- Source: List of Sciences Po people
This is a list of alumni, former staff, and those otherwise associated with Sciences Po. For further information, refer to the list of Sciences Po alumni in the French Wikipedia. Neither list is complete.
Heads of international organisations
Audrey Azoulay (b. 1972), Director general to UNESCO (2017–present)
Bertrand Badré (b. 1968) Managing Director of World Bank (2013–Present)
Boutros Boutros-Ghali (1922–2016), United Nations Secretary-General (1992–1996)
Michel Camdessus (b. 1933), Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (1987–2000)
Alpha Condé (b. 1938), Chairperson of African Union (2017–present)
Nicole Fontaine (1942–2018), President of the European Parliament (1999–2001)
Gilbert Guillaume (b. 1930), ex president of the International Court of Justice (2000–2003)
Pascal Lamy (b. 1947), Director-General of the World Trade Organization
Pierre Lellouche, president of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly
Roger Ockrent (1907–1983), chairman of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (1957–1974)
Dominique Strauss-Kahn (b. 1949), ex-Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund
Marisol Touraine (b. 1959), Chair of Unitaid Executive Board
Justin Vaïsse (b. 1973), Director General of the Paris Peace Forum
Simone Veil (1927–2017), president of the European Parliament (1979–1984)
Wan Waithayakon (1891–1976), president of the United Nations General Assembly (1956–1958)
Elena Zhemkova, Co-Founder of Memorial Society
Heads of state or government
= World
=Pridi Banomyong (1900–1983), Prime Minister of Thailand (1946), Regent of Thailand (1941–45)
Edvard Beneš (1884–1948), President of Czechoslovakia (1935–1948)
Paul Biya (b. 1933), President of Cameroon (1982–present)
Hissène Habré (b. 1942), President of Chad (1982–1990)
Habib Bourguiba (1903–2000), President of Tunisia (1957–1987)
Alpha Condé (b. 1938), President of Guinea (2010–present)
Esko Aho,(b. 1954), former prime minister to Finland (1991–1995)
Bảo Đại (1913–1997), Emperor of Vietnam (1926–1955), Emperor of Annam (1926–1945)
Chandrika Kumaratunga (b. 1945), President of Sri Lanka (1994–2005)
Mohammad Mosaddegh (1882–1967), Prime Minister of Iran (1951–1953), Time magazine Man of the Year (1951)
Rainier III (1923–2005), Prince of Monaco (1949–2005)
Enrico Letta, Prime Minister of Italy (2013–2014), Present Dean at Sciences Po
José Sócrates (b. 1957), Prime Minister of Portugal (2005–2011)
Pierre Trudeau (1919–2000), Prime Minister of Canada (1968–1979, 1980–1984)
Pierre Werner (1913–2002), Prime Minister of Luxembourg (1959–1974, 1979–1984), so-called "father of the Euro"
Hasan Saka (1885–1960), Prime Minister of Turkey (1947–1949)
Salome Zurabishvili (12-2018), President of Georgia
Angela Merkel (b. 1954), Chancellor of Germany (2005–2021)
Václav Havel (1936-2011), President of Czechoslovakia (1989–1992), President of the Czech Republic (1993–2003)
France
Édouard Balladur (b. 1929), Prime Minister of France (1993–1995)
Raymond Barre (1924–2007), Prime Minister of France (1976–1981)
Jacques Chaban-Delmas (1915–2000), Prime Minister of France (1969–1972)
Jacques Chirac (1932-2019), President of the French Republic (1995–2007), Prime Minister of France (1983–1986, 1986–1988)
Maurice Couve de Murville (1907–1999), Prime Minister of France (1968–1969)
Michel Debré (1912–1996), Prime Minister of France (1959–1962)
Laurent Fabius (b. 1946), Prime Minister of France (1983–1986)
François Hollande (b. 1954), President of the French Republic (2012–2017)
Lionel Jospin (b. 1937), Prime Minister of France (1997–2002)
Alain Juppé (b. 1945), Prime Minister of France (1995–1997)
Emmanuel Macron (b. 1977), President of the French Republic (2017–)
Pierre Mauroy (1928–2013) Prime Minister of France (1981–1984)
François Mitterrand (1916–1996), President of the French Republic (1981–1995)
Michel Rocard (1930–2016), Prime Minister of France (1988–1991)
Dominique de Villepin (b. 1953), Prime Minister of France (2005–2007)
Édouard Philippe (b. 1970), Prime Minister of France (2017–2020)
Jean Castex (b. 1965), Prime Minister of France (2020–2022)
Gabriel Attal (b. 1989), Prime Minister of France (2024)
Politics and government
= World
=Nebahat Albayrak, Turkish–Dutch politician in the Netherlands;
Alin Mituța, Member of the European Parliament, former Secretary of State in the Romanian Government
J. Brady Anderson, US ambassador to the United Republic of Tanzania
François-Albert Angers, Canadian economist
Jihad Azour, Minister of Finance of Lebanon (2005–present)
Jeremy Kinsman, former Canadian ambassador to European Union
Howard Balloch, erstwhile Canadian ambassador to China, director at Zi Corporation
Rula Ghani, First lady of Afghanistan
Adrian A. Basora, United States ambassador
Cina Lawson, Minister in Togo Government
Íngrid Betancourt, Colombian senator, anti-corruption activist, and candidate for president of Colombia
Sir John Henry Birchenough, GCMG (1853 –1937), English public servant; President of the British South Africa Company (1925–1937)
L. Paul Bremer (b. 1941), U.S. Civil Administrator in Iraq (2003–2004)
Caroline, Princess of Hanover, princess of the Principality of Monaco; daughter of American actress Grace Kelly
Sir Austen Chamberlain, British Foreign Secretary (1924–1929); 1925 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize
Yves-Thibault de Silguy, EU Commissioner for Economic and Financial Affairs
Božidar Đelić, vice-president of the government of Serbia, 2007–
Alain Destexhe, Belgian liberal senator and author
Stéphane Dion, former leader of the Liberal Party of Canada and former Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs.
Roland Dumas (1922–2024), French Minister of Foreign Affairs (1984–1993)
William Eagleton, representative of UN Secretary-General for Western Sahara; erstwhile US ambassador to Syria
Joaquim do Espirito Santo, ambassador of Angola to the United States
James Foley, US ambassador to Haiti (2003–2005)
Ahmad Kamal, Pakistani ambassador to the United Nations
Bernard Landry, former Premier of Quebec
Ertuğrul Osman, pretender to the title of Sultan of the Ottoman Empire; head of the house of Osmanli (1994–2009)
Sam Rainsy, Cambodian opposition leader; Member of Parliament
Leon Reich, member of the Sejm of Poland
Charles Rizk, Lebanese justice minister (2005–)
Nano Ružin, Macedonian professor of political and social sciences, Ex-Macedonian Ambassador to NATO, and presidential candidate of the Liberal Democratic Party in 2009
Afif Safieh, Palestinian ambassador to the US, regarded as the most articulate living Palestinian diplomat
Nawaf Salam, ambassador and permanent representative of Lebanon to the United Nations
Ghassan Salamé, former Minister of Culture of Lebanon (2000–2003); prolific author on Middle East politics
Ieng Sary, deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Democratic Kampuchea, 1975–1979
Brad Setser, former Deputy Secretary in the US Treasury Department
Mike Schmuhl, manager for the Pete Buttigieg 2020 presidential campaign
Sally Shelton-Colby, assistant administrator of the Bureau for Global Programs, Field Support, and Research in the US Department of State, erstwhile US ambassador to Grenada and Barbados
Joan E. Spero, Under Secretary of State for Economic, Business, and Agricultural Affairs
Jonas Gahr Støre, Norwegian Minister of Health and Care Services; former Minister of Foreign Affairs (2005–2012)
Francis Orlando Wilcox (1908–1985), Assistant Secretary of State of the USA (1955–1961)
Stanley Woodward, US Ambassador to Canada (1950–1953)
Salome Zurabishvili, former French diplomat, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Georgia and the current leader of the United Georgian Opposition
Thanat Khoman, Thai Minister of Foreign Affairs 1959–1971 and Deputy Prime Minister 1981–1983
Joseph Ki-Zerbo, Burkinabé advocate for African independence
Władysław Grabski, Prime Minister of Poland 1920, 1923–1925
France
Ministers (N.B. This is a small selection given the large number of Fifth Republic ministers who studied at the institute.)
Martine Aubry, former French Minister for Social Affairs, mayor of Lille (in French: Martine Aubry)
Dominique Baudis, French MP and former mayor of Toulouse (in French: Dominique Baudis)
Jean-Louis Bourlanges, member of the European Parliament; vice-président of the UDF
Jean-Pierre Chevènement, former French Minister of Interior
Bernadette Chirac, former First Lady of France; Representative in Corrèze General Council; chairwoman of Fondation Hôpitaux de Paris; wife of former French president Jacques Chirac
Renaud Denoix de Saint Marc, vice-president of the Council of State
Olivier Duhamel, former member of the European Parliament; former Member of the European Convention (in French: Olivier Duhamel)
Hervé Gaymard, former French Minister of Finance
Jean-Marcel Jeanneney, former Minister of Industry, French ambassador to Algeria
Jack Lang, former French Minister of Culture and Education
Emmanuel Macron, Minister of the Economy, Industry and Digital Affairs and now President of France
Xavier Musca, director of the French Treasury; Director-General of the French Treasury and Economic Development Department (2002–present)
Jean Peyrelevade, civil servant, politician and business leader
Ségolène Royal, a defeated 2007 presidential candidate
Hubert Védrine, former French Minister of Foreign Affairs (1997–2002)
Maurice Papon, French civil servant, Gaullist politician and Nazi collaborator
Diplomats (N.B. This is a small selection given that almost every diplomat since the inception of the Fifth Republic studied at the institute.)
Hervé Alphand, erstwhile French ambassador to the United States, UN, NATO, and the OEEC
Roland de Margerie, former ambassador of France to Germany
Gérard Errera, ambassador of France to the United Kingdom (2002–present)
André François-Poncet, former ambassador of France to Germany
Dominique Girard, ambassador of France to India
Daniel Jouanneau, ambassador of France to Canada (2004–present)
Jean-David Levitte (b. 1946), ambassador of France to the USA (2002–present); Permanent Representative of France to the United Nations (2000–2002)
Claude Martin, ambassador of France to Germany (2001–present)
Jean-Maurice Ripert, former Permanent Representative of France to the United Nations, Ambassador of France to Russia, and Ambassador of France to China
Luis Vassy, former ambassador of France to the Netherlands; Director of Sciences Po
Advisors:
Charline Avenel, Rector of Versailles Academy from 2018 to 2023.
Anastasia Colosimo (born c. 1990), International Press Advisor since 2023.
Ismaël Emelien (born c. 1987), Advisor to Emmanuel Macron
Jean Messiha (born 1970), Advisor to the National Front
Members of the European Parliament:
Raphaël Glucksmann - Chair, Special Committee on Foreign Interference in all Democratic Processes in the European Union
Academia, journalism and literature
Luis López Álvarez, Spanish poet, writer, and professor
Raymond Aron
Olivier Auroy, novelist
Jean-Pierre Azéma
Frédéric Beigbeder, novelist
Derek Bok, president of Harvard University
Fernand Braudel
Emmanuel Carrère
Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, specialist of Russia, member of the Académie Française
Louis Chauvel
Vincent Chauvet
Houchang E. Chehabi, professor
Paul Claudel, writer
Jean-Marie Colombani, head of Le Monde
Michèle Cotta
Michel Crozier
Guillaume Dustan
Pierre Drieu La Rochelle
Alain Duhamel, senior journalist at Le Monde and Libération
Jean-Paul Fitoussi , French economist
Matthew Fraser, editor-in-chief of National Post (Canada)
Jacques Frémontier (born surname Friedman; 1930–2020), French journalist and television producer
Erhard Friedberg
Jacques Généreux
Pierre Georges
Hala Gorani, CNN journalist and anchorwoman
Julien Gracq, novelist
Nicolas Grenier, poet
Stanley Hoffmann, professor at Harvard University
Adrienne Jablanczy
Christophe Jaffrelot
Rebecca Jarvis, finalist on The Apprentice, Season Four; reporter on CNBC
Stanley Karnow, Pulitzer Prize-winning author on Southeast Asia; Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
Gilles Kepel
Grayson Kirk, political scientist; president of Columbia University (1953–1968)
Marc Lambron, novelist
Bruno Latour
Marc Lazar
Yvette Lebas-Guyot, journalist and World War II commander
Bernard-Henri Lévy, bestselling French writer; philosopher; political campaigner
Paul Morand
Anne Muxel
Christine Ockrent, broadcast journalist
Érik Orsenna, member of the Académie Française; former chief economic advisor to François Mitterrand
Roger Peyrefitte, novelist
Marcel Proust, novelist
Edmond Marc du Rogoff, (a.k.a. Edmundo Marcos Rogoff) ancien professeur agregé, Université d'Ottawa
David Pujadas
René Rémond, historian, member of the Académie Française
Jean-Christophe Rufin, novelist
Russ Rymer, editor-in-chief of Mother Jones magazine
Robert B. Silvers, co-editor of The New York Review of Books
Anne Sinclair
Jared Taylor
Milana Terloeva, Chechen journalist and bestselling author
Maurice Vaïsse
Luis Vassy
Georges Vedel
Florian Zeller, novelist, Prix Interallié 2004
Hayeon Lim, South Korean socialite and author
Élie Halévy, French philosopher and historian
Pierre Hassner, Romanian-French geopolitologist and philosopher, Director Emeritus of Research at the Sciences Po Center for International Studies and Research
Ma Jianzhong, author of the first Chinese grammar textbook written by a Chinese
Pierre Milza, French historian, specialist in history of Italy and fascism
Jean-Luc Parodi, French political scientist
Pierre Renouvin, French historian of international relations
Ian Goldin, British economist, former Distinguished Visiting Professor at Sciences Po, Founding Director of the Oxford Martin School
Elise Buckle, french environmentalist and professor at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies for the Executive Programme Graduate Institute of Geneva.
Business and finance
Wilfried Baumgartner, governor of the Bank of France
Jean-Hugues Bittner, CFO of Morgan Stanley Europe
Michel Bon, former CEO of France Telecom and current CEO of Carrefour
Daniel Bouton, former CEO of Société Générale
Gerardo Braggiotti, CEO of Lazard LLC, Italy
Nicolas Calemard, Director of Human Resources, LVMH
Philippe Camus, CEO of European Aeronautic Defense and Space Company
Richard Descoings, former CEO and director of Sciences Po
Romain Durand, CEO of Scor VIE
Henri Giscard d'Estaing, CEO of Club Med
Jean-Marc Espalioux, CEO of Accor, European leader and one of the world's largest hotel groups
Elizabeth Fleuriot, CEO of Kellogg's France
Michel Gardel, CEO of Toyota France
Pierre-Yves Gerbeau, CEO of X-Leisure
Frédéric Jolly, chairman of Russell for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa
Jean-Pierre Jouyet, Director-General of the French Treasury and Economic Development Department
Jacques de Larosière, former president of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
Frédéric Lemoine, former CEO of Capgemini
Gérard Mestrallet, CEO of Suez
Léone-Noëlle Meyer, chairman of Galeries Lafayette from 1998 to 2005
Thierry Moulonguet, CFO and Executive VP of Renault
Marcin Obroniecki, former CEO of Polish Agency for Audit Supervision, Vice President of Monte Vero Audit and Advisory, a Polish audit firm
Frédéric Oudéa, CEO of Société Générale
Laurence Parisot, “boss of the bosses”, former president of the MEDEF (ex-CNPF), director of the IFOP, CEO of Optimum
Guillaume Pepy, President of SNCF, the French national railway company
David René de Rothschild, chairman of N M Rothschild & Sons
François Roussely, CEO of Credit Suisse France; vice-chairman of Credit Suisse Europe
Javier Santiso, economist at the OECD, former Chief Economist for Latin America at BBVA
Marie-Laure Sauty de Chalon, marketing executive and CEO of the aufeminin.com group
Louis Schweitzer, former CEO of Renault
Ernest-Antoine Seillière, “boss of the bosses”, president of the MEDEF (ex-CNPF)
Jean-Cyril Spinetta, CEO of Air France
Anne-Claire Tattinger, CEO of Société du Louvre, major luxury hotel and luxury goods company
Agnès Touraine, CEO of Act III Consultants; former CEO of Vivendi Universal Publishing
Jean-Claude Trichet, president of the European Central Bank (2003–2011), former governor of the Bank of France (1993–2003)
Alex Vieux, CEO and founder of technology conference sponsor DASAR; publisher of Red Herring magazine
Marc Vincent, director of Credit Suisse, former Managing Director at Citigroup France
Serge Weinberg, CEO of Pinault Printemps Redoute, one of the world's largest luxury goods groups
Culture and sports
Fanny Ardant, internationally acclaimed French movie star
Camille, born Camille Dalmais, singer and songwriter
Pierre Christin, French comics creator and writer (Valérian and Laureline)
Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the modern Olympic Games
Christian Dior, haute couture and fashion designer
Marc Drillech, sociologist and President of universities
Jingjing Fan, fashion designer and founder of Elleme
Léo Ferré, singer and songwriter
Thierry Gilardi, football and rugby commentator
Anna Hopkins, actress
Kimon Evan Marengo, British cartoonist
Rafaela Reyes-Chaboussou, Academy Award-winning actress
Teddy Riner, World Championships winner judoka,
Anne Roumanoff, comedian
Manvi Khosla, singer
Jake Arnstein, diplomat and rugby star
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Gajah
- Academy Awards ke-96
- Medang
- Suku Jawa
- Asam traneksamat
- Prunus africana
- Logam alkali
- Tjoe Bou San
- Revolusi Kebudayaan
- Kalium
- List of Sciences Po people
- Sciences Po
- List of Sciences Po honorary doctorate recipients
- Po Bronson
- Māori people
- Alexandra Mitsotaki
- List of people who have been considered deities
- Polynesians
- Institut d'études politiques de Bordeaux
- List of Taiwanese people