quinta-feira, 5 de fevereiro de 2015

Relacoes Internacionais na academia: no Brasil e nos EUA: pesquisas sobre ensino no Brasil e sobre as melhores nos EUA

Em 2014, participei de uma pesquisa sobre o ensino de RI no Brasil. A despeito de não estar exatamente nesse terreno, ou nesse tipo de Faculdade (uma vez que sou professor de Economia Política em cursos de mestrado e doutorado em Direito), fui convidado e aceitei responder às questões. Acabo de receber agora o agradecimento dos arquitetos da pesquisa, que me enviam a informação sobre a sua publicação:

2014 TRIP International Relations Survey Results
Dear Professor(a) Paulo Roberto de Almeida,
We are writing to let you know about the release of the 2014 Teaching, Research, and International Policy (TRIP) World Faculty Survey report. Today Foreign Policy released some of the highlights of our U.S. survey in their “View from the Ivory Tower” article available here: bit.ly/FPIRSurvey. In addition, we have made topline results for all countries available here: bit.ly/IRSurveyToplines
We would like to express our deep appreciation and gratitude to our respondents for their participation in our survey.
Please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions or concerns by sending an email to irsurvey@wm.edu. If you would like to join the discussion on Twitter, use #IRSurvey to let us know your thoughts.
Sincerely,
Susan Peterson, Michael Tierney, Daniel Maliniak, and Ryan Powers
College of William and Mary

Os resultados para o Brasil figuram neste link:
https://trip.wm.edu/reports/2014/rp_2014/index.php

Ao mesmo tempo a Foreign Policy apresenta os resultados da mesma pesquisa sobre os melhores cursos dessa área nos EUA, feitos pelos mesmos pesquisadores e organizados de outra forma pela revista. Como esperado, a revista considera que as universidades americanas selecionadas não são apenas as melhores do país, mas que elas são as melhores do mundo. Eles só fazem algumas modestas concessões para poucas universidades de outros países: para a Scieces-Po de Paris, para o Graduate Institute de Genebra, e para Oxford, Cambridge e a London School of Economics, da Grã-Bretanha:
http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/02/03/top-twenty-five-schools-international-relations/

The Best International Relations Schools in the World

U.S. scholars rank the top 25 IR programs for undergraduates, master's, and Ph.D.s.




The road to Washington is paved with elite educations. Indeed, for young people hoping to secure jobs in Foggy Bottom, on Pennsylvania Avenue, and elsewhere in the foreign-policy establishment, a key ingredient to success is often a diploma in international relations (IR) from one of America’s top universities. There are debates to be had about this model—how the pipeline can become more affordable, for instance, to ensure greater diversity among government hires. Scholars and policymakers alike rightly agree, however, that language skills, expertise about regions of the world, and other knowledge gleaned in the classroom make for a stronger, more effective corps of foreign-policy wonks. So which schools prepare students best?
The results of the 2014 Ivory Tower survey—a collaboration between Foreign Policy and the Teaching, Research, and International Policy (TRIP) project at the College of William & Mary—provide an insider’s guide. Responses from 1,615 IR scholars drawn from 1,375 U.S. colleges and universities determined rankings for the leading Ph.D., terminal master’s, and undergraduate programs in IR. (The scholars were asked to list the top five institutions in each category.) The survey also quizzed respondents about recent historical events and future policy challenges: Just how plausible is a U.S. war with China, for example, and who was the most effective secretary of state over the past 50 years? (Hint: Neither Condoleezza Rice nor John Kerry.)
All told, the Ivory Tower survey offers a window into how America’s top IR scholars see the world today—and which institutions are effectively nurturing future generations of thinkers and policymakers.

Top U.S. Undergraduate Institutions to Study International Relations

  • 1.Harvard University46.20%
  • 2.Princeton University39.14%
  • 3.Stanford University33.02%
  • 4.Georgetown University28.06%
  • 5.Columbia University24.37%
  • 6.University of Chicago19.62%
  • 7.Yale University18.67%
  • 8.George Washington University11.39%
  • 9.American University9.92%
  • 10.University of Michigan9.49%
  • 11.University of California—Berkeley8.54%
  • 12.Dartmouth College8.23%
  • 13.University of California—San Diego7.70%
  • 14.Tufts University7.07%
  • 15.Cornell University6.43%
  • 16.Johns Hopkins University6.12%
  • 17.Massachusetts Institute of Technology5.06%
  • 18.College of William & Mary4.54%
  • 19.Swarthmore College3.48%
  • 20.Williams College2.95%
  • 21.University of California—Los Angeles2.85%
  • 22.Brown University2.74%
  • 22.University of Virginia2.74%
  • 24.Ohio State University2.64%
  • 25.Duke University2.22%

Top Master's Programs for Policy Career in International Relations

  • 1.Georgetown University58.61%
  • 2.Johns Hopkins University47.76%
  • 3.Harvard University46.31%
  • 4.Princeton University33.33%
  • 5.Columbia University31.21%
  • 6.Tufts University29.08%
  • 7.George Washington University26.06%
  • 8.American University17.11%
  • 9.London School of Economics13.42%
  • 10.Stanford University5.37%
  • 11.University of Denver5.15%
  • 12.University of Chicago5.03%
  • 13.University of California—San Diego4.70%
  • 14.University of Oxford4.47%
  • 15.Yale University3.91%
  • 16.Syracuse University3.13%
  • 17.University of California—Berkeley2.57%
  • 18.University of Cambridge2.35%
  • 19.University of Pittsburgh1.79%
  • 20.Massachusetts Institute of Technology1.68%
  • 21.Monterey Institute of Int’l Studies1.45%
  • 21.Sciences Po—Paris1.45%
  • 21.University of Michigan1.45%
  • 24.Graduate Inst. of Int’l and Dev. Studies1.12%
  • 24.New York University1.12%
  • 24.Texas A&M University1.12%

Top Ph.D. Programs for Academic Career in International Relations

  • 1.Harvard University62.51%
  • 2.Princeton University53.17%
  • 3.Stanford University48.76%
  • 4.Columbia University32.44%
  • 5.Yale University21.80%
  • 6.University of Chicago21.37%
  • 7.University of California—San Diego16.00%
  • 8.University of Michigan15.68%
  • 9.Massachusetts Institute of Technology13.43%
  • 10.University of California—Berkeley12.03%
  • 11.University of Oxford8.59%
  • 12.Cornell University7.30%
  • 13.London School of Economics6.66%
  • 14.Ohio State University5.48%
  • 15.Georgetown University5.37%
  • 16.University of Cambridge4.51%
  • 17.Johns Hopkins University4.08%
  • 18.George Washington University3.22%
  • 19.New York University2.69%
  • 19.University of Wisconsin—Madison2.69%
  • 21.University of Minnesota2.26%
  • 22.American University2.15%
  • 22.Duke University2.15%
  • 22.University of Rochester2.15%
  • 25.University of California—Los Angeles2.04%

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