I’m not in or associated with that Union but, what I could find is that they have some prerequisites that need to be met in order to be eligible to join.
According to their statutes :
"211 Rätt till medlemskap i förbundet har den som har avlagt ingenjörsexamen omfattande minst
180 högskolepoäng vid svensk högskola eller den som har likvärdig utländsk examen och har
svensk anknytning. Förbundsstyrelsen får efter särskild prövning bevilja annan person "
English translation:
“211 The right to membership of the association is granted to those who have completed an engineering degree of at least 180 credits at a Swedish university or to those who hold an equivalent foreign degree and are Swedish-affiliated. The Federal Administration may, after special examination, grant other person”
My interpretation of that clause; is that if you reside in Sweden and work here, you should be eligible to be a member. But that’s not for me to decide.
They refer all questions to their contact form and welcome all questions regarding becoming a member, but ask that its done through the contact form. Could only find the contact form page in swedish.
Thank you for the assistance! From my earlier research I do hold a qualifying engineering degree. I’m also interested in studying for a Masters or potentially PhD at Göthenburg, but frankly will accept any path to legally move and work somewhere that isn’t the US. The EU in general and Sweden or Germany in particular have been my focus thus far and I sincerely appreciate a new route to investigate.
After some really quick checking i would say fastest safest way (to get permanent recedency) is probably study permit, look for work during studying with an employer open to up your hours once your studies are over. So you can get a work permit. And before you known it 4 years have passed you can apply for permanent residence. One more year then apply for citizenship.
Edit: since you said you were open to studying
Edit 2: you probably already knew all this. If so read this as someone trying support your decision rather than some rando on the interwebs over splaining.
I found the individual pieces through my research earlier this year. Laying it out for me plainly really helps and has me revisiting the idea. I think I stumbled after learning about the need for enough funding to self-support? I’ll look into it more.
Thank you, I really appreciate your help and encouragement.
I’m not in or associated with that Union but, what I could find is that they have some prerequisites that need to be met in order to be eligible to join.
According to their statutes :
"211 Rätt till medlemskap i förbundet har den som har avlagt ingenjörsexamen omfattande minst 180 högskolepoäng vid svensk högskola eller den som har likvärdig utländsk examen och har svensk anknytning. Förbundsstyrelsen får efter särskild prövning bevilja annan person "
English translation: “211 The right to membership of the association is granted to those who have completed an engineering degree of at least 180 credits at a Swedish university or to those who hold an equivalent foreign degree and are Swedish-affiliated. The Federal Administration may, after special examination, grant other person”
My interpretation of that clause; is that if you reside in Sweden and work here, you should be eligible to be a member. But that’s not for me to decide.
They refer all questions to their contact form and welcome all questions regarding becoming a member, but ask that its done through the contact form. Could only find the contact form page in swedish.
Hope this helps.
https://www.sverigesingenjorer.se/hjalp-kontakt/kontakta-oss/
Edit: you of course also have to have an engineering degree minimum 180 swedish university points or equivalent.
Thank you for the assistance! From my earlier research I do hold a qualifying engineering degree. I’m also interested in studying for a Masters or potentially PhD at Göthenburg, but frankly will accept any path to legally move and work somewhere that isn’t the US. The EU in general and Sweden or Germany in particular have been my focus thus far and I sincerely appreciate a new route to investigate.
After some really quick checking i would say fastest safest way (to get permanent recedency) is probably study permit, look for work during studying with an employer open to up your hours once your studies are over. So you can get a work permit. And before you known it 4 years have passed you can apply for permanent residence. One more year then apply for citizenship.
Edit: since you said you were open to studying
Edit 2: you probably already knew all this. If so read this as someone trying support your decision rather than some rando on the interwebs over splaining.
I found the individual pieces through my research earlier this year. Laying it out for me plainly really helps and has me revisiting the idea. I think I stumbled after learning about the need for enough funding to self-support? I’ll look into it more.
Thank you, I really appreciate your help and encouragement.