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Campus of the Walsh School of Foreign Service in Doha's Education City From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Georgetown University in Qatar (GU-Q) is a campus of Georgetown University (Washington, D.C.) in Education City, Doha, Qatar. It is one of Georgetown University's eleven undergraduate and graduate schools,[5] and is supported by a partnership between Qatar Foundation and Georgetown University.
جامعة جورجتاون في قطر | |
Former names | Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar (2005–2015) |
---|---|
Motto | Utraque Unum ("Both into One")[1] |
Type | Satellite campus of Georgetown University |
Established | August 31, 2005 |
Parent institution | Georgetown University |
Affiliation | Roman Catholic (Jesuit) |
President | John J. DeGioia |
Dean | Safwan M. Masri[2] |
Academic staff | 66[3] |
Undergraduates | 433[4] |
Location | , 25°18′56″N 51°26′5″E |
Campus | Urban |
Language | English |
Newspaper | The Georgetown Gazette |
Colors | Blue and gray |
Nickname | Hoyas |
Mascot | Jack the Bulldog |
Website | www |
In 2015, the university broadened its remit to include executive and professional education and custom training programs, in addition to the primary Bachelor of Science in Foreign Service degree. It rebranded to Georgetown University in Qatar (previously Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar or SFS-Q) to reflect the broadening of its remit.
In 2002, Georgetown University studied the feasibility of opening a campus of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service in Qatar in October 2002 and joined four other U.S. universities in opening a campus in Education City in 2005. Former U.S. Ambassador to Qatar, Patrick N. Theros called it "the most important development in American higher education in the twenty-first century."[6]
Since 2005, the campus became the home to the Center for International and Regional Studies (CIRS), GU-Q's premier research institute, which focuses on issues facing the Middle East and broader Asian region.[7]
In 2014, Nancy Pelosi, Former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, visited GU-Q and gave a commencement speech on the Graduation Ceremony. She said: “I was immediately struck by the enthusiasm of the students: they are enthusiastic to learn and they are enthusiastic about Georgetown. It is a campus full of intellectually curious young people who are tremendously proud of their association with Georgetown University.”
“The students on the Doha campus are pioneers. Being part of something new takes courage, and I commend the Doha students for their entrepreneurial spirit,” she added.[8]
In August 2014, Former Indonesian President, Bacharuddin Jusuf Habibie, visited GU-Q and talked Technology and Economic Stability in the Islamic World.
In October 2014, the President of Slovenia, Danilo Türk, visited GU-Q and gave a speech.
In April 2021, Georgetown University has appointed Safwan M. Masri, professor at Columbia University, Executive Vice President of Columbia Global Centers, as the new dean of Georgetown University in Qatar (GU-Q).[9]
In September 2023, on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Iraq War, former Iraqi President Dr. Barham Salih attended and delivered a speech at an academic conference organized by GU-Q.[10]
GU-Q has trained two Rhodes Scholars, namely Khansa Maria (Class of 2021), who won the award in 2020, and Asma Shakeel (Class of 2024), who won the award in 2023.[11]
Georgetown offers a four-year Bachelor of Science in Foreign Service (BSFS), with four majors within the program, the curriculum and course materials of which are identical to those offered at Georgetown's main campus in Washington D.C:[12]
Georgetown University in Qatar also offers three certificate options:
Additionally, GU-Q offers three minors:
Georgetown University in Qatar offers three executive master's programs:[13]
GU-Q also offers custom designed certificates, including programs on Public-Private Partnerships and Strategic Leadership Development.
Current students and graduates of GU-Q will be offered special accelerated program considerations to enroll at Georgetown University's graduate professional schools and programs.
Georgetown University in Qatar has an acceptance rate of 20% for the Class of 2027. Its yield rate is unknown.[14][15] The university is need-blind.[16]
The Center for International and Regional Studies (CIRS) sponsors studies of regional and international significance, including research initiatives in the areas of international relations, political economy, and domestic politics of the Persian Gulf.[7]
Past and current research projects[17] have included the study of Islamic bioethics, skills training for migrant workers, food security in Qatar, Arabic language pedagogy for heritage learners, and the history of women in Persian Gulf countries, among many other topics. Funding sources are available both within GU-Q and from external funding bodies.
GU-Q students formed the Middle Eastern Studies Association (MESSA)[18] in 2012 as a forum for organizing an annual global conference to showcase undergraduate research in the social sciences and humanities. The conference is also fully organized by GU-Q students who consult extensively with a faculty board to help select papers for presentation and to peer review papers for possible publication in the annual Journal of the Georgetown University in Qatar Middle Eastern Studies Student Association. This journal is the first peer-reviewed scholarly journal run by students in Qatar.[citation needed]
GU-Q students have access to research grants funded by the Qatar National Research Fund Undergraduate Research Experience Program (QNRF-UREP)[19] for research projects with topics that are relevant to Qatar's national development.
In 2022, GU-Q faculty numbered 66,[20] which includes both teaching and research staff.
The Georgetown University in Qatar building[22] in Education City was inaugurated in February 2011. The purpose-built 360,000-square-foot (33,000 m2) building features a three-story high atrium, an auditorium with a seating capacity for 300 people and 14 classrooms and lecture halls. It includes offices, classrooms, a library and other facilities for more than 200 undergraduate and graduate students. The facility was designed by Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta.
GU-Q's office in Washington, D.C. is located at the Leavey Center at Georgetown University.[23]
The James Reardon-Anderson Library was the largest library in Qatar before the Qatar National Library was built. The library is one of nine Georgetown University libraries. The library offers online access to more than 2 million scholarly resources and an intercampus loans service with Georgetown's library services in Washington DC. There is also an interlibrary loans services agreement with other universities on the Education City campus and with Qatar University. The Library houses over 90,000 books,[24] and over 6,000 multimedia items.[25] The Library space is open to the public. As of 2016, over 650,000 members of the GU-Q community and the general public have visited the library since 2005. In honor of its founding dean James Reardon-Anderson, the GU-Q Library was officially renamed the James Reardon-Anderson Memorial Library in 2023.[26]
About 25[27] student organizations exist on the school's campus. Student organizations include The Georgetown Gazette, Brainfood, the Women's Society and Development Club, Amal, Hoya Empowerment and Learning Program (HELP), Model United Nations, Photography Club, Senior Class Committee, Performing Arts Club, Fencing Club, The Free Society, Georgetown Business Society (GBS), Students for Justice in Palestine (GUQ-SJP), Southeast and East Asian Student Association (SEA), and the Georgetown Investment Association (GIA). Funding for student organizations comes from the Student Activities Commission (SAC) while the student body as a whole is represented by the Student Government Association (SGA).[28]
There are 213 study abroad programs in 57 countries available to GU-Q students, GU-Q students usually choose to study abroad for one or two semesters at Georgetown's main campus in DC, Villa Le Balze, or other partnering institutions with the Georgetown main campus.[29]
Zones of Conflict, Zones of Peace (ZCZP) is one of GU-Q’s academic program, aiming to lead students to explore areas of the world that have been involved in political and military conflicts every semester. Previous destinations include Nepal, China, Spain, Finland, Japan, the United States, South Africa, Northern Ireland, Germany, Rwanda, Cambodia, Palestine, Jordan and other countries and regions.[30]
No. | Name | Years | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | James Reardon-Anderson | 2005–2009 | [31] | |
- | Mehran Kamrava | 2009–2011 | Interim dean | [32] |
2 | Gerd Nonneman | 2011–2016 | [31] | |
3 | James Reardon-Anderson | 2016–2017 | [31] | |
4 | Ahmad S. Dallal | 2017–2021 | [33] | |
- | Clyde Wilcox | 2021–2022 | Interim dean | [34] |
5 | Safwan M. Masri | 2022–present | [35] |
GU-Q has partnerships and ongoing collaborations with a number of educational institutions, government bodies, and civil society organizations mainly in Qatar, with a dearth of connection to the larger, more relevant international community.
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