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The School of Politics and International Relations is an academic department at the University of Nottingham, England housed in the Law and Social Sciences Building (LASS) together with Law and Sociology. The school runs nine undergraduate programmes, nine postgraduate programmes and have a 40-strong PhD community.〔(Ballots & Bullets | About )〕 Research activity in the school is ranked around 7 Institutes.〔(Research - The University of Nottingham )〕 the Head of School was Matthew Humphrey.〔(About the School - The University of Nottingham )〕 In 2013 the department was chosen along with the University of Oxford and the University of Manchester to host the 2015 British Election Study.〔(Consortium plays host to British Election Study - The University of Nottingham )〕 In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise the Department's research was ranked in the top 10 departments of Politics in the country〔(School History - The University of Nottingham )〕 and 85% of the research was considered of international standard.〔 The department ranks 12th in The Guardian's 2013 league table of Politics departments.〔(University guide 2013: league table for politics | Education | theguardian.com )〕 The Complete University Guide ranked Nottingham 10th for Politics in 2013 and 13th for Politics in 2014.〔(Politics - Top UK University Subject Tables and Rankings 2014 - Complete University Guide )〕 ==History== The School of Politics and International Relations at Nottingham was established in 1965 and was initially housed in the old Engineering Building. Richard Pear was the first Professor of Politics.〔http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/politics/about-the-school/history.aspx〕 Politics had previously been taught as early as 1959 as part of the Department of Social Science where Politics formed part of a joint degree in Politics and Economics. In 1971 the Sir Francis Hill chair was established following an endowment from the Municipal Mutual Insurance Company and Frank Stacey, an expert in local government was appointed. In 1981 Dennis Kavanagh joined the school. Kavanagh is best known for his work on the Nuffield Election Studies. The School moved to the 'Orchards' Building during the 1980s. Several new degrees were introduced during the 1980s including an MA in Political Economy and Political Culture and a joint BA in Politics and History and an MA in International Relations. In 1994 the head of department Dr David Regan committed suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning and cited his treatment by the University of Nottingham in a suicide note. 〔http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/pressure-for-nottingham-suicide-inquiry-continues/98080.article〕 In 1999 moved to the Law and Social Sciences Building (LASS) and changed its name to the ‘School of Politics and International Relations' in 2005. In 2011 the school gained national media attention following the arrest of two student one of whom was completing a PhD related to terrorism. Dr Rod Thornton published a paper critical of the department’s handling of the incident and was subsequently suspended. Thornton later left by “mutual consent”.〔http://www.impactnottingham.com/2012/06/dr-rod-thornton-leaves-the-university-after-mutual-agreement/〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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