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Emory University

Coordinates:33°47′28″N84°19′24″W/ 33.79111°N 84.32333°W/33.79111; -84.32333
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Emory University
Former name
Emory College (1836–1915)
MottoCor prudentis possidebit scientiam(Latin)
Motto in English
"The wise heart seeks knowledge"[1]
TypePrivateresearch university
Established1836;188 years ago(1836)[2]
AccreditationSACS
Religious affiliation
United Methodist Church[3][4]
Academic affiliations
Endowment$11 billion (2021)[9]
PresidentGregory L. Fenves[10]
Total staff
32,594 (2020) includes approx. 24,000 health care employees[11]
Students15,909 (Fall 2022)[12]
Undergraduates8,155 (Fall 2022)[12]
Postgraduates7,754 (Fall 2022)[12]
Location,,
United States

33°47′28″N84°19′24″W/ 33.79111°N 84.32333°W/33.79111; -84.32333
CampusLarge city[13],631 acres (255 ha)
Other campusesOxford
NewspaperThe Emory Wheel[14]
ColorsBlue and gold[15][16]
NicknameEagles
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IIIUAA[17]
Mascot
  • Swoop the Eagle
  • Dooley the Skeleton
Websitewww.emory.edu

Emory Universityis aprivateresearch universityinAtlanta, Georgia.It was founded in 1836 asEmory Collegeby theMethodist Episcopal Churchand named in honor of Methodist bishopJohn Emory.[18]Its main campus is inDruid Hills,3 miles (4.8 km) fromDowntown Atlanta.[19]

Emory is composed of nine undergraduate, graduate, and professional schools and enrolls nearly 16,000 students from the US and over 100 foreign countries.[20]Emory Healthcareis the largest healthcare system in the state ofGeorgia[21]and comprises seven major hospitals, includingEmory University HospitalandEmory University Hospital Midtown.[22]The university operates theWinship Cancer Institute,Yerkes National Primate Research Center,and many disease and vaccine research centers.[23][24]Emory University is adjacent to theU.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC) and is a long-time partner in global and national prevention and research initiatives.[25]Emory University is the leading coordinator of theU.S. Health Department'sNational Ebola Training and Education Center.[26]The university is one of four institutions involved in theNIAID'sTuberculosis Research Units Program.[27]TheInternational Association of National Public Health Institutesis headquartered at the university.[28]

Emory University has the 15th-largest endowment among U.S. colleges and universities.[9]The university isclassifiedamong "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity"[29]and is cited for high scientific performance andcitation impactin theCWTS Leiden Ranking.[30]Emory University was elected to theAssociation of American Universitiesin 1995.[31]

Emoryfaculty and alumniinclude 1President of the United States,2Prime Ministers,9 university presidents, 11 members of theUnited States Congress,2Nobel Peace Prizelaureates, aVice President of the United States,aUnited States Speaker of the House,and aUnited States Supreme Court Justice.Other notable alumni include 21Rhodes Scholarsand 6Pulitzer Prizewinners, as well asEmmy Awardwinners,Grammy Awardwinners,MacArthur Fellows,CEOs ofFortune500companies, heads of state and other leaders in foreign government.[32]Emory has more than 165,000 alumni, with 75 alumni clubs established worldwide in 20 countries.[20][33][34]

History[edit]

Nineteenth century[edit]

Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church is located on the campus of Emory University

Emory College was founded in 1836 inOxford, Georgia,by theMethodist Episcopal Church.[35]The college was named in honor of the departed Methodist bishopJohn Emory.[35]Ignatius Alphonso Fewwas the college's first president. In 1854, the Atlanta Medical College, a forerunner ofEmory University School of Medicine,was founded. On April 12, 1861, theAmerican Civil Warbegan. Emory College was closed in November 1861 and all of its students enlisted on the Confederate side.[35]In late 1863 the war came to Georgia and the college was used as hospital and later a headquarters for theUnion Army.The university produced many officers who served in the war, including GeneralGeorge Thomas Anderson(1846C) who fought in nearly every major battle in theeastern theater.Thirty-five Emory students lost their lives and much of the campus was destroyed during the war.[36]

Emory College, as with the entireSoutheastern United States,struggled to overcome financial devastation during theReconstruction Era.In 1880,Atticus Greene Haygood,Emory College President, delivered a speech expressing gratitude for the end ofslavery in the United States,which captured the attention of George I. Seney, a New York banker. Seney gave Emory College $5,000 to repay its debts, $50,000 for construction, and $75,000 to establish a new endowment. In the 1880s, the technology department was launched byIsaac Stiles Hopkins,a polymath professor at Emory College. Hopkins became the first president of theGeorgia Institute of Technologyin 1888. Emory University's first international student,Yun Chi-ho,graduated in 1893.[37]Yun became an important political activist inKoreaand is the author of "Aegukga",the national anthem of theRepublic of Korea.[38][39]

Twentieth century[edit]

Asa Griggs Candler,founder ofThe Coca-Cola Company,provided a land grant for Emory College to relocate tometropolitan Atlantaand be rechartered as Emory University.

On August 16, 1906, the Wesley Memorial Hospital and Training School for Nurses, later renamed theNell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing,was established. In 1914, theCandler School of Theologywas established. In 1915, Emory College relocated toDruid Hillsand was rechartered as Emory University after accepting a land grant fromAsa Griggs Candler,founder ofThe Coca-Cola Companyand brother of commissioned chairWarren Akin Candler[40]Based on large donations from theCandler,Woodruff,andGoizuetafamilies, Emory University is colloquially referred to as "Coca-Cola University".[41]Emory University School of Lawwas established in 1916. From the 1920s through the 1970s, Emory University established its reputation as a regional institution that offered a solid education in medicine, law, theology, business, and the liberal arts.

First and Second World Wars[edit]

In 1917, the United States joined theFirst World War,and Emory University responded by organizing a medical unit composed of faculty and alumni of the medical school. The unit, which became known as Emory Unit, Base Hospital 43, served inLoir-et-Cher,France, from July 1918 to January 1919. During theSecond World War,the Emory Unit was mobilized once again and served in theNorth African campaignand Europe. Emory's contributions to the war effort were recognized by christening a ship, M.S. Emory Victory, which served during World War II and the Korean War.

In the 1940s, Emory University students, alumni, and faculty served in theAsia-Pacific WarandEuropean theater of World War II.Lieutenant Commander James L. Starnes, a graduate of Emory Law, was the navigator of the battleshipUSSMissouriand served asofficer of the deckduring the signing of theJapanese Instrument of Surrender.[42]Bobby Jones,the golfer, served during theBattle of Normandy.[43]Dr. Alfred A. Weinstein, a professor of surgery atEmory University School of Medicine,was aprisoner of warof theEmpire of Japanbetween 1942 and 1945. His memoir,Barbed Wire Surgeon,is considered one of the finest accounts concerningallied prisoners under Japanese captivityand highlights the abuses of thewar criminalMutsuhiro Watanabe.[44]Kiyoshi Tanimoto,who graduated from theCandler School of Theologyin 1940 and is portrayed in John Hersey'sHiroshima,was able to organize theHiroshima Maidensreconstructive surgery program based on the associations he made while studying in the United States.[45]Tatsumasa Shirakawa, a Japanese student at theCandler School of Theology,was placed under arrest temporarily until Dean Henry Burton Trimble negotiated his release. Emory helped the nation prepare for war by participating in theV-12 Navy College Training ProgramandArmy Specialized Training Program,programs designed to supplement the force of commissioned officers in theUnited States NavyandUnited States Army.TheCandler School of Theologytrained men formilitary chaplaincy.During the war, university enrollment boasted two military students for every one civilian. Emory University alumni would go on to serve in theKorean War,Second Indochina War(Vietnam War),Persian Gulf War,Yugoslav Wars,and theGlobal War on Terrorism.

Women's and civil rights movements[edit]

Thewomen's movementandcivil rights movementduring the 1950s and 1960s in the United States profoundly shaped the future of Emory University. Formerly an all-male school, Emory officially became a coeducational institution in 1953. Although it had previously admitted women under limited circumstances, the university had never before had a policy through which they could enroll in large numbers and as resident students. In 1959, sororities first appeared on campus. In 1962, in the midst of the civil rights movement, Emory embraced the initiative to end racial restrictions when it asked the courts to declare portions of the Georgia statutes unconstitutional. Previously, Georgia law denied tax-exempt status to private universities with racially integrated student bodies. TheSupreme Court of Georgiaruled in Emory's favor and Emory officially became racially integrated.Marvin S. Arrington Sr.was Emory University's first, full-timeAfrican Americanstudent and graduated fromEmory University School of Lawin 1967.[46]

In 1983,Kim Dae-jung,while inpolitical exile,gave a speech on human rights and democracy at Emory. Kim went on to serve as the eighthPresident of South Korea.[47][48]

In 1971, Emory established one of the nation's firstAfrican-American studiesprograms and the first of its kind in the Southeastern United States.[49]Emory's diversity and academic reputation continued to flourish under the leadership of the university's fifth president,James T. Laney.In addition to leading universities in the Southeastern United States in the promotion ofracial equality,Laney and many of the school's faculty and administrators were outspoken advocates of globalhuman rightsand thus were openly opposed to themilitary dictatorship in South Korea (1961–1987).On March 30, 1983, Laney's friendKim Dae-jung,while in political exile in the United States, presented a speech on human rights and democracy at Emory University and accepted an honorary Doctor of Laws degree.[47]Kim would go on to play a major role in endingauthoritarianism in South Korea,served as the eighthPresident of South Koreafrom 1998 to 2003, and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2000 for his successful implementation of theSunshine Policy.Laney would later serve asUnited States Ambassador to South Koreaand Emory graduate school, founded in 1919, was named in his honor in 2009.[46]

In 2005, the university presented the President Medal, a rare award conferred only on individuals whose impact on the world has enhanced the dominion of peace or has enlarged the range of cultural achievement, toCivil Rights MovementactivistRosa Parks.The award is one of the highest honors presented by Emory.[50]

In 2014, at Emory's 169th Commencement,John Lewis,the only living "Big Six"leader of the civil rights movement, delivered the keynote address and received an honorary doctor of laws degree. In 2015,Emory University School of Lawreceived a $1.5 million donation to help establish a John Lewis Chair in Civil Rights and Social Justice. The gift, given anonymously, funds a professorship which will enable Emory Law to conduct a national search for a scholar with an established academic profile of distinction and a demonstrated desire to promote the rule of law through the study of civil rights. The law school has committed to raise an additional $500,000 to fund the chair fully.[51]

Expansion and modernization[edit]

In November 1979, Emory University experienced a historical shift whenRobert Winship WoodruffandGeorge Waldo Woodruffdonated $105 million worth of Coca-Cola stock to the institution. At that time, this was the largest single gift ever made to any institution of higher education in the United States.[35]

Twenty-first century[edit]

The latest additions to the Atlanta Campus include buildings for cancer research, biomedical research, scientific computation, mathematics and science, vaccine research, and the performing arts.[46]

Prior to 2018, the campus was in anunincorporated area,[52]statistically counted in theDruid Hillscensus-designated place.[53]In 2016 the university stated that it intended to petition to be annexed into the City of Atlanta;[54]in 2017 the university leadership formally submitted its petition.[55]The City of Atlanta annexed Emory's campus effective January 1, 2018, a part of its largest annexation within a period of 65 years; theAtlanta City Councilvoted to do so the prior December.[56]

Gregory L. Fenves,formerly the president of theUniversity of Texas at Austin,became Emory University's twenty-first president in August 2020.[57]

TheIsrael–Hamas war sparked demonstrationsaround the U.S., including at Emory. On April 25, 2024, during a pro-Palestinian protest, immediately subsequent to each objecting to the police presence, police detained both philosophy chairNoëlle McAfee[58]and arrested economics professorCaroline Fohlin,[59]who was later charged with battery, following her battering by police.[60]The College of Arts and Science adopted a motion the following day for a college faculty no-confidence vote for Greg Fenves, president of the university,[61]with an electronic vote organized for the following week.[62]

Academics[edit]

Admissions[edit]

Undergraduate admissions statistics
2021 entering
class[63]

Admit rate10.6%
Test scoresmiddle 50%
SATTotal1470–1540
ACTComposite34–35

Emory University is considered highly selective. The median SAT score of the class of 2023 was 1500 and median ACT score was 34. In 2022, Emory University received 33,517 applications and had a 9% regular decision admission rate and a 10.6% overall admission rate.[64]The enrolling class was 55.4% female, 44.6% male and 10.4% of enrolling class identify as first-generation college students. 59 unique languages were spoken in the enrolling first year class and 40 countries were represented.[65]The university isneed-blindfor domestic applicants.[66][67]

Undergraduate schools[edit]

Emory College of Arts and Sciences[edit]

Main Quadrangle on Emory University'sDruid HillsCampus

Emory College of Arts and Sciences offers theBachelor of Arts(B.A.) and theBachelor of Science(B.S) undergraduate academic degrees. The university operates theConfucius Institute in Atlantain partnership withNanjing University.[68][69]The Emory-Tibet Partnership was established in 1998.

Emory University offers highly selectivehonors programsfor high-performing undergraduates in most areas of concentration.[70]More than 25% of undergraduates participate in an honors program each year.[71]

Undergraduate/Graduate Schools
School Year founded
Emory College of Arts and Sciences 1836
Oxford College 1836
Emory University School of Medicine 1854
Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing 1905
Candler School of Theology 1914
Emory University School of Law 1916
Laney Graduate School 1919
Goizueta Business School 1919
Rollins School of Public Health 1990

Emory University offers a five-yeardual degreeprogram inengineering,in collaboration with theGeorgia Institute of Technology.[72]Emory University also offers adual master's degreeinsocial workwith theUniversity of Georgia.[73]

Oxford College[edit]

Oxford Collegeoffers anAssociate degree(A.A.) inliberal arts.Students who complete Oxford College advance to Emory College of Arts and Sciences to complete their undergraduate education.

Graduate and professional schools[edit]

Gambrell Hall,Emory University School of Law

Emory University School of Medicineoffers theDoctor of Medicine(MD),Doctor of Physical Therapy,andMaster of Medical Sciencedegrees.

TheNell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursingoffers theBachelor of Science in Nursing(BSN),Masters of Science in Nursing,andDoctor of Nursing Practice(DNP).[74]

Candler School of Theologyis grounded in the Christian faith and shaped by theWesleyantradition of evangelical piety, ecumenical openness, and social concern. Its mission as a university-based school of theology is to educate—through scholarship, teaching, and service—faithful and creative leaders for the church's ministries throughout the world.

Emory University School of Lawoffers theJuris Doctor,Juris Master,Master of Laws,andDoctor of Juridical Science.[75]It was founded in 1916 and was the first law school in Georgia to be granted membership in theAmerican Association of Law Schools.

The Laney Graduate School offers theDoctor of PhilosophyandMaster of Artsdegrees.[76]

TheGoizueta Business Schooloffers theBachelor of Business Administration,Master of Business Administration,Executive Master of Business Administration, and aDoctor of Philosophyin Business Administration.[77]

TheRollins School of Public Healthoffers theMaster of Public Health(MPH) and Master of Science in Public Health (MSPH) andDoctor of Philosophy(PhD) degrees.

Library system[edit]

Matheson Reading Room, Candler Library Annex,Robert W. Woodruff Library

Emory University is a member of theAssociation of Research Libraries.[78]The Emory University library system includes over 3.9 million print and electronic volumes and 83,000-plus electronic journals.[79][80]Emory University libraries include theRobert W. Woodruff Library,Woodruff Health Sciences Center Library, Hugh F. MacMillan and Yuddhishtir Modhwadia Law Library, James S. Guy Chemistry Library, Pitts Theology Library, Goizueta Business Library, Marian K. Heilbrun Music & Media Library, and the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library (The Rose Library).[79][81]The Rose Library contains rare materials relating to literature, African American history and culture, and Southern and Georgia history.[79][80]Notable pieces of the collection include a rare first edition ofRobinson CrusoebyDaniel Defoe,[82]as well as papers ofFlannery O'Connor,Alice Walker,Langston Hughes,Salman Rushdie,W.B. Yeats,Medbh McGuckian,Seamus Heaney,andTed Hughes.[83]

In 2012, thePrinceton Reviewranked Emory University among the "10 Colleges with the Best Libraries" in the United States.[84]

Rankings and reputation[edit]

Academic rankings
National
ARWU[85]39-51
Forbes[86]31
U.S. News & World Report[87]24
Washington Monthly[88]55
WSJ/College Pulse[89]20
Global
ARWU[90]101–150
QS[91]166=
THE[92]106=
U.S. News & World Report[93]72

Emory University is ranked 24th among national universities in the United States and 72nd among global universities byU.S. News & World Reportfor2023-2024.Times Higher Education World University Rankingsranked Emory 20th in the United States and 82nd among global universities for 2022–2023.[96]In 2023, QS University Rankings listed Emory as 155th among global universities.[97]The university was ranked 17th among colleges and universities in the United States in aThe Wall Street Journalsurvey.[98]

Emory was named as one of the "25 New Ivies" in 2006 byNewsweek.[99]Emory has also been referred to as a "Hidden Ivy".[100]In 2024,Forbesincluded Emory in its list of 20 new ivies.[101]

The Princeton ReviewnamedEmory University School of Lawas one of the best 169 law schools in the U.S. in 2014. TheEmory University School of Lawis ranked 35th in the nation according toU.S. News & World Report's 2023-2024 rankings.[102]

Bloomberg BusinessweekrankedGoizueta Business School's BBA Program ninth in the nation in 2014. In 2023,Goizueta Business School's MBA program ranked 17th in the nation byU.S. News & World Reportand 16th in the nation byBloomberg Businessweek.[103][104]Financial Timesranked the MBA program 36th worldwide in 2023.[105]

Times Higher Education World University Rankingsplaced the School of Medicine at #32 in the world for Clinical/Pre-clinical and Health in its 2019 rankings list.[106]TheEmory University School of Medicineis ranked 23rd in the nation fromU.S. News & World Report's 2023-2024 rankings and also ranked 14th for Radiology, 16th for Surgery, #14 for Obstetrics and Gynecology, and 15th for Internal Medicine.[102]

U.S. News & World Reportranked theNell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing1st in the nation for MSN programs and 3rd for BSN programs for its 2023-2024 rankings.[107][108]QS University Rankings listed theNell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursingas the 25th top nursing school globally in 2023.[109]

TheRollins School of Public Healthranked 3rd in the nation in 2024 byU.S. News & World Report.[110]

TheWallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering,a collaboration between Emory University and the Georgia Institute of Technology, was ranked 1st in the nation in 2024 byU.S. News & World Report.[111]

Controversies[edit]

In 2012, Emory University underwent an internal investigation led by Emory Provost Earl Lewis and Jones Day Law Firm, revealing deliberate falsification of information by members of Emory University's Office of Admission and Institutional Research. These individuals intentionally misreported data concerning entering students' standardized test scores and class rankings between 2000 and 2012 to standard reference sources and third parties who rank colleges and universities.[112]The falsified data aimed to boost the university's rankings.[112]For example, while the office reported an 89% graduation rate within the top 10% of the class, the actual figure stood at only 75%. Consequently, following the investigation, the individuals responsible either resigned or were terminated, and the university issued a public apology to address the misconduct.[113]To prevent future inaccuracies in data collection and reporting, Emory University took corrective actions in 2012 and 2013. These measures included the employment of independent data advisers to ensure the accuracy and integrity of the university's data management processes.[114]

Research[edit]

Facilities and partnerships[edit]

Whitehead Biomedical Research Building, Emory University

Emory University isclassifiedamong "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity".[115]In 2021, Emory received $894.7 million from external funding agencies.[116]Emory University leads the nation in the number of students with Kirschstein-National Research Service Awardpre-doctoral fellowships from theNational Institutes of Health.[117]

In 1947, the university donated 15 acres of land to theUnited States Department of Health and Human Servicesfor the construction of theCDCheadquarters.[118]Emory University Prevention Research Center (EPRC) and Emory Center for Injury Control are funded by the CDC.[23][119]Emory University's African Center of Excellence for Public Health Security, which seeks to improve preparedness and response to health threats in low-income countries, is a five-year, multimillion-dollar cooperative program with the CDC andInternational Association of National Public Health Institutes(IANPHI).[120]Emory University Center for Global Safe Water (CGSW), which conducts applied research, evaluation, and training to promote global health equity through universal access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene, works in collaboration with the CDC.[121][122]Emory University Global Health Institute, funded by theBill & Melinda Gates Foundation,partners with the CDC to enhance public health infrastructure in low-resource countries.[123]Emory University HospitalIsolation Unit and Quarantine Station was established by the CDC following the2003 SARS outbreak.[124]The isolation and treatment facilities at Emory University played a crucial role in ending the 2014Ebola virus cases in the United States.[125]CDCscientists and administrators hold memberships and frequently speak at Emory University's Vaccine Dinner Club (VDC), an association that holds monthly academic meetings to discuss and advancevaccine research.[126]In 2015, Emory was made a member of theCDC's Prevention Epicenters Program, a research program in which CDC's Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion (DHQP) collaborates with academic investigators to conduct innovative infection control and prevention research.[127][128]

In 2015, Emory University, theLondon School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine,thePublic Health Foundation of India,and theAll India Institute of Medical Sciencesestablished the Center for Control of Chronic Conditions inNew Delhi,India. The center aims to improve the prevention and care of diabetes, heart disease, cancer, mental health, and injuries in India.[129]

TheInternational Association of National Public Health Institutesis based at the university. The association was chartered in 2006 with a $20 million, five-year grant through Emory University from theBill and Melinda Gates Foundation.In 2015, the Emory Global Health Institute andCenters for Disease Control and Preventionwere made lead partners for the newly created, $75 millionBill and Melinda Gates Foundation-funded Child Health and Mortality Prevention Surveillance Network (CHAMPS).[130]

Dowman Administration Building

Emory University research is heavily funded by theUnited States Department of Health and Human Services'sNational Institutes of Health.[131]The federal agency awarded the university nearly $600 million in the fiscal year of 2021. In 2015, Emory University was one of four institutions selected by theNational Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseasesfor its seven-year, multimillion-dollar Tuberculosis Research Units (TBRU) program, which aims to drive innovation intuberculosisresearch and reduce the global burden of the disease.[27]In 2015, an Emory-led research consortium received a five-year, $15 million grant from theNational Institutes of Health(NIH) to research humanimmune responsestoVaricella zoster virusandpneumococcalvaccination.[132]The university also received a $9 million grant over five years from the NIH to support one of three national Centers for Collaborative Research inFragile X syndrome.The grant is a renewal of Emory's National Fragile X Research Center, continuously funded by the NIH for more than 10 years.[133]In 2015, the university received an $8.9 million grant over five years from the NIHNational Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute(NHLBI) to better understand the role ofreactive oxygen speciesand inflammation in blood vessel function and to explore new interventions and preventive approaches foratherosclerosisandaortic aneurysms.[133]In 2015, the university received an $8 million grant over five years from the NIH to develop and validate mathematical models of how prior immunity affects recall immune responses to influenza viruses. The researchers will create and disseminate powerful, user-friendly modeling tools for use by the wider research community in developing more effective vaccines.[133]In 2015, the university received a $3.6 million grant over five years from the NIH to examine the effects of maternal stress on brain function, development, and behavior in African-American infants, including the biochemical connection between the brain and the microbiome.[133]In 2015, the university received a $3.5 million grant over five years from the NIHNational Cancer Institute(NCI) for an Informatics Technology for Cancer Research award. Winship Cancer Institute and Emory School of Medicine researchers will develop software tools to help the cancer research community gain new insights from cancer imaging "big data" and develop new open-source cancer research applications.[133]In 2015, the university received a $3.4 million grant from the NIH International Collaborations in Infectious Disease Research Program to support a partnership between the Emory Vaccine Center and theInternational Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology(ICGEB) inNew Delhi,India to studydengue virusinfection in India.[133]

Charles and Peggy Evans Anatomy Building,Emory University School of Medicine

The Emory University Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) and the Emory Vaccine Center are world leaders in AIDS Vaccine Development and HIV Pathogenesis studies are funded by nine different institutes of theNational Institutes of Healthand by theGeorgia Research Alliance.[134]The centers include one of the largest groups of academic vaccine scientists in the world and are currently attempting to develop an effectiveHIV vaccine.[135]Emory University Researchers Dr.Dennis C. Liotta,Dr. Raymond F. Schinazi and Dr. Woo-Baeg Choi discoveredEmtricitabine,anucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor(NRTI) used in the treatment ofHIV.The drug was named as one of the world's most importantantiviral drugsby theWorld Health Organizationand is included in theirModel List of Essential Medicines.[136]

Emory University was one of three institutions that successfully treatedmedical evacueesduring the2014 Ebola outbreak.In 2015, theUnited States Department of Health and Human Servicesnamed Emory University the lead coordinating center for the National Ebola Training and Education Center (NETEC).[26]The university collaborated with theUniversity of Nebraska Medical Center,theNew York City Health and Hospitals Corporation,theCenters for Disease Control and Preventionand theOffice of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Responseon the program, which received $12 million. The university also received a $10.8 million grant over three years from theU.S. Department of Defense'sDefense Advanced Research Projects Agency(DARPA) to lead a 10-institution national team developing improved therapeutics and vaccines for multiple strains ofEbola virus.[133]In 2015, Emory received a three-year, $2.2 million grant from theCDCto prevent the spread of infectious diseases, including Ebola, in health-care facilities.[128]

In 2015, Emory and Georgia Tech were awarded an $8.3 million grant by theNIHto establish a National Exposure Assessment Laboratory.[137]The laboratory will research the impact of environmental chemicals on children's health.[137]In 2015, the two universities received a five-year, $2.9 million grant from theNational Science Foundation(NSF) to create new bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degree programs and concentrations inhealthcare robotics,which will be the first program of its kind in the Southeastern United States.[138]In 2015, Emory University, Georgia Tech, and Children's Healthcare of Atlanta were awarded a four-year, $1.8 million grant by theCystic Fibrosis Foundationin order to expand the Atlanta Cystic Fibrosis Research and Development Program. As of 2015,Emory jointly manages the second-largestcystic fibrosispopulation in the United States.[24]In 2015, Emory and Georgia Tech received a $1.6 million grant from the Coulter Translational Research Partnership Program to accelerate nine promising technologies developed in research laboratories with commercialization potential.[133]

In 2015, Emory University received a $15 million grant from theWounded Warrior Projectin order to establish the "Warrior Care Network"and develop innovative approaches to treat veterans withpost-traumatic stress disorder(PTSD) andtraumatic brain injury(TBI).[139]

In 2015, Emory University and theUniversity of South Floridareceived a $2.5 million grant over five years from theJohn E. Fogarty International Centerto study links between infectious disease transmission and agricultural practices.[133]

In 2023, Emory celebrated the opening of Georgia's largest health sciences research building. The eight-story, 350,000-square-foot building houses more than 1,000 researchers, including 130 principal investigators, from across a variety of specialties including: pediatrics, biomedical engineering, Winship Cancer Institute, cardiovascular medicine, the Emory Vaccine Center, radiology and brain health. The project cost $313 million to complete.[140]

In 2023, Emory launched a global university network consisting ofUniversity of Bonn,Hebrew University of Jerusalem,University of St Andrews,andWaseda Universityto deepen partnership in education, research, leadership and innovation.[141]

Campuses[edit]

Aerial view of Emory University's campus (bottom) and theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention(top)

Emory University's original campus was established inOxford, Georgia,in 1836. The 56-acre campus, located 38 miles east of Emory's Atlanta Campus, is home toOxford College of Emory Universityand was the site of military headquarters and infirmaries during theAmerican Civil War.[36]Many of the buildings were designed withNeoclassical architectureandGothic Revival architecture.In 1975, the United StatesNational Register of Historic Placesdesignated the campus as part of theOxford Historic District.[142]

Emory's Atlanta Campus, established in the early twentieth century on a Beaux-Arts master plan byPittsburgharchitectHenry Hornbostel,[143]covers more than 600 acres inAtlanta's historic neighborhood ofDruid Hills.The university campus is heavily forested with pine, maples, oak, and magnolias, and Peavine Creek, a branch of thePeachtree Creek,runs through the campus. TheArbor Day Foundationnamed Emory a Tree Campus USA school in 2015.[144]Many of the university's buildings are designed with multi-hued granite andSpanishSaltillo tile.The university has one of the largest inventories by square footage ofLeadership in Energy and Environmental Design-certified building space among campuses in the United States.[145]

Clock towerat Cox Hall

The campus is home toEmory University Hospital,Michael C. Carlos Museum,which has the largest collection of ancient artifacts in the Southeastern United States, theWinship Cancer Institute,Georgia's first and only cancer center designated by the National Cancer Institute,[146]theYerkes National Primate Research Center,one of eightNational Institutes of Health-funded national primate research centers, and a number of other academic, art, medical, and student facilitates. In 1991, Emory opened the first collegiateLGBT student centerin the Southeastern United States which is the tenth oldest in the nation.[147]Undergraduate dormitories include the Woodruff Residential Center, Clairmont Residential Center, Clifton Tower Apartments, Alabama Hall, Complex, Dobbs Hall, Harris Hall, Hamilton Hall, Eagle Hall, Raoul Hall and Turman Hall.[148]TheCenters for Disease Control and Prevention,American Cancer Society,Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Egleston hospital, andEmory Pointare located adjacent to the campus.

In 2015, a $52 million expansion and renovation project of theSanford S. AtwoodChemistry Center was completed. The new, 270,000-square-foot complex contains laboratories, interactive teaching and study spaces, and a chemistry library.[149]The completion of the complex was accompanied by a $1.2 million grant from theHoward Hughes Medical Instituteto advance and modernize the university's chemistry curriculum.[149]

In the Candler Library Annex ofRobert W. Woodruff Library,there is a 1920sPietro Capronireproduction ofBertel Thorvaldsen's "The Triumph of Alexander"frieze.The frieze depictsAlexander the Greatand his army enteringBabylonfollowing their victory over theAchaemenid Empirein theBattle of Gaugamela.[150]

During the1996 Summer Olympicsin Atlanta, the university hosted the United StatesOlympic women's gymnasticsteam on its Atlanta Campus.[151]The team, known as theMagnificent Seven,won the first-ever gold medal for the United States in the women's team all-around competition. The university housed international officials and journalists and served as a training facility forOlympians.The Cox Hall Ballroom was transformed into a news center for the Olympic foreign press.[151]

In February 2017, Emory announced that its R. Howard Dobbs University Center, built in 1986 from aneofuturisticpostmodernistdesign by local architectJohn C. Portman Jr.,to house the university's main student/faculty center and dining hall (Coca-ColaCommons), would be demolished and replaced with a new $98 million Campus Life Center, designed byDurham, North Carolina-based Duda Paine Architects. Reasons given for the replacement included inconvenience of food delivery to the dining hall, undersized kitchen facilities, and inadequatefenestrationin the Commons.[143]The Emory Student Center (ESC), opened in May 2019 includes a dining hall, study and collaboration spaces, game room, a 1400+ person multipurpose space, coffee shop, and food emporium. It is the first building on Emory's campus to receive aLEEDplatinum rating.[152]

Student life[edit]

Student body composition as of May 2, 2022
Race and ethnicity[153] Total
White 37% 37
Asian 23% 23
Foreign national 15% 15
Hispanic 11% 11
Black 9% 9
Other[a] 5% 5
Economic diversity
Low-income[b] 21% 21
Non-low income[c] 79% 79

Student body[edit]

Emory University's total enrollment for fall 2021 was 15,846 students, with 8,197 undergraduates and 7,649 graduate and professional students. 21% of students are Georgia residents, the remaining come from 49 other states, D.C., American territories and more than 100 countries. 40% of students are male, 60% are female.[154]The student to faculty ratio is 7:1, with an average class size of 25 students.[155]

Of the 1,534 freshmen enrolled in fall 2021, 31% were Caucasian, 22% were Asian, 13% were Black/African American, 11% were Latino/Hispanic, 18% were International, 1% were Native American and 4% did not identity; 57% were female and 43% were male.[156]

Arts[edit]

Students may engage in the performing and fine arts as an area of academic study or as extracurricular activities. Undergraduates may pursue a major in the performing arts (dance, theater, or music) or in film studies, art history, visual arts, or creative writing.[157]Graduate programs in art history, film studies, and music are offered.[158]There are more than 50 student organizations dedicated to the arts. Students can explore artistic interests as diverse as architecture, breakdancing, poetry, and improvisational comedy.[159]Emory routinely hosts arts events in the Schwartz Center for Performing Arts that are open to the Emory and Atlanta communities. Recent[when?]performances include Bang on a Can All-Stars (a side project of drummerGlenn Kotchefrom the rock bandWilco), jazz performerEsperanza Spalding,and New York's Cedar Lake Dance Company. A program called Creativity Conversations brings artistic minds to campus to discuss art and the creative process. Guests have includedPhilip Glass,Jimmy Carter,Salman Rushdie,Seamus HeaneyandRita Dove.[160][161][162]Rita Dove also gave the keynote address at Emory's 2013 Commencement.[163]

Barkley Forum[edit]

TheBarkley ForumCenter for Debate Education is an intercollegiate debate organization at Emory University.[164]The center is named in honor of Emory alumnusAlben Barkley,35thVice President of the United States.Debating was established at the university in 1837 and the intercollegiate debate team was formed in 1914. Emory's Barkley Forum debate team has won 3National Debate Tournamentsand over 25individual champion speaker awards.[165]

Community service[edit]

The university received the 2008 Presidential Award for General Community Service, which is the highest federal recognition given to higher education institutions for their commitment to community service, service-learning and civic engagement.[166]About 25% of Emory students participate in Volunteer Emory, Emory's umbrella community service group. As one of the most popular groups on campus, Volunteer Emory offers dozens of ways to serve the community, working with varied organizations including the Atlanta Community Food Bank, Trees Atlanta, PAWS Atlanta, and Jones Boys and Girls Club.[167]Emory Cares International Service Day brings together students, alumni and other community members to volunteer at a number of projects organized by Emory and its many partners around the city of Atlanta and in cities worldwide.[168]

Newspaper[edit]

The Emory Wheelis thestudent-run newspaperof Emory University. TheWheelis published weekly on Wednesdays, during the regular school year. Serving the Emory community since 1919, theWheelis editorially and financially independent from the university. The staff is composed entirely of students, with the exception of the general manager, who oversees advertising and whose salary is paid by the newspaper.[169][170]

Programs abroad[edit]

Through the Centers of International Programs Abroad, Emory University students can study in over 40 countries at the top academic institutions in the world including theNational University of Singapore,Kyoto Consortium for Japanese Studies,Nanjing University,Oxford University,Imperial College London,theSchool of Oriental and African Studies,Yonsei University,Trinity College Dublin,University of St. Andrews,University of Melbourne,Hertie School of Governance,University of Amsterdam,Sciences Po,University of Cape Town,andTel Aviv University.[171]

Greek life[edit]

Fraternitieshave existed on Emory's campus as early as 1840. One early chronicler makes the case that Emory's "temple" of theMystic Sevenmay have been the first chapter of a national fraternity established anywhere in the South. Today, the Greek-letter sororities and fraternities play a part in leavening Emory's campus life. For undergraduates, Greek life accounts for approximately 20% of the Emory student population.[172]The Office of Greek Life recognizes and regulates on-campus chapters of fraternities and sororities. Fraternities have on-campus housing located on Eagle Row, and Sorority Village, a series of townhouses, faces the fraternity houses.[173]There are eight sorority chapters: Alpha Delta Pi, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Phi Epsilon, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pi Beta Phi, and Sigma Delta Tau.[174]There are eleven fraternity chapters: Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Zeta Beta Tau.[175]

Student organizations[edit]

Hundreds of student clubs and organizations operate on Emory's campus. These include numerousstudent government,special interest,andservice organizations.The Student Government Association charters and provides most of the funding for other student groups and represents students' interests when dealing with the administration.[176]The Student Government Association oversees divisional councils, each coinciding with the undergraduate, graduate and professional schools of the university. Notable among these are the College Council (CC) which handles students' concerns primarily for the undergraduate body of Emory College of Arts and Sciences and annually sponsors the State of Race event, and the BBA Council which does similar activities for the Goizueta Business School BBA Program. The Student Programming Council is the school's primary programming organization, responsible for planning multiple events every year: Homecoming Week, Dooley's week, and a plethora of other events that happen around campus that benefit the students in a proactive way.[177]Emory also has severalsecret societies—thePaladin Society,theD.V.S. Senior Honor Society,Ducemus, Speculum, andThe Order of Ammon.[178]Emory has a partnership with Coca-Cola in which they pledged 3 million dollars over a 5-year period for "Service for Learning" which projects that Emory student volunteers participate to help preserve nature trails, create urban farms, as well as restore neighborhood parks.[179]Emory University also has many Black student organizations, including: the Black Student Alliance, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and Voices of Inner Strength Gospel Choir (VOIS).

Theintramural sportsprogram provides an athletic outlet for the entire Emory community. Emory has numerous club sports[180]and a variety of recreational and competitive intramural teams.[181]The Outdoor Emory Organization sponsors weekend trips of outdoor activities such as rafting, rock climbing and hiking.[182]

Athletics[edit]

Emory's 18 varsity sports teams, known as the Eagles, are members of theNCAA'sDivision IIIin theUniversity Athletic Association(UAA). Emory consistently ranks among top schools in theDirectors' Cupof theNational Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics(NACDA) for best all-around athletics program.[183]

Notable alumni and faculty[edit]

AuthorSalman Rushdie,Booker Prize-winning novelist, having a discussion with Emory University students

Emory University has over 13,200 faculty and staff members and over 133,000 living alumni. Awards and honors recognizing Emory alumni and faculty include theNobel Peace Prize,Pulitzer Prize,Presidential Medal of Freedom,Bancroft Prize,Booker Prize,Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize,National Humanities Medal,Peabody Award,Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences,Guggenheim Fellowship,Fulbright Fellowship,American Mathematical SocietyFellowship,MacArthur Fellows Program,Rhodes Scholarship,Marshall Scholarship,and membership in theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences,Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching,Howard Hughes Medical Institute,American Society for Clinical Investigation,National Academy of Sciences,andNational Research Council.[184][185]

Notable alumni includeAlben Barkley(BA 1900),[186]35th Vice President of the United States;Isaac Stiles Hopkins(1859C)[187]andRobert Stewart Hyer(BA 1881, MA 1882),[188]founding presidents of Georgia Institute of Technology and Southern Methodist University, respectively;Young John Allen(1858C),[189]American Methodist Missionary in the late Qing Dynasty, China;Thomas Milton Rivers(1909C);[190]Dumas Malone,Jefferson biographer and director of theHarvard University Press(AB, 1910); Director of the Rockefeller Institute;Ernest Cadman Colwell(1923C, 1927 PhD),[191]President of the University of Chicago;Bobby Jones(Law 1929),[192]the only golfer to win a Grand Slam, founder of the Masters Golf Tournament, and regarded as one of the greatest golfers of all time;Ely Callaway Jr.(1940C),[193]Founder of the Callaway Golf Company;Ernie Harwell(1940C),[194]baseball broadcaster for the Detroit Tigers;Arnall Patz(BA 1943, MD 1945),[195]Lee Hong-koo[196](1959C), 26th Prime Minister of the Republic of Korea;Newt Gingrich(BA 1965),[197]58th Speaker of the House of Representatives;Sonny Carter,[198]NASA astronaut, Crew member of STS-33 Space Shuttle mission (1969C);Peter Buck,guitarist for the band R.E.M.;[199]Kenneth Cole(BA 1976),[200]clothing designer and founder of Kenneth Cole Productions;Christopher McCandless(1990C),[201]Alaskanwilderness adventurer and main subject of Jon Krakauer'sInto the Wild;Fala Chen(2005C),[202]Chinese American Actress;Kirsten Haglund(2013C), Miss America 2008;[203]Duncan L. Niederauer,chief executive officer of theNew York Stock Exchange(NYSE);[204]Elizabeth Prelogar(BA 2002), 48thSolicitor General of the United States.[205]

Notable faculty includeJimmy Carter,39th president of the United States;[206]SirSalman Rushdie,Booker Prize-winning novelist;[207]Desmond Tutu,Nobel Peace Prize recipient;[208]William Foege,[209]tenth Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director;Nathan McCall,New York Timesbestselling author;[210]James T. Laney,[211]17th president of Emory University, United States ambassador to Korea from 1993 to 1997;Natasha Trethewey,Pulitzer Prize winner;[212]and US poet laureateJohn L. ConeyandDr. Sanjay Gupta,CNN chief medical correspondent.[213]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^Other consists ofMultiracial Americans& those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^The percentage of students who received an income-based federalPell grantintended for low-income students.
  3. ^The percentage of students who are a part of theAmerican middle classat the bare minimum.

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Further reading[edit]

  • "Emory University", inNew Georgia EncyclopediaArchivedJuly 26, 2011, at theWayback Machine.Retrieved July 1, 2006.
  • "Emory University", inEncyclopedia of Southern Culture,ed. C. R. Wilson and William Ferris (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989).
  • English, Thomas H.Emory University 1915–1965: A Semicentennial History.Atlanta: Emory University, 1966.
  • Gleason, Jan. "Emory ranked ninth-best national university by U.S. News & World Report magazine" inEmory Report50, no. 1 (1997).
  • Hauk, Gary S.A Legacy of Heart and Mind: Emory since 1836(Atlanta: Emory University, developed and produced by Bookhouse Group, Inc., 1999).
  • Hauk, Gary S.Where Courageous Inquiry Leads[Atlanta; Emory University, 2010].
  • Young, James Harvey. "A Brief History of Emory University", inEmory College Catalog 2003–2005(Atlanta: Emory University Office of University Publications, 2003), 9–15.

External links[edit]