These rankings are part of the Teaching, Research, and International Policy (TRIP) survey, conducted by Paul C. Avey, Michael C. Desch, James D. Long, Daniel Maliniak, Susan Peterson, and Michael J. Tierney. All additional information provided was added by Foreign Policy and is not part of the survey results.
1. Harvard University
Student-faculty ratio: 7:1
Tuition: $39,849
Website: http://www.gov.harvard.edu/
Campus international relations
organization: Harvard International
Relations Council
Why go to Harvard? You
get to rub elbows with some of the most prestigious academics in the world,
from FP contributors like Joseph S. Nye and Stephen M. Walt to Harvey
Mansfield. Not only is it the oldest center of higher education in the United
States, Mr. Bartley's -- just across the
street -- cooks a mean hamburger.
2. Princeton University
Student-faculty ratio: 6:1
Tuition: $37,000
Website: http://wws.princeton.edu
Campus international relations
organization: International Relations
Council
Why go to Princeton? President Woodrow Wilson's convictions were forged in its halls, and the university's tradition of impacting how the United States approaches foreign policy is carried on today by former Director of Policy Planning Anne-Marie Slaughter. It features a range of other outstanding thinkers on foreign policy, from G. John Ikenberry to former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Daniel Kurtzer. Bonus points: The hospital that appears in the opening credits of the hit TV show "House, M.D." is actually Princeton's University Medical Center.
3. Stanford University
Student-faculty ratio: 6:1
Tuition: $40,500
Website:
http://www.stanford.edu
Campus international relations
organization: Society for
International Affairs at Stanford
Why go to Stanford? The
Hoover Institution -- which counts
Condoleezza Rice and Fouad Ajami as fellows -- is the premier conservative
public policy think tank in the United States. Drive an hour north to San
Francisco's Haight-Ashbury District for some serious cognitive dissonance.
4. Columbia University
Student-faculty ratio: 6:1
Tuition: $45,290
Website: http://www.studentaffairs.columbia.edu
Campus international relations
organization: Columbia International Relations Council and Association
Why go to Columbia? The only way to get closer to the intellectual debate that animates the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a 5,000-mile plane flight. The late Professor Edward Said's intellectual home has long been the scene of contentious debates over the conflict -- Norman Finkelstein and Alan Dershowitz are just two recent combatants. University President Lee Bollinger has also proven not to be someone to shy away from a fight, inviting Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2007 to address the university in free intellectual debate. Not everyone was convinced.
5. Georgetown University
Student-faculty ratio: 10:1
Tuition: $41,393
Website: http://sfs.georgetown.edu/
Campus international relations
organization: Georgetown International
Relations Club
Why go to Georgetown? In
the nation's capital, you get to learn at the feet of the men and women who don't
just theorize about international affairs -- they practice it. From former
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to fresh-out-of-government
former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for the Middle East Colin Kahl, its faculty is full of
professionals who know all about the hard work of translating theory into
policy. If you imagine yourself as the next Bill
Clinton, this is the place to meet thousands of other students who do too.
6. Yale University
Student-faculty ratio: 6:1
Tuition: $40,500
Website: http://www.yale.edu/
Campus international relations
organization: Yale International Relations
Association
Why go to Yale? Its
foreign-policy student group has the top-ranked model U.N. team and a whopping
operating budget of $250,000, which is uses to send its members across the
globe during school breaks. When you're not traveling to Singapore or Honduras,
a faculty that includes famous thinkers such as Bruce Ackerman and
Robert Dahl may
also know a thing or two.
7. University of Chicago
Student-faculty ratio: 7:1
Tuition: $42,783
Website: http://cir.uchicago.edu/
Campus international
relations organization: University
of Chicago Model United Nations Team
Why go to the University
of Chicago? If you have a grim fascination for understanding why the world
economic system is in a state of collapse, this is the school for you. The University
of Chicago's Department of Economics has fielded more Nobel Prize laureates
than any other university -- a fact it is
not, and should not be, shy about pointing out. FP contributors Robert
Fogel and Raghuram
Rajan will tell you why China is rising, why the global financial system is
collapsing, and what we can do about it.
8. Dartmouth College
Student-faculty ratio: 8:1
Tuition: $42,996
Website:
http://www.dartmouth.edu
Campus international relations
organization: Dartmouth
Model U.N. Conference
Why go to Dartmouth? If you're
looking for small-town New
England charm and an Ivy League intellectual pedigree, it's hard to do
better than Dartmouth. The college is also home to experts who know all about
closed regimes: There's Libya expert par
excellence Dirk
Vandewalle and Jennifer
Lind, who currently has her hands full trying to figure out what's going on
in Kim Jong Un's North Korea. The school's Greek life was also the inspiration
for the antics in National Lampoon's Animal House -- so
rest assured, you'll have a good time.
9. George Washington University
Student-faculty ratio: 13:1
Tuition: $44,148
Website: http://elliott.gwu.edu
Campus international relations
organization: George Washington International
Affairs Society
Why go to George
Washington? It's where FP Mideast Channel editor Marc Lynch hangs his hat! Nathan Brown, Amitai Etzioni, and a
whole slew of other professors can also show you how Washington's
foreign-policy machinery really works.
10. American University
Student-faculty ratio: 13:1
Tuition: $38,071
Website:
http://www.american.edu
Campus international relations
organization: American
University International Politics Student Association
Why go to American
University? Students here take their politics out of the classroom -- since
2006, it has been named by Princeton
Review as the most politically active university in the United States three
times. It also has an active international presence, falling within the top 10
of all universities for number of students studying abroad and joining the
Peace Corps.
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