<p>Macalester.</p>
<p>Lawrence University, Wi.</p>
<p>Newsweek's "25 Hottest Schools" issue named Middlebury the hottest school for international studies. </p>
<p>international studies, international relations, foreign languages, and linguistics are totally four different subjects</p>
<p>i feel like i'm only interested in languages, but my dad wants me to do international business, lol</p>
<p>Along with Middlebury, my list would be (for undergrad). </p>
<p>Georgetown, Tufts, Brown, Columbia , LSE (UK)</p>
<p>All of which are extremely difficult to get into (they're all top-tier). My experience is that, for IR-minded students, each school is looking for slighty different qualities (aside from the top student bit). Brown seems to be more for administrative work, Georgetown for poli-sci, diplomatic-based, and foreign work, and Tufts and Columbia for IR that will branch out into business, law, or publishing. Just my thoughts.</p>
<p>The London Scholl of Economics has a huge international student body. About 50% of students are non-UK. It is also excelent in international relations and is located in one of the most international cities in the world. It also offers language courses at it's language centre. However, I believe their enfises is on languages for business and you would not learn much literature.</p>
<p>The American University of Paris. Only 33% American. Then 16% French. The rest are all international.</p>
<p>The LSE is great for overseas, except that fro undergrad financial aid assistance is poor.</p>
<p>Financial aid for overseas undergraduates in the UK is very poor all around.</p>
<p>Georgetown, Macalester I would say</p>
<p>The American University of Paris.
1000 students, over 100 nationalities.
The international and comparative politics program is good. I hear that the international comunications and business programs are, as well.</p>
<p>forgot to post…
of the over 100 nationalites, probably half of them are AT LEAST bilingual (French, English). If they’re from somewhere other than the States, England, or France, then that’s when you get into the trilingual kids, too. I have one friend that grew up in 4 different countries and thus speaks Arabic, Hebrew, English, French, and Chinese (Mandarin AND Cantonese). I only speak two and I feel a little bit insecure about that…</p>