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The Alison Richard Building, in which the department is located | |
Parent institution | Faculty of Human, Social, and Political Science |
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Affiliation | University of Cambridge |
Head of Department | Jude Browne (2021- ) |
Undergraduates | 612 |
Postgraduates | 439 |
Location | Cambridge, England |
Business Operations Manager (formerly Departmental Administrator) | Helen Reynolds (2024 - ) Emma King (2021-4) |
Website | www |
The Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Cambridge (abbreviated POLIS) is the department at the University of Cambridge responsible for research and instruction in political science, international relations and public policy. It is part of the Faculty of Human, Social, and Political Science.
History
The inductive study of political science at Cambridge was pioneered in the 19th century by John Robert Seeley. In 1928, the Rockefeller Foundation endowed the university's first chair in political science, which was situated in the Faculty of History and inaugurally held by Ernest Barker. The Social and Political Sciences Committee was formed in 1970 as an early attempt to unify research and instruction in political science at the university and, in 2004, the Department of Politics was established.
POLIS, formed in 2009 by the merger of the former Department of Politics and the Centre for International Studies, is administratively housed at the university's Alison Richard Building on the Sidgwick Site.
In 2016, POLIS PhD student Giulio Regeni was killed while carrying out research in Cairo, Egypt.
Heads of department
- Geoffrey Hawthorn (Founder)
- Andrew Gamble (2009-12)
- Christopher J. Hill (2012-14)
- David Runciman (2014-18)
- Jason Sharman (2018-21)
- Jude Browne (2021- )
Degrees and reputation
Degrees
Politics and International Studies are taught at the undergraduate level through either the Human, Social, and Political Sciences Tripos or the History and Politics Tripos. At the postgraduate level, the department offers nine Masters' programmes and four PhD programmes.
University rankings | |
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University of Cambridge | |
Global – Liberal arts | |
QS Politics | 7 (2024) |
Reputation
The 2024 edition of the QS World University Rankings ranked Cambridge seventh in the world for the study of politics. The 2024 Times Higher Education World University Rankings ranked it sixth. The department has been ranked top in the UK for the teaching of politics by the 2025 Complete University Guide. Its masters and doctoral programmes have been ranked among the 25 "Best International Relations Schools in the World" by Foreign Policy. In the 2021 UK government Research Excellence Framework (REF) exercise, the department was ranked 21st out of 56 institutions.
Academic and research centres
The peer reviewed journal Cambridge Review of International Affairs is published by Taylor & Francis in academic affiliation with the department.
Ten specialised centres are housed within the department.
Centre | Focus | Director(s) | Official website | Reference(s) | |
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Bennett Institute for Public Policy |
Public policy | Michael Kenny | bennettinstitute.cam.ac.uk | ||
Cambridge Centre for Political Thought |
Political theory | Duncan Bell, Richard Bourke, Annabel Brett, Duncan Kelly | polthought.cam.ac.uk | ||
Centre for Gender Studies |
Gender studies | Lauren Wilcox | gender.cam.ac.uk | ||
Centre for Geopolitics |
Geopolitics | Brendan Simms | cfg.polis.cam.ac.uk | ||
Centre of African Studies |
African studies | Adam Branch | african.cam.ac.uk | ||
Centre of Development Studies |
Development studies | Graham Denyer Willis | devstudies.cam.ac.uk | ||
Centre of Governance and Human Rights |
Human rights, Social justice | Ella McPherson, Sharath Srinivasan | cghr.polis.cam.ac.uk/ | ||
Centre of Latin American Studies |
Latin American studies | Pedro Mendes Loureiro | latin-american.cam.ac.uk | ||
Centre of South Asian Studies |
South Asian studies | Shailaja Fennell | s-asian.cam.ac.uk | ||
YouGov-Cambridge Centre for Public Opinion Research |
Public opinion | Dr Joel Rogers de Waal | yougov.co.uk/cambridge |
Notable people
This section may contain excessive or irrelevant examples. Please help improve the article by adding descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples. (October 2024) |
Alumni
Notable alumnae of Cambridge's politics and international studies programmes include: (top row, left to right) NATO Military Committee chair Sir Stuart Peach, Nigerian foreign minister Yusuf Tuggar, Oaktree founder Hugh Evans; (middle row, left to right) Pulitzer Prize winner Ronen Bergman, CBS News journalist Roxana Saberi, U.S. Ambassador to Spain Julissa Reynoso Pantaleón; (bottom row, left to right) S&P Global vice chair Daniel Yergin, IAEA chair Chae-Hyun Shin.Master of Philosophy (MPhil) programmes
- Salman Ahmed — Director of Policy Planning at the U.S. Department of State
- Robyn Curnow — Journalist, CNN
- Hugh Evans — Founder, Oaktree
- Mirza Shakir Ispahani — Managing Director of M. M. Ispahani Limited
- Emily Kassie — Documentary filmmaker, recipient of the 2016 World Press Photo award
- Yuri Kim — United States Ambassador to Albania
- Dan Markel — Professor, Florida State University
- Michael G. Masters — CEO, Secure Community Network
- Evan S. Medeiros — Professor, Georgetown University
- Julissa Reynoso Pantaleón — United States Ambassador to Spain and Andorra
- Stuart Peach — Chair of the NATO Military Committee
- Samir Rifai — Prime Minister of Jordan
- Rohan Sajdeh — Senior Partner, Boston Consulting Group
- Elizabeth N. Saunders — Professor, Columbia University
- Andrew Shearer — Director-General of the Australian Office of National Intelligence
- Damian Williams — United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York
Master of Studies (MSt) programme
- Massimo Ambrosetti — Ambassador of Italy to the People's Republic of China
- Marcus Bleasdale — Photojournalist, recipient of the 2014 Robert Capa Gold Medal
- Nadine Chahine — Typographer, Fast Company's 2012 "100 Most Creative People in Business"
- Janis Mackey Frayer — Journalist, NBC News
- Vin Gupta — Medical correspondent, NBC News
- Zach Nunn — Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
- Paul Paton — Dean of law, Chapman University
- Roxana Saberi — Journalist, CBS News
- Chae-Hyun Shin — Chair of the International Atomic Energy Agency
- Yusuf Tuggar — Foreign Minister of Nigeria
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) programmes
- Peter Biar Ajak — Peace activist
- Ronen Bergman — Journalist and recipient of the Pulitzer Prize
- Reuben Brigety — United States Ambassador to South Africa
- Masuma Hasan — Chair of the Group of 77
- Asle Toje — Deputy Leader of the Norwegian Nobel Committee
- Paul Twomey — CEO of ICANN
- Daniel Yergin — Vice Chair of S&P Global, recipient of the Pulitzer Prize
Faculty, past and present
- Duncan Bell
- Dame Diane Coyle
- John Dunn
- Andrew Gamble
- Cristina Penasco
- David Walter Runciman, 4th Viscount Runciman of Doxford
- Lauren Wilcox
- Ayşe Zarakol
See also
References
- Bevir, Mark (2022). A History of Political Science. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781009043458.
- ^ Gamble, Andrew (2008). The Limits of Politics: An Inaugural Lecture Given in the University of Cambridge, 23 April 2008. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521145985. Retrieved 1 December 2024.
- Craig, John (25 September 2019). "The emergence of politics as a taught discipline at universities in the United Kingdom". The British Journal of Politics and International Relations. 22 (2): 145–163. doi:10.1177/1369148119873081. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
- "Welcome to POLIS". Department of Politics and International Studies. University of Cambridge. 7 March 2014. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
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