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As of November 2021, the Times Higher Education World University Rankings ranks Oxford first for politics and international studies (including development studies) overall, and for research, and fifth for teaching. [2]
Montague Burton Professor of International Relations at Oxford University, 1986–2007. With interests in civil resistance , international law , the United Nations , strategic studies , and the history (and theories) of international relations, his publications include works on the United Nations and on Hugo Grotius jointly edited with ...
The Montague Burton Professorship of International Relations is a named chair at the University of Oxford and the London School of Economics, and a former chair at the University of Edinburgh. Created by the endowment of Montague Burton in UK universities, [ 1 ] the Oxford chair was established in 1930 and is associated with a Fellowship of ...
St Antony's College is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England. Founded in 1950 as the result of the gift of French merchant Sir Antonin Besse of Aden, St Antony's specialises in international relations, economics, politics, and area studies relative to Europe, Russia, former Soviet states, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, Japan, China, and South and South East Asia.
The Oxford University Diplomatic Studies Programme (formerly known as the Foreign Service Programme) is a long-running programme of courses offered by the University of Oxford in the field of diplomacy.
Duncan Snidal, FBA is professor of international relations at the University of Oxford (Nuffield College) and professor emeritus at University of Chicago. Snidal has research interests in international relations theory, institutional organizations, cooperation, international law, and rational choice. [1] [2]
In 2004, she became the Seton-Watson Research Fellow in International Relations at Oriel College, Oxford and part of the Oxford-Leverhulme Programme on the Changing Character of War. [8] In 2007, she moved to Queen Mary University of London as a senior lecturer in International Relations and taught there until 2011.
Hurrell was educated at Gresham's School, St John's College, Cambridge (MA), and St Antony's College, Oxford (MPhil, DPhil). He was a research fellow at Christ Church, Oxford, from 1983 to 1986, an assistant professor of international relations at the Bologna Centre of the School of Advanced International Studies of Johns Hopkins University (now known as The Johns Hopkins University SAIS ...