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The university gave offers of admission to roughly 12.2% of its undergraduate applicants in 2023, one of the lowest offer rates across the UK. Bsc Economics is the most competitive undergraduate course at the LSE with over 4000 applications for just over 200 places. LLB in Laws comes second with 2600 applications for just over 170 places. [139 ...
TRIUM Global Executive MBA [1] program is an alliance between NYU Stern School of Business, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), and HEC School of Management, Paris. TRIUM is ranked #2 [ 2 ] in the world in the 2018 Financial Times EMBA rankings and #1 [ 3 ] in the 2014 edition.
In 1981, the program was renamed the Graduate Program in Public Policy and Administration and the school renamed the School of International and Public Affairs. [3] In the early 1990s, SIPA began appointing its own faculty, supplementing the distinguished social and natural scientists and humanists with whom SIPA students studied around the ...
The General Course at LSE (the London School of Economics and Political Science) has been in operation since 1910 and is a full 'Study Year Abroad'. [1] Today, the General Course offers a fully integrated year of undergraduate study to around 300 students of more than 40 nationalities drawn from over 130 universities. It is considered one of ...
The Stern School was founded by Charles Waldo Haskins (an alumnus of New York University Tandon School of Engineering) in 1900 as the Undergraduate School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance on the university's Washington Square campus. In 1913, Jeanette Hamill, J.D., M.A., joined the school's Economics department, becoming its first female ...
London School of Economics and Political Science, a public research university within the University of London; Lahore School of Economics, a private university in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan
Anthony Saunders, chairman, Department of Finance, Stern School of Business, New York University; Tibor Scitovsky, economist; Arthur Seldon, free market ideologue; Amartya Sen, economist and Professor of Economics at LSE (1971-1977) Andrew Sentance, member of Monetary Policy Committee; G.L.S. Shackle, economist; Neil Shephard, econometrician
The centre's work on wellbeing and mental health, including the LSE Depression Report, [24] led to the introduction of the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies programme, [25] [26] which is widely recognised as the most ambitious programme of talking therapies in the world, [27] treating 1 million people a year. [28]