After its defeat in the
Constitutionalist Revolution,
São Paulo needed institutional improvements. Therefore, in 1933, a group of businessmen founded the
Free School of Sociology and Politics (ELSP) (the current Foundation of the
School of Sociology and Politics in São Paulo). In 1934, the intervenor of São Paulo (which corresponded to the governor), Armando de Sales Oliveira, founded the University of São Paulo (USP). That was one of the efforts to provide Brazil with modern administrative, educational, and military institutions in a period known as "the search for alternatives." One of the main initiatives included the founding, that same year, of the University of São Paulo. Its nucleus was the School of Philosophy, Sciences, and Languages, with professors from France, Italy, Spain, Germany, and other European countries. The ELSP (Escola Livre de Sociologia e Política) assumed the goal of administrative elites to form a new model in which they noted an increasing role of the state. At the same time, the USP (Universidade de São Paulo) focused on training teachers for secondary schools, experts in sciences, engineers, lawyers, physicians, and professors. The ELSP followed a sociological American model, while the USP used the French academic world as its primary source of inspiration. Foreign professors such as
Claude Lévi-Strauss (France),
Fernand Braudel (France),
Roger Bastide (France), Robert H. Aubreton (France), Heinrich Rheinboldt (Germany), Paul Arbousse Bastide (France), Jean Magüé (France),
Martial Gueroult (France),
Emilio Willems (Germany),
Donald Pierson (US),
Gleb Vassielievich Wataghin (
Russia),
Pierre Monbeig (France),
Giacomo Albanese (
Italy),
Luigi Fantappiè (Italy),
Vilém Flusser (Czech Republic),
Giuseppe Ungaretti (Italy) and
Herbert Baldus (Germany), broadcast in various institutions new standards for teaching and research, creating new generations of scientists in
Brazil. Since its foundation the USP received professors and researchers from all over the world, such as
David Bohm (US),
Giuseppe Occhialini (Italy),
François Châtelet (France),
Anatol Rosenfeld (Germany), Helmi Nasr (Egypt), Gérard Lebrun (France),
Fritz Köberle (
Austria),
Alexander Grothendieck (France), and Heinz Dieter Heidemann (Germany).
Origins The University of São Paulo is the result of a combination of the newly founded School of Philosophy, Sciences and Languages (Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras, FFCL, currently the
Faculty of Philosophy, Languages and Human Sciences – Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humana
s, FFLCH) with the existing
Polytechnic School of Engineering (founded in 1893), the Luiz de Queiroz College of Agriculture (
Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz de Queiroz) (founded in 1901), the Medical School (founded in 1912), the traditional
Law School (founded in 1827), the old School of Pharmacy and Dentistry (founded in 1898), the Institute of Astronomy, Geophysics and Atmospheric Sciences (founded in 1886), and the School of Veterinary Medicine (founded in 1919). The FFCL emerged as the integrating element of the university, bringing together courses in various areas of knowledge. Also, in 1934, the
School of Physical Education (sports science) of the State of São Paulo was created, the first civil school of physical education in Brazil, which would later be part of the university. In 1944, the Medical School opened its public hospital (
Hospital das Clínicas da Universidade de São Paulo). The School of Engineering of Sao Carlos (EESC) emerged in the same year. In subsequent years, several other research units were also created, such as a second Medical School located in the city of
Ribeirão Preto (São Paulo's inland) in 1952. This slowed down scientific production in Brazil. It also promoted a systematic increase in the total number of graduate vacancies, encouraged by the state government. The gap caused by the removal of teachers and students chased by the
military regime was interrupted by the campaign of political amnesty in the early 1980s. Several units of the USP celebrated the return of their deposed professors, although many of them were rehired under different conditions (former
full professors took new positions as assistant professors).'s building
Expansion Parallel to the resulting intellectual emptiness of political repression in the 1960s-80s, academic units were fragmented; new faculties and institutes were created, resulting in new courses, new lines of research, and
graduate programs. Originally conceived as the university's academic core – gathering itself the various fields of knowledge – the FFCL (
School of Philosophy, Sciences and Letters) saw its departments gain autonomy and become separate units. The
Institute of Physics was the first department to extricate itself from the old FFCL, followed by other natural science departments. In 2004, the university founded the
Institute of International Relations to study global matters in a multidisciplinary environment (law, political science, economy, and history) with Brazilian and international students and professors (
International Exchange Program). In 2005, it was built in the East Zone of the
city of São Paulo a new
School of Arts, Sciences, and Humanities (EACH), taking a few courses that go beyond the traditional Brazilian university model and aim to diversify the areas of the consolidated institution. [22] On 21 March 2006, the USP approved the merger of a second
School of Chemical Engineering (FAENQUIL) in the city of Lorena (rural area), at the
Paraíba Valley (
State of São Paulo's rural area), with about 1,600 students in total and of these 1,200 at graduation. In 2007, a second Law School was established in the city of
Ribeirão Preto, also in the
State of São Paulo's countryside. ==Academics==