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Sciences Po

Coordinates: 48°51′15.02″N 2°19′42.49″E / 48.8541722°N 2.3284694°E / 48.8541722; 2.3284694
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Paris Institute of Political Studies
Institut d'études politiques de Paris
Former names
École libre des sciences politiques
TypePublic
Established1872
Endowment€173 million
PresidentOlivier Duhamel
DirectorFrédéric Mion
Academic staff
200
Students13,000
Undergraduates4000
Postgraduates3900
Location,
France
CampusUrban
NicknameSciences Po
MascotThe lion and the fox
Websitesciencespo.fr

The Paris Institute of Political Studies (French: Institut d'études politiques de Paris, French pronunciation: [ɛ̃stity detyd pɔlitik dəpaʁi]), simply referred to as Sciences Po (French pronunciation: [sjɑ̃s po]), is an elite public research and higher education institution in Paris, France.

A prestigious university with less than a 10% acceptance rate, it is ranked 4th in the world for Politics and International Studies (2016) and 1st on Continental Europe by QS World University Rankings.[1] The School has produced many notable alumni in the fields of law, economics, philosophy, history, business, literature, media and politics – including the last four presidents of France (and five of the last six). Around 28 past or present heads of state have studied or taught at Sciences Po, as well as many heads of international organizations (UN, IMF, etc.) and CEOs.

Sciences Po maintains faculties in political science as well as in economics, history, sociology, law, finance, business, communication, social and urban policy, management and journalism.

Sciences Po is a member of several university consortia (APSIA, College Board, GPPN, etc.) and has developed partnerships with 410 universities, including Oxford, Warwick, Edinburgh, Columbia, UCL, LSE, Harvard Law School, Peking University, and McGill.[2]

The main Paris campus is located near the Seine River, between Boulevard Saint Germain and Boulevard Raspail. It is housed primarily in 17th- and 18th-century mansions located on the Left Bank, on and around fr [Rue Saint-Guillaume], fr [Rue des Saints-Pères] and Rue de l'Université (in the 7th arrondissement). Other campuses can be found outside Paris, for specialized undergraduate programs.

History

The name Sciences Po refers to three distinct, yet complementary institutions:

1872–1945: École Libre des Sciences Politiques

Sciences Po Founder, Émile Boutmy.

Sciences Po was established in February 1872 as the École Libre des Sciences Politiques by a group of French intellectuals, politicians and businessmen led by Émile Boutmy, and including Hippolyte Taine, Ernest Renan, Albert Sorel and Paul Leroy Beaulieu. Following defeat in the 1870 war, the demise of Napoleon III, and the Paris Commune, these men sought to reform the training of French politicians. Politically and economically, people feared France's international stature was waning due to inadequate teaching of its political and diplomatic corps. ELSP was meant to serve as “the breeding ground where nearly all the major, non-technical state commissioners were trained.”[3]

The school developed a humanistic and pragmatic teaching program: instructors included academics as well as ministers, high civil servants, and businessmen. New disciplines such as International Relations, International Law, Political Economy and Comparative Government were introduced. In August 1894, the British Association for the Advancement of Science spoke out for the need to advance the study of politics along the lines of ELSP. Sidney and Beatrice Webb used the purpose and curriculum of Sciences Po as part of their inspiration for creating the London School of Economics in 1895.[1]

The situation since 1945

As per ordinance 45-2284, issued by Charles de Gaulle on 9 October 1945, two entities were created from ELSP: Fondation nationale des sciences politiques (English: National Foundation of Political Science) or FNSP and Institut d'études politiques de Paris (English: Paris Institute of Political Studies) or IEP Paris.[2] Both entities were tasked by the French government to ensure “the progress and the diffusion, both within and outside France, of political science, economics, and sociology”.[3]

The epithet Sciences Po was applied to both entities, which inherited the reputation previously vested in ELSP.[3] France's Legislature entrusted FNSP with managing IEP Paris, its library, and budget, and an administrative council assured the development of these activities. The curriculum and methodology of the ELSP were also the template for creating an entire system of institutes of political studies (French: Institut d'études politiques) across France, namely in Strasbourg, Lyon, Aix, Bordeaux, Grenoble, Toulouse, and then in Rennes and Lille. They are not to be confounded with Sciences Po's satellite campuses.[4]

FNSP further strengthened its role as a scientific publication center with significant donations from the Rockefeller Foundation. FNSP periodicals such as la Revue française de science politique, le Bulletin analytique de documentation, la Chronologie politique africaine, and the Cahiers de la Fondation as well as its seven research centres and main publishing house, Presses de Sciences Po, contribute to the reputation attained by Sciences Po research.[3]

Recent reforms

Sciences Po has undergone myriad reforms under Richard Descoings, Director of Sciences Po (1997–2012). Sciences Po has introduced a compulsory year abroad component to its undergraduate degree, and now offers a multilingual curriculum in French, English, and other languages. New educational sites have been set up in Nancy, Dijon, Poitiers, Menton, Le Havre and Reims. Sciences Po also set the length of its undergraduate program to three years and its graduate program to two years in line with the Bologna Process.

Sciences Po also implemented reforms in its admissions process. Previously, Sciences Po recruited its students almost exclusively from elite schools (mostly state-funded) in France, but in March 2001, the school's governing council widened its admissions policy.[5] From September 2002, Sciences Po began accepting a small batch of students from certain schools located in economically depressed suburbs of Paris on the basis of their school record and a 45-minute interview, rather than the name-blind examination all other students must pass to be admitted. The reform is intended to broaden the socio-economic characteristics of Sciences Po student-body, and gained national and international media attention for being the first affirmative action experience in France. Despite the controversy it brought up it is accepted by the French and considered a relative success. Moreover, Sciences Po introduced an alternative recruitment method -the so-called procédure internationale- for foreign students or students with an international background, as they are not well prepared for the French written examination. Sciences Po also accepts a large contingent of graduate students from abroad without written exams. With the addition of many master's degree programs almost exclusively taught in English, Sciences Po has widely globalized its student body and curriculum.

The proportion of students benefiting from financial support has grown fourfold over the past decade. Today, 30% of students receive grants and other support on the basis of social criteria. This rate exceeds most other selective institutions of higher learning. Half of the student body is international: in 2014, students accepted to Sciences Po hailed from 142 different countries.[4]

Rankings

For the year 2016 the QS World University Rankings ranked Sciences Po as the 4th best university in the world for Politics and International studies.[5] The magazine Foreign Policy, for their 2015 rankings, ranked Sciences Po as the 21st best university in the world to obtain a master's degree for a policy career in International Relations.[6] For 2014 the QS World University Rankings ranked Sciences Po 1st French university in Politics and International Studies and Sociology, 2nd in Law, 3rd in History, and 4th in Economics.[7] In 2013, the QS World University Rankings ranked Sciences Po the 16th best university in the world in Politics and International Relations & Affairs and 30th in Sociology.[8] In the Times Higher Education World University Rankings for 2013/2014, Sciences Po ranked 98th in the world for Social Sciences.[9] In the 2013 Times Higher Education Alma Mater Index of Global Executives, a ranking of a university's number of degrees awarded to chief executives of the world’s biggest companies, Sciences Po is ranked 81st.[10]

Notable faculty and alumni

See List of Sciences Po People

Sciences Po boasts a community of over 65,000 alumni, many of whom hold high-level positions in sectors as varied as auditing, diplomacy, media, social issues, sustainable development, finance, civil service, culture and more, in France and around the world.

Politics and government

Sciences Po alumni and former staff include twenty-eight heads of state or government, specifically the last four French presidents (François Hollande, Jacques Chirac, Nicolas Sarkozy - although he didn't graduate - and François Mitterrand), thirteen past or present French prime ministers, twelve past or present foreign heads of state or government, a former United Nations Secretary-General, the former head of the International Monetary Fund, the former head of the European Central Bank and the former head of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Former Portuguese Prime Minister, José Socrates was a doctoral student at this institution in 2012.[11]

Business

While nearly every French politician or diplomat has attended Sciences Po since its inception, the school is also well known for educating top business managers, including CEOs of France's forty largest companies (Frédéric Oudéa of banking group Societe Generale, Michel Bon of Carrefour, Jean-Cyril Spinetta of Air France, Serge Weinberg of PPR, Gérard Mestrallet of Suez, Philippe Camus of Alcatel-Lucent), private bankers such as David René de Rothschild, the CEO of Lazard Italy, the CFO of Morgan Stanley Europe, the Director of Credit Suisse World, Co-founder, Chairman and CEO of TradingScreen and the Chairman of Credit Suisse Europe as well as the current head of the European Federation of Businesses, Industries and Employers and the current head of the French Businesses and Employers Union and many others.

Alumni alliance

Graduates of Sciences Po are usually referred to as Sciences Po. "alumni" is the Sciences Po's alumni magazine (formerly "Rue Saint Guillaume"). The vast majority of teachers and professors working in Sciences Po are alumni.

Organization

Admissions

There are different admission procedures at Sciences Po :

  • Undergraduate programs: acceptance rate 10%
    • For holders of the French baccalauréat:
      • Admission based on the "concours" (written examination) at Bac+0 level, the student file and an interview.
      • Admission based on the student file (exemption from written examination for students with outstanding records) and an interview.
      • Admission based on the student file and an interview for students from disenfranchised neighborhoods.
    • For holders of foreign secondary school diplomas:
      • Admission based on the student file and an interview.
  • Graduate programs (except double degrees and post-experience programs): acceptance rate 15%
    • Examination for the students who have validated 180 ECTS
    • Admission by the International cycle of political studies (CIEP)
    • Admission for the persons who have worked during five years.

Since 2002, the number of applicants (all programs taken into account) has steadily increased, doubling from 2003 to 2008 and increasing by 50% between 2008 and 2013. In 2014, about 9000 students applied to the undergraduate program (not taking into account joint degree applicants) and 4500 to one of the graduate programs (only students applying from other universities than Sciences Po) . The number of applicants for dual bachelor programs has also increased by 63% between 2013 and 2014.

Campuses

Sciences Po garden, between the rue Saint-Guillaume and the rue des Saints-Pères.

Sciences Po is located in the heart of Paris, in the 6th and 7th districts (arrondissements):

  • 27 rue Saint-Guillaume houses the head office since 1879. It is also home to the Amphitheatres Émile Boutmy and Jacques Chapsal.
  • 9, rue de la Chaise: administrative offices.
  • 56, rue des Saints-Pères: language classes, language lab, audiovisual service and a cartography workshop.
  • 117, boulevard Saint-Germain: Master of Public Affairs, office of the School of Journalism
  • 174, boulevard Saint-Germain: MBA offices and classrooms
  • 199, boulevard Saint-Germain: offices of Graduate Program staff.
  • 224, boulevard Saint-Germain: classrooms
  • 56, rue Jacob: Research Center for History (Centre d'histoire de Sciences Po) and International Relations (Centre d'études et de recherches internationales)
  • 13, rue de l'Université / The René Rémond building: classrooms and amphitheatre
  • 8, rue Jean-Sébastien-Bach: Urban Studies Graduate Program
  • rue d'Assas and rue de la Cassette at the Institut Catholique

Student union and clubs

  • The entire political spectrum is represented in the Student Union: UNEF (left), InterZaid-Fac Verte, Nouvelle Donne, UNI (right) and Sud Etudiant (far left). Delegates are elected each January by the students.
  • There are five permanent associations at Sciences Po:
    • Bureau des élèves (BDE) is the studentbody organization.
    • Association sportive (AS) offers participation in individual and team sports and organizes sportive or recreative events.
    • Bureau des arts (BDA) offers courses in theater, painting, writing scenario etc.
    • Junior Consulting
    • Sciences Po Environnement[12]

There are more than 130 clubs and organizations, about 2,500 students in athletic classes and 800 involved in artistic activities. Examples of associations in addition to the 5 permanent ones include Paris International Model United Nations, Sciences Po Finance (Finance society), Sciences Po TV, Amnesty International, etc.

Instructors

Instruction is provided by a staff of about 200 permanent faculty and 4,000 lecturers from the professional world. Most recently, instructors included or still include former French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin, former WTO president Pascal Lamy, current French President Francois Hollande, former French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, former French foreign minister Hubert Védrine, Nobel Prize Laureate economist Joseph Stiglitz, former Lebanese Minister of Culture Ghassan Salame and former Economics minister as well as former Managing Director of IMF Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

Undergraduate program

Description

In 2000, Sciences Po set the length of its undergraduate program to three years and the length of its graduate program to two years in line with the Bologna Process.

The Sciences Po College offers a three-year undergraduate programme. Students spend the first two years on one of Sciences Po’s seven campuses in France, and are then required to spend their third year abroad, either performing an internship or studying in one of Sciences Po's 410 partner universities.

The educational programme at the Sciences Po College includes a common core of social sciences courses - law, economics, history, political science and sociology - as well as specialised courses according to specific regional focuses:

  • Central and Eastern Europe in Dijon
  • Asia in Le Havre
  • Middle-East and Mediterranean in Menton
  • Europe & Franco-German Region in Nancy
  • Latin America in Poitiers
  • Africa in Reims
  • North America in Reims

The Paris Campus offers a general social sciences programme.

French and English are the main languages of instruction. In addition, Sciences Po offers language courses in 25 languages. Sciences Po is also open to non French-speaking students, who may enrol in one of the English-language programmes offered in Le Havre, Menton and Reims. They learn French while studying at Sciences Po.

The Sciences Po College curriculum also features artistic, literary and scientific disciplines. In addition to academics, Sciences Po's curriculum incorporates more practice-oriented skills like teamwork, effective oral communication and presentation skills, and nurturing leadership potential. Sciences Po's student-body is active, with more than seventy student clubs, councils, and organizations.

Sciences Po also offers several dual bachelor's degree programmes with prominent world universities, like Columbia University.

Satellite campuses and specific regional focuses

While all of Sciences Po's graduate programs are taught in Paris, the school has six additional undergraduate campuses in France. Each of the six campuses has its own distinct cultural identity and academic focus, except for Reims which welcomes both Euro-American and Europe-African undergraduate programs. They are designed to widen the academic concentration of the wider Sciences Po community, and allow students enrolled in the three-year Sciences Po undergraduate program, the "Collège Universitaire", to specialize in a given region. Upon completing their undergraduate studies by spending a year abroad, all students usually move to Paris for their graduate studies (Master).

As the satellite campuses are part of Sciences Po Paris, their official designations always include the word "Paris" in order to distinguish them from the so-called "IEP de province". For instance, Sciences Po Paris' Dijon campus is officially named Sciences Po Paris in Dijon:

These are six regional campuses and seven specific programs :

  • French-German Undergraduate Program / Nancy (created in 2000):

The French-German European Campus is located in Nancy, the city of the Dukes of Lorraine, in a region historically well known for its German connections.

Established in 2000, hosts 350 students (about one third of whom are currently spending their 3rd year abroad), who come from France and German-speaking countries, but also from other places: in all, 28 nationalities are represented. Courses are taught in three languages (French, German and English); students can also learn Arabic, Spanish, Swedish or Russian.

  • European Undergraduate Program / Dijon (created 2001):

The Sciences Po Dijon campus is housed in a 19th-century building, and welcomes 157 students from 23 countries. Students - from France, Central and Eastern Europe and even farther afield - come to Dijon to study the European Union, with a particular focus on the countries of Central and Eastern Europe.

This program illustrates Sciences Po’s continuing interest in studying democratic transition in Central Europe, which was initiated by researchers at the Centre of International Research. It has also strengthened the school’s longstanding ties with the Czech Republic and Poland.

The Dijon Undergraduate Programme features a curriculum on the EU and Central and Eastern Europe, the opportunity to study a Central European language (Polish, Czech or Hungarian) as well as to master Russian, a programme with intensive French classes (for students with a basic French level).

Sciences Po - Poitiers Campus
  • Euro-Latin American Undergraduate Program / Poitiers (created 2001):

The Ibero-American Undergraduate Program is located in the Chaboureau town house in Poitiers, a small city in western France. It hosts 180 students and specializes in the politics and history of Iberia and Latin America.

Courses are taught in French, Spanish, Portuguese, and English. The majority of students come from Spain, Portugal, and Latin America.

  • Middle Eastern and Mediterranean Undergraduate Program / Menton (created 2005):

The Middle Eastern and Mediterranean Undergraduate College of Menton focuses on political, economic and social issues in Mediterranean countries, the Middle East and the Gulf.

In addition to the core courses of Sciences Po College, the campus offers courses specialized in the zone of the College’s interest (Political Economy of the Middle East, Geopolitics of the Middle East, History of the Arab-Islamic Civilization…) in three languages (French, Arabic and English), as well as language classes (English, Arabic, and French as second language, with the possibility for non-beginners to start Arabic and French).

The campus of Menton brings together international students from Europe, the Maghreb, the Middle East and the Gulf, as well as from the United States and Asia. It offers a curriculum in French and a complete curriculum in English, underpinned by the expertise of Sciences Po professors and researchers specialized in the Middle Eastern and Mediterranean zone, prestigious lecturers, and guest professors. Classes are complemented by extracurricular collective projects (Arabic publications, field trips in the Middle East, Spring School…).

  • Euro-Asian Undergraduate Program / Le Havre (created 2007):

Located on the coast of Normandy, Le Havre is a city of 200,000 inhabitants. The port of Le Havre, founded by François the first in 1517, is France’s largest commercial harbour. Historically, Le Havre has been a city oriented towards Asia. The port city is home to a rich architectural heritage, including the areas constructed by August Perret, which have been added to the UNESCO World Heritage List.

Located in a modern building, the campus is home to mostly French, European, and Asian students. Multilingual, the students work in English as well as French. European students must learn an Asian language (Chinese, Japanese, Korean or Hindi), while Asian students take French and/or English classes. While the main working language is English, learning an Asian language (or French) is a mandatory part of the curriculum. Students can begin learning any of these languages even if they have no prior knowledge in the subject, as all language classes are taken for six hours every week.

The undergraduate program at Le Havre is part of a long tradition of cooperation between Sciences Po and Asia. Sciences Po currently has representation in China, Japan, India, and benefits from a network of ninety different partner universities in Asia and Oceania. All European students at Le Havre will be required to spend their third year in Asia before joining their colleagues at the Paris campus for the Masters program.

  • Euro-American Undergraduate Program / Reims (created 2009):

The Reims Euro-American Campus is the seventh international campus of Sciences Po Paris. Opened in September 2010, it welcomes students from around the world, including USA, Canada, and throughout Europe in an English environment. Reims (45 minutes from Paris by high speed train) is a Gallo-Roman city and the traditional site of the coronation of France’s kings, and has a rich architectural legacy. It is the capital of the Champagne-Ardenne region, world-renowned for its production of champagne.

The goal of the program is to give these students a comparative understanding of the European and North-American systems. Courses are taught in English, although students may follow some courses in French. The program also includes several hours a week of language classes, the objective being for all students to be English-French bilingual at the end of the first two years. German, Italian and Spanish are taught as supplementary languages.

On the site of the former collège des jésuites, an exceptional architectural complex in the center of the city made available to Sciences Po by the city of Reims, students have the opportunity to enjoy an academic experience connecting both the European model (intellectual content of the courses, methodology) and the American approach (group work and interactive exchanges). Great emphasis is also placed on sport, artistic activities and student organizations.

  • Europe-Africa Undergraduate Program / Reims (created 2011):

Sciences Po has inaugurated since September 2011 an undergraduate Europe-Africa programme on the Paris campus and starting September 2015 this programme will move to the Reims campus after 4 years in the Paris campus. Some 60 students from 37 nationalities, speaking English and French, are accepted onto the programme each year.

The program aims at reinforcing the links between youth in Europe and Africa and contributing to a better understanding of the political, economic, social and cultural dynamics of a burgeoning continent/a continent undergoing radical transformation.

The Europe-Africa undergraduate program offers a unique teaching program: courses both in French and English, a multidisciplinary curriculum common to all Sciences Po campuses, enhanced with a special focus on the African continent and its challenges.

Third year abroad

Richard Descoings decided, among other reforms, that every student should spend his or her third year abroad. Thanks to 410 university partners,[13] students at Sciences Po have multiple possibilities. Students can also do an internship in a company, a cultural association, an embassy, etc. As a direct result of mandatory study abroad, Sciences Po has extensive availability in their classrooms allowing them to accommodate impressive exchange programs with their partner schools. Several hundred foreign exchange students are studying at Sciences Po at any given time.

Dual bachelor's degree programs

Sciences Po offers highly selective dual bachelor's degree programmes with prominent world universities. These programmes offer a carefully coordinated curriculum. Students graduate from both institutions, providing access to leading graduate studies and prominent markets in the world.

  • Dual bachelor's degree with Columbia University
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Reims, Menton or Le Havre Campus) + 2 years at Columbia
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po, students choose their major at Columbia
    • Programme in English with no prior study of French required
  • Dual bachelor's degree with University of California, Berkeley
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Reims, Menton or Le Havre Campus) + 2 years at UC Berkeley
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po. Students choose their major at UC Berkeley
    • Programme in English with no prior study of French required
  • Dual bachelor's degree with the University of Hong Kong
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Reims, Menton or Le Havre Campus) + 2 years at the University of Hong Kong
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po, students choose among a Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Social Sciences, and Bachelor of Business and Economics from the University of Hong Kong
    • Programme in English with no prior study of French required
  • Dual bachelor's degree with the National University of Singapore
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Reims, Menton or Le Havre Campus) + 2 years at the National University of Singapore (NUS)
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po. Major in Political Science, Economics, History or Sociology at NUS.
    • Programme in English with no prior study of French required
  • Dual bachelor's degree with Freie Universität Berlin
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Nancy Campus) + 2 years at Freie Universität Berlin
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po and on political science at Freie Universität Berlin
    • Trilingual programme in English, French and German
  • Dual bachelor's degree with Keio University
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Le Havre Campus) + 1.5 year at Keio University
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po. Focus on economics and Japanese language and culture at Keio University
    • Programme in English, no prior knowledge of Japanese or French required
  • Dual bachelor's degree with the University of British Columbia
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Reims, Menton or Le Havre Campus) + 2 years at UBC
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po. Students choose one of 5 majors at UBC - business, economics, history, political science or sociology
    • Programme in English with no prior study of French required
  • Dual bachelor's degree with University College London
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Dijon, Nancy, Poitiers, Paris or Menton Campus) + 2 years at UCL
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po, including a major European language
    • Students choose one language and one of 9 majors at UCL - anthropology, urban planning, economics, history, international relations, law, philosophy, political theory or comparative politics - alongside students of the European Social and Political Studies single degree.
    • Programme in English, French or English/French
  • Dual bachelor's degree with the University of Sydney
    • 2 years at Sciences Po (Reims, Menton or Le Havre Campus) + 2 years at the University of Sydney
    • Focus on the social sciences at Sciences Po. Students choose one of three possible degrees at the University of Sydney: Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Political, Economic and Social Sciences or Bachelor of Economics
    • Programme in English with no prior study of French required

Master's degrees

Description

Upon completion of the third year of undergraduate studies, students return to Paris for a two-year graduate program of their choosing leading to a master's degree. Programmes last four semesters: three semesters at Sciences Po in Paris and one semester away, to complete an internship or pursue studies in France or abroad within our partner network. These programmes lead to a master's degree, opening doors to a large number of career specialisations. Students from the school's undergraduate programs make up about half of the graduate programs' student population, the remainder having completed undergraduate studies elsewhere in France or abroad. Most programs are taught in more than one language though English-only programs are also available. Students can choose from a wide array of programs designed either by Sciences Po alone or in conjunction with other universities.

Single Master's degrees

The school's traditional "single" Master's degrees are suited for those seeking to develop professional skills in a specific area without losing the benefits of a generalist education. The curriculum generally comprises a set of generalist courses known as the "tronc commun," specific courses related to the chosen field of study, and an internship semester.

Graduate schools and master programmes offered include :

    • Paris School of International Affairs
    • Sciences Po School of Communication
    • Sciences Po Law School (SPLS)
    • Sciences Po School of Journalism
    • Sciences Po School of Public Affairs
    • Sciences Po Urban School
    • Doctoral School
    • Sciences Po School of Arts and Politics (SPEAP)

BefThe Department of Economics currently administers the following master's degrees:

    • Master in Economics and Business, Master in Finance and Strategy,
    • Master in Financial Regulation and Risk Management
    • Master in Economics (Research)
    • Master in Organizational Behavior and Human Resources

Dual Master's degrees

Sciences Po has partnered with internationally renowned universities to offer dual-degree programmes at the Master level. A multidisciplinary approach, dual expertise, fluency in different languages, multicultural experience: graduates of these programmes boast profiles that are highly appreciated by recruiters in a wide variety of sectors.

Nearly all dual-degree programmes are taught in English. Students enrolled in these programmes can take advantage of their experience at Sciences Po to learn French and become multilingual professionals.

  • In North America
    • Columbia University (New York, USA)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Journalism, Dual master's degree in International Affairs (programme in English)
    • Georgetown Law School (Washington, USA)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Law & International Affairs (programme in English)
    • University of Pennsylvania Law School (Philadelphia, USA)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Law & International Finance (programme in English)
  • In Latin America
  • In Asia
    • Fudan University (Shanghai, China)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Communication and Media (programme in English), Dual master's degree Europe and Asia in Global Affairs (programme in English)
    • Keio University (Tokyo, Japan)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Economics and Public Policy (programme in English)
    • Peking University (Beijing, China)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in International Relations (programme in English)
  • In Europe
    • Freie Universität Berlin (Berlin, Germany)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in European Affairs or International Affairs (programme in English)
    • London School of Economics (London, United Kingdom)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in European Affairs (programme in English), Dual master's degree in International Affairs (programme in English), Dual master's degree in Regional and Urban Policies and Strategies (programme in English)
    • Moscow State University of International Relations (Moscow, Russia)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in International affairs, Finance & Strategy (programme in English)
    • Università Bocconi (Milan, Italy)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Management and International Public Affairs (programme in English)
    • Université Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne (Paris, France)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Economics and Quantitative Methods
    • Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris, France)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Environmental Science and Policy
    • University of Saint Gallen (Saint Gallen, Switzerland)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in International Affairs, European Affairs, Public Administration, Finance and Strategy (programme in English)
    • Stockholm School of Economics (Stockholm, Sweden)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in International Affairs & Economics, International Affairs & Finance, International Affairs & Business/Management (programme in English)
    • École du Louvre (Paris, France)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in History, Art History and Cultural Management
    • École Nationale de la Statistique et de l’Administration Economique (ENSAE) / École Polytechnique (Paris, France)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Economics and Public Policy
    • HEC (France)/Sciences Po: Dual master's degree in Corporate and Public Management

Research

Sciences Po is a major social sciences research and teaching institution, with 35% of its budget devoted to research and over 800 publications per year.

Research at Sciences Po hosts eleven research units bringing together over 200 researchers. Five of these centres are associated with the CNRS (the French National Centre for Scientific Research). The Doctoral School, with over 500 Ph.D. students, is a central element of Sciences Po's research infrastructure.

Research at Sciences Po covers economics, law, history, sociology and political science, while also taking in many interdisciplinary topics such as cities, political ecology, sustainable development, socioeconomics and globalization.

Doctoral School

The Doctoral School is currently directed by Jean-Marie Donegani and includes 200 faculty members and 600 doctoral students. It was created in 1988 and welcomes students for their Master and PhD studies, in law, economics, history, political science, or sociology.

Research Master's

The Research Master’s program entails two years of interdisciplinary instruction in five basic social sciences: political science, history, law, sociology and economics. This interdisciplinary approach is designed to reinforce and round out graduate-level training. The Research Master’s program prepares students for doctoral studies and subsequent careers in research and higher education. But it also opens out into a wider range of career options (work in consulting, expertise, public opinion polling, publishing etc.) thanks to the links between the Sciences Po master's degree and Research Master’s programs in the form of joint courses and degrees.

The Research Master’s program offers:

  • an outstanding academic framework
  • close administrative support all the way through to entry into professional life
  • openness and close links to outside academic and professional domains at national and international levels.

Master programmes are offered in the following subjects :

  • Economics
  • History
  • Law
    • Legal and law-based careers
    • Economic law
  • Political Science
    • Comparative political sociology
    • International Relations
    • Political Theory
  • Sociology

PhD Program

Sciences Po is accredited to confer PhD degrees in law, economics, history, political science and sociology.

The Sciences Po PhD Program counts roughly 600 doctoral candidates, a third of whom hail from abroad. About 40 defend their dissertations each year. The program has a long-standing tradition of multi-disciplinary scholarship.

The PhD Program covers 15 fields of study, which follow up on those offered in the Master’s program: Latin America, Sociological Analysis of Change, Asia, Economics of International Relations, United States, Europe, International Finance, Law, Economic Governance, History, Muslim World, Political Thought, Russia/CIS, Political Science of International Relations, Sociology of Action, Political Sociology and Public Policy.

In addition to academic training, the PhD Program provides a number of student services, including financial aid for PhD studies as well as for research abroad, support and promotion for publications, and job placement guidance and assistance.

PhD candidates may participate in conferences and research stays abroad. Partner institutions of higher education also offer a number of opportunities: for example, the doctoral fellowships programme with eight leading North American universities, or the doctoral mobility programme with the London School of Economics, Columbia University, and the National University of Singapore.

In addition, Sciences Po has created three dual PhD degrees: in political sciences with Columbia University, in sociology with Northwestern University, and in political science and sociology with the Max Planck Research School and the University of Cologne.

Habilitation

Sciences Po’s graduate school also awards accreditations to supervise research (HDR) in economics, history, political science and sociology.

The accreditation to supervise research recognises a candidate’s high level of scholarship, original approach, mastery of research in a sufficiently broad field of science or technology, and the ability to oversee young researchers. It is key to applying for university faculty positions.

Research centres

FNSP manages the research faculty and facilities of Sciences Po, and is one of the largest social sciences research bodies in Europe. Bringing together over two hundred researchers, Sciences Po’s research centres generate new approaches and new knowledge in law, economics, history, political science and sociology.

Six units are associated with France’s National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) as “joint research units” (UMR in French) and four units are recognized by the Ministry of Education and Higher Education as “host teams” (EA in French).

  • The Center for Socio-Political Data - CDSP

The CDSP (UMS 828) provides documented and scientifically validated socio-political data for research by archiving, disseminating, and contributing to international survey programs. It also supports training in data collection and analysis.

  • The Centre d'études européennes - CEE

CEE’s (UMR 8239) projects combine basic and applied research, and focus on four main areas: a crosscutting approach to European studies; the inter-linkage between participation, democracy and government; election analyses: new paradigms and tools; the restructuring of the state and public action.

  • The Centre for International Studies - CERI

The CERI (UMR 7050) analyses foreign societies, international relations, and political, social and economic phenomena across the world from a comparative and historical perspective.

  • The Centre for Political Research - CEVIPOF

CEVIPOF (UMR 7048) research focuses on two main areas. The first includes political attitudes, behaviour and parties; the second involves political thought and the history of ideas.

  • The Centre for History - CHSP

The Centre for History (EA 113) research has evolved over time to focus on five major topics: arts, knowledge and culture; wars, conflicts and violence; states, institutions and societies; the political and cultural history of contemporary France; from local to global: international history and its levels.

  • The Centre for the Sociology of Organizations - CSO

The CSO (UMR 7116) works at the intersection of the sociology of organizations, sociology of public policy, and economic sociology. Its five major research programmes address fundamental issues such as higher education and research, healthcare, sustainable development, the evolution of firms, and the transformation of the state.

  • The Department of Economics

Research in the Department of Economics (EA 4460) contributes to the development of methodology and economic analysis. Its research focuses in particular on the labour market, international economics, political economy, microeconomics and development.

  • The Law School

The Law School’s (EA 4461) research focuses on globalization, legal cultures and the economics of law. In addition, a number of works address the theory and history of law, public and private international law and intellectual property.

  • The médialab

The médialab (EA 7033) is a digital laboratory devoted to the study and exploitation of data generated by new information technologies, as well as the study of their means of production and circulation.

  • The Observatory for Social Change - OSC

The OSC (UMR 7049) is a research centre for general and comparative sociology. Its researchers study urban, educational and gender inequalities, as well as social and ethno-racial stratification, mobility and segregation phenomena.

  • The OFCE

The OFCE is an independent body that produces forecasts, and researches and evaluates public policy. It covers most areas of economic analysis, from macroeconomics, growth, social protection systems, taxation and employment policy, to sustainable development, competition, innovation and regulation.

  • Three major crosscutting programs

In addition to the ten centres, three major crosscutting programs produce research: LIEPP, DIME-SHS and MaxPo. They allow researchers from different centres to pursue joint research with five- to ten-year funding commitments. These frequently multidisciplinary projects are conducive to the development of new approaches and methodologies that are shared with the rest of the research community.

The LIEPP and DIME-SHE have been awarded highly competitive grants from the “Investments for the Future” program, and MaxPo has a contractual partnership with the prestigious Max Planck Society. Researchers from our various research units lead these programs, which pursue crosscutting and multidisciplinary issues.

Networks of universities

Sciences Po is part of a network of 410 partner universities. This network is unique for its dynamism and academic excellence. Partner universities include: Berkeley (USA), Cambridge (England), Columbia (USA), Freie Universität Berlin (Germany), Fudan (China), Keio (Japan), London School of Economics (England), etc.

Sciences Po and several universities within its network have developed 34 dual-degree programmes at the Bachelor, Master and PhD levels. These programmes allow students to earn degrees from both Sciences Po and partner universities, including Columbia University in New York (USA), the London School of Economics (England) and Peking University (China).

This network also provides significant benefits for undergraduate Sciences Po students during their mandatory 3rd year abroad, for graduate students taking advantage of a semester outside of Sciences Po, and for PhD candidates who participate in doctoral exchange programmes. Sciences Po also welcomes students from partner universities as part of exchange programmes.

Global Public Policy Network

Sciences Po is a member of the Global Public Policy Network along with the London School of Economics, the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University, the Hertie School of Governance in Berlin, and the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore. This collaboration has existed since the early 1990s, but was formalized in September 2005 with the official launch of the Global Public Policy Network in Beijing, China. The partnership fosters academic collaboration among students, faculty, and research centers of leading public policy schools in several world capital cities.[6] The network is further intended to facilitate collaboration on public policy research, student and faculty exchanges, and international conferences and fora with policymakers from the USA, Germany, UK, France, Japan, São Paulo and Singapore. This alliance has produced five degree programs with LSE, including master's degrees in International Relations, Negotiation, International Political Economy, Public Affairs, the Practice of International Affairs, and Urban Policy, two degree programs with Columbia, specifically a Master in International Affairs, dual Master of Public Policy and Master of Public Administration with the Hertie School of Governance, and a Master in Public Affairs, and one degree program with LKS, a Master in Public Policy.[7]

Alliance

Alliance is a partnership programme bringing together Columbia University, the French Ecole Polytechnique, Université Paris 1-Panthéon Sorbonne and Sciences Po. A laboratory of educational and scientific innovation, the Alliance programme is also a pre-eminent platform for transatlantic cooperation in the fields of education and research.

Research networks

  • EUREDOCS: European Research & Higher Education Doctoral Studies network:

Euredocs is a network run by Sciences Po made up of doctoral students and recent PhD recipients (who have defended their dissertations within the past three years). The network addresses the Europeanization of higher education and research, including such issues as the structure of academic curricula, evaluation/accreditation procedures, changes in national education policies and university governance, academic career patterns, the production of knowledge, the impact of internationalization/globalization etc.

  • GARNET Network of Excellence: “Global Governance, Regionalisation and Regulation: The Role of the EU”

Funded under the European Commission’s 6th Framework Programme, the GARNET network gathers 42 leading research centres and universities in Europe and operates with a budget of 5.4 million euros over 5 years (2005–2010). Sciences Po is represented in the network by CERI who runs a specific “dissemination of excellence” programme. A number of GARNET activities address doctoral students and finance their participation:

    • PhD School Network develops interdisciplinary seminar programmes focusing on key theoretical and methodological issues on global governance and the role of the EU. These one-week seminars bring together professors and PhD students from all over Europe and the world;
    • Research programmes are particularly welcoming participation of doctoral students, namely 18 Jointly Executed Research Projects, the “Capacity Building in Professional Training on Issues of Global Governance and Regulation” program and GARNET Annual Conferences;
    • Mobility programme offers up to 1,500 Euros/ month allowance to doctoral students at the later stages of their dissertation wishing to participate in the research activities of GARNET partner institutions for short or long period.
  • Connex Network of Excellence on Efficient and Democratic Governance in a Multi-level Europe:

CONNEX is a network set up under the 6th Framework Programme for European Research and Technological Development (2002–2006) to analyze various facets of democratic governance in Europe.

  • OXPO :

OXPO is a collaborative social sciences structure established between Oxford University and Sciences Po. OXPO aims to stimulate comparative research into political and social phenomena, particularly in European countries with an emphasis on France and the United Kingdom.

  • MaxPo :

MaxPo’s research investigates how individuals, organizations, and nation-states are coping with the new forms of economic and social instability that have developed in Western societies as a result of policy shifts, the expansion of markets, technological advances, and cultural changes. Located at Sciences Po Paris and cooperating closely with the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (MPIfG) in Cologne, the Center aims to contribute substantially to the social sciences in Europe and to enrich academic and political dialogue between France and Germany.

Sorbonne Paris Cité

Sciences Po is a member of the Sorbonne Paris Cité Community of Universities and Establishments (COMUE), which brings together:

The COMUE stands out as a major player in higher education and research in the Paris Region : its 13 members include 120,000 students, 10,300 faculty members and researchers, 6,500 PhD candidates, 5,500 technical and administrative staff members and 251 research units.[14]

Library and publishing

Library (Bibliothèque de Sciences Po)

Sciences Po Library

Founded in 1871, the nucleus of the school’s research is Bibliothèque de Sciences Po. Serving Sciences Po students, professors and researchers, as well as external readers from across the world, the library offers an outstanding collection of more than 950,000 titles in the field of social sciences. It is the biggest library for the social sciences in continental Europe.

The library facilitates access to information for all, especially through its many digital resources, including 20,000 online journals, more than 5500 ebooks and more than 60 online databases. While access to its online journals and databases is reserved for students and teachers, the library’s bibliographies and documentary files on current events are open to all. The library also publishes research from Sciences Po in the Sciences Po Institutional Repository (SPIRE open archive).

In keeping with the ethos of Sciences Po, the library’s collections are highly international, containing 60% foreign language documents. The library functions as a network across the seven campuses of Sciences Po.

In 1982, the National Ministry of Education made the Bibliothèque the Centre for Acquisition and Dissemination of Scientific and Technical Information in the field of political science, and since 1994, it has been the antenna associated with Bibliothèque Nationale de France.[8] Bibliothèque de Sciences Po is also the main French partner in the International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, which is based at the London School of Economics.[9] The library has also been a depository library for United Nations publications since 1947.

Publishing house / Presses de Sciences Po

Founded in the 1950s, Presses de Sciences-Po is the publishing house of Sciences Po. It publishes academic works related to the social sciences, and is the leading French publisher in the fields of public policy, international relations, political history, French government, and economics.[10]

It has more than 1000 titles in its catalogue, with about 30 new titles added annually.

Presses de Sciences Po also publishes several leading French academic journals in the social sciences: La Revue française de science politique (Political science), Critique internationale (International relations), Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire (Twentieth Century History), Raisons politiques (Political theory), La Revue économique (Economics), La Revue de l'OFCE (Economics), Sociétés contemporaines (Sociology), Sève. Les tribunes de la santé (Health).

References and notes

Notes

  1. ^ "QS World University Rankings by Subject 2016 - Politics & International Studies". Top Universities.
  2. ^ "About / A world-class university - Sciences Po". Sciences Po.
  3. ^ a b c “Sciences Po 1945–1979” Centre d’histoire de Sciences Po
  4. ^ "About / What is Sciences Po ? - Sciences Po". Sciences Po.
  5. ^ "QS World University Rankings by Subject 2015 - Politics & International Studies". Top Universities.
  6. ^ "Foreign Policy - The Best International Relations Schools in the World". Foreign Policy.
  7. ^ "QS World University Rankings by Subject 2014". Top Universities.
  8. ^ QS Top Universities. "QS WORLD UNIVERSITY RANKINGS BY SUBJECT 2013 - POLITICS & INTERNATIONAL STUDIES". QS Top Universities. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
  9. ^ THE World University Rankings for 2013-2014. http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/2013-14/subject-ranking/subject/social-sciences/institution/sciences-po. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ "Alma Mater Index: Global Executives 2013". Times Higher Education.
  11. ^ http://www.cmjornal.xl.pt/detalhe/noticias/ultima-hora/jose-socrates-mais-1-ano-em-paris José Sócrates: 1 more year in Paris (Portuguese)
  12. ^ "Associations , Sciences Po". Sciencespo.fr. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
  13. ^ "Partner Universities , Sciences-Po International". International.sciences-po.fr.
  14. ^ "About / Our community of universities in the Paris Region - Sciences Po". Sciences Po.

  1. ^ "LSE: A History of the London School of Economics and Political Science, 1895–1995", Oxford University Press, 1 June 1995.
  2. ^ "Consolidation de L'autonomie de Sciences Po" Sénat, 1996.
  3. ^ "Le statut juridique de Sciences Po: la dualité FNSP et IEP de Paris" Centre d’histoire de Sciences Po
  4. ^ “Sciences Po Paris Overview: Introducing Sciences Po” Sciences Po Website, 2001.
  5. ^ “Sciences Po Paris Overview: Introducing Sciences Po” Sciences Po Website, 2001.
  6. ^ “Sciences Po Paris Overview: Introducing Sciences Po” Sciences Po Website, 2001.
  7. ^ "La Bibliothèque de Sciences Po", Sciences Po Website, 2007
  8. ^ "IBSS Boosts Coverage of French Social Science Journals", IBSS, 2005.
  9. ^ "Presses de Sciences Po", Sciences Po Website, 21 October 2004.
  10. ^ "Columbia University, LSE and Sciences Po launch Global Public Policy Network", PRNewsWire, 19 September 2005.
  11. ^ "Sciences Po’s Joint Degrees", Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs, 21 October 2004.
  12. ^ "Sciences Po ― an elite institution's introspection on its power, position and worth in French society" NYU Department of Journalism, 9 September 2003.

Bibliography

  • Richard Descoings, Sciences Po. De la Courneuve à Shanghai, préface de René Rémond, Paris: Presses de Sciences Po, 2007 (ISBN 2-7246-0990-5)
  • Jacques Chapsal, « L'Institut d'études politiques de l'Université de Paris », Annales de l'Université de Paris, n° 1, 1950
  • « Centenaire de l'Institut d'études politiques de Paris (1872–1972) », brochure de l'Institut d'études politiques de Paris, 1972
  • [11], A Sciences-Po, les voyages forment la jeunesse, Monde Diplomatique, Février 2006
  • Pierre Favre, Cent dix années de cours à l'École libre des sciences politiques et à l'Institut d'études politiques de Paris (1871–1982), thèse de doctorat, 2 volumes, 1986
  • Gérard Vincent, Sciences Po. Histoire d'une réussite, Orban, Paris, 1987
  • Marie-Estelle Leroty, L'Enseignement de l'histoire à l'École libre des sciences politiques et à l'Institut d'études politiques de l'Université de Paris de 1943 à 1968, mémoire de diplôme d'études approfondies dirigé par Jean-François Sirinelli, Institut d'études politiques de Paris, 2000
  • Anne Muxel (direction), Les Étudiants de Sciences Po, Paris: Presses de Sciences Po, 2004, ISBN 2-7246-0937-9: Résultats d'une grande enquête menée en janvier 2002 auprès des élèves par le Cevipof
  • Comité national d'évaluation des établissements publics à caractère scientifique, culturel et professionnel, Template:PDFlink, Septembre 2005
  • Cyril Delhay, Promotion ZEP. Des quartiers à Sciences Po, Paris: Hachette, 2006, ISBN 2-01-235949-3

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