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American University in Cairo

The American University in Cairo (AUC; Arabic: الجامعة الأمريكية بالقاهرة, romanizedal-Jāmi‘a al-’Amrīkiyya bi-l-Qāhira) is a private research university in New Cairo, Egypt. The university offers American-style learning programs at undergraduate, graduate, and professional levels, along with a continuing education program.

Other name

AUC

1919

Charles Watson

$535.5 million (2019)[1]

Ehab Abdel-Rahman

467 Full-time and 149 part-time (45% international faculty)

6,980 (from 69 countries, 59% female)

31,127 (Continuing Education)

Main campus in New Cairo, and the old campus in Tahrir Square

English

  Federal blue

The Eagle Horus

The AUC student body represents over 50 countries.[2] AUC's faculty members, adjunct teaching staff and visiting lecturers are internationally diverse and include academics, business professionals, diplomats, journalists, writers and others from the United States, Egypt and other countries.


AUC holds institutional accreditation from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education in the United States and from Egypt's National Authority for Quality Assurance and Assessment of Education.[3]

History[edit]

The American University in Cairo was founded in 1919 by the American Mission in Egypt, a Protestant mission sponsored by the United Presbyterian Church of North America, as an English-language university and preparatory school.[4] University founder Charles A. Watson wanted to establish a western institution for higher education.[5]


AUC was intended as both a preparatory school and a university. The preparatory school opened to 142 students on October 5, 1920, in Khairy Pasha Palace, which was built in the 1860s. The first diplomas issued were junior college-level certificates given to 20 students in 1923.[6][7]


There were disputes between Watson, who was interested in building the university's academic reputation, and United Presbyterian leaders in the United States who sought to return the university to its Christian roots. Four years later, Watson decided that the university could not afford to maintain its original religious ties and that its best hope was the promotion of good moral and ethical behavior.[8]


Originally limited to male students, the university enrolled its first female student in 1928.[9] That same year, the university graduated its first class, with two Bachelor of Arts and one Bachelor of Sciences degrees awarded.


In 1950, AUC added its first graduate programs to its ongoing Bachelor of Arts, bachelor of sciences, graduate diploma, and continuing education programs, and in 1951, phased out the preparatory school program. During the Six-Day War, AUC was seized by the Egyptian government and was placed under control by Egyptian administrators for the next seven years, and most of its American faculty were forced to leave the country.[10] Egypt stopped short of nationalizing the university,[11] which was supported by money owed as repayment of loans made by the U.S. Agency for International Development. The government returned control to American administrators on June 12, 1974, coinciding with a visit to Cairo by U.S. president Richard Nixon.[10] By the mid-1970s, the university offered a broad range of liberal arts and sciences programs. In the following years, the university added bachelors, masters, and diploma programs in engineering, management, computer science, journalism and mass communication and sciences programs, as well as establishing a number of research centers in strategic areas, including business, the social sciences, philanthropy and civic engagement, and science and technology. In the 1950s, the university also changed its name from The American University at Cairo, replacing "at" with "in."


The American University in Cairo Press was established in 1960. By 2016, it was publishing up to 80 books annually.[12]


In 1978, the university established the Desert Development Center to promote sustainable development in Egypt's reclaimed desert areas.[13] The Desert Development Center's legacy is being carried forward by the Research Institute for a Sustainable Environment.[14]


Faculty voted "no confidence" in university president Francis J. Ricciardone in February 2019. In a letter to the president, the faculty cited "low morale, complaints about his management style, grievances over contracts and accusations of illegal discrimination" with tensions further increasing when Ricciardone invited U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to give a speech at the university.[15]


On February 11, 2019, the Board of Trustees of the American University in Cairo reaffirmed its continued confidence and unqualified support for President Francis J. Ricciardone. In May 2019, it extended his tenure till June 2024.[16] Ricciardone retired June 2021.[17]


The board of trustees announced their appointment of Ahmad S. Dallal as the university's 13th president on June 22, 2021.[18]

(2021-)

Ahmad Dallal

Ehab Abdel-Rahman (July–October 2021) "acting president"

(2016–2021)

Francis J. Ricciardone

Thomas E. Thomason (2015–2016), interim president

(2011–2015)

Lisa Anderson

David C. Arnold (2003–2011)

John D. Gerhart (1998–2003)

Donald McDonald (1990–1997)

(1977–1990)

Richard F. Pedersen

Cecil K. Byrd (1974–1977)

Christopher Thoron (1969–1974)

(1963–1969)

Thomas A. Bartlett

Raymond F. McLain (1954–1963)

(1944–1953)

John S. Badeau

(1919–1944)

Charles Watson

AUC is ranked 411th university globally and 9th in the "Arab Region" by QS World University Rankings in their 2021 rankings

[47]

Ten AUC graduate programs were ranked among the top in Africa and best 200 worldwide in Eduniversal's Best Master's Rankings for 2015 - 2016

[48]

AUC placed 81 out of 407 institutions worldwide in the Universitas Indonesia (UI) GreenMetric World University Ranking for 2015 - 2016

[49]

Student life[edit]

Student activities[edit]

AUC has 70 student organizations.[50] Most of the student activities at AUC are organized by students in areas of community service, student government, culture and special interests, academics, and student conferences.

singer, songwriter and guitarist.

Aida el Ayoubi

actor

Amr Waked

Australian political scholar, academic and counter-terrorism expert.

Anne Aly

Egyptian theologian

Anne Zaki

Foreign correspondent for The New York Times; Best-Selling Author and Two-Time Pulitzer Prize Winner.

Anthony Shadid

(BSME) Egyptian actor

Asser Yassin

senior international correspondent, CNN

Ben Wedeman

Romanian minister, diplomat, political scientist and journalist

Dan Stoenescu

Canadian diplomat

David M. Malone

professor at Emory University

Devin J. Stewart

Saudi Arabia's first female filmmaker

Haifa Al-Mansour

CEO and Vice Chairman of Arab African International Bank.

Hassan Abdalla

(ME) singer

Hisham Abbas

feminist activist

Nadeen Ashraf

a Palestinian educationist and philanthropist

Jaweed al-Ghussein

American scholar, public intellectual, and historian of the modern Middle East and South Asia. Currently Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor of History at the University of Michigan.

Juan Cole

associate justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court

Karl Procaccini

activist, educator, former civil servant in Egypt

Khaled al-Qazzaz

CEO of Orascom Telecom and founder of LinkdotNet

Khaled Bichara

president of the Maldives from 1978 to 2008

Maumoon Abdul Gayoom

Qatari Minister of Communications and Information Technology

Mohammed bin Ali bin Mohammed Al Mannai

Egyptian actor and son of Adel Emam

Mohamed Emam

head of Egypt's National Council for Women

Maya Morsy

romance novelist, Larry Ellison's Wife (Oracle Corporation CEO)

Melanie Craft

Egyptian talk show host

Mona El-Shazly

journalist

Mona Eltahawy

poet and activist

Muin Bseiso

Ex Egyptian foreign minister

Nabil Fahmi

Op-Ed Columnist, The New York Times; Best-Selling Author and Two-Time Pulitzer Prize Winner.

Nicholas Kristof

professor of Arabic literature at the University of California, Davis

Noha Radwan

first Egyptian to climb Mount Everest

Omar Samra

Crown Prince of Iran

Reza Pahlavi

poet

Rana al-Tonsi

research scientist at MIT Media Lab and Founder of Affectiva

Rana el Kaliouby

Minister of International Cooperation

Rania El-Mashat

queen of Jordan.

Rania al Abdullah

Pakistani-American scholar of Islam at Harvard University; Author of What is Islam?

Shahab Ahmed

editor and host/presenter on Akher Kalam, a talk show on ONTV

Yosri Fouda

Op-Ed Columnist, The New York Times; Best-Selling Author and Three-Time Pulitzer Prize Winner.

Thomas Friedman

anchor, Bloomberg Television[57]

Yousef Gamal El-Din

former Japanese Minister of Defense and first female governor of Tokyo

Yuriko Koike

playwright

Yussef El Guindi

Dutch minister and diplomat

Sigrid Kaag

journalist

Fadwa El Gallal

(1935–2018), economist and commentator

Galal Amin

professor and chair of the Finance department

Aliaa Bassiouny

(born 1948), Italian former Commissioner of the European Community Humanitarian Office (ECHO)

Emma Bonino

professor of political science and member of the 2012 Constituent Assembly

Manar El-Shorbagy

American emeritus professor and Sufi master

Shems Friedlander

(born 1968), American contemporary philosopher of metaphysics

Graham Harman

emerita professor of Egyptology

Fayza Haikal

Egyptologist and expert on animal mummies

Salima Ikram

(born 1967), sex therapist and host of The Big Talk, a sexual advice show

Heba Kotb

chemist

Jehane Ragai

(born 1941), American Egyptologist, launched the Theban Mapping Project, which discovered the identity and vast dimensions of KV5, the tomb of the sons of Ramesses II in the Valley of the Kings

Kent R. Weeks

(born 1947), American Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author

Lawrence Wright

Computer science and engineering professor, first and only ACM Fellow in the Middle East and Africa

Moustafa Youssef

American University in Cairo Press

(AUB)

American University of Beirut

(AUD)

American University in Dubai

(AUS)

American University of Sharjah

(AUIS)

American University of Iraq, Sulaimani

Cairo International Model United Nations

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Official website