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Translating for the European Commission Francisco De Vicente, Director Directorate for Translation Strategy and Multilingualism, DGT
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Contents Multilingualism in the world (slides 3-6) Translating for a multilingual European Union (slides 3-16) DG Translation within the European Commission (slides 17-37) Working in and with DG Translation (slides 38-49) In conclusion… (slides 50-51)
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Multilingualism in the world
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What is multilingualism? several languages spoken within a geographical area; a person’s ability to master several languages; a policy requiring an organisation/ a company/an institution to use several languages for communication
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Languages mean jobs! Language industry: worth 8.4 billion EUR in 2008, 10% annual growth, 15 billion EUR in 2015?
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Translating for a multilingual European Union
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EU official languages over time
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Linguists in the EU Council Parliament Court of Justice Court of Auditors Economic & Social Committee Committee of the Regions Translators: ± 4300 European Central Bank Translation Centre Interpreters: ± 1000
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Translators in the EU institutions Council of the EU European Commission Court of Justice Court of Auditors Economic & Social Committee European Parliament
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We translate from and into all the EU’s 23 official languages
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…and cover all subject areas
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The legal basis Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union Citizens have a right to address the official EU bodies in any of the EU’s official languages and to receive a reply in that language. Council Regulation No 1/58 Regulations and other documents of general application shall be drafted in the official languages.
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Translation and democracy Thanks to translation, people can help build the European Union and contribute to its openness and legitimacy.
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Translation as part of the legislative process Translation is central to the legislative process Translation and editing contribute to better regulation
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Types of languages Official/working/Treaty languages: 23 Procedural languages: English, French, German Additional languages: Basque, Catalan, Galician, Scottish Gaelic and Welsh
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Additional languages UK or SpainCommission Citizens Commission Services Designated body Translation Reply in the „regional” language Written communication in the „regional” language Original mail + translation into official language Reply in the official language
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DG Translation in the European Commission
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European Commission Initiates new legislation Implements EU policies and supervises compliance with EU law
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DG Translation Some 2500 translators and support staff 50% in Brussels 50% in Luxembourg Field Offices in Member States
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Organisation
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Over 2 million pages translated in 2011 Growth in the number of translated pages 2000-2011
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Language of original documents (%) English French German Others
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Number of translated pages 2011 by target language (%)
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Main document types
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Our services Translation of confidential texts
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Traditional translation aids Contact with customers/other translators Contact with experts in the Commission, the other institutions or the Member States Libraries (Brussels and Luxembourg) Reference works
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Electronic translation tools Terminology IATE (public) EUR-Lex (public) Quest Metasearch DGT Vista Electronic dictionaries, glossaries, Google, Wikipedia, etc. Translation tools Translation memories, Euramis Speech recognition Machine translation
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EUR-Lex: free public access to EU law eur-lex.europa.eu
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IATE: public multilingual term base iate.europa.eu
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Quality assurance 1. Before translation: editing of originals, Clear Writing campaign and training, preparatory work 2. During translation: translation aids and tools, information sharing (Note/Elise) 3. After translation: revision/review/spot-checking; evaluation; feedback
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What else do we do? Links with schools and universities Machine translation LIND-Web Studies Terminology and tools European Day of Languages Visiting Translator Scheme
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Mutual interest, mutual benefit DGT translators spend 1-4 weeks at a university or a public institution in their own or another country Exchange of knowledge, experience and good practices
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European Day of Languages 26 September
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Localising the EU’s message
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Cost of multilingualism Translation and interpreting in all EU institutions put together cost each EU citizen just over 2 euros per year. The cost of multilingualism adds up to less than 1% of the annual EU budget.
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Cost of translation Challenge: doing more with less Improving cost-effectiveness Prioritisation – translation strategy Fit-for-purpose translation Machine translation, other tools Outsourcing Why have in-house translation?
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Challenges ahead Future EU enlargements and related staff matters Doing more with less Modernity: efficiency gains by developing tools Recruitment: replacing retiring staff and attracting new translators
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Working in and with DG Translation
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Job opportunities Permanent job (EU official) Contract staff External contractor (freelance) Trainee
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Recruitment competitions for EU officials Publication: Official Journal of the European Union (C edition) EPSO (European Personnel Selection Office) website www.eu-careers.eu Selection procedure: 5 to 9 months
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Recruitment criteria You must be an EU citizen You must hold a full university degree in languages or another field (minimum BA) No professional experience is required
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Language knowledge Perfect command of your main language or mother tongue Very sound knowledge of English or German or French (first source language) Very sound knowledge of a second source language among the EU’s official languages
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Other skills People with non-language degrees please apply! Translator profile and skills needed: see ec.europa.eu/dgs/translation/workwithus/staff/profile
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The competition process Apply online (July for translators) Pre-selection test (numerical, verbal & abstract reasoning) Translation tests, group exercise, structured interview, oral presentation
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What can the Commission offer you? €4500/month starting salary Good leave entitlement Varied and challenging work with scope to shape your own career in the Commission Excellent language learning opportunities Job security Multicultural environment Flexible working-time arrangements
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Contract staff Special calls for contract staff For more information, check regularly ec.europa.eu/dgs/translation/workwithus
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Translation outsourcing Documents of all kinds are outsourced… … EXCEPT urgent, politically sensitive or confidential documents Certain specialised documents if no in-house capacity Non-EU languages if no in-house capacity 28 % of DGT’s total output was outsourced in 2011.
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How to become a contractor? The only way: respond to a call for tenders and have your bid accepted Calls for tenders for translation services are published in the Official Journal and on our website ec.europa.eu/dgs/translation/workwithus/ contractor
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Duration: 5 months Two rounds per year, starting in March and October For university graduates only For EU citizens – but a quota for other countries’ nationals Competence: able to translate from two EU languages into your main language Monthly grant Traineeships
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More information? Web: ec.europa.eu/dgs/translation Facebook.com/translatingforeurope
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Thank you for your attention!
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