The Sciences Po Centre for History

The Sciences Po Centre for History was founded in 1984 and brings together all research and teaching in history at Sciences Po, doctoral studies included. The CHSP is primarily concerned with political history, understood in the broadest sense and approached from a transnational and comparative perspective.

The CHSP has implemented several changes in recent years. We have increased and internationalised our staff, broadened our fields of research on a European and global scale, extended our chronological range back to the early modern period, and stepped up multidisciplinary collaboration. We have fully integrated our PhD students into our research activities, placed greater emphasis on their professional training, and regularly host post-doctoral fellows and visiting researchers.

At the CHSP, research and teaching are closely linked and geared towards a multidisciplinary, international outlook. We have 26 permanent faculty members, 50 PhD students, several post-doctoral fellows and 32 affiliated researchers, accompanied by a research support team.

We maintain several partnerships for academic collaboration with research centres, networks, and associations at the international level, such as with the London School of Economics and King’s College. The CHSP is active in the CIVICA network, established in 2019 by several major European universities including Sciences Po.

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RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS

HISTOIRE@POLITIQUE (FR)

The latest publications

Yves LéonardSalazar. Le dictateur énigmatique, Perrin, 2024

Laurence Bertrand DorléacL'art de la défaite, Points Histoire, 2024 [poche]

M'hamed OualdiL'esclavage dans les mondes musulmans. Des premières traites aux traumatismes, Editions Amsterdam, 2024

Sébastien-Yves LaurentÉtat secret, État clandestin : essai sur la transparence démocratique, nrf essais, Gallimard, 2024. ▸ Actualité

 Histoire@Politique n° 51 2023 /3, "Écrire l'histoire politique aujourd'hui", sous la direction d'Alain Chatriot.

Sylvain KahnL'Europe face à l'Ukraine, PUF, 2024. 

Jean-Pierre FiliuComment la Palestine fut perdue. Et pourquoi Israël n'a pas gagné. Histoire d'un conflit (XIXe-XXIe siècle), Editions du Seuil, 2024. ▸ Actualité 

Louise Francezon, L'espionne de la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Pratiques et représentations d'une "masculinisation" de la femme, Préface d'Elissa Mailänder, PUR/Mmémosyne, 2024

Denis Lafay (dir.), Démocratia: "Une époque formidable 2023" au révélateur de l'IA, avec L. Berger, L. Bertrand Dorléac, ..., Cédric Villani, Editions de l'Aube, 2024

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