释义 |
- Notable alumni Nobel laureates Academia, science, medicine and technology Athletics Business Government, public service and public policy Literature, arts and media
- Notable faculty
- Fictional alumni
- References
{{see also|Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health|Johns Hopkins School of Medicine|Whiting School of Engineering|Carey Business School|Johns Hopkins School of Nursing}}{{more citations needed|date=November 2012}}{{use mdy dates|date=November 2012}}This is a list of people affiliated with the Johns Hopkins University, an American university located in Baltimore, Maryland. Notable alumni Nobel laureates {{main|List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Johns Hopkins University}}- Peter Agre – Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 2003
- Richard Axel – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 2004
- J.M. Coetzee – Nobel Prize in Literature, 2003
- Joseph Erlanger – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1944
- Andrew Fire – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 2006
- Robert Fogel – Nobel Prize in Economics, 1993
- Herbert Spencer Gasser – Nobel Prize in Physiology, 1944
- Riccardo Giacconi – Nobel Prize in Physics, 2002
- Paul Greengard – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 2000
- Carol W. Greider – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 2009
- Haldan Keffer Hartline – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1967
- Merton H. Miller – Nobel Prize in Economics, 1990
- Thomas Hunt Morgan – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1933
- Robert H. Mundell – Nobel Prize in Economics, 1999
- Daniel Nathans – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1978
- Adam Riess – Nobel Prize in Physics, 2011
- Martin Rodbell – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1994
- Francis Peyton Rous – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1966
- Hamilton O. Smith – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1978
- George Hoyt Whipple – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1934
- Jody Williams – Nobel Peace Prize, 1997
- Woodrow Wilson – President of the United States, Nobel Peace Prize, 1919
Academia, science, medicine and technology - William Foxwell Albright – authenticator of the Dead Sea Scrolls, linguist, expert on ceramics
- Hattie Alexander – pediatrician and microbiologist
- Jack Andraka – cancer researcher; as a high school student, developed new test for detecting pancreatic cancer early
- John August Anderson – astronomer
- Richard T. Antoun – Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Binghamton University
- John W. Ayers - (Ph.D. 2011) behavioral epidemiologist
- Florence Bascom – geologist
- Richard E. Bellman – American applied mathematician; inventor of dynamic programming
- Harold H. Bender – professor of philology at Princeton University
- Vinod Bhakuni – biophysicist, Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar and N-BIOS laureate
- Frederick S. Billig – scramjet and hypersonics pioneer
- David S. Bredt – neuroscientist, professor and research leader in pharmaceutical companies
- Hilde Bruch – Professor of Psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, expert on eating disorders
- Ernesto Bustamante – (Ph.D. 1978, School of Medicine) Biochemist & Molecular Biologist, former Chief of the National Institute of Health of Peru
- Gabrielle M. Spiegel - Historian of the Middle Ages and former President of the American Historical Association
- Kim Butler - historian and author
- David Celentano, American epidemiologist
- Schuyler V. Cammann (Ph.D. 1949) – anthropologist
- Henry E. Chambers (Ph.D.) – Louisiana historian
- Dipankar Chatterji – Indian molecular biologist and Padma Shri recipient
- Harold F. Cherniss – noted historian of ancient philosophy
- William Chomsky – scholar of Hebrew and Judaic studies, father of Noam Chomsky
- Denton Cooley – cardiovascular surgeon
- Segun Toyin Dawodu – former Associate Professor in the Department of Pain Medicine at Albany Medical College and currently Attending Interventional Physiatrist at WellSpan Health; physician, entrepreneur, journalist, attorney
- John Dewey – philosopher, psychologist, and educational reformer
- William H. Dobelle – biomedical researcher
- Wendell E. Dunn – educator and principal of Forest Park High School
- G. Roger Edwards – archaeologist
- Jessica Einhorn – Dean of SAIS, managing director of the World Bank
- Daniel Eisenberg (B.A.), Distinguished Research Professor of Spanish at Florida State University
- Luther P. Eisenhart – mathematician, theoretical physicist
- Joel Elkes – psychopharmaceutical researcher
- Adam Falk – President of Williams College
- James M. Farr – President of the University of Florida
- Rabbi Dr. Emanuel Feldman – rabbi emeritus of Congregation Beth Jacob of Atlanta
- John Charles Fields – mathematician, established Fields Medal
- Linda P. Fried – geriatrician and epidemiologist, dean of Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health
- William K. George – fluid dynamicist
- George Otto Gey – scientist, propagated the HeLa cell line, inventor of the roller drum
- Solomon W. Golomb – mathematician, invented the Golomb coding and Golomb ruler
- Harry Clinton Gossard – geometer, discoverer of the Gossard perspector of a triangle
- Duane Graveline – astronaut
- Michael Griffin – administrator, NASA
- Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg
- L. Emmett Holt Jr. – pediatrician
- Jason Huang - neurosurgeon
- Ru Chih C. Huang - biochemist[1]
- Grover Hutchins – pathologist
- Ray Hyman – Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Oregon, author, magician and a noted critic of parapsychology
- James H. Hyslop (1854–1920) – professor of ethics and logic at Columbia University; psychical researcher; secretary-treasurer of the American Society for Psychical Research
- Kate Breckenridge Karpeles (1887-1941) (MD 1914) – U. S. Army doctor during World War I
- Kenneth H. Keller – Director of the SAIS Bologna Center, former President of the University of Minnesota system
- Cornelius M. Kerwin – President of American University
- Charles Rollin Keyes – geologist
- Steven Knapp – President of George Washington University
- Christine Ladd-Franklin – scientist and logician
- Steven Lehrer – medical researcher and writer
- Ruey-Shiung Lin (Dr.P.H., 1977) – Taiwanese public health and epigenetics scientist; Professor emeritus at National Taiwan University
- Thomas H. Maren MD – inventor of the drug Trusopt
- Howard Markel – pediatrician and historian of medicine
- John Mauchly – co-inventor of the ENIAC Computer
- Michael Merzenich – Professor emeritus neuroscientist, brain researcher, CEO Scientific Learning, Posit Science[2]
- Bessie Moses – gynecologist and obstetrician
- Yūjirō Motora – psychologist
- Mike Muuss – author of Ping
- George Nemhauser – American operations researcher, the A. Russell Chandler III Chair and Institute Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology and the former president of the Operations Research Society of America
- Michael J. Neufeld – historian, curator of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
- Frank Oppenheimer – physicist, worked on the Manhattan Project
- Fernando Picó (Ph.D. 1970) – historian, Jesuit priest, expert on the history of Puerto Rico[3]
- Charles Lane Poor – astronomer
- Kanury Venkata Subba Rao – immunologist, Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar (1997) laureate
- Nicholas P. Restifo – tumor immunology and immunotherapy
- Justin B. Ries (Ph.D. 2005) – geoscientist and inventor known for discoveries in the field of global oceanic change
- Thomas Milton Rivers – virologist, United States Navy Admiral
- Arye Rosen – electrical engineer
- Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt
- Saurabh Saha – cancer researcher
- Gail G. Shapiro – pediatric allergist
- Louise L. Sloan – ophthalmologist and vision scientist
- Clifford V. Smith, Jr. – fourth chancellor of University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
- Aage B. Sørensen – sociologist
- Harry L. Swinney – physicist, Director of the Center for Nonlinear Dynamics at the University of Texas at Austin
- Ibrahim B. Syed – radiologist
- Morris Tanenbaum – physical chemist, Developed the first working silicon transistor on January 26, 1954
- Michael E. Thomas – professor of industrial engineering, former acting president of the Georgia Institute of Technology
- Frederick Jackson Turner – historian
- Robert Ulanowicz – theoretical ecologist
- Thorstein Veblen – economist, author, The Theory of the Leisure Class
- George W. Ward – third principal of Maryland State Normal School (now Towson University)
- John B. Watson – psychologist
- Reid Wiseman – American and NASA Astronaut as part of Expedition 40.
- Morris A. Wessel – pediatrician, pioneer of hospice care, discoverer of colic
- Henry S. West – fourth principal of Maryland State Normal School (now Towson University)
- John Archibald Wheeler – physicist, graduate advisor to Richard Feynman and Kip Thorne, coined the term "black hole"
- Abel Wolman – inventor of modern water treatment techniques
- Bang Wong – Creative director of the Broad Institute at MIT and Harvard University
- Frank H. Wu – Chancellor and Dean of UC Hastings College of the Law; law professor; author
- John H. Yardley – pathologist
Athletics - Louis Clarke – Olympic track champion
- Andy Enfield – University of Southern California men's basketball head coach
- Hall Gardner - Professor of International Politics at the American University of Paris
- Henry Homer Gessler – Major League Baseball player, 1903–1911
- Kyle Harrison – three-time All-American lacrosse player at JHU and Major League Lacrosse player
- Davey Johnson – Major League Baseball player and manager
- Marc Kligman – sports agent and criminal lawyer
- Andrea Leand (MBA) – professional tennis player
- Alex Mullen – three-time world memory champion (2015–17)
- Dave Pietramala – Johns Hopkins lacrosse coach
- Paul Rabil – All-American lacrosse player and MLL Most Valuable Player
- William C. Schmeisser – "Father Bill", National Lacrosse Hall of Fame inductee
- Robert H. Scott – Johns Hopkins lacrosse coach, athletic director, author
- John Thomas – Led lacrosse team to a 34–6 record during his time at JHU
- John Tucker – head coach of Washington Bayhawks professional lacrosse team
- Neil Vranis – USL 2 professional soccer player
- Joanna Zeiger (born 1970) - Olympic and world champion triathlete, and author
- Don Zimmerman – UMBC lacrosse coach
Business - Sanju Bansal (M.S. 1990) - co-founder of MicroStrategy
- Scott M. Black - founder, Delphi Management
- Michael Bloomberg (B.S. 1964) - founder of Bloomberg L.P., Mayor of New York City
- David S. Cordish (B.A. 1960, M.L.A 1965) - real estate developer, Chairman and CEO of the Cordish Company
- Paul L. Cordish - attorney and businessman, former member of the Maryland House of Delegates and founder of the Cordish Law Firm, serving as the legal arm of the Cordish Company
- Henry Gantt - eponymous designer of the Gantt chart
- John Hewson - Chairman of General Security Australia Insurance Brokers Pty Ltd
- David M. Hoffman - CEO of Internews Network
- Terry Keenan (B.A., A&S 1983) - business columnist for the New York Post, anchor for CNN
- Jeong H. Kim - President of Bell Labs
- Shahal M. Khan - Owner of Plaza Hotel and venture capitalist
- Rahmi Koç – Chairman of Koç Holding, Turkey's largest and oldest conglomerate
- Robert Lawrence Kuhn - corporate strategist, investment banker, adviser to Chinese leaders
- Christopher Hoiles Lee - Founder of AIG Highstar Capital; Chairman of Ports America
- Barry Lowenkron (MS '77) - Vice President, Global Security & Sustainability, MacArthur Foundation
- Edmund C. Lynch (B.A. 1907) - co-founder, Merrill Lynch
- Sol Kumin (B.A. 1999) - Founder of Folger Hill Asset Management, philanthropist, and winning thoroughbred racehorse owner.
- Peter Magowan - owner of the San Francisco Giants and CEO of Safeway
- John C. Malone - (MA. 1964; PhD. 1967) Chairman of Liberty Media, and CEO of Discovery Holding Company
- Robert D. Manning - financial expert in consumer credit, author of Credit Card Nation
- Michael Marcus - commodities trader
- Dave McClure - Founder of 500 Startups
- Gail J. McGovern (B.A. 1974) - President and CEO of the American Red Cross[4]
- Bill Miller - Chairman and Chief Investment Officer of Legg Mason Capital Management
- Gordon Earle Moore - co-founder and Chairman Emeritus of Intel Corporation; the author of Moore's Law
- Edward L. Morse - Global Head of Commodities Research at Citigroup, Co-Founder of PFC Energy
- Samuel J. Palmisano - IBM, Chairman and former president and CEO
- Karen Peetz (MS ’81) - President, BNY Mellon[5]
- Leslie Sanchez - founder and CEO of Impacto Group LLC
- David Sifry - founder, CEO of Technorati
- Bill Stromberg – CEO of T. Rowe Price and only Johns Hopkins player in the College Football Hall of Fame (inducted 2004)
- Gary Wang - founder, CEO, Tudou ({{zh |s=土豆网 |t=土豆網 |p=Tǔdòu Wǎng}})
- Zhu Min - Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, former officer of the Bank of China and the People's Bank of China
Government, public service and public policy - Dr. Chen Chien-jen – Vice President of Taiwan (2016-); former Minister of Health, VP and Academician of national academic institute (Academia Sinica)
- Dr. Chang Po-ya – President of the Control Yuan, Republic of China (Taiwan, 2014-); former Chairperson of the Central Election Commission, Minister of the Interior concurrently as Taiwan Provincial Governor, Minister of Health
- Mahamat Ali Adoum – Foreign Affairs minister, ambassador from Chad
- Sahibzada Khan - Pakistan's High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Former Chief of Protocol of Pakistan[6]
- Spiro T. Agnew – Vice President of the United States, former Governor of Maryland
- Madeleine Albright – Secretary of State under President Bill Clinton
- Peter F. Allgeier – Deputy U.S. Trade Representative
- Niels Annen - member of the Bundestag, the German national parliament
- Nurul Izzah Anwar – Malaysian member of Parliament and daughter of Anwar Ibrahim
- Newton D. Baker – mayor of Cleveland (1912–1915), and US Secretary of War (1916–1921)
- David C. Litt - Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates[7]
- Juan Carlos Pinzón - Ambassador of Colombia to the United States and former Colombian Minister of Defence
- Bandar bin Sultan – Saudi Arabia's former Ambassador to the United States
- Arthur F. Bentley – political scientist and philosopher
- Michael Bloomberg – founder of Bloomberg L.P., Mayor of New York City
- Paul Bomani – Tanzanian politician and ambassador
- Richard Hecklinger - Former U.S. Ambassador to Thailand and former Deputy Secretary General of the OECD[8]
- Rudy Boschwitz – Republican Senator from Minnesota (1978-1991)
- Rust Macpherson Deming - Former U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia, former U.S. Deputy Chief of Mission Japan, and recipient of the Order of the Rising Sun
- John E. Herbst - Former U.S. Ambassador to Uzbekistan and, later, to Ukraine
- Seema Verma - Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, serving in the Trump Administration.
- Daniel B. Brewster – Democratic Senator from Maryland (1963–1969)
- Jean de Ruyt - Former ambassador of Belgium to the United Nations and, later, to the European Union. Additionally, former ambassador to Italy and Albania.
- Cresencio S. Arcos Jr. - Former U.S. Ambassador to Honduras and former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs
- Charles Hillman Brough – Democratic Governor of Arkansas (1917–1921)
- Kurt Volker - Current U.S. Special Representative for Ukraine and former U.S. Ambassador to NATO
- R. Nicholas Burns – U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, former U.S. Ambassador to NATO and Greece
- Harold W. Geisel - Former U.S. Ambassador to Mauritius and former Acting Inspector General of the Department of State[9]
- Ron Capps – author, former Foreign Service Officer, and founder and director of the Veterans Writing Project
- Aneesh Chopra – President Obama's Chief Technology Officer of the United States
- Robert Stephen Ford - Retired American diplomat, and former U.S. Ambassador to Algeria and, later, Syria.
- Benjamin R. Civiletti – Attorney General of the United States under President Jimmy Carter
- William F. Clinger, Jr. – Congressman from Pennsylvania, 1979–97
- Haris Lalakos - Ambassador of Greece to the United States, former Ambassador of Greece to the Republic of Macedonia[10]
- Poya Chang – former minister of health of Taiwan
- Arturo Sarukhán - Former ambassador of Mexico to the United States
- Rafael Hernández Colón – Governor of Puerto Rico
- Nicholas Platt - Former U.S. Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Pakistan, Philippines, Zambia, high level diplomat in Canada, China, Hong Kong, and Japan, and former president of the Asia Society in New York City.
- Anne E. Derse – American Ambassador to Lithuania, former Ambassador to Azerbaijan
- Lawrence Di Rita – Pentagon spokesperson
- Cameron Munter - CEO & President of The EastWest Institute, and former U.S. Ambassador to Serbia and, later, Pakistan
- Sheila Dixon – former president of Baltimore City council, Mayor of Baltimore (2007–2010)
- James B. Eldridge – member of the Mass. House of Representatives (2002–present)
- Andy Harris – member of the United States House of Representatives, Maryland's 1st congressional district
- William J. Frank – member of Maryland House of Delegates
- David B. Shear - Former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs and former U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam
- Frank Gaffney – founder and President of the Center for Security Policy
- Elizabeth Davenport McKune - Former U.S. Ambassador to Qatar[11]
- Jennifer Galt – current United States Ambassador to Mongolia
- Ibrahim Gambari – Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations
- Anne Casper - U.S. Ambassador to Burundi and former Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Rwanda[12]
- Jeffrey Garten – Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade and Dean of the Yale School of Management
- Timothy F. Geithner – President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Treasury Secretary of the United States
- April Glaspie – diplomat, first woman to be appointed an American ambassador to an Arab country
- Dr. Nancy S. Grasmick – Maryland State Superintendent of Schools
- Jorge Skinner-Klee - Ambassador of Guatemala to the United Nations, former ambassador to Belgium and Luxembourg, and former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs.[13]
- Wang Guangya – China's Ambassador to the United Nations
- Geir H. Haarde – former Prime Minister of Iceland
- John J. Hamre – President and CEO of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, former U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense
- Martin G. Brennan - Former U.S. Ambassador to Uganda and Zambia[14]
- Andrew P. Harris – United States Representative from Maryland
- Alger Hiss – State Department official, lawyer and Soviet spy
- Hans Hoogervorst – the Netherlands' Minister of Public Health, Minister of Finance
- Constance Horner – official in the Reagan and first Bush administrations; formerly with the Johns Hopkins Center for the Study of American Government
- Chang-beom Kim - Former Ambassador of South Korea to the European Union and Belgium[15]
- Jauhar Saleem - Ambassador of Pakistan to Germany
- James Howard Holmes – former U.S. Ambassador to Latvia, now State Department special adviser
- David Jacobson – former United States Ambassador to Canada
- Sam Katz – politician from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Mohammad Zubair Khan – former Commerce Minister of Pakistan
- Henry A. Crumpton - Ambassador-at-large, former chief of the CIA's National Resources Division, and author of The Art of Intelligence: Lessons from a Life in the CIA's Clandestine Service[16]
- Tomi Kōra – Councillor in the Japanese House of Councillors
- Richard Bernal - Former ambassador of Jamaica to the United States and former Permanent Representative of Jamaica to the Organization of American States
- Frank Lavin – U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade, former U.S. Ambassador to Singapore
- Samuel W. Lewis – former U.S. Ambassador to Israel and U.S. Ambassador at the Camp David Accord talks in 1978
- Dennis P. Lockhart – President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
- Barry Lowenkron – Vice President of the Program on Global Security & Sustainability at the MacArthur Foundation
- Raymond Mabus – 75th United States Secretary of the Navy
- Sir David Manning – British Ambassador to Israel, foreign policy adviser to Tony Blair, British Ambassador to the United States
- Scott McCallum – 43rd Governor of Wisconsin
- Gail J. McGovern – President and CEO of the American Red Cross
- John E. McLaughlin – Director of Central Intelligence
- Bernard Membe – Tanzanian Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation
- Kweisi Mfume – former President of the NAACP, former Congressman from Maryland
- John S. Morgan – former Maryland Delegate
- Eva Moskowitz – founder and the Chief Executive Officer of Success Charter Network and Harlem Success Academy
- Donald F. Munson – Maryland State Senator
- Irvin B. Nathan - Attorney General of the District of Columbia, General Counsel of the United States House of Representatives
- Antonia Novello – United States Surgeon General (1990–1993)
- Bruce J. Oreck – U.S. Ambassador to Finland
- John E. Osborn – Commissioner, U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy
- Neilesh Patel – humanitarian, National Jefferson Award Recipient
- Kevin B. Quinn – Chief Executive Officer and Administrator of the Maryland Transit Administration
- George L. P. Radcliffe – U.S. Senator from Maryland (1935–1947)
- Miguel Castilla - Peruvian economist and politician, former Minister of Economy and Finance, and former ambassador of Peru to the United States
- Peter Rheinstein – FDA official
- Leslie Sanchez – political pundit and commentator
- Christopher B. Shank – Maryland House of Delegates (1999–present)
- Frederic N. Smalkin – Chief United States District Judge for Maryland (2001–2003)
- Mary Ann Peters - Senior U.S. Diplomat, former U.S. Ambassador to Bangladesh, former provost of the United States Naval War College, and CEO of the Carter Center
- Christopher Soghoian – Washington, DC based privacy researcher and activist
- George O. Squier – Chief Signal Officer of the United States Army during World War I
- Michael S. Steele – Lieutenant Governor of Maryland (2003–2007), head of the RNC (2009–2011)
- Takuya Tasso – governor of Iwate Prefecture in Japan
- Ali Akbar Velayati – former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iran
- Amos Griswold Warner – social worker, first head of charity for the District of Columbia
- Woodrow Wilson – President of the United States
- Abdul Zahir - Prime Minister of Afghanistan
- Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein – Jordan's permanent representative to the United Nations
- Elias Zerhouni – Director of the National Institutes of Health
- Zhu Min – Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund
- Craig Zucker – member of the Maryland House of Delegates
- Makan Delrahim – Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice.
- Lauren Underwood – U.S. Representative for Illinois's 14th congressional district.
Literature, arts and media - Arthur Talmage Abernethy – journalist, theologian, minister, first North Carolina Poet Laureate
- Keith Ablow – Fox News contributor
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie – Author and winner of MacArthur Award
- Dan Ahdoot – standup comedian
- Jeff Altman – standup comedian
- Chris Arnade - former Wall Street trader turned documentarian and commentator
- Tori Amos – singer (Peabody Conservatory)
- John Astin – actor, Gomez Addams on The Addams Family
- Harriet Baber - professor of philosophy and writer for The Guardian.
- Russell Baker – author, New York Times reporter, Pulitzer Prize winner, host of Masterpiece Theatre
- Andy Barth – Baltimore TV reporter for 35 years, retired to run for Congress
- John Barth – novelist
- Jeffrey Blitz – writer / director, notably of the 2007 film Rocket Science
- Wolf Blitzer – CNN news anchor
- Paul Harris Boardman – film producer and screenwriter
- Denis Boyles – writer, journalist
- Matt Briggs – novelist
- Rachel Carson – environmentalist, author of Silent Spring
- Angelin Chang – Grammy Award-winning classical pianist
- Iris Chang – author, Rape of Nanking
- C. J. Cherryh – author
- J.D. Considine – music critic
- Richard Ben Cramer – journalist, author of What It Takes, Pulitzer Prize winner
- Wes Craven – film director, producer
- Richard Harding Davis – journalist who covered the Spanish–American War and World War I (attended from 1885–86)
- Caleb Deschanel – cinematographer
- Michael Dumanis – poet and editor
- Mildred Dunnock – film and stage actress
- David Hildebrand – Maryland musicologist and colonial period music performer
- Hallie Jackson – news reporter for MSNBC
- Millard Kaufman – Oscar-nominated screenwriter of "Bad Day at Black Rock" and "Take the High Ground!"
- Murray Kempton – Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- Quint Kessenich – ESPN sportscaster, lacrosse All-American
- Porochista Khakpour – novelist
- Rjyan Kidwell – musician
- Kevin Kilner – actor
- Alen Pol Kobryn – poet
- Alan Lakein – author of books on personal time management, including How to Get Control of Your Time and Your Life
- Sidney Lanier – musician and poet
- David Lipsky – contributing editor, Rolling Stone; author of Absolutely American
- Megan Morrone – TechTV personality
- Wes Moore – American author, social entrepreneur, producer, political analyst and Author of two New York Times Bestsellers.
- Walter Murch – Oscar-winning sound and film editor
- Loriann H. Oberlin – writer/author
- Sidney Offit – writer/author
- P. J. O'Rourke – political satirist and journalist
- Arlene Raven – author and art critic, professor
- Matthew Robbins – screenwriter of "The Sugarland Express" and "MacArthur"
- James Rosen – Fox News Channel Washington correspondent
- Deborah Rudacille – writer
- Brad Rutter – all-time Jeopardy! champion
- Gil Scott-Heron – political musician, poet and author (Masters Course)
- Laurence Shanet – award-winning commercial, film and theater director
- Karl Shapiro – U.S. Poet Laureate (1946), Pulitzer Prize winner (attended but did not graduate)
- Howard "Chip" Silverman – author, lacrosse coach
- Russ Smith – founder of Baltimore City Paper, Washington City Paper, and New York Press
- Gertrude Stein – feminist, author
- Susan Stewart – poet and literary critic
- Bill Todman – game show producer
- Juliette Wells – author, editor and Jane Austen scholar
- Eleanor Wilner – poet
Notable faculty - Herbert Baxter Adams – historian, coined phrase "political science"
- Peter Agre – chemist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 2003
- Fouad Ajami – Professor of Middle Eastern studies at SAIS and Director of the Council on Foreign Relations
- William Foxwell Albright – authenticator of the Dead Sea Scrolls, linguist, expert on ceramics
- Ethan Allen Andrews – biologist
- Christian B. Anfinsen – Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1972
- John Astin – television actor (The Addams Family), lecturer in the Johns Hopkins Writing Seminars department
- James Mark Baldwin – philosopher
- Gabrielle M. Spiegel - Historian of the Middle Ages and Former President of the American Historical Association
- John W. Baldwin – medievalist, member of the French Academy
- Florence E. Bamberger – professor of education, director of the College for Teachers
- John Barth – novelist
- Touqir Hussain - Former Ambassador of Pakistan to Brazil, Spain, and Japan, former Diplomatic Adviser to the Prime Minister of Pakistan.[17]
- Charles L. Bennett – astrophysicist, Principal Investigator of the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP)
- Peter Bergen – CNN terrorism analyst and author of Holy War, Inc.
- Richard Bett – philosopher, former Executive Director of APA
- Karin J. Blakemore – medical geneticist
- Husain Haqqani - Author, Former Ambassador of Pakistan to the United States[18]
- Alfred Blalock – Lasker Prize–winning surgeon
- Eric Brill – computer scientist
- Max Broedel – medical illustrator and founder of the first US medical illustration graduate program
- Harold Brown – Secretary of Defense, 1977–1981
- Zbigniew Brzezinski – National Security Advisor, 1977–1981
- Nicholas Murray Butler – Nobel Peace Prize, 1931
- David P. Calleo – Director of European Studies, author of Rethinking Europe's Future
- Benjamin Carson – former Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital, author of Gifted Hands
- Arthur Cayley – mathematician
- William G. Cochran – statistician
- J.M. Coetzee – Nobel Prize in Literature, 2003
- Shirin R. Tahir-Kheli - Political scientist, first U.S. Ambassador for Women's Empowerment, former Senior Advisor to the Secretary of State on United Nations Reform, and former Senior Director for Democracy, Human Rights and International Operations at the White House National Security Council
- Eliot A. Cohen – Director of Strategic Studies at SAIS, Advisor to the U.S. Secretary of Defense
- Jared Cohon – President of Carnegie Mellon University, former Assistant and Associate Dean of Engineering at Johns Hopkins
- William E. Connolly – influential political theorist
- Thomas M. Cooley – appointed 1877, Michigan Supreme Court Justice, 1864–1885, namesake of Thomas M. Cooley Law School, also a Dean of University of Michigan Law School[19]
- W. Max Corden – trade economist, developed Dutch disease model
- Robert J. Cotter – chemist and mass spectrometrist
- Richard Threlkeld Cox – physicist, Cox's theorem
- Thomas Craig – mathematician
- Tyler Cymet – physician
- Maqbool Dada – professor of operations management
- Veena Das – feminist anthropologist
- Steven R. David – international relations
- George Delahunty – Physiologist, endocrinologist, and Lilian Welsh Professor of Biology at Goucher College
- Flavio Delbono – economist, mayor of Bologna
- Samuel Denmeade - Professor of Oncology, Urology and Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences at the School of Medicine.[20]
- Jacques Derrida – philosopher
- Daniel Deudney – international relations
- Stephen Dixon – most prolific American short story writer
- David A. Dodge – former Governor, Bank of Canada; Co-Chairman, the Global Market Monitoring Group of Institute of International Finance; Chairman, C.D. Howe Institute; Chairman, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research; former Associate Professor of Canadian Studies and International Economics at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University
- Thomas Dolby – musician, film score composer, and music technology entrepreneur
- Vincent du Vigneaud – Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1955
- Acheson J. Duncan – statistician, winner of the Shewhart Medal
- Ward Edwards – American psychologist, prominent for work on decision theory and on the formulation and revision of beliefs.
- Jessica Einhorn – former dean of SAIS, managing director of the World Bank
- Paul H. Emmett – chemical engineer, Manhattan Project
- George L. Engel – psychiatrist, best known for the formulation of the biopsychosocial model
- Joseph Erlanger – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1944
- Andrew Fire – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 2006
- Marisa Lino - Former U.S. Ambassador to Albania and former director of the Bologna Center of the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies
- Henry Jones Ford – political scientist and journalist
- P. M. Forni – co-founder and current director of the Civility Initiative at Johns Hopkins
- James Franck – Nobel Prize in Physics, 1925
- John K. Frost – cytopathologist, founder and director of the Division of Cytopathology at Hopkins
- Francis Fukuyama – political economist, author The End of History
- Donald Geman – statistician
- Ashraf Ghani – President of Afghanistan, 2014–present
- Riccardo Giacconi – Nobel Prize in Physics, 2002; National Medal of Science, 2003
- Robert Stephen Ford - Retired American diplomat, and former U.S. Ambassador to Algeria and, later, Syria.
- Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve – classical scholar
- Maria Goeppert-Mayer – Nobel Prize in Physics, 1963
- Michael Griffin – former NASA Administrator (2005–2009)
- Stanislav Grof – psychologist
- G. Stanley Hall – pioneer in the field of psychology, founding president of Clark University
- William Stewart Halsted – founding head of the Department of Surgery
- Steve H. Hanke – economist, United States Presidential advisor, Cato Institute senior fellow
- Haldan Keffer Hartline – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1967
- David Harvey (until 2001) – geographer
- Robert Herman – founding father of the field of transportation science
- Christian A. Herter, Jr. – former U.S. Secretary of State and Governor of Massachusetts
- John L. Holland – psychologist who developed the RIASEC career model
- Roger Horn – co-developed the Bateman-Horn conjecture and wrote the standard-issue Matrix Analysis textbook with Charles Royal Johnson
- Hans-Hermann Hoppe – economist
- Ralph H. Hruban – pathologist
- David H. Hubel – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1971
- Rufus Isaacs – game theorist, winner of Frederick W. Lanchester Prize
- Nathan Jacobson – mathematician
- Kay Redfield Jamison – Professor of Psychiatry
- Frederick Jelinek – pioneer in automatic speech recognition and natural language processing
- Ellis L. Johnson – Professor Emeritus and the Coca-Cola Chaired Professor in the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology
- Kenneth H. Keller – President of the University of Minnesota system
- Howard Atwood Kelly – founding head of the Department of Gynecology
- Hugh Kenner – Andrew Mellon professor of humanities 1973–1990, literary critic, expert on Ezra Pound and James Joyce, and popular writer on computing
- Benjamin Ginsberg - Libertarian Political Scientist and Professor
- Majid Khadduri – Professor of Islamic Law and Middle East specialist
- Kunihiko Kodaira – mathematician, Fields Medal winner
- Anne O. Krueger – Managing Director of the IMF and World Bank Chief Economist
- Simon Kuznets – Nobel Prize in Economics, 1971
- Sidney Lanier
- Albert L. Lehninger – author of a long-time standard biochemistry textbook
- Robert C. Lieberman – political scientist
- Paul Linebarger – author known as Cordwainer Smith
- Alfred J. Lotka – mathematician and statistician
- Arthur Oncken Lovejoy – philosopher, founder of the Journal of the History of Ideas
- Marty Makary – physician
- Nina Marković – physicist and professor
- Elmer McCollum – professor and biochemist, co-discovered vitamins A, B, and D
- Alice McDermott – novelist, National Book Award, 1998
- Victor A. McKusick – medical geneticist, author of Mendelian Inheritance in Man
- Merton H. Miller – Nobel Prize in Economics, 1990
- George Richards Minot – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1934
- Jack Morava – mathematician
- Frank Morley – mathematician
- Harmon Northrop Morse – chemist, Avogadro Medal 1916
- Robert H. Mundell – Nobel Prize in Economics, 1999
- Azar Nafisi – Muslim feminist and author
- Daniel Nathans – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1978
- Simon Newcomb – astronomer and mathematician
- John Niparko – surgeon and scientist specializing in cochlear implants
- Paul H. Nitze – diplomat, principal author NSC 68, co-founder of SAIS
- Santa J. Ono – 15th President & Vice-Chancellor, University of British Columbia; 28th President, University of Cincinnati; Immunologist
- Lars Onsager – Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1968
- Sir William Osler – founding head of the Department of Medicine
- Sidney Painter – medievalist
- Edwards A. Park—Chief-of-Pediatrics in the Harriet Lane Home, proofed the cause of rickets
- Robert G. Parr – theoretical chemist
- Henry Paulson – former U.S. Treasury Secretary (2006–2009)
- Ronald Paulson – English specialist
- Charles Sanders Peirce – logician
- J.G.A. Pocock – Harry C. Black Professor of History Emeritus
- Matthew Porterfield – Film Director and Professor of Film
- Ayn Rand – author, The Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged; visiting lecturer - 1961
- Mark M. Ravitch - surgeon
- Stuart C. Ray – HIV researcher
- Ira Remsen – chemist, discoverer of saccharin
- Francisco Rico Manrique – visiting professor of Spanish, 1966-1967
- Riordan Roett – political scientist and Latin America specialist
- Richard S. Ross – cardiologist; former dean of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
- Henry Augustus Rowland – physicist
- Avi Rubin – head of the ACCURATE organization, established to solve the problem of secure electronic voting
- Pedro Salinas – Spanish poet, Turnbull Professor
- Karl Shapiro – professor of poetry, former U.S. Poet Laureate
- Vyacheslav Shokurov – mathematician
- Robert Skidelsky – economist, biographer of John Maynard Keynes
- Hamilton O. Smith – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1978
- R. Jeffrey Smith – Pulitzer Prize winner
- Paul Smolensky – cognitive scientist; authored Optimality Theory
- Solomon H. Snyder – National Medal of Science, 2003
- Julian Stanley - Professor of Psychology; Founder of the Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth (SMPY)
- Sir Richard Stone – Nobel Prize in Economics, 1984
- Mark Strand – 1990–1991 US Poet Laureate, Pulitzer Prize winner
- Raman Sundrum – physicist
- Kathleen M. Sutcliffe – Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Business and Medicine
- James Joseph Sylvester – mathematician
- Vivien Thomas – co-developer of the Blalock-Thomas-Taussig shunt, along with Alfred Blalock and Helen Taussig.
- Clifford Truesdell – mathematician, natural philosopher, historian of mathematics
- Harold Clayton Urey – Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1934
- Henry N. Wagner – pioneer in nuclear medicine
- Kameshwar C. Wali – physicist, member of Johns Hopkins Society of Scholars from 1980
- John Walker – concert organist (Peabody Conservatory)
- Bruce W. Wardropper – Hispanist, Spanish refugee, scholar of Spanish drama
- David B. Weishampel – paleontologist, author of The Dinosauria 2004
- William H. Welch – founding head of the Department of Pathology
- James Edward Maceo West – National Medal of Technology, 2006
- George Hoyt Whipple – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1934
- Chester Wickwire – Chaplain emeritus and humanist
- Torsten Wiesel – Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1981
- Michael Williams – philosopher
- Paul Wolfowitz – President, World Bank, former United States Deputy Secretary of Defense, former Dean of SAIS
- Barry Wood – microbiologist and physician
- Robert W. Wood – experimental physicist
- Elias Zerhouni – Director of the National Institutes of Health
- Barbara Landau – Cognitive Scientist, leading authority on Williams Syndrome
Fictional alumni{{see also|Johns Hopkins University in popular culture}}- Dr. Ellie Bartlet – daughter of President Josiah Bartlet in the television series The West Wing
- Dr. Preston Burke – cardiothoracic surgeon on the television series Grey's Anatomy
- Dr. Perry Cox – main character of the television series Scrubs
- Dr. Julius Hibbert – family doctor on The Simpsons
- Dr. Gregory House – main character of the television series House
- Lena - professor and biologist in Annihilation, based on the novel by Jeff VanderMeer
- Dr. Hannibal Lecter – psychiatrist and cannibalistic serial killer in The Silence of the Lambs, based on the novel by Thomas Harris
- Dr. John Prentice – doctor played by Sidney Poitier in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner[21]
References 1. ^IS Abd-Elazem, HS Chen, RB Bates, RCC Huang (2002). "Isolation of two highly potent and non-toxic inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase from Salvia miltiorrhiza." Antiviral Res. 55:91-106. 2. ^{{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Dr. Michael M. Merzenich | work = | publisher = Scientific Learning Corporation | date = 1997–2009 | url = http://www.scilearn.com/our-approach/our-scientists/merzenich/index.php | format = | doi = | accessdate = January 2, 2009}} 3. ^{{cite news |first=|last=|title=Historian Fernando Picó Passes Away |url=https://repeatingislands.com/2017/06/27/historian-fernando-pico-passes-away/ |work=Repeating Islands |publisher= |date=2017-06-27 |accessdate=2017-07-17}} 4. ^{{cite press release | title = Gail J. McGovern Biography | publisher = The American Red Cross | date = 2008-04-08 | url = http://www.redcross.org/gail-j-mcgovern | accessdate = 2013-11-13}} 5. ^{{cite web| url= http://releases.jhu.edu/2013/01/25/karen-peetz-bny-mellon-president-and-former-penn-state-board-chair-to-speak-at-johns-hopkins-carey-business-school-on-feb-1/ | title= Karen Peetz, BNY Mellon president, to speak at Carey Business School on Feb. 1 | date= 25 January 2013 | accessdate= 18 November 2013 | publisher = Jhu.edu }} 6. ^{{cite news |title=CP Sahibzada Ahmed Khan leaves for London to assume as HC in UK |url=https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/341169-cp-sahibzada-ahmed-khan-leaves-for-london-to-assume-as-hc-in-uk}} 7. ^{{cite web |title=David C. Litt Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates |url=http://dosfan.lib.uic.edu/ERC/biographies/litt.html}} 8. ^{{cite web |title=Richard Hecklinger |url=https://www.academyofdiplomacy.org/member/richard-hecklinger/}} 9. ^{{cite web |title=Harold W. Geisel |url=https://2001-2009.state.gov/r/pa/ei/biog/106096.htm}} 10. ^{{cite web |title=Ambassador Haris Lalakos |url=http://www.washdiplomat.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=13945&Itemid=105}} 11. ^{{cite web |title=Elizabeth Davenport McKune Ambassador to State of Qatar |url=https://1997-2001.state.gov/about_state/biography/mckune_qatar.html}} 12. ^{{cite web |title=Casper, Anne S. - Republic of Burundi |url=https://www.state.gov/m/dghr/coc/2016/257802.htm}} 13. ^{{cite web |title=New Permanent Representative of Guatemala Presents Credentials |url=https://www.un.org/press/en/2016/bio4881.doc.htm}} 14. ^{{cite web |title=Former U.S. ambassador to head International House |url=https://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/05/11_ihouse.shtml}} 15. ^{{cite web |title=OECF Kim Chang-beom |url=https://www.oecd.org/greengrowth/KIM%20Chang-beom%20Bio.pdf}} 16. ^{{cite web |title=In From the Cold and Able to Take the Heat |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/11/AR2005091101062.html}} 17. ^{{cite web |title=Touqir Hussain |url=http://www.mei.edu/profile/touqir-hussain-1}} 18. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.bu.edu/pardeeschool/files/2013/09/CV_Husain_Haqqani.pdf}} 19. ^http://www.fullbooks.com/The-History-Of-University-Education-In.html 20. ^{{Cite web |url=http://urology.jhu.edu/newsletter/2016/prostate_cancer_testosterone1.php |title=Prostate cancer testosterone |publisher=jhu.edu |accessdate=November 16, 2017}} 21. ^https://www.imdb.com/character/ch0013315/
{{JHU}} 2 : Johns Hopkins University people|Lists of people by university or college in Maryland |