About Nuffield College
Nuffield is a graduate college of the University of Oxford specialising in the Social
Sciences, particularly Economics, Politics, and Sociology. It aims to provide a stimulating
research-orientated environment for postgraduate students (about 75 in number) and
faculty (approximately 60 academic fellows of the College). Nuffield College, which
was founded in 1937, is located in the centre of Oxford.
Around a third of Nuffield's fellows hold appointments at the University of Oxford
as lecturers, readers or professors. In addition the College fully funds around a
dozen Official Fellowships, which the College views as tenured research professorships
(although most also teach on the University's graduate programme), and about a dozen
three year post-doctoral research fellows. The College also houses a number of young
scholars who hold distinguished awards, such as British Academy post-doctoral fellowships,
some senior research fellows and a group of research active emeritus & honourary
fellows.
The College has been - and continues to be - the source of some of the major research
developments in social science. These include the British Election Studies and the
major programme of research on Social Mobility in Britain. It was the birthplace of
the "Oxford School" of Industrial Relations; it pioneered the development of cost
benefit analysis for developing countries; and it has made a major contribution to
the methodology of econometrics.
Most of the College's graduate students are interested in Economics, Politics or Sociology.
The College also encourages interdisciplinary research which crosses the boundaries
of these subjects and sometimes admits students who are interested in neighbouring
disciplines such as recent social, political and economic history, social and medical
statistics, medical sociology, international relations, social policy, American studies,
Commonwealth history, social geography and European studies.
The activities of the College are largely funded by the College's endowment and monies
raised to support research projects. It receives no direct block grant from the government
nor from the University of Oxford. The College's financial independence means it has
a high degree of autonomy rare amongst social science institutions.
The College is governed under its Statutes by
its academics and is led by the Warden.
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