糖心Vlog

Where do world leaders study? Oxford and Manchester are top UK destinations

British universities are political heavyweights on global stagesays Hepi report

Published on
October 1, 2015
Last updated
February 16, 2017
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull
Source: Alamy
Malcolm Turnbull is an alumnus of the University of聽Oxford

Asked to identify something associated with Manchester, most people would probably mention its football clubs, Coronation Street or one of its numerous indie bands.

But the city should perhaps be recognised for a lesser-known export in recent times: world leaders, suggests a study that highlights where international statesmen and women were educated in the UK.

Eight current prime ministers and presidents attended the University of Manchester, according to research by the 糖心Vlog Policy Institute published on 1 October.

Only the University of Oxford produced more overseas leaders, boasting a total of nine, including five monarchs.

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Among those to study at Manchester are Michael D. Higgins, president of the Republic of Ireland, Iceland鈥檚 president 脫lafur Ragnar Gr铆msson and Iraq鈥檚 prime minister Haider Al-Abadi, as well as elected leaders from Palestine, Mozambique, Somaliland and two Caribbean countries.

Those counting Oxford as their alma mater are arguably better known. They include Australia鈥檚 new prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, who ousted fellow Oxford alumnus Tony Abbott last month, Hungary鈥檚 premier Viktor Orb谩n, and the kings of Belgium, Bhutan, Jordan, Norway and Malaysia.

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Other leaders educated at UK universities include Iran鈥檚 president Hassan Rouhani, who studied prehistoric archaeology at Glasgow Caledonian University, Colombia鈥檚 president Juan Manuel Santos, who studied at the London School of Economics, and Tuvalu鈥檚 prime minister Enele Sopoaga, who studied at both Oxford and the University of Sussex.

Overall, 55 world leaders from 51 countries have studied in the UK, including three at the University of Cambridge and three at the University of Bristol, Hepi says.

鈥淲e punch above our weight internationally partly because of the soft power benefits that arise from educating the world鈥檚 leaders,鈥 said Nick Hillman, director of Hepi.

鈥淚t is staggering that 55 world leaders should have studied in a country of the UK鈥檚 size, yet we benefit enormously from the fact that they did,鈥 he added.

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Efforts by the 糖心Vlog Office to restrict the number of foreign students coming to the UK ignored the soft power advantages of educating future world leaders and damaged 鈥渙ur links to parts of the world with which the UK's history has long been intertwined鈥, Mr Hillman said.

鈥淭here is a patriotic as well as an internationalist case for teaching people from around the world, and we forget it at our peril,鈥 he added.

The Hepi study follows a similar report by the British Council last year, which found that one in 10 world leaders had studied in the UK.

When measured as a proportion of total students in each country, the UK is 10 times more likely to educate a world leader than the US, producing one leader per 50,000 graduates, the report says.

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jack.grove@tesglobal.com


UK universities that have educated more than one leader

Leaders who studied in the UK

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Print headline: UK universities are political heavyweights on聽global stage

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Reader's comments (2)

...how does SOAS not make the list?!
Clearly, too embarrassed to mention Bashar al-Assad. Should've made a joke about it,聽self-deprecation is the British way.

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