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Virginia Tech's School of Public and International Affairs has received the following rankings: Public Affairs: No. 39 in the nation for Graduate Public Affairs in the 2020 U.S. News & World Report [6] Urban Planning: No. 22 in the nation in Planetizen's Top 25 Schools For Urban Planners [7]
The Global Policy Center, established in 2015, seeks to bring together academic and policy scholarship in order to address the world's most pressing humanitarian and development challenges with the tools of research and education. It works alongside the Humanitarian Collaborative at the University of Virginia to accomplish this goal.
Northern Virginia Community College: Annandale: Public (Virginia Community College System) Junior college: SACS: 1964 51,896 Old Dominion University: Norfolk: Public Research university: SACS: 1930 23,107 Patrick & Henry Community College: Martinsville: Public (Virginia Community College System) Junior college: SACS: 1962 1,861 Paul D. Camp ...
School of Global and International Studies international relations and studies N/A Indiana University of Indianapolis: College of Graduate Arts and Sciences international relations [6] N/A Indiana University of Notre Dame: Keough School of Global Affairs global affairs [7] N/A Iowa Drake University: N/A Kentucky University of Kentucky
In 1947, the school began to offer bachelors degrees in subjects other than theology and changed its name for the first time, becoming Eastern Mennonite College. In 1948–49, EMU admitted two local African American students, becoming one of the first historically white colleges in the U.S. South to integrate prior to the Civil Rights Act of ...
The college also has connections to research facilities and local community service organizations through which students can earn experience in major related fields and has many study abroad programs. In 2010–11, the college had 4,386 students taking courses on the Blacksburg campus. [2] The college's dean, Rosemary Blieszner, was appointed ...
The school was founded in 1886 and incorporated in 1888 by the Virginia Baptist State Convention as the coeducational "Lynchburg Baptist Seminary". Classes were first held in 1890 under the name Virginia Seminary. [4] With the offering of a collegiate program in 1900, the name was again changed, to Virginia Theological Seminary and College.
Hampton University is a private, historically black, research university in Hampton, Virginia.Founded in 1868 as Hampton Agricultural and Industrial School, it was established by Black and White leaders of the American Missionary Association after the American Civil War to provide education to freedmen.