School of Oriental and African Studies
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[edit] School of Oriental and African Studies
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Motto | Knowledge is Power | |
Crest | Image:SOAS Crest.jpg | |
Patron | HM The Queen | |
President | Baroness Helena Kennedy QC | |
Director & Principal | Prof. Colin Bundy | |
Pro-Director | Prof. Peter Robb | |
Visitor | The Rt Hon. Sir Anthony Evans QC | |
Established | 1916 | |
Location | Russell Square, Bloomsbury, London, United Kingdom | |
Students | 3,700 (1,500 postgraduates) | UK Ranking | 4th(2005) | European Ranking | 11th(2005) |
Member of | University of London | |
Website | http://www.soas.ac.uk | |
Students' Union | SOAS Students' Union | |
Hon. SU President | Ken Livingstone | |
Organisations with special links with SOAS | The Royal Society for Asian Affairs, The Royal Asiatic Society, The Royal African Society, The Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Department for International Development, and the British Museum | |
Top Employer Destinations | Banks, NGOs, Government Departments (specifically, GCHQ, MI5, DFID, and the FCO), and International Organisations (UN Agencies and Progammes, IMF, World Bank and the ADB) |
The School of Oriental and African Studies (often abbreviated to SOAS) was founded in 1916 as the School of Oriental Studies at 2, Finsbury Circus, London, England, the then premises of the London Institution. Africa was added to the school's name and remit in 1938 and the school shifted to Malet Street , Russell Square in 1941. (Now, however, in all communication and correspondence Thornhaugh Street is employed.) The institution's founding mission was primarily to train British administrators for overseas postings across the empire. Since then the school has grown into the world's foremost centre for the exclusive study of Asia and Africa. A college of the University of London, SOAS fields include Law, Social Sciences, Humanities and Languages with special reference to Asia and Africa. SOAS today is a source of some of the most influential and innovative thinking in many fields of the social sciences and humanities, principally, but not exclusively in relation to Asia and Africa. The SOAS Library, housed in a building designed at the beginning of the 1970s by Sir Denys Lasdun, is the UK's national resource for materials relating to Asia and Africa and is the largest of its kind in Europe.
The school has grown considerably over the past thirty years, from under 1,000 students in the 1970s to nearly 4,000 students today, approximately half of them postgraduates.
The school also houses two galleries: the Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, one of the foremost collections of Chinese ceramics in Europe, and the Brunei Gallery, completed in 1995, which stages temporary exhibitions of both historical and contemporary materials which reflect subjects and regions studied at SOAS.
The main campus was moved to a new, purpose-built home, just off Russell Square in Bloomsbury in 1938, and has much expanded since then. The present library building was added in 1973, the Brunei Gallery in 1995, and an extension to the library building opened in 2004 (the second phase of this expansion is due to be completed in 2006).
A new campus at Vernon Square in Islington was opened in 2001.
Image:SOAS Library interior view.jpg
SOAS is consistently rated as one of the United Kingdom's top ten higher education institutions in national League tables. In the most recent Guardian League Table (2005) SOAS was ranked 4th nationally out of 122 UK Higher Education institutions. This is the third year in a row that the School has achieved 4th place in the Guardian Newspaper rankings. Internationally, in November 2004 SOAS was ranked the 44th best university in the world by the THES world league table of universities (the 7th UK university, and 11th European university in the table).
The SOAS Department of Linguistics was the first linguistics department in United Kingdom, founded in 1932 as a centre for research and study in Oriental and African languages. J R Firth, known internationally for his original work in phonology and semantics, was Senior Lecturer, Reader and Professor of General Linguistics at the school between 1938 and 1956.
Faculties at SOAS
Faculty of Law and Social Sciences
The Faculty of Law and Social Sciences consists of five academic departments
- Department of Economics
- Department of Development Studies
- Department of Finance and Management Studies
- Department of Politics and International Studies
- The School of Law
The Faculty of Arts and Humanities
The Faculty of Arts and Humanities contains five Departments
- Anthropology and Sociology
- Art and Archaeology
- History
- Music
- Study of Religions
The Faculty also administers the Centre for Media and Film Studies and MA in Gender Studies
Faculty of Languages and Cultures
The Faculty of Languages and Cultures consists of seven academic departments:
- Department of Linguistics
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of China and Inner Asia
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of Japan and Korea
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of Near and Middle East
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of South Asia
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of South East Asia
- The Language Centre
Note: At present, where The Language Centre employs its own staff and administers language only courses, the respective departments manage language acquisition in their courses. In the near future (the date is TBC), all language acquisition will be brought under the remit of the new School of Languages.
Students' accommodation
Many SOAS students are accommodated in the college's own halls of residence; SOAS students are also eligible to apply for places in the University of London intercollegiate halls of residence, such as Connaught Hall.
Most students in college or university accommodation are first-year undergraduates. The majority of second and third-year students and postgraduates find their own accommodation in the private sector.
OpenAir Radio
SOAS runs its own radio station, OpenAir Radio, based on the 5th floor of the Russell Square Building. The initial Restricted Service Licence ran from November until 16th December 2005, and broadcast on 101.4FM over a three mile radius in the Camden/Central London area. The remit of the station is world music, culture and current affairs, with programmes focusing on Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America. OpenAir programmes include everthing from local news to international media analysis, and cookery programmes to DJ sets.
OpenAir Radio broadcasts on 101.4fm, and can also be accessed online at www.openair.org.uk.
Notable alumni
- Akbar S. Ahmed: Anthropologist, former Pakistani High Commissioner
- Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas: Prominent Islamic thinker
- Aung San Suu Kyi: Nobel Peace Prize laureate and dissident Burmese opposition leader.
- Zeinab Badawi: Newsreader
- Luisa Diogo: Current Prime Minister of Mozambique
- Fred Halliday: Middle East expert at LSE
- Michael Jay: Permanent Secretary at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, formerly British Ambassador to France.
- Dom Joly: Comedian.
- Jemima Khan: Society figure and campaigner, daughter of Sir James Goldsmith and former wife of Imran Khan.
- David Lammy: The 'black Blair'. MP for Tottenham, Minister for Culture. (He read Law.)
- Bernard Lewis: "The neo-cons' favourite historian", recently chosen by Time magazine as the world's most influential academic.
- Mette-Marit:Crown Princess of Norway
- Sir Francesco Nardozzi Famous visual artist and designer, CO chairman of Yo sushi.
- Khyentse Norbu: Bhutanese film-maker and prominent Tibetan Buddhist lama
- Enoch Powell: British statesman
- Paul Robeson: Musician, writer and civil rights activist.
- Walter Rodney: Guyanese historian and political activist.
- Sultan Salahuddin: Sultan of Selangor and King of Malaysia
- Ron Pundak: Head of Shimon Perez Centre for Peace [1]
Notable members of staff
- Arthur Arberry
- T. Grahame Bailey
- Sir Harold Bailey
- Arnold Bake
- Arthur Llewelyn Basham
- A. D. H. Bivar
- N. E. Mary Boyce
- K. N. Chaudhary
- K. de B. Codrington
- Patricia Crone
- Dr. David Dalby
- T. N. Dave
- Lucy Durán: [2]
- Ronald Emmerick
- J. R. Firth
- Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf
- Gerald Hawting
- Alfred Guillaume
- Sir Hamilton Gibb
- W. B. Henning
- P. M. Holt
- Reginald Johnston
- Ann K. S. Lambton
- David Marshall Lang
- Bernard Lewis
- D. Neil MacKenzie
- Vladimir Minorsky
- Sir Cyril Philips
- Xiao Qian
- William Radice
- Sir E. Denison Ross
- Ralph Russell
- R. B. Serjeant
- Lao She
- Nicholas Sims-Williams
- A. S. Tritton
- Sir Ralph Turner
- Edward Ullendorff
- Daniel de Vries
- Arthur Waley
- John Wansbrough
- Richard O. Winstedt
- Malcolm Yapp
External links
- School of Oriental and African Studies website
- Guardian 2005 League Table
- SOAS Student Union website
Recognised bodies of the University of London |
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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 |
University of London Institute in Paris | Courtauld Institute of Art | School of Advanced Study | University Marine Biological Station, Millport |