A Graduate School of Statecraft and National Security Affairs.
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“I thoroughly enjoyed the curriculum, the small group environment, and the open dialogue between faculty and students at IWP. Moreover, the guest lecturers who appeared here make this institution all the more unique."

David Keefe, B.A., Fordham University;
former IWP student; Immigration and Naturalization Service; Major, U.S. Army Reserves

 
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IWP is Unique

The Institute of World Politics is unique among graduate schools, filling several educational needs with a curriculum offered by no other academic institution in America, and perhaps the world. This curriculum is designed to prepare students to be effective leaders in statecraft, national security, and foreign policy. It includes the study of all the instruments of power and how these instruments are integrated at the level of grand strategy. These include: diplomacy; military strategy; opinion formation and public diplomacy; intelligence and counterintelligence; psychological strategy; political action and political warfare; economic strategy; moral suasion and other forms of "soft power"; and effective leadership.

The Institute’s curriculum exposes students to the full spectrum of international realities, including history, political culture, the practices of foreign powers (including those that exceed traditional diplomatic norms), current and potential threats, and the strategic role of ideas, values, and belief systems in world politics. In doing so, the Institute’s courses examine subjects that are often ignored either in the academy or by our official foreign policy and national security culture and its training centers.

The Institute has some of the best professors in the world in their respective fields. They include ambassadors, senior intelligence officials, military officers, presidential advisers, and senior Congressional staff members. Almost all are scholar-practitioners with both academic credentials and high-level governmental and nongovernmental experience in the subjects they teach. Each course is taught by a principal professor with several guest lecturers, many of whom are among the most prominent figures in government and the broader policy community. Several of the faculty occupy senior policymaking positions in government, but continue to teach at the Institute as well.

The Institute’s student body includes traditional graduate students and a mix of mid-career professionals from government, the armed forces, industry, and foreign embassies and governments, whose various perspectives enrich the classroom experience.

Finally, the educational philosophy of the Institute, based on a recognition of the necessity of the cultivation of civic virtue and responsibility in the exercise of power, distinguishes itself from the widespread utilitarianism, relativism and moral neutrality present in our culture.

All these factors unite to create the unique purpose, curriculum, philosophy, and method of instruction that are to be found at The Institute of World Politics.

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Marlatt Mansion
Eight blocks north of the White House, the Institute is located in the historic Marlatt Mansion at 1521-1525 16th Street, NW, in downtown Washington, DC. 
Favored School of Statecraft

Wall Street Journal on IWP
“In sharp contrast to a foreign-policy world that tends to elevate method and process.... The Institute of World Politics roots itself in American values....When the Institute started up in 1990, the Berlin Wall had fallen, people were talking about the end of history.... But in the 10 years since, we've had the Gulf War, Osama bin Laden, Kosovo, and the rise of China. The world will not always run in accord with American interests and ideals. All the more reason for a school of statecraft that does."

The Wall Street Journal, Editorial, June 1, 2001
 
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