IAE Lille

IAE de Lille
Institut d'Administration des Entreprises de Lille
Motto Tout un monde de management
Type Public, Business School
Established 1956
Dean Pascal Philippart
Students 2300
Address

104, avenue du peuple Belge

59043 Lille Cedex, Lille, Nord, France
Affiliations University Lille 1: Sciences and Technologies
Website http://www.iae.univ-lille1.fr/
IAE de Lille - main entrance

IAE de Lille, also known as Institut d'Administration des Entreprises de Lille is the business school of Lille University of Science and Technology. It is also a component of the "Réseau des IAE", bringing together 33 similar business schools around France. Being one of the top French universities in management, school is highly internationalized and has an alumni network of 18,000 former students throughout the world.

IAE Lille is situated in old town of Lille.

IAE participates in Erasmus Programme and also maintains exchange agreements with several universities across Europe, Asia and America.

Admissions

Students are recruited after a bachelor's or master's degree from Public Universities, Grandes Ecoles, Grands Etablissements or equivalents. Candidates need to show very good academic records, pass an entrance examination, and show working knowledge of the French language.

Ranking

The IAE Lille has been ranked #10 Business school in France by Le Nouvel Economiste.[1]

History

The Institut d'Administration des Entreprises de Lille was established in 1956 by Gaston Berger. The vocation of the school is to provide skills in Management and Business Administration to executives and students from various backgrounds (in engineering, law, humanities...) and to offer advanced expertise to high potential professionals.

Undergraduate, Masters & Doctorate

Campus

In 1996 main campus was moved to a remodeled 18th century building in the Old town of Lille.

Research

IAE de Lille participates in the management research studies. About a hundred of researches work for Center of national scientific research in 5 topics:

External links

Coordinates: 50°38′47″N 3°03′44″E / 50.64639°N 3.06222°E / 50.64639; 3.06222

  1. Le Nouvel Economiste, issue 20/12/07
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