The AUP Magazine is full of alumni stories, and we’re always looking for new ideas and suggestions. If you have a story that you think would make a great article, don’t hesitate to reach out.
The AUP Magazine is full of alumni stories, and we’re always looking for new ideas and suggestions. If you have a story that you think would make a great article, don’t hesitate to reach out.
Designed to be more accessible, the all new AUP Magazine provides a glimpse of on-campus life and alumni achievement over the last 12 months. Published annually, the magazine brings you stories and updates from across the AUP community – with a special emphasis on our global alumni network, living and working in 145 countries worldwide.
We want every member of our global community to be able to stay in touch with AUP no matter where they are in the world. The revamped AUP Magazine therefore offers ways to reach out to fellow community members and share personal or professional stories – with a sleek new design that centers on beautiful imagery of AUP community life.
If you are an alum of The American University of Paris, you can sign up to receive a print copy of future magazine issues mailed to your home free of charge. Just fill in the webform below, and you’ll receive the magazine on your doorstep once a year.
The Fall 2023 issue of the AUP Magazine explores the University's founding principles of international cooperation and cultural exchange, highlighting their ongoing importance to our global community. How can we best forward these values as an institution and as a community in 2023 and beyond? You’ll also find the usual mix of highlights of on-campus events and alumni success stories, looking back at the past year, as well as updates from our worldwide alumni community via the Class Notes section.
Designed to be more accessible, the new look AUP Magazine provides a glimpse of on-campus life over the last year while also placing alumni contributions front and center. We want to let you know how you, as members of our worldwide community, can stay in touch with AUP no matter where you are. The magazine offers great ways to reach out to fellow alumni and share your stories – with a sleek new design that spotlights beautiful imagery of AUP community life.
For 60 years, The American University of Paris has delivered a quality global liberal arts education to students from across the world. To celebrate 60 years of our worldwide community, the Fall 2021 issue of the AUP Magazine focused on what unites us.
The Fall 2020 issue of the AUP Magazine shares with you some of the AUP community’s proudest moments over the year 2020 – moments of courage, perseverance and solidarity. We have learned and witnessed so much from each other, whether in response to Covid-19 or the Black Lives Matter movement.
The Fall 2019 issue of the AUP Magazine was devoted to the meaningful careers of AUP alumni. Global explorers from across the world contributed stories about the professional projects of which they are most proud.
In the Spring 2019 issue we looked at AUP's newest campus building, the Quai d'Orsay Learning Commons, and what it means to have such a building for the AUP community.
In the Fall 2018 issue, we shone a spotlight on our incredible faculty and their research within and beyond the AUP classroom. Professors from across departments contributed articles on everything from fake news to fashion studies.
In the Spring 2018 issue, we marked two great milestones with profiles of our Center for Writers and Translators and the Sustainable Development Practicum in India - both of which were celebrating their tenth anniversary.
In this 55th-anniversary issue in Spring 2017, we explored the latest changes on campus; got a close look at AUP's past, present, and future; and dove into the diverse projects led by alumni across the globe.
In the Spring 2016 issue, you could read a conversation with famed chef Daniel Rose ’00 about how he came to Paris from Chicago, discover the latest changes on AUP’s campus, and explore the many endeavors of Sultan Sooud Al-Qassemi ’98.