Global Alliance in Management Education

CEMS – The Global Alliance in Management Education or CEMS (formerly the Community of European Management Schools and International Companies) is a cooperation of leading business schools and universities with multinational companies and NGOs. The CEMS Global Alliance includes 34 academic institutions on every continent, nearly 70 corporate partners and eight social partners (NGOs) from around the globe.[1] CEMS administers the delivery of the CEMS MIM degree in its member schools, supports the CEMS Alumni Association (CAA) and facilitates general cooperation among its members.

CEMS
Former name
Community of European Management Schools (and International Companies)
TypeNetwork
Established1988
ChairmanProfessor Gregory Whitwell, Dean of the University of Sydney Business School
Executive DirectorNicole de Fontaines
Academic staff
Combined from 34 schools
Students1300+ of 80+ nationalities (2019–20 cohort)
Location
34 countries across 6 continents
CampusMultiple sites
Alumni15,000+ (108 nationalities, work in over 75 countries)
Websitewww.cems.org

CEMS MIM

CEMS Master in International Management (CEMS MIM) is a one-year degree program for a select group of students at the member institutions, taught jointly by CEMS business schools and universities. Created in 1988 by founding members from the University of Cologne, HEC Paris, ESADE and the Bocconi University, it was the first supra-national MSc.[clarification needed][2] The aim of CEMS is to develop knowledge and provide education that is essential in the multilingual, multicultural and interconnected business world.[3]

The MIM Programme consists of three terms: two academic terms and one internship term. The two academic terms must be consecutive, while the internship term can take place at any time during the graduate period of studies. Students must spend at least two out of the three terms abroad.[4] In addition to completing one's home degree, graduation from CEMS also requires completion of a business project, skill seminars, an international internship, and two foreign language exams.

Each CEMS academic member has a limited number of places available. In many cases, schools have prerequisites to be admitted into the selection process, including a high-grade average and proof of language skills. The selection process typically requires the student to already be enrolled or selected for a Master of Business degree with a member university before applying for the CEMS MIM.[5] CEMS graduates receive a degree from their home institution as well as from CEMS.

Global ranking

The CEMS MIM has consistently ranked among the top 10 in the Masters in Management Ranking since 2005 by the Financial Times.[6][7]

201920182017201620152014201320122011201020092008200720062005
Financial Times Ranking89945732213223

Academic members

Schools offering the CEMS Master's in International Management (CEMS MIM):[8]

Country/regionSchoolCity
 JapanKeio University[9][10]Tokyo
 South KoreaKorea University Business SchoolSeoul
 ChinaTsinghua University School of Economics and ManagementBeijing
 Hong KongHKUST Business SchoolHong Kong
 SingaporeNational University of SingaporeSingapore
 IndiaIndian Institute of Management CalcuttaKolkata
 TurkeyKoç UniversityIstanbul
 AustraliaUniversity of Sydney Business SchoolSydney
 RussiaSaint Petersburg State University Graduate School of ManagementSt.Petersburg
 PolandSGH Warsaw School of EconomicsWarsaw
 Czech RepublicPrague University of Economics and BusinessPrague
 HungaryCorvinus University of BudapestBudapest
 FinlandAalto University School of BusinessHelsinki
 SwedenStockholm School of EconomicsStockholm
 NorwayNorwegian School of EconomicsBergen
 DenmarkCopenhagen Business SchoolFrederiksberg
 NetherlandsRotterdam School of Management, Erasmus UniversityRotterdam
 GermanyUniversity of CologneCologne
 BelgiumLouvain School of Management, UCLouvainLouvain-la-Neuve
 AustriaVienna University of Economics and BusinessVienna
 SwitzerlandUniversity of St. GallenSt. Gallen
 ItalyBocconi UniversityMilan
 FranceHEC ParisJouy-en-Josas
 SpainESADE Business SchoolBarcelona
 PortugalNova School of Business and EconomicsLisbon
 United KingdomLondon School of EconomicsLondon
 IrelandMichael Smurfit Graduate Business SchoolDublin
 EgyptThe American University in CairoCairo
 South AfricaUniversity of Cape Town Graduate School of BusinessCape Town
 CanadaIvey Business SchoolLondon
 United StatesCornell UniversityIthaca
 ColombiaUniversity of The AndesBogotá
 BrazilEscola de Administração de Empresas de São PauloSão Paulo
 ChileUniversidad Adolfo IbáñezSantiago

Corporate partners

Nearly 70 corporate partners contribute financially on an annual basis and provide the programme with human resources and input into the curriculum itself in each country they are based.[a]

Students are advised to arrange by themselves an internship partner which will accept the student intern for at least ten consecutive weeks. There are student visa requirements that each student takes responsibility to abide by, and the regulation varies by each local government.[4]

Social partners

The first CEMS social partners joined the organisation in December 2010. These are the first in a series of non-profits and NGOs that contribute to the alliance in a way identical to corporate partners (selection and admission of students, governance, curriculum delivery, proposal of internships and employment opportunities). This new initiative is part of a major sustainability drive from within CEMS. In the same vein, CEMS has also signed the PRME (Principles for Responsible Management Education) declaration.[12]

Alumni association

The CEMS Alumni Association (CAA), founded in 1993 by CEMS graduates, is an international network of CEMS graduates throughout the world. To date, there are nearly 16,000 CEMS alumni.[13] The Graduation Ceremony takes place each year during the CEMS Annual Events (usually at the end of November) which is hosted by one of the CEMS member schools.[14][15]

The CAA is led by an alumni board and is present in many countries through local committees of CEMS alumni. The local committees are responsible for keeping in contact with CEMS alumni and organizing professional and social activities. They meet regularly to discuss the activities and development of the association. The alumni board comprises the CAA President, the CEMS Executive Director, a representative of the CEMS Student Board, a representative of CEMS member schools, three local committee representatives, two senior alumni and two junior alumni. It proposes and develops initiatives to foster career and personal development opportunities for its alumni members and represents alumni interests on the CEMS Executive Board.

While students stay at partner universities, there are support groups called CEMS clubs through which CEMS students share their identities. The extended network of CEMS students spans schools across the world.[16]

Footnotes

Notes

References