Wardens The first
Warden of the college was
Sir William Deakin (1950–1968), a young Oxford academic who in the Second World War became an adventurous soldier and aide to
Winston Churchill. He won
Antonin Besse's confidence and played the key role in turning his vision into the centre of excellence that St Antony's has become.
Sir Raymond Carr (1968–1987), a distinguished historian of Spain, expanded the college and its regional coverage and opened its doors to visiting scholars from all over the world.
Sir Ralf Dahrendorf (later Lord Dahrendorf) (1987–1997) came to St Antony's after a distinguished career as a social theorist and politician in Germany, a
European Commissioner and Director of the
London School of Economics. He further enlarged the college and developed its role as a source of policy advice. The previous Warden, Sir
Marrack Goulding (1997–2006), served in the British
Diplomatic Service for 26 years before becoming an
Under Secretary-General at the
United Nations. His appointment underlined the international nature of the college and its links with government and business. Following the retirement of the fifth Warden of the College
Margaret MacMillan in October 2017, social anthropologist
Roger Goodman was elected Warden, having previously served in an acting capacity between 2006 and 2007. • Sir
William Deakin, 1950–68 • Sir
Raymond Carr, 1968–87 • Sir Ralf Dahrendorf (1987–1993), later
Lord Dahrendorf, 1987–97 • Sir
Marrack Goulding, 1997–2006 • Roger Goodman, (acting), October 2006–July 2007 •
Margaret MacMillan, 2007–17 •
Roger Goodman, 2017–
Former students File:Mohamed A. El-Erian at the World Economic Forum Summit on the Global Agenda 2008.jpg|
Mohamed El-Erian File:Sir Richard Evans.jpg|
Richard Evans File:Chrystia Freeland in Ukraine - 2017 (cropped).jpg|
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Gary Hart File:President Gudni Thorlacius Johannesson September 2016.jpg|
Guðni Jóhannesson File:International Women's Day (16579994330) (cropped).jpg|
Bridget Kendall File:Profpaulkennedy.jpg|
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Julian Lewis File:2017 Halifax International Security Forum (37604059155) (cropped)Dr. Margaret MacMillan.jpg|
Margaret MacMillan File:Official portrait of Rt Hon John Redwood MP crop 2.jpg|
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Olli Rehn File:Nemat Shafik Portrait.jpg|
Nemat Shafik File:Kolumbianischer Präsident Alvaro Uribe 2004.jpg|
Álvaro Uribe File:Prince Moulay Hicham.jpg|
Prince Moulay Hicham of Morocco St Antony's alumni (Antonians) have achieved success in a wide variety of careers; these include writers, politicians, academics and a large number of civil servants, diplomats and representatives of international organisations. Former students with careers as politicians and civil servants include
Guðni Th. Jóhannesson, the 6th
President of Iceland,
Álvaro Uribe, who was
President of Colombia from 2002 to 2010 and his Minister of Foreign Affairs
Jaime Bermúdez,
Yigal Allon, a deputy and acting
Prime Minister of Israel, former Vice President of the European Commission and current Finnish Minister of Economic Affairs
Olli Rehn, the Dutch Minister of Finance and former Minister of Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation and former UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon
Sigrid Kaag, the former Secretary of State for Wales
John Redwood, former EU Commissioner
Jean Dondelinger, the Canadian politician
John Godfrey,
Gary Hart, a former US Senator and presidential candidate, and US Rep.
Tom Malinowski (D-NJ), a former US
Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. Diplomats
Joseph A. Presel,
Gustavo Bell and
Shlomo Ben-Ami are also Antonians. Furthermore,
Minouche Shafik, Deputy Governor of the
Bank of England and former managing director of the
International Monetary Fund, is an Antonian, as are three-time Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist
Thomas Friedman and Pulitzer Prize-winning war correspondent
Dexter Filkins. Further Antonians include
Anne Applebaum, former editor at The Economist,
Jorgo Chatzimarkakis, Member of the European Parliament, book author
Agnia Grigas, the Bulgarian communist
Lyudmila Zhivkova, Indian journalist
Sagarika Ghose and Rhodes scholar
Chrystia Freeland, Canada's former
Deputy Prime Minister and
Minister of Finance, and a former director at Thomson Reuters. In academia,
Sir Christopher Bayly was
Vere Harmsworth Professor of Imperial and Naval History at the
University of Cambridge, whilst
Wm. Roger Louis is Kerr Chair in English History and Culture at the
University of Texas at Austin,
Craig Calhoun, current president of the
Berggruen Institute is the former director of the
London School of Economics, where he remains Centennial Professor,
Frances Lannon is the principal of
Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.
Richard Evans is the Regis professor of Modern History at Cambridge,
Anthony Venables holds Oxford's BP professorship in Economics and was Chief Economist at the UK's
Department for International Development;
Paul Kennedy is the Dilworth professor of British History at Yale,
Rashid Khalidi a professor at Columbia and
Michael T. Benson is the president of
Coastal Carolina University. The college also counts the Olympic gold medal-winning swimmer
Davis Tarwater, violinist and conductor
Joji Hattori, screenwriter
Julian Mitchell and the historian
Margaret MacMillan amongst its alumni.
Academics •
Timothy Garton Ash, journalist and author on European matters •
Mats Berdal, Professor of Security and Development at the
Department of War Studies, King's College London. •
Archie Brown, historian of the end of the Cold War and author of
The Gorbachev Factor •
Paul Collier, Director of the Centre for the Study of African Economies at Oxford •
Michael Kaser, economist and author of
Soviet Economics •
Homa Katouzian, literary critic and scholar of Iranian studies •
Paul Kennedy, J. Richardson Dilworth Professor of History; Director, International Security Studies,
Yale University •
Alan Knight, post-critical historian, Director of the Latin American Centre, and author of the two-volume award-winning book
The Mexican Revolution (1986) •
Wm. Roger Louis, historian and scholar of the British Empire, especially Decolonization. •
Kalypso Nicolaïdis, Professor of International Relations and Director of the European Studies Centre •
Tariq Ramadan, Professor of Contemporary Islamic Studies •
Oliver Ready, translator of Russian literature •
Eugene Rogan, historian of the Modern Middle East and author of
The Arabs: A History •
Robert Service, historian of the USSR and biographer of
Vladimir Lenin and
Joseph Stalin •
Avi Shlaim, historian writing on the Arab-Israeli conflict. •
Vivienne Shue, FBA, sinologist and author of "The Reach of the State" •
Omer Bartov, historian writing on genocide focused on the Holocaust; author of seven books. •
Arnab Goswami, Journalist, Editor-in-Chief(Republic Media Networks)
Former fellows •
Michael Herman, founder of the Oxford Intelligence Group •
Foulath Hadid, Honorary Fellow •
Albert Hourani, Founder-Director, Middle East Centre, St Antony's College, Oxford •
James Joll, historian, fellow (1950–67) •
Sudipta Kaviraj, Professor of Political Sciences,
Columbia University, New York •
Frank McLynn, historian and biographer •
Tapan Raychaudhuri, Emeritus Fellow, St Antony's College, Oxford •
Giulio Angioni, Italian writer and anthropologist •
José Cutileiro, Portuguese diplomat, historian, and author •
Michael Aris, leading Western authority on Bhutanese, Tibetan and Himalayan culture, Husband of Burmese opposition leader
Aung San Suu Kyi Donors •
Investcorp • The
A. G. Leventis Foundation • Dean Dakolias •
Harley Lippman • Raycap • The
Tides Foundation ==Gallery==