Dr chris hill biography

Professor Christopher Hill, FBA, M.A. DPhil (Oxon) joined the Department of Politics and International Studies (POLIS) in October 2004 as the Sir Patrick Sheehy Professor of International Relations. He was previously the Montague Burton Professor of International Relations from 1991 to 2004 at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He retired in September 2016 and since then has been Professor Emeritus of International Relations at POLIS. For the period 2017-2019 he has held the Wilson E. Schmidt Distinguished Chair of International Relations at the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), Johns Hopkins University, Bologna.

During his career he has also held visiting positions at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington DC, the Department of Government at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire, the European University Institute, Florence, the Università di Catania, the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, the University of California at San Diego, the Università di Siena and St. Antony’s Colleg

Christopher J. Hill

British political scientist

Christopher John HillFBA (born 20 November 1948) is an emeritus professor of international relations at the University of Cambridge.[1][2]

Education

Hill was educated at the University of Oxford where he received both his Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy degrees.[3]

Career and research

From 1974 to 2004 he taught in the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science where he was the Montague Burton Professor of International Relations from 1991. He was head of the Department of Politics and International Studies (POLIS) at Cambridge, 2012–14.

He has published widely in the areas of foreign policy analysis, European politics and general international relations. He is a past chair of the British International Studies Association, and was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 2007. He was a member of the RAE2008 Panel for Politics and International Studies.[4] From 2016 to 2019 he has been Wilson E. Schmidt Dist

Christopher T. Hill

American theoretical physicist

Christopher T. Hill (born June 19, 1951) is an American theoretical physicist, formerly of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, who did undergraduate work in physics at M.I.T. (B.S., M.S., 1972), and graduate work at Caltech (Ph.D., 1977, Murray Gell-Mann[1]). Hill's Ph.D. thesis, "Higgs Scalars and the Nonleptonic Weak Interactions" (1977) contains one of the first detailed discussions of the two-Higgs-doublet model and its impact upon weak interactions.[2] His work mainly focuses on new physics that can be probed in laboratory experiments or cosmology.

Hill is an originator, with William A. Bardeen and Manfred Lindner, of the idea that the Higgs boson is composed of top and anti-top quarks. This emerges from the concept of the top quarkinfrared fixed point,[3] with which Hill predicted (1981) that the top quark would be very heavy, contrary to most popular ideas at the time. The fixed point prediction lies within 20% of the observed top quark mass (1995). This implies that the top quar

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