Oxford Department of International Development

(Redirected from Queen Elizabeth House)

The Oxford Department of International Development (ODID), or Queen Elizabeth House (QEH), is a department of the University of Oxford in England, and a unit of the University’s Social Sciences Division. It is the focal point at Oxford for multidisciplinary research and postgraduate teaching on the developing world.[1]

Oxford Department of International Development
Established1954
Academic staff
75
Postgraduates200
90
Location
Oxford
,
England
Head of DepartmentProfessor Diego Sanchez Ancochea
AffiliationsUniversity of Oxford

The current Head of Department is Professor Diego Sanchez-Ancochea. Former Heads of Department include Dr Nandini Gooptu, Dr Christopher Adam, Professor Valpy FitzGerald, Professor Barbara Harriss-White, Rosemary Thorp and Professor Frances Stewart.

History

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QEH was founded as a result of a gift of £100,000 given by Sir Ernest Oppenheimer to the University of Oxford.[2] The donation was for the development of colonial studies and the establishment of an associated colonial centre. A further gift of £50,000 was given by the Colonial Development and Welfare Fund of the British government.[citation needed]

QEH was constituted by Royal Charter in 1954 to provide a residential centre which people concerned with the study of Commonwealth affairs could visit to make contacts and exchange ideas.[citation needed]

In the 1980s there was a drive to reshape QEH as a centre for international studies, rather than purely for study concerning the Commonwealth. In 1986 it was merged with the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, Oxford and the Oxford University Institute of Agricultural Economics to create the International Development Centre, a department of the University within the Social Studies Faculty.[citation needed]

From 1958 to 2005 QEH was located at 20-21 St Giles. In 2005, the department moved to the former School of Geography building in Mansfield Road and became known as the Oxford Department of International Development.[3] In 2011 the Palace authorised the use of the name Queen Elizabeth House for the buildings at 3 Mansfield Road.[citation needed]

Teaching

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The Department provides postgraduate research training (DPhil and MPhil) and four MSc taught courses to some 200 students. These programmes involve advanced research methods, personal supervision, subject specialisation and fieldwork. International demand for these programmes is high and entrance standards are exacting.[4] The Department forms part of the ESRC-funded Doctoral Training Centre for the Social Sciences at the University of Oxford.[citation needed]

ODID currently offers the following degree courses:

  • DPhil in International Development
  • DPhil in Migration Studies
  • MPhil in Development Studies
  • MSc in Economics for Development
  • MSc in Global Governance and Diplomacy
  • MSc in Migration Studies
  • MSc in Refugee and Forced Migration Studies

Research

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The Department hosts some 80 active researchers working on four broad themes: Economic Development and International Institutions; Migration and Refugees in a Global Context; Human Development, Poverty and Children; and Political Change, Conflict and the Environment.[5]

Research at ODID is conducted by individual scholars as well as by five externally funded research groups:

Notable people

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References

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  1. ^ ODID, About Us
  2. ^ Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford University Archives
  3. ^ "History". qeh.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
  4. ^ ODID, Study
  5. ^ ODID, Research Themes
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51°45′21″N 1°15′05″W / 51.755875°N 1.251386°W / 51.755875; -1.251386