Foreign Policy Magazine, November/December 2005
Where’s the best place to study international relations? The answer depends in part on the career you have in mind. Aspiring academics typically need a Ph.D. from a top-notch political science department. For scholarly pursuits, Harvard easily leads the field; it was the only institution named by a majority of respondents. For those who want to walk the corridors of power—not study them—Johns Hopkins and
Top 20 Ph.D Programs
Harvard University (75%)
Columbia University (48%)
Stanford University (47%)
Princeton University (43%)
University of Chicago (36%)
Yale University (29%)
University of Michigan (28%)
University of California-Berkeley (27%)
University of California-San Diego (16%)
Cornell University (12%)
Mass. Institute of Tech. (11%)
Duke University (10%)
Johns Hopkins University (9%)
Georgetown University (8%)
Ohio State University (7%)
University of Minnesota (7%)
University of Los Angeles (6%)
New York University (6%)
University of Rochester (4%)
Tufts University (3%)
Top 20 Masters Programs
Johns Hopkins University (65%)
Georgetown University (62%)
Harvard University (47%)
Tufts University (45%)
Columbia University (45%)
Princeton University (39%)
George Washington University (26%)
American University (16%)
Syracuse University (7%)
University of California-Berkeley (5%)
University of Denver (5%)
Yale University (5%)
University of Chicago (4%)
University of Pittsburgh (4%)
University of Maryland (3%)
Mass. Institute of Tech. (2%)
Stanford University (2%)
University of Kentucky (2%)
New York University (2%)
University of South Carolina (2%)
출처: http://www.foreignpolicy.com