File:Logo sup.png Pisa University System logo
The Pisa University System (Italian : Sistema Universitario Pisano ) is a network of higher education institutions in Pisa, Italy. The following three schools and universities belong to the system:[ 1]
International rankings
According to the Academic Ranking of World Universities,[ 2] Italy Rankings:
Italy Rankings
Institution
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
University of Pisa (Università di Pisa)
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The Academic Ranking of World Universities puts Pisa University System at the first place in Italy (National Rank # 1) and within the best 30 universities in Europe.[ 3]
As part of the Pisa University System, Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies has also been mapped by Times Higher Education-QS World University Rankings as one of the most important educational institutions in Italy (section on Italy i.e. Top universities and specialisms ),[ 4] [ 5] having its Graduate/Postgraduate Profile .[ 6]
Also, Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies together with Scuola Normale Superiore are named as leading institutions in [ 7]
According to QS World University Rankings, Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies is part of the initiative Invest Your Talent in Italy [ 8] which puts Italian graduate programmes on the world's stage .[ 9]
The European Research Ranking , a ranking based on publicly available data from the European Commission database puts Pisa University System among the best in Italy and best performing European research institutions.[ 10]
La Voce , published a ranking of Italian universities by h-index , where Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies acquires the first (#1) place in Italy.[ 11]
Notable alumni and faculty
I. Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa
Enrico Fermi , physicist and Nobel prize winner
Carlo Rubbia , physicist and Nobel prize winner
Giosuè Carducci, poet and Nobel prize winner
Luigi Bianchi , mathematician
Lamberto Cesari , mathematician
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, former Governor of the Banca d'Italia, former Prime Minister of Italy, former President of the Italian Republic
Massimo D'Alema (withdrew), politician, former Italian Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs
Guido Fubini , mathematician
Giovanni Gentile , philosopher and politician
Carlo Ginzburg, historian
Ennio De Giorgi, mathematician, solved the 19th Hilbert problem , won Wolf Prize (1990)
Giovanni Gronchi, former President of the Republic of Italy
Fabio Mussi (withdrew), former Italian Minister of the University
Leonida Tonelli , mathematician
Vito Volterra , mathematician
Giancarlo Wick, physicist
Riccardo Barbieri , physicist
Riccardo Rattazzi , physicist
Jiyuan Yu , philosopher
II. Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies
Giuliano Amato, former Prime Minister of Italy, Vice President of the Convention on the Future of Europe that drafted the new European Constitution
Antonio Cassese, first President of the International Criminal Tribunal For the Former Yugoslavia
Sabino Cassese, Professor of Administrative Law and a judge of the Constitutional Court of Italy
Pier Francesco Guarguaglini, former president of Finmeccanica
Enrico Letta, Italian Chamber of Deputies, Deputy Secretary of the Democratic Party (Italy), former Prime Minister of Italy
Antonio Maccanico, Minister in the Italian Republic
Marcello Spatafora, President of the United Nations Security Council in 2007
Tiziano Terzani, Italian journalist and writer
Vittorio Grilli, Deputy Minister of the Ministry of Economy and Finance (government of Mario Monti)[ 12]
Giovanni Dosi, economist, co-director of the Initiative for Policy Dialogue, editor of the Oxford University Press Journal[ 13]
Stefan Collignon, professor of political economy
Giorgio Buttazzo, Professor at Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies[ 14]
III. University of Pisa
Galileo Galilei , Italian physicist , mathematician , astronomer , and philosopher who played a major role in the Scientific Revolution.
Enrico Fermi , physicist , 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on induced radioactivity [ 15]
Enrico Fermi , physicist , 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics[ 15]
Carlo Rubbia , particle physicist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1984 with Simon van der Meer
Francesco Accarigi, professor of civil law
Giuliano Amato, former Prime Minister of Italy, studied at the Collegio Medico-Giuridico of the Scuola Normale Superiore
Andrea Bocelli, tenor, multi-instrumentalist and classical crossover artist
Andrea Camilleri, writer (ad honorem )
Giosuè Carducci, poet, 1906 Nobel Prize in Literature
Bonaventura Cavalieri, mathematician, known for his work on the problems of optics and motion
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, 73rd former Prime Minister of Italy, tenth President of the Italian Republic
Pope Clement XII
Massimo D'Alema, former 77th Prime Minister
Giovanni Gentile , minister and neo-Hegelian Idealist philosopher
Giovanni Gronchi, former President of the Italian Republic
Girolamo Maggi , 16th century scholar
Guido Fubini , mathematician
Mario Monicelli, movie director
Alessandro Natta, former secretary of the Italian Communist Party (PCI)
René Préval , President of Haiti
Carlo Sforza, President of the Italian National Consult, Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs
Adriano Sofri, writer
Tiziano Terzani, journalist and writer
Elio Toaff, former Chief Rabbi of Rome
Andrea Vaccá Berlinghieri, 19th century surgeon
Vito Volterra , mathematician and physicist , known for his contributions to mathematical biology and integral equations.[ 16] [ 17]
François Carlo Antommarchi, Napoleon's physician from 1818 to his death in 1821.
Stefano Arduini, scholar of linguistics, rhetoric, semiotics and translation
Adolfo Bartoli, physicist , known for introducing the concept of radiation pressure from thermodynamical considerations
Enrico Betti , mathematician , known for his 1871 paper on topology that led to the later naming after him of the Betti numbers
Luciano Bianciardi, journalist, translator and writer of short stories and novels
Emilio Bizzi, neuroscientist and Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Sandro Bondi, politician, Culture Minister in Silvio Berlusconi's fourth cabinet
Cesare Borgia, Duke of Romagna, Prince of Andria and Venafro[ 18] [ 19]
Philippe Buonarroti, 18th century egalitarian and utopian socialist , revolutionary, journalist, writer, agitator, and freemason
Piero Calamandrei, author, jurist , soldier, university professor and politician
Francesco Cappè, United Nations official, United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI)[ 20]
Adán Cárdenas, President of Nicaragua between 1 March 1883 and 1 March 1887.[ 21]
Antonio Cassese, jurist who specialized in public international law, President of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon
Sabino Cassese, Professor of Administrative Law and a judge of the Constitutional Court of Italy
Benedetto Castelli, mathematician
Carlo Chiti, Italian racing car and engine designer, best known for his long association with Alfa Romeo 's racing department
Mauro Cristofani, linguist and researcher in Etruscan studies
Luigi Fantappiè , mathematician , known for work in mathematical analysis and for creating the theory of analytic functionals
Lando Ferretti, journalist , politician and sports administrator
Clara Franzini-Armstrong, FMRS an American electron microscopist,[ 22] and Professor Emeritus at University of Pennsylvania .[ 23] [ 24]
Luca Gammaitoni , scientist in the area of noise and nonlinear dynamics
David Levi (Italy), Italian-Jewish poet and patriot
Lorenzo Magalotti, philosopher, author, diplomat and poet
Paolo Malanima, Italian economic historian
Alessandro Natta, politician and secretary of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) from 1984 to 1988
Jože Pirjevec, Slovene historian from Italy, diplomatic historian of the west Balkans region, member of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Francesco Redi, 17th century physician , naturalist, and poet
Giovanni Battista Rinuccini, Roman Catholic archbishop in the mid seventeenth century
Luigi Rizzi (linguist), linguist
Giovanni Salvemini , FRS, 18th century mathematician and astronomer
Atto Tigri, 19th century anatomist
External links
See also
List of Italian universities
References
↑ "Pisan University System" . http://www.unipi.it/english/university/uniandpisa/Pisan-University-System.htm_cvt.htm .
↑ "Home" . http://www.arwu.org/ .
↑ Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU)
↑ Top universities and specialisms Article "Invest your talent in Italy: graduate study opportunities in Southern Europe" in Times Higher Education-QS World University Rankings on Sat, 09/15/2007
↑ Article "Top ten things to do while studying abroad in... Italy" in Times Higher Education-QS World University Rankings
↑ Graduate/Postgraduate Profile of Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna at Times Higher Education-QS World University Rankings
↑ Italy's six top higher education institutes by Times Higher Education World University Rankings.
↑ "Invest your Talent in Italy" programme by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and by the Italian Ministry for Economic Development
↑ "Italian graduate programmes on the world's stage" Article by QS World University Rankings on 13 June, 2011
↑ European Research Ranking 2010
↑ RICERCA PER INDICE H. di Daniele Checchi e Tullio Jappelli, 16.12.2008
↑ Vittorio Grilli vice ministro Economia
↑ Giovanni Dosi CV
↑ Journal of Real-Time Systems (Springer)
↑ 15.0 15.1
Snow, C. (1981). The Physicists: A Generation that Changed the World . Little Brown. ISBN 1-84232-436-5 .
↑ O'Connor, John J. ; Robertson, Edmund F. , "Pisa University System" , MacTutor History of Mathematics archive , University of St Andrews , http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Volterra.html .
↑ Pisa University System at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
↑ Encyclopædia Britannica . Borgia, Cesare. Web. 20 February 2011.
↑ World Book Encyclopedia . Borgia, Cesare. Web. 20 February 2011.
↑ National press agency Ansa (12-08-2010) Ban Ki-Moon. "UNICRI is one of the three most active Agency against terrorism"
↑ "Adán Cárdenas" . MSN Encarta . Archived from the original on 8 July 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080708213921/http://es.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761585779/Ad%C3%A1n_C%C3%A1rdenas.html . Retrieved 17 January 2008 .
↑ Clara Franzini-Armstrong at Biophysical Society
↑ Clara Franzini-Armstrong at Emeritus Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology at University of Pennsylvania
↑ Clara Franzini-Armstrong at Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine