Talk:List of people associated with the London School of Economics

list from London School of Economics
The following list comes from the main LSE page. It is largely duplication of the list here (List_of_London_School_of_Economics_people). But someone needs to go through & sort out whether there's any new information, and also weed for errors. (eg I know David Attenborough didn't study at LSE - he was awarded an honorary degree, but that doesn't make him an alumnus).


 * The list on this page has now been merged to the article overleaf. Little attempt was made to check accuracy of the items during the merge, but no information was lost from either list. Feel free to remove this list from this talk page if you need the space, but I'll leave it here for reference for now. -- zzuuzz (talk) 16:39, 10 February 2006 (UTC)

Heads of State or Heads of Government

 * Harmodio Arias (1886-1962) - President of Panama,1932-1936
 * Oscar Arias (b. 1941) - President of Costa Rica and Nobel Prize Winner
 * Lord Clement Attlee - Prime Minister of United Kingdom, 1945-1951
 * Errol Walton Barrow (1920-1987) - Prime Minister of Barbados, 1962-1966, 1966-1976, 1986-1987
 * Marek Belka (b. 1952) - Prime Minister of Poland, 2004-present
 * Pedro Gerardo Beltran Espanto (1897-1979) - Prime Minister of Peru, 1959-1961
 * Maurice Bishop (1944-1983)Prime Minister of Grenada (1979-1983)
 * Heinrich Brüning (1885-1970) - Chancellor of Germany, 1930-1932
 * Kim Campbell (b. 1947) - Prime Minister of Canada, June-November 1993
 * Eugenia Charles (b. 1919) - Prime Minister of Dominica, 1980-1995
 * John Compton (b. 1926) - Premier of Saint Lucia, 1964-1979, and Prime Minister of Saint Lucia, February-July 1979 & 1982-1996
 * Sher Bahadur Deuba (b. 1943) - Prime Minister of Nepal, 1995-1997, 2001-2002, 2004-2005
 * Tuanku Jaafar (b. 1922) - Yang di-Pertuan Agong (King) of Malaysia, 1994-1999
 * Jomo Kenyatta (1891-1978) - First President of Kenya, 1964-1978
 * Mwai Kibaki (b. 1931) - President of Kenya, 2002-present
 * Thanin Kraivichien (b. 1927) - Prime Minister of Thailand, 1976-1977
 * Yu Kuo-Hwa (1914-2000) - Premier of Taiwan, 1984-1989
 * Hilla Limann (1934-1998) - President of Ghana, 1979-1981
 * Alfonso López Pumarejo - President of Colombia, 1934-1938, 1942-1945
 * Michael Manley (1924-1997) - Prime Minister of Jamaica, 1972-1980, 1989-1992
 * Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara (1920-2004) - Prime Minister of Fiji 1970-1992, President of Fiji 1994-2000
 * Queen Margrethe II (b. 1940) - Queen of Denmark, 1972-present
 * Beatriz Merino - First female Prime Minister of Peru, (2002-2003)
 * Shri K R Narayanan (1997-2002) - President of India
 * Kwame Nkrumah (1909-1972) - First President of Ghana, 1960-1966
 * Jacques Parizeau, Premier of Quebec, 1994-1995
 * Percival Patterson (b. 1935) - Prime Minister of Jamaica, 1992-present
 * Romano Prodi (b. 1939) - Prime Minister of Italy, 1996-1998 and President of the European Commission, 1999-2004
 * Navinchandra Ramgoolam (b. 1947) - Prime Minister of Mauritius, 1995-2000, 2005-present
 * Seewoosagur Ramgoolam (1900-1985) Prime Minister of Mauritius (1961-1982)
 * Veerasainy Ringadoo (1920-2000) - First President of Mauritius, March-June 1992
 * Moshe Sharett (1894-1965) - Prime Minister of Israel, 1953-1955
 * Constantine Simitis (b. 1936) - Prime Minister of Greece, 1996-2004
 * Anote Tong (b. 1952) - President of Kiribati, 2003-present
 * Pierre Trudeau (1919-2000) - Prime Minister of Canada, 1968-1979, 1980-1984
 * Lee Kuan Yew (b. 1923) - Prime Minister of Singapore (1959-1990)

Nobel Laureates

 * 1925: George Bernard Shaw (Literature)
 * 1950: Bertrand Russell (Literature)
 * 1950: Ralph Bunche (Peace)
 * 1959: Philip Noel-Baker (Peace)
 * 1972: Sir John Hicks (Economics)
 * 1974: Friedrich Hayek (Economics)
 * 1977: James Meade (Economics)
 * 1979: Sir Arthur Lewis (Economics)
 * 1990: Merton Miller (Economics)
 * 1991: Ronald Coase (Economics)
 * 1998: Amartya Sen (Economics)
 * 1999: Robert Mundell (Economics)
 * 2001: George Akerlof (Economics)

Academics

 * Daron Acemoglu (John Bates Clark Medal Winner 2005)
 * Sir Roy Allen (Economist and Mathematician)
 * Sir Arthur Bowley (Statistician/professor)
 * Hedley Bull (one of the world's foremost scholars in the field of International Relations)
 * Ralph Bunche (Nobel Peace Prize winner)
 * Nancy Cartwright (philosopher)
 * Ronald Coase (economist, Nobel Prize winner)
 * Lord Meghnad Desai (development economist)
 * Albert Venn Dicey - Author of Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution; one of the most famous English jurists ever.
 * Paul Feyerabend (philosopher)
 * Professor Lord Anthony Giddens (a former Director of the School, who is the most cited contemporary sociologist in the world and is widely regarded as the field's foremost scholar)
 * John Gray (political philosopher)
 * Ernest Gellner (philosopher)
 * Amy Gutmann (President of the University of Pennsylvania, 2004-present; former Provost of Princeton University, 2001-2004)
 * W.D. Hamilton (grandfather of sociobiology and the 'selfish gene' theory popularised by Dawkins)
 * Friedrich Hayek (economist, Nobel Prize winner)
 * Ludwig Lachmann (economist)
 * Imre Lakatos (philosopher)
 * Harold Laski (political scientist and economist)
 * Lord Richard Layard (economist)
 * Sir Arthur Lewis (economist, Nobel Prize winner)
 * Halford MacKinder (geographer and LSE director, 1903-1908)
 * Z.K. Mathews (prominent Apartheid-era South African academic)
 * Ralph Miliband (political scientist)
 * Merton Miller (economist, Nobel Prize winner)
 * Robert Mundell (economist, Nobel Prize winner)
 * Philip Noel-Baker (Nobel Peace Prize winner)
 * Michael Oakeshott (philosopher)
 * Sir Karl Popper (philosopher)
 * Lionel Robbins (economist)
 * Bertrand Russell (philosopher, Nobel Prize winner)
 * Arthur Seldon (free market ideologue)
 * David Starkey, (historian specialising in Tudor England)
 * Richard Titmuss, (social administrator)
 * William John Lawrence Wallace, Baron Wallace of Saltaire (Professor of International Relations; deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats in the House of Lords)
 * Allyn Abbott Young (economist)

Politics & Government

 * Roberto Abdenur (former Brazilian Ambassador to the US)
 * Elliott Abrams (Assistant Secretary of State in the Reagan Administration; founding member of the Project for the New American Century; Special Assistant to the President and Policy Director on the National Security Council in the George W. Bush Administration)
 * Leo Abse (politician)
 * Prince Amedeo of Belgium
 * Kader Asmal (South African politician and member of the African National Congress' Executive Committee
 * Taro Aso (Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs)
 * Charlotte Jean Scott Atkins (politician)
 * Richard Bacon (politician)
 * Tony Banks, Baron Stratford (politician)
 * Cherie Booth QC (wife of Tony Blair)
 * Baroness Virginia Bottomley (Secretary of State in Major Government)
 * Ed Broadbent (Canadian socialist opposition leader)
 * Johnnie Carson (US Ambassador to Zimbabwe in the Clinton Administration)
 * Shami Chakrabarti (Director of Liberty)
 * Francis Cockfield, Baron Cockfield (Cabinet Minster under Thatcher; Vice-President of the European Commission)
 * Yvette Cooper (British MP, Minister for Housing and Planning)
 * Hugh Dalton (former Chancellor of the Exchequer)
 * Rosa DeLauro (high-ranking Democratic Member of the US House of Representatives)
 * Kemal Dervis (UNDP Administrator (Head) and former Minister of Finance of Turkey)
 * Frank Dobson (former Health Secretary)
 * Sir Morris Finer (Barrister, Judge, Chairman of the Finer Report on One Parent Families & the Royal Commission on the Press, Vice Chairman of Governors of LSE)
 * Stanley Fischer (Governor of the Bank of Israel)
 * Ian A. Goldin (Vice President of External Affairs, World Bank)
 * Christopher Greenwood QC (esteemed international lawyer; advised Tony Blair and the Bush Administration on the legality of the 2003 Iraq war)
 * Marc Grossman (U.S. Under Secretary of State)
 * Margaret Hodge (British MP, Minister for Children)
 * Robert E. Hunter (Former U.S. Ambassador to NATO)
 * Derry Irvine, Baron Irvine of Lairg (former Lord Chancellor)
 * C. Donald Johnson (former Member of Congress and US Ambassador)
 * Ruth Kelly (UK Secretary of State for Education)
 * Anthony Kennedy (U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice)
 * Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. (first son of Joseph Kennedy and brother to John F. Kennedy)
 * John F. Kennedy President of United States
 * Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. (environmental activist, son of slain Senator Robert Kennedy)
 * Vanessa Kerry (Democratic activist and daughter of Senator John Kerry (D-MA))
 * Edwin Feulner (President of the Heritage Foundation Think Tank)
 * Mervyn King (Governor of the Bank of England)
 * Mark S. Kirk (prominent Republican Member of the US House of Representatives)
 * James A. Leach (prominent Republican Member of the US House of Representatives)
 * Monica Lewinsky (former White House intern involved in sex scandal wither former President Bill Clinton)
 * Dr Maleeha Lodhi (prominent Pakistani politician; Pakistani Ambassador to the United Kingdom)
 * Joy MacPhail (former finance minister and deputy premier of British Columbia)
 * Haakon Magnus (Crown Prince of Norway)
 * John J. Maresca (former US Ambassador to the OSCE in the George H.W. Bush Administration)
 * Krishna Menon (former Indian Permanent Representative to the UN, Minister of Defense, and leading proponent of India's emancipation)
 * Baron Merlyn-Rees (former Home Secretary)
 * Thomas A. Mesereau, Jr. (Michael Jackson's defence attorney)
 * Peter Mond, 4th Baron Melchett (politician)
 * Baron Moore of Lower Marsh (Cabinet Minister under Thatcher)
 * Daniel Patrick Moynihan (former U.S. Senator)
 * Franz Neumann, (First Chief of Research of the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal)
 * Alice Paul (American suffragist)
 * Dr N.M. Perera, Sri Lankan Trotskyist freedom-agitator, politician and trade-unionist, parliamentarian, Mayor of Colombo, Leader of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party, twice Minister of Finance, twice Leader of the Opposition, first ever Sri Lankan DSc.
 * Richard Perle (Political advisor)
 * Saif el-Islam el-Qaddafi (Political activist and elder son of Libyan President Muammar Qaddafi)
 * Shridath Ramphal (former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth)
 * James P. Rubin (former Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs and Chief Spokesman for the Department of State in the Clinton Administration; lead foreign policy adviser to the 2004 Kerry-Edwards campaign)
 * Robert Rubin (former U.S. Treasury Secretary, former Director of Goldman Sachs)
 * Dr Don Russell former Australian Ambassador to the US and adviser to Labor Prime Minister Paul Keating
 * Tharman Shanmugaratnam (Singapore's Minister of Education, and the Deputy Chairman of the Monetary Authority of Singapore )
 * Michelle Sison (US Ambassador to the UAE in the Bush Administration)
 * Jonas Gahr Støre (Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs)
 * Goh Keng Swee (former Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore)
 * John Tower (former US Senator from Texas)
 * Paul Volcker (former Chairman of Federal Reserve)
 * David Welch (Assistant Secretary of State in the Clinton Administration; US Ambassador to Egypt in the Bush Administration)
 * Janet Yellen (Former Member of the Council of Economic Advisers in the Clinton Administration and the current President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, 2004-present)

Media, Authors & Journalists

 * Edith Abbott (author)
 * Sir David Attenborough (TV Presenter, Former Director-General of the BBC)
 * Jackie Ballard (Director General of the RSPCA)
 * Edwina Currie (politician, author, radio presenter)
 * Loyd Grossman (TV Chef/Presenter)
 * Judith, Countess of Listowel (journalist)
 * Robert Kilroy-Silk (TV Presenter and politican)
 * Bernard Levin (journalist)
 * Michael Lewis (#1 New York Times best selling author of Moneyball, Next, The New New Thing, Liar's Poker, Trail Fever, and The Money Culture; contributing writer to the New York Times Magazine and Bloomberg)
 * John Honderich (former Publisher of the Toronto Star)
 * China Miéville (writer)
 * Keith Murdoch (journalist and the father of Rupert Murdoch)
 * Nisha Pillai (BBC World presenter)
 * Owen Bennett-Jones (BBC Worldservice journalist)
 * Jules O'Riordan (aka Judge Jules) (Radio 1 DJ)
 * Siddharth Varadarajan (journalist and editor)

Business & Finance

 * Delphine Arnault (Billionaire French businesswoman)
 * Tony Fernandes (entrepreneur)
 * David Rockefeller (American billionaire and business tycoon)
 * Stelios Haji-Ioannou (entrepreneur, founder of EasyGroup)
 * Jorma Ollila (CEO of Nokia Corporation)
 * Maurice Saatchi (Founder, Saatchi and Saatchi)
 * George Soros (Billionaire; Notable Financier)

Others

 * Sir Mick Jagger (Rock star, left LSE for music)
 * Valerie Plame, (CIA operative who was controversially identified in a newspaper column by Robert Novak in July 2003)
 * Ilich Ramirez Sanchez (Carlos the Jackal, criminal)
 * Omar Sheikh (international terrorist)

List of the School's Directors

 * Sir Howard Davies 2003-Present
 * Professor Lord Anthony Giddens 1997-2003
 * Dr John Ashworth 1990-96
 * Dr Indraprasad (IG) Patel 1984-90
 * Professor Lord Ralf Dahrendorf 1974-84
 * Sir Walter Adams 1967-74
 * Sir Sydney Caine 1957-1967
 * Sir Alexander Carr-Saunders 1937-57
 * Sir William (later Lord) Beveridge 1919-37
 * William Pember Reeves 1908-19
 * Sir Halford Mackinder 1903-08
 * William Hewins 1895-1903

What's the difference between a 'head of state' and a 'head of government'?
--Anchoress 05:36, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
 * I noticed that no-one answered my question. It's not a homework question or trolling; I ask because I wonder why they are both necessary in the article. Anchoress 02:15, 10 February 2007 (UTC)
 * They are broadly similar, except when they are not. The Head of state and Head of government articles explain it. -- zzuuzz(talk) 02:38, 10 February 2007 (UTC)

David Attenborough
Like someone above, I thought that the claim that David Attenborough is an alumni of LSE is based on an error, namely on that fact that he received an honourary degree from LSE.

However, a google search reveals some hints that he did study at LSE:

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg13117845.100-a-man-for-all-habitats-david-attenborough-this-yearspresident-of-the-british-association-is-one-of-the-most-important-andgifted-science-popularisers-of-our-day-.html

http://info.uwe.ac.uk/news/UWEnews/article.asp?item=419

The sources above are ambigious, so could someone in-the-know shed some light on this matter? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 131.111.194.10 (talk) 18:01, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
 * Reading those sources I get the impression he was offered the job of controller of BBC2 just as he was resigning to start at LSE. The New Scientist seems fairly clear about it, the UWE newsletter less so (I know which I would trust more). -- zzuuzz (talk) 23:48, 25 February 2008 (UTC)

Founders of LSE
Just noticed that this has been substantially increased from Sidney Webb, Beatrice Webb and George Bernard Shaw to several others, on the basis that these other people either gave money to help establish the LSE or appear on the Fabian window. I'm not sure whether this is sufficient to be considered a "founder". Unless a clear criteria is given, I recommend reverting back to the original three. (Also, Bertand Russell gave a lot of money to the LSE, as well as teach there, but does that make him a "founder" too?) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 131.111.194.10 (talk) 01:50, 24 April 2008 (UTC)

I've just looked at the LSE website here http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/pressAndInformationOffice/aboutLSE/nobelPrizeWinners/russell.htm

LSE considers Russell as a "spiritual and financial founder". What might be worth doing is distinguishing between the actual founders of LSE - Shaw and the Webbs - and the financial ones - Russell et al. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 131.111.194.10 (talk) 01:58, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
 * Both suggestions sound sensible. There are normally only three or four people recognised as founders. -- zzuuzz (talk) 11:47, 25 April 2008 (UTC)

There appears to be someone bent on trying to add every member of the Fabian Society circa 1895 as a founder of the LSE. This is simply ludicrous. I think we should only list those those can be verified as founders. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 131.111.194.10 (talk) 01:42, 31 May 2008 (UTC)
 * I have to agree there seems to be bloat in this section. We may require citations.  I would also remove anyone who wasn't even of age at the time (e.g., Virginia Woolf).  --Erp (talk) 04:15, 16 March 2021 (UTC)

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Val Venis
Val Venis' new RF shoot video shows that he never in fact studied at LSE.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pDdNefyxJp8 - video doesn;t work

I'll remove him as appropriate. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.157.27.18 (talk) 22:25, 28 July 2009 (UTC)

It's on several bios of him too: http://lsesu.tumblr.com/post/97903302368/the-weird-and-wonderful-world-of-lse-alumni

Peter Cornelius
Peter Cornelius is the Managing Director for AlpInvest Partners, a private equity asset management firm, and is responsible for analysing the economic and financial environment for private equit markets and examing the implications for the firm’s strategic asset allocation. He joined the firm in 2005 from Shell where he was Group Chief Economist. Previously, he was Chief Economist and Director of the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Program. Prior to that, he was head of international economic research at Deutsche Bank and a senior economist with the International Monetary Fund. Peter studied at the London School of Economics as a General Course student and the University of Göttingen where he received his doctorate in Economics. He has been a visiting professor at Leuven Gent Vlerick Management School and a visiting scholar at Harvard University and authored ‘International Investments in Private Equity’.

Carlos the Jackal, terrorist
Are we sure that Carlos the Jackal was ever a registered student at the LSE?. I was aware that he may have been a student at the Polytechnic of Central London for a period in the 1960s but I have never heard of an LSE association. Izzy (talk) 17:56, 21 November 2011 (UTC)
 * Whether it's true or not it's been well reported for years that he attended LSE. A recent source:. -- zzuuzz (talk) 18:27, 21 November 2011 (UTC)

Sure, I now accept that it is widely stated that Carlos "studied" (an ambiguous term) at LSE for a brief period in the early 1970s. I have my doubts about that and am pretty sure that he was never a registered student at LSE. Izzy (talk) 14:46, 22 November 2011 (UTC)

Josh Chetwynd
Josh seems to be adding himself to three or more different fields. Shouldn't alumni be placed in a single category? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 110.6.99.14 (talk) 13:14, 9 January 2015 (UTC)

Feroze Gandhi, First Gentleman of India ?
In India, President is the head of the state, not Prime Minister. In such a scenario I believe it would be wrong to refer to Feroze Gandhi, who was the husband of former Indian Prime Minister as former 'First Gentleman of India'. I would like to know is it possible to call Prime minster's in such scenario as First Gentleman. I would like an adequate justification for this reference otherwise we could remove this statement. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Akhil.bharathan (talk • contribs) 16:28, 16 July 2012 (UTC)

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