London School of Economics and Political Science
London School of Economics and Political Science is located on Houghton Street in London, off the Aldwych and next to the Royal Courts of Justice. The school is regarded as a major center of political debate. LSE alumni and former staff include thirteen Nobel Prize winners in Economics, Peace or Literature; around twenty-nine past or present heads of state, thirty current British MPs and twenty-nine current peers of the House of Lords. A quarter of all the Nobel Prizes in Economics have been connected with the London School of Economics in one way or another, and the School is also regarded as a pacemaker in the study of international relations, social philosophy, anthropology, sociology, and social policy. It is a constituent college of the University of London. The Library of the London School of Economics and Political Science is the world's largest library dedicated to the social sciences.
The LSE also has a very active and prominent student newspaper, The Beaver, which recently celebrated its 50th anniversary.
The LSE has nearly 7,000 full-time students and around 750 part-time students. Of these, 38% come from the United Kingdom, 18% from other European Union countries and 44% from more than 120 other countries. Around 48% are women and 52% are postgraduates. Courses are taught in over thirty research departments and eighteen departments, including Accounting and Finance, Anthropology, Economic History, Economics, Geography and Environment, Government, Industrial Relations, Information Systems, International History, International Relations, Law, Mathematics, Media and Communications, Operational Research, Philosophy Logic and Scientific Method, Social Policy, Social Psychology, Sociology, and Statistics.
League tables published by British newspapers consistently rank the LSE as one of the top five academic institutions in the country.
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2 Noted alumni 3 External links |
George Bernard Shaw, Bertrand Russell and Clement Attlee were among those involved in the school in the years following its founding. The school often served as the intellectual hub for the Labour Party in the years following its founding in 1900. Conversely, Friedrich von Hayek also later taught at the university. Other notable faculty members included William Beveridge and Karl Popper.
The school maintained an unmatched level of academic prestige in the 1960s and 1970s - the faculty included such notables as Amartya Sen, George Akerlof, James Meade, Robert Mundell, Sir John Hicks, and Merton Miller, all of whom won Nobel Prizes - despite acquiring a reputation for political extremism among the student body.
History
Noted alumni
Heads of State/Heads of Government
Other Prominent Alumni
External links
| Recognized bodies of the University of London |
| Birkbeck | Goldsmiths | Heythrop | Imperial | Institute of Cancer Research | Institute of Education | King's | London Business School | LSE | London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine | Queen Mary | Royal Academy of Music | Royal Holloway | Royal Veterinary College | St George's | SOAS | School of Pharmacy | UCL |
| Listed bodies |
| British Institute in Paris | Courtauld Institute of Art | School of Advanced Study | University Marine Biological Station, Millport |
