity’s evolving identity in a digital world. In addition, students took part in the Colloquium of Young Researchers, where they presented their own projects and discussed future-facing ideas across disciplines.
The program also featured:
- A company visit to a water treatment plant using renewable energy, A sustainable geocaching session,
- A laboratory tour through key facilities at TU BAF,
- And a dynamic Alumni Talk on career paths after the PhD.
At the conclusion of the Colloquium, the following awards were presented:
- Best Research: Shabnam Ahadzadeh (UH) and Hamza Mumtaz (SUT)
- Best Presentation: Johannes Krämer (MUL) and Marios Salinas (TUC)
- Students’ Choice Award: Mujahid Ali (SUT)
This intensive two-week program deepened participants’ academic and cultural understanding while strengthening the EURECA-PRO network and its commitment to sustainable, innovative, and inclusive research in Europe.