Former names
|
Management Studies in the Engineering Department (1954-1990) Judge Institute of Management Studies (1990-2005) Judge Business School (2005-2010) |
---|---|
Type | Public |
Established | 1954 |
Parent institution
|
University of Cambridge |
Dean | Christoph Loch |
Academic staff
|
80 |
Students | ~420 |
Location |
Old Addenbrooke's Site, Trumpington Street 52°12′01″N 0°07′17″E / 52.200224°N 0.121461°ECoordinates: 52°12′01″N 0°07′17″E / 52.200224°N 0.121461°E |
Campus | Urban |
Website | www |
Business school rankings | |
---|---|
Worldwide overall | |
QS | 7 |
Times Higher Education | 7 |
Worldwide MBA | |
Business Insider | 19 |
Economist | 62 |
Financial Times | 5 |
Cambridge Judge Business School is the business school of the University of Cambridge. The School is a provider of management education and is consistently ranked as one of the world's top business schools, with the Cambridge MBA programme ranked among the top in the world by Bloomberg, the Financial Times, BusinessInsider, US News & World Report and Forbes Magazine. It is named after Sir Paul Judge, a founding benefactor of the school.
The School is situated on the site of the Old Addenbrooke's Site on Trumpington Street, near the University's Fitzwilliam Museum.
The School was established in 1954 as Management Studies in the Engineering Department of the School of Technology.
In 1990 it became the Judge Institute for Management Studies. In 1991, benefactions from Sir Paul and Lady Judge, together with the Monument Trust, provided the funds for the construction of a building for the newly formed business school. Architect John Outram was appointed to the project. The building was completed in August 1995 and officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II.
The Judge Institute of Management Studies was renamed Judge Business School in September 2005. It adopted the title Cambridge Judge Business School during 2010, and revised its logo to read "University of Cambridge Judge Business School" rather than "Cambridge Judge Business School" in November 2010. It remains in the School of Technology, as an independent Department.
The full-time MBA is the flagship MBA programme of the University and roughly 150 MBA students attend the 12-month programme each year. Admissions standards are high, with an average Graduate Management Admission Test score of 710. The average age of students on the full-time MBA is 29.6 and generally students come with extensive work experience in distinguished firms. Currently 95% of students come from outside of the UK and approximately 30% of students are women.
MBA students from Cambridge Judge Business School and Oxford's Saïd Business School maintain a friendly rivalry and have numerous opportunities throughout the year to meet for athletic events and business conferences.