The following is a partial list of notable Brown University alumni, known as Brunonians. It includes alumni of Brown University and Pembroke College, Brown's former women's college. "Class of" is used to denote the graduation class of individuals who attended Brown, but did not or have not graduated. When solely the graduation year is noted, it is because it has not yet been determined which degree the individual earned.
MacArthur "Genius" Fellows
Donald Antrim (A.B. 1981) – novelist, Elect Mr. Robinson for a Better World; recipient of the 2013 MacArthur Fellowship
Greg Asbed (BSc 1985) – human rights strategist and labor organizer; recipient of the 2017 MacArthur Fellowship
Kelly Benoit-Bird (BSc 1998) – Senior Scientist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute; recipient of the 2010 MacArthur Fellowship
Richard Benson (1961) – photographer, Dean of the Yale School of Art (1996–2006); recipient of the 2010 MacArthur Fellowship
Lucy Blake (A.B. 1981) – conservationist, recipient of the 2000 MacArthur Fellowship
John C. Bonifaz (A.B. 1987) – founder, National Voting Rights Institute, recipient of the 1999 MacArthur Fellowship
Edwidge Danticat (M.F.A. 1993) – Haitian-American author, recipient of the 2009 MacArthur Fellowship
Michael H. Dickinson (Sc.B. 1984) – Esther M. and Abe M. Zarem Professor of Bioengineering and Aeronautics at the California Institute of Technology; recipient of the 2001 MacArthur Fellowship
Richard Foreman (A.B. 1959) – playwright and avant-garde theater pioneer; recipient of the 1995 MacArthur Fellowship
Rina Foygel Barber (Sc.B. 2005) – Louis Block Professor of Statistics, University of Chicago; recipient of the 2023 MacArthur Fellowship
Jim Yong Kim (A.B. 1982) – 12th President of the World Bank, President Emeritus of Dartmouth College, and public health physician; recipient of the 2003 MacArthur Fellowship
Ben Lerner (A.B. 2001, M.F.A. 2003) – poet; recipient of the 2015 MacArthur Fellowship
David Lobell (Sc.B. 2000) – Gloria and Richard Kushel Director at the Center on Food Security and the Environment at Stanford University; recipient of the 2015 MacArthur Fellowship
Monica Muñoz Martinez (A.B. 2006) – public historian; recipient of the 2021 MacArthur Fellowship
Lynn Nottage (A.B. 1986) – first female playwright to win the Pulitzer Prize twice; recipient of the 2007 MacArthur Fellowship
Nawal M. Nour (A.B. 1988) – obstetrician and gynecologist, Kate Macy Ladd Professor at Harvard Medical School; recipient of the 2013 MacArthur Fellowship
Lauren Redniss (A.B. 1996) – artist and writer; recipient of the 2016 MacArthur Fellowship
Jennifer Richeson (Sc.B. 1994) – Philip R. Allen Professor of Psychology, Yale University; recipient of the 2006 MacArthur Fellowship
Sarah Ruhl (A.B. 1997, M.F.A 2001) – playwright; recipient of the 2006 MacArthur Fellowship
Sebastian Ruth (A.B. 1997) – violinist, recipient of the 2010 MacArthur Fellowship
Joanna Scott (M.A. 1985) – author; recipient of the 1992 MacArthur Fellowship
William Seeley (A.B. 1993) – Professor of Neurology and Pathology, UC San Francisco, recipient of the 2011 Macarthur fellowship
Academia
Academic administrators
Jasper Adams (A.B. 1815) – President, College of Charleston; 1st President Hobart College
Vernon Alden (A.B. 1945) – 15th President, Ohio University
James Burrill Angell (A.B. 1849) – 3rd President, University of Michigan
Rufus Babcock (1821) – 2nd President, Colby College
Ravi V. Bellamkonda (PhD 1994) – Dean, Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University (2016–2021); Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs, Emory University (2021–)
Samuel Belkin (PhD 1935) – 2nd President, Yeshiva University
Lee Eliot Berk (A.B 1964) – 2nd President and namesake, Berklee College of Music
Sarah Bolton (Sc.B. 1988) – 12th President, College of Wooster; former Dean of the College, Williams College
Hermon Carey Bumpus (Ph.B. 1884) – 5th President, Tufts University
Walter Burse (1920) – 2nd President, Suffolk University
James Tift Champlin (1834) – 7th President, Colby College
Gordon Keith Chalmers (A.B. 1925) – 13th President, Kenyon College; 9th President, Rockford College
Jeremiah Chaplin (1799) – Founder and 1st President, Colby College
Oren B. Cheney (Class of 1840) – Founder and 1st President, Bates College
Barbara Chernow (A.B. 1979) – Executive Vice President for Finance and Administration, Brown University
Aram Chobanian (A.B. 1951) – 9th President, Boston University
Jay Coogan (A.B. 1980) – 16th President, Minneapolis College of Art and Design
William E. Cooper (A.B., A.M. 1973) – 8th President, University of Richmond
Robert A. Corrigan (A.B. 1957) – 12th President, San Francisco State University
Glenn Cummings (M.A.T. 1984) – 13th President, University of Southern Maine
Eliphaz Fay (A.B. 1821) – 4th President, Colby College
Willbur Fisk (A.B. 1815) – 1st President, Wesleyan University
Henry Simmons Frieze (A.B. 1841) – Acting President, University of Michigan
Edward Guiliano (1972) – 3rd President, New York Institute of Technology
Thomas Hassan (1978) – 14th Principal, Phillips Exeter Academy; first gentleman of New Hampshire
John Hope (1894) – 4th President, Morehouse College; 5th President, Atlanta University; the first African American in both roles; co-founder of the Niagara Movement, which became the NAACP
Jim Yong Kim (A.B. 1982) – 17th President, Dartmouth College; 12th President of the World Bank
Joan Leitzel (M.A. 1961) – 17th President, University of New Hampshire
Luther Luedtke (PhD 1971) – 5th President, California Lutheran University
James A. MacAlister (1856) – 1st President, Drexel University
Horace Mann (A.B. 1819) – 1st President, Antioch College; father of American public education; member of the U.S. House of Representatives
Jonathan Maxcy (A.B. 1787) – 2nd President, Brown University; 1st President, University of South Carolina; 3rd President, Union College
David Maxwell (A.M. 1968) – 12th President, Drake University
Alexander Meiklejohn (A.B. 1893, A.M. 1895) – 8th President, Amherst College; Dean, Brown University; philosopher and free-speech advocate
Alonzo G. Morón (B.A. 1932) – 8th President of Hampton University, sociologist, civil servant
Richard L. Morrill (A.B. 1961) – 8th President, University of Richmond; 18th President, Centre College; President, Salem College
Robert W. Morse (A.M. 1947, PhD 1949) – 1st President, Case Western Reserve University
Bernard Muir (1990) – Athletic Director, Stanford University
Samuel M. Nabrit (PhD 1932) – 2nd President, Texas Southern University
Louis E. Newman (PhD 1983) – Associate Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, Stanford University
Melissa Nobles (A.B. 1985) – Chancellor and Professor of Political Science, MIT
Eliphalet Nott (A.M. 1795) – 4th President, Union College; 3rd President, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; the longest serving American college president
Inman E. Page (A.B. 1877, A.M. 1880) – President of the Lincoln Institute, Langston University, Western University, and Roger Williams University
Lynn Pasquerella (PhD 1985) – 18th President, Mount Holyoke College
Willard Preston (A.B. 1806) – 4th President, University of Vermont
Wendell Pritchett (A.B. 1986) – Chancellor of Rutgers University–Camden (2009–14); Provost, University of Pennsylvania (2017–21); Interim President, University of Pennsylvania (2022); first person of color to lead the University of Pennsylvania
Suzanne M. Rivera (A.B. 1991) – 17th President, Macalester College
Chase F. Robinson (A.B. 1985) – President and Distinguished Professor, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Leonard Schlesinger (A.B. 1972) – 12th President, Babson College
Arthur R. Taylor (A.B. 1957, A.M 1961) – 10th President, Muhlenberg College; President, CBS (1972–1976)
Sir Richard Trainor (A.B. 1970) – Principal, King's College London (2004–2014); Rector, Exeter College, Oxford (2014–)
Yang Wei (PhD 1985) – President, Zhejiang University
Nils Yngve Wessell (A.M. 1935) – 8th President, Tufts University
Benjamin Ide Wheeler (A.B. 1875, A.M. 1878) – 8th President, University of California
Charles Lincoln White (A.B. 1887) – 13th President, Colby College
Beniah Longley Whitman (A.B. 1887, A.M. 1890) – 11th President, Colby College; 7th President, George Washington University
Mary Emma Woolley (A.B. 1894, A.M 1895) – 11th President, Mount Holyoke College
Applied sciences
Lallit Anand (Sc.M. 1972, PhD 1975) – Warren and Towneley Rohsenow Professor of Mechanical Engineering, MIT
Panos Antsaklis (MSc PhD 1977) – H. Clifford and Evelyn A. Brosey Professor of Electrical Engineering, University of Notre Dame
Ravi V. Bellamkonda (PhD 1994) – Dean, Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University (2016–2021); Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs, Emory University (2021–)
Sangeeta N. Bhatia (Sc.B. 1990) – John J. and Dorothy Wilson Professor of Health Sciences and Technology and of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, MIT
Bernard Budiansky (PhD 1950) – James Lawrence Professor of Engineering, Harvard University; recipient of the 1989 Timoshenko Medal
Herman Chernoff (PhD 1948) – Professor Emeritus of Applied Mathematics, MIT; known for the Chernoff bound, Chernoff distribution and Chernoff face
Kathleen M. Eisenhardt (Sc.B. 1969) – Stanford W. Ascherman M.D. Professor, Department of Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University
Tejal Desai (Sc.B. 1994) – Sorensen Family Dean of Engineering, professor, School of Engineering, Brown University
Philippe Fauchet (MSc 1980) – Bruce and Bridgitt Evans Dean of Engineering, Vanderbilt University School of Engineering
Rina Foygel Barber (Sc.B. 2005) – Louis Block Professor of Statistics, University of Chicago; recipient of the 2023 MacArthur Fellowship
Leigh Hochberg (BSc 1990) – L. Herbert Ballou University Professor of Engineering, Brown University; Senior Lecturer in Neurology, Harvard Medical School
Philip G. Hodge (PhD 1949) – Professor Emeritus of Mechanics, University of Minnesota
Ayanna Howard (Sc.B. 1993) – Dean, College of Engineering, Ohio State University
Joseph Jacobson (Sc.B 1987) – Associate Professor of Media Arts and Sciences, MIT
Richard D. James (BSc 1974) – Distinguished McKnight University Professor of Aerospace Engineering Mechanics, University of Minnesota
Mark Kachanov (PhD 1981) – Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Tufts University
John Kim (Sc.M. 1974) – Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, UCLA
Victor Li (BSc 1977, MSc 1978, PhD 1981) – James R. Rice Distinguished University Professor of Engineering and the E.B. Wylie Collegiate Professor of Civil Engineering, University of Michigan; inventor of engineered cementitious composites
Reda R. Mankbadi (PhD 1979) – Distinguished Professor and Founding Dean, College of Engineering, Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University
Robert McMeeking (MSc 1974, PhD 1977) – Tony Evans Distinguished Professor of Structural Materials and Mechanical Engineering, UC Santa Barbara; recipient of the 2014 Timoshenko Medal
Yves Moreau (MSc 1994) – Professor of Engineering, KU Leuven
Simon Ostrach (Sc.M. 1945, PhD 1950) – Wilbert J. Austin Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Engineering, Case Western Reserve University; pioneer in space science
Stella Pang (BSc 1977) – Department Head and Chair Professor of Electronic Engineering, City University of Hong Kong
Louise Prockter (MSc PhD 1999) – Chief Scientist, Space Exploration Sector, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University
Upadrasta Ramamurty (PhD 1994) – Professor, Department of Materials Engineering, Indian Institute of Science
Kavita Ramanan (MSc 1993, PhD 1998) – Roland George Dwight Richardson University Professor of Applied Mathematics, Brown University
Kaliat Ramesh (Sc.M. 1985, Sc.M. 1987, PhD 1988) – Alonzo G. Decker Jr. Professor of Science and Engineering, Johns Hopkins University Whiting School of Engineering
Guruswami Ravichandran (PhD 1987) – John E. Goode Jr., Professor of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering; Otis Booth Leadership Chair, Division of Engineering and Applied Science at the California Institute of Technology
Ares J. Rosakis (ScM. 1980, PhD 1982) – Theodore von Kármán Professor of Aeronautics and Professor of Mechanical Engineering, California Institute of Technology
Ed Scheinerman (BSc 1980) –Professor of Applied Mathematics & Statistics, Johns Hopkins University
Paul H. Steen (Sc.B. A.B., 1975) – Maxwell M. Upson Professor, Smith School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Cornell University
Katia Sycara (Sc.B. 1969) – Edward Fredkin Research Professor of Robotics, Carnegie Mellon University
Gretar Tryggvason (Sc.M. 1982, PhD 1985) – Department Head and Charles A. Miller Jr. Distinguished Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University
Krystyn Van Vliet (Sc.B. 1998) – Michael and Sonja Koerner Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, MIT
Richard W. Ziolkowski (Sc.B. 1974) – Litton Industries John M. Leonis Distinguished Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Arizona
Economics and management
Mark Aguiar (A.B. 1988) – Walker Professor of Economics and International Finance, Princeton University
Igor Ansoff (PhD 1948) – economist and applied mathematician; Founding Dean, Owen Graduate School of Management at Vanderbilt University
Clarence Edwin Ayres (A.B. 1912, M.A. 1914) – Professor of Economics, University of Texas at Austin; leading proponent of institutional economics
Malcolm Baker (A.B. 1992) – Robert G. Kirby Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School
William A. Darity Jr. (A.B. 1974) – Samuel DuBois Cook Distinguished Professor of Public Policy, Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University
Steven J. Davis (A.M. 1981, PhD 1986) – William H. Abbott Distinguished Service Professor of International Business and Economics, University of Chicago Booth School of Business; Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution
Mihir A. Desai (A.B. 1989) – Mizuho Financial Group Professor of Finance, Harvard Business School; Professor of Law, Harvard Law School
Douglas Diamond (A.B. 1975) – Merton H. Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance, University of Chicago Booth School of Business; Nobel laureate (Economic Sciences, 2022)
Karen Dynan (A.B. 1985) – Professor of the Practice, Economics Department, Harvard Kennedy School
James Feyrer (A.M., PhD 2001) – Professor and Vice-Chair of Economics, Dartmouth College
Marvin Goodfriend (PhD 1980) – Friends of Allan Meltzer Professor of Economics, Carnegie Mellon University
John Haltiwanger (Sc.B. 1977) – Dudley and Louisa Dillard Professor of Economics and Distinguished University Professor of Economics, University of Maryland, College Park
Janice Hammond (Sc.B.) – Jesse Philips Professor of Manufacturing, Harvard Business School
Jerry A. Hausman (A.B. 1968) – John and Jennie S. MacDonald Professor of Economics, MIT
Guido Imbens (A.M. 1989, PhD 1991) – Applied Econometrics Professor and Professor of Economics, Stanford Graduate School of Business; Nobel laureate (Economic Sciences, 2021)
Sebnem Kalemli-Ozcan (A.M. 1997, PhD 2000) – Neil Moskowitz Endowed Professor of Economics, University of Maryland, College Park
Bruce J. Katz (A.B. 1981) – Vice President, Brookings Institution; Visiting Professor, London School of Economics
Michael Keane (PhD 1989) – Wm. Polk Carey Distinguished Professor, Johns Hopkins University
Robert G. King (A.B., A.M., PhD) – Professor of Economics, Boston University
Randall Kroszner (Sc.B. 1984) – Norman R. Bobins Professor of Economics, University of Chicago Booth School of Business
Neale Mahoney (Sc.B. 2005) – Professor of Economics, Stanford University
Edwin Mills (A.B. 1951) – Professor Emeritus of Real Estate and Finance, Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University
Robert A. Moffitt (A.M. 1972, PhD 1975) – Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Economics, Johns Hopkins University
Jonathan Morduch (A.B. 1985) – Professor of Public Policy and Economics, Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service at NYU
Anna Nagurney (A.B. 1977, Sc.B. 1977, Sc.M. 1980, PhD 1983) – John F. Smith Memorial Professor, Isenberg School of Management at University of Massachusetts Amherst
Georgia Perakis (Sc.M. 1988, PhD 1993) – William F. Pounds Professor of Management, MIT Sloan School of Management
Eswar Prasad (A.M. 1986) – Tolani Senior Professor of Trade Policy, Cornell University; Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution
Nancy Rothbard (A.B. 1990) – Deputy Dean and David Pottruck Professor of Management, Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
David Schmittlein (A.B. 1977) – John C Head III Dean and Professor of Marketing, MIT Sloan School of Management
Scott Shane (A.B. 1986) – A. Malachi Mixon III Professor of Entrepreneurial Studies and Professor of Economics, Case Western Reserve University
Anthony Shorrocks (A.M. 1970) – Professor, London School of Economics; 5th Director of World Institute for Development Economics Research;
Julia Steinberger (Sc.B. 1996) – Professor of Ecological Economics, University of Lausanne
Ebonya Washington (A.B. 1995) – Samuel C. Park Jr. Professor of Economics, Yale University
David N. Weil (A.B. 1982) – James and Merryl Tisch Professor of Economics, Brown University
John Henry Williams (A.B. 1912) – Founding Dean, Harvard Kennedy School; economist of international trade theory
Janet Yellen (A.B. 1967) – Eugene E. and Catherine M. Trefethen Professor Emeritus of Business Administration, Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley; 78th U.S. Secretary of the Treasury; 15th Chair of the Federal Reserve; the first woman in both roles
Formal sciences
Frederick J. Almgren Jr. (PhD 1962) – Professor of Mathematics, Princeton University; recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship
Douglas N. Arnold (A.B. 1975) – McKnight Presidential Professor of Mathematics, University of Minnesota
Dorothy Lewis Bernstein (PhD 1939) – President, Mathematical Association of America; the first woman elected to position
David Blei (Sc.B. 1997) – Professor of Computer Science and Statistics, Columbia University
Dick Bulterman (Sc.M. 1977, PhD 1982) – Professor and Chair of the Department of Computer Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Nelson Dunford (PhD 1936) – James E. English Professor of Mathematics Emeritus, Yale University; namesake of the Dunford decomposition, Dunford–Pettis property, and Dunford-Schwartz theorem;
Steven K. Feiner (A.B. 1973, PhD 1985) – Professor of Computer Science, Columbia University
George Forsythe (PhD 1941) – founder and chair of the Computer Science Department, Stanford University; creator of the term "Computer Science"
William Fulton (A.B. 1961) – Oscar Zariski Distinguished University Professor Emeritus, University of Michigan
Anne Gelb (Sc.M. 1991, PhD 1996)– John G. Kemeny Parents Professor of Mathematics, Dartmouth College
Mark Goresky (PhD 1976) – Member, Institute for Advanced Study; co-inventor of intersection homology
John Guttag (A.B. 1971) – Chair of the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department (1999–2004), MIT
James Hendler (MSc 1983, PhD 1986) – Tetherless World Professor of Computer, Web and Cognitive Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; one of the originators of the Semantic Web
Scott Klemmer (A.B. 1999) – Professor of Cognitive Science and Computer Science & Engineering, UC San Diego
Robert Lazarsfeld (PhD 1980) – Distinguished Professor of Mathematics and Chair of the Mathematics Department, Stony Brook University
Edward D. Lazowska (A.B. 1972) – Bill & Melinda Gates Chair Emeritus, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering at University of Washington
Derrick Henry Lehmer (PhD 1930) – Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, UC, Berkeley; "father of computational number theory"
Katrina Ligett (Sc.B. 2004) – Associate Professor of Computer Science, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Michael L. Littman (PhD 1996) – University Professor of Computer Science, Brown University
Dan Margalit (Sc.B. 1998) – Professor of Mathematics, Georgia Tech
Kathleen McKeown (A.B. 1976) – Henry and Gertrude Rothschild Professor of Computer Science and Founding Director, Data Science Institute at Columbia University
Melanie Mitchell (A.B. 1980) – Davis Professor of Complexity, Santa Fe Institute; co-developer of Copycat
John Coleman Moore (PhD 1952) – Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, Princeton University; known for the Borel−Moore homology and Eilenberg–Moore spectral sequence
Edward F. Moore (PhD 1950) – Professor of Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Wisconsin–Madison; known for the Moore machine
Anthony Morse (PhD 1937) – Professor of Mathematics, UC Berkeley; known for the Morse–Kelley set theory, Morse–Sard theorem and the Federer–Morse theorem
John Mylopoulos (Sc.B. 1966) – Professor Emeritus of Computer Science, University of Toronto
David Nadler (BSc 1996) – Professor of Mathematics, UC Berkeley
David Notkin (Sc.B. 1977) – Professor of Computer Science & Engineering, University of Washington
Peter J. Olver (Sc.B. 1973) – Professor of Mathematics, University of Minnesota
Randy Pausch (Sc.B. 1982) – Professor of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
Carl Pomerance (A.B. 1966) – Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, Dartmouth College
Ken Ribet (A.B., A.M. 1969) – Professor of Mathematics, UC Berkeley; known for the Herbrand–Ribet theorem and Ribet's theorem
Stefan Roth (Sc.M. 2003, PhD 2007) – Professor of Computer Science, Chair of the Department of Computer Science, Technische Universität Darmstadt
Robert Schapire (Sc.B. 1986) – former David M. Siegel '83 Professor in Computer Science, Princeton University
Robert Sedgewick (Sc.B. 1968, Sc.M. 1970) – Department Chair and William O. Baker Professor in Computer Science, Princeton University
Scott Shenker (Sc.B. 1978) – Professor Emeritus of Computer Science and Chief Scientist, UC Berkeley
Shu Shien-Siu (PhD 1948) – Chair Emeritus, Purdue University School of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Joseph H. Silverman (Sc.B. 1977) – Professor of Mathematics, Brown University
Scott A. Smolka (PhD 1984) – Distinguished Professor of Computer Science, Stony Brook University
Halil Mete Soner (MSc 1983, PhD 1986) – Professor of Operations Research and Financial Engineering, Princeton University
John A. Stankovic (BSc 1970, MSc 1975, PhD 1979) – BP America Professor of Computer Science, University of Virginia
John Stasko (Sc.M. 1985, PhD 1989) – Regents Professor, School of Interactive Computing, Georgia Tech
Frank Tompa (Sc.B., Sc.M. 1970) – Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Computer Science, University of Waterloo
Kari Vilonen (PhD 1983) – Professor in Pure Mathematics, University of Melbourne
Martin M. Wattenberg (A.B. 1991) – Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science, Harvard University
Raymond Louis Wilder (Ph.B. 1918, Sc.M. 1921) – Professor of Mathematics, University of Michigan
Thaleia Zariphopoulou (MSc 1989, PhD 1989) V.F. Neuhaus Centennial Professor and Presidential Chair in Mathematics, University of Texas at Austin
Humanities
Linda Martín Alcoff (PhD 1987) – Professor of Philosophy, Hunter College
Margaret L. Anderson (PhD 1971) – Professor Emerita of History, UC Berkeley
Leora Auslander (PhD 1988) – Arthur and Joann Rasmussen Professor in Western Civilization, Professor of European Social History, University of Chicago
Jacques Bailly (A.B. 1988) – classicist at the University of Vermont; National Spelling Bee Official Pronouncer
Janetta Rebold Benton (PhD 1980) – Distinguished Professor of Art History, Pace University
Olivier Berggruen (A.B. 1986) – art historian
Bernard Bloch (PhD 1935) – Professor of Linguistics, Yale University
George Boas (A.B., A.M. 1913) – Professor of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University
Edgar S. Brightman (A.B. 1907, A.M. 1908) – philosopher, Martin Luther King Jr.'s advisor at Boston University
Marcia Chatelain (A.M., PhD 2008) – Professor of History and African American Studies, Georgetown University, recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for History for Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America
Roderick Chisholm (A.B. 1938) – Professor of Philosophy, Brown University
James Corum (A.M.) – military historian; Lecturer, University of Salford
Christina Crosby (PhD 1982) – Professor of English, Wesleyan University; scholar of feminism and critical disability studies
Kenneth Dean (A.B. 1979) – Raffles Professor of Humanities, National University of Singapore
Matt Delmont (A.M. 2004, PhD 2008) – Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Professor of History, Dartmouth College
Melvin Dixon (PhD 1975) – Professor of Literature, Queens College
Anne Dufourmantelle – philosopher and psychoanalyst
Fred Feldman (PhD 1968) – Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Ann Ferguson (PhD 1965) – Professor Emerita of Philosophy and Women's Studies, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Alison Fields (M.A. 2003) – Mary Lou Milner Carver Professor of Art of the American West, University of Oklahoma
Diana Fuss (PhD 1988) – Louis W. Fairchild Class of ’24 Professor of English, Princeton University
Alexander R. Galloway (A.B. 1996) – Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication, New York University
Gary Gerstle (A.B. 1976) – Paul Mellon Professor of American History, University of Cambridge
Brie Gertler (PhD 1997) – Commonwealth Professor of Philosophy and Vice-Provost for Academic Affairs, University of Virginia
George Gorse (A.M. 1974, PhD 1980) – Viola Horton Professor of Art History, Pomona College
Jacqueline Wernimont (A.M 2005, PhD 2009) – Distinguished Chair in Digital Humanities and Social Engagement, Dartmouth College
John Greco (PhD 1989) – Robert L. McDevitt and Catherine H. McDevitt Professor of Philosophy, Georgetown University
Roland Greene (A.B. 1979) – Mark Pigott KBE Professor, Anthony P. Meier Family Professor of the Humanities, director, Humanities Center, Stanford University; President, Modern Language Association (2015–16)
Albert Harkness (1842) – founder of the American Philological Association and the American School of Classical Studies at Athens
John Hattendorf (A.M. 1971) – Ernest J. King Professor Emeritus of Maritime History, United States Naval War College
Dagmar Herzog (A.M. 1985, PhD 1991) – Distinguished Professor of History, Daniel Rose Faculty Scholar, Graduate Center, CUNY
Marianne Hirsch (A.B., A.M. 1970, PhD 1975) – William Peterfield Trent Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University
Charles Hill (A.B. 1957) – Senior Lecturer in the Humanities, Brady-Johnson Distinguished Fellow in Grand Strategy, Yale University
James S. Holmes (1948–1950) – founding figure in translation studies
Jean E. Howard (A.B. 1970) – George Delacorte Professor in the Humanities, Princeton University
George B. Hutchinson (A.B. 1975) – Newton C. Farr Professor of American Culture, Cornell University
Matthew Frye Jacobson (PhD 1992) – Sterling Professor of American Studies and History, Yale University
Dale Jacquette (A.M. 1981, PhD 1983) – Professor Ordinarius of Philosophy, University of Bern
Gene Andrew Jarrett (A.M. 1999, PhD 2002) – Dean of the Faculty and William S. Tod Professor of English, Princeton University
Donald Kagan (A.M. 1955) – Sterling Professor Emeritus of Classics & History, Yale University; winner of the National Humanities Medal
Matthew Kapstein (PhD 1987) – Numata Visiting Professor of Buddhist Studies, University of Chicago Divinity School
Patricia Keating (A.M. 1976, PhD 1980) – Distinguished Professor and Chair of the Department of Linguistics, UCLA
David Kelley (A.B., A.M.) – philosopher, founder of The Atlas Society
Sean Dorrance Kelly (Sc.B. 1989, M.S. 1989) – Teresa G. and Ferdinand F. Martignetti Professor of Philosophy at Harvard University
Ari Kelman (A.M. 1993, PhD 1998) – Chancellor's Leadership Professor of History, University of California, Davis; winner of the 2014 Bancroft Prize
Karen Leigh King (PhD 1984) – Hollis Professor of Divinity, Harvard University
Mark Kishlansky (A.M. 1972, PhD 1977) – Frank Baird Jr. Professor of History, Harvard University
Carolyn Korsmeyer (PhD 1972) – Professor Emerita of Philosophy, University at Buffalo
Jennifer Lackey (PhD 2000) – Wayne and Elizabeth Jones Professor of Philosophy, Northwestern University
Aditi Lahiri (PhD 1982) – Chair of Linguistics, University of Oxford
Wallace Lambert (A.B. 1947) – psychologist of linguistics; "widely considered the father of the psychological study of bilingualism"
Keith Lehrer (PhD 1960) – Regents' Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, University of Arizona
Jeffrey Lesser (A.B. 1982; M.A. 1984) – Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of History, Emory University
Nancy MacLean (A.B. 1981, A.M. 1981) – William H. Chafe Professor of History and Public Policy, Duke University
Sharon Marcus (A.B. 1986) – Orlando Harriman Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University
Brian Massumi (A.B. 1979) – philosopher and social theorist, former Professor of Communication, Université de Montréal
Brian McHale (A.B. 1974) – Arts and Humanities Distinguished Professor, Ohio State University
Jeffrey L. Meikle (A.B. 1971, A.M. 1971) – Stiles Professor in American Studies Emeritus, University of Texas at Austin
Anne K. Mellor (A.B. 1963) – Distinguished Professor of English and Women's Studies, UCLA
Nara Milanich (A.B. 1994) – Professor of History, Barnard College
Monica Muñoz Martinez (A.B. 2006) – Associate Professor of History, UT Austin, recipient of the Macarthur fellowship
Ronald H. Nash (A.M. 1960) – Evangelical Baptist philosopher and apologist; Professor, Reformed Theological Seminary
Sianne Ngai (A.B. 1993) – Andrew W. Mellon Professor of English, University of Chicago
Kathy Peiss (PhD 1982) – Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professor of American History, University of Pennsylvania
Nelson W. Polsby (A.M. 1956) – Heller Professor of Political Science, UC Berkeley
Arthur Upham Pope (A.B. 1904) – expert on Iranian art; founder and first director, Asia Institute
Gerald Prince (PhD 1968) – Professor of Romance Languages, University of Pennsylvania
Arthur S. Reber (M.A. 1965, PhD 1967) – psychologist known for introducing the concept of implicit learning; Broeklundian Professor, Emeritus, Brooklyn College
Christina J. Riggs (A.B. 1993) – Professor of History of Visual Culture, Durham University
Camille Robcis (A.B. 1999) – Professor of History and French, Columbia University, recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship
Daniel T. Rodgers (A.B., Sc.B. 1965) – Henry Charles Lea Professor of History Emeritus, Princeton University
Tricia Rose (A.M. 1987, PhD 1993) – Chancellor's Professor of Africana studies, Director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America, Brown University
Alvin Hirsch Rosenfeld (PhD 1967) – Professor of English and M. Glazer Chair and Professor of Jewish Studies, Indiana University Bloomington
James F. Ross (PhD 1958) – Professor of Philosophy and Law, University of Pennsylvania
John Howland Rowe (A.B. 1939) – Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, UC Berkeley
Mari Ruti (A.B. 1988) – Distinguished Professor of Critical Theory and of Gender and Sexuality Studies, University of Toronto Mississauga
Nathan Schneider (A.B. 2006) – journalist; Assistant Professor of Media Studies, University of Colorado Boulder
Daniel R. Schwarz (PhD 1968) – Frederic J. Whiton Professor of English Literature & Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow, Cornell University
Julius S. Scott (A.B 1973) – scholar of slavery and Caribbean and Atlantic history, author, The Common Wind
Russ Shafer-Landau (A.B. 1986) – Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin, Madison
Ethan H. Shagan (A.B. 1994) – Zaffaroni Family Chair in Education of the History Department, UC Berkeley
Tracy Denean Sharpley-Whiting (PhD 1994) – Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Distinguished Professor of Humanities, Chair of African American and Diaspora Studies, Vanderbilt University
Maxim D. Shrayer (A.B. 1989) – Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies, Boston University
Kaja Silverman (PhD 1977) – Katherine and Keith L. Sachs Professor of Art History, University of Pennsylvania
Richard Slotkin (PhD 1966) – Olin Professor of English Emeritus, Wesleyan University
Timothy D. Snyder (A.B. 1991) – Richard C. Levin Professor of History, Yale University, Permanent Fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences
David Sosa (A.B. 1989) – Professor and Chair of Philosophy, University of Texas at Austin
Jeffrey Stout (A.B. 1972) – Professor Emeritus of Religion, Princeton University
David Summers (A.B. 1963) – William R. Kenan Jr. Professor Emeritus of Art Theory and Italian Renaissance Art, University of Virginia.
Charles Taliaferro (A.M., PhD 1984) – Oscar and Gertrude Boe Overby Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, St. Olaf College
Richard Taylor (PhD 1959) – philosopher; subject of David Foster Wallace's prize-winning undergraduate thesis
John L. Thomas (PhD 1961) – George L. Littlefield Professor of American History Emeritus, Brown University; winner of the 1964 Bancroft Prize
Salamishah Tillet (M.A.T. 1997) – Henry Rutgers Professor of African American Studies and Creative Writing, Rutgers University–Newark; recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism
Francesca Trivellato (PhD 2004) – Andrew W Mellon Professor in the School of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced Study
Adam Ulam (A.B. 1943) – Gurney Professor of History and Political Science, Harvard University; one of the world's foremost authorities on Russia and the Soviet Union
Dell Upton (M.A. 1975, PhD 1980) – Chair of the Department of Art History, University of California, Los Angeles
Geoffrey Wawro (A.B. 1983) – Professor of Military History and Director of the Military History Center, University of North Texas
Charles Edwin Wilbour (Class of 1854) – Egyptologist, co-discoverer of the Elephantine Papyri
Dean Zimmerman (PhD 1992) – Professor of Philosophy, Rutgers University
Steven Zwicker (PhD 1969) – Stanley Elkin Professor in the Humanities, Washington University in St. Louis
Law
Herman Vandenburg Ames – legal scholar, Professor of American Constitutional History, University of Pennsylvania
Richard Reeve Baxter (A.B. 1942) – Judge, International Court of Justice; Manley Hudson Professor of Law, Harvard Law School
Karima Bennoune (A.B. 1988) – Homer G. Angelo and Ann Berryhill Endowed Chair and Martin Luther King Jr. Professor of Law, UC Davis School of Law
Samuel W. Buell (A.B. 1987) – Bernard M. Fishman Distinguished Professor of Law, Duke University School of Law
Zechariah Chafee (A.B. 1907) – First Amendment scholar; University Professor of Law, Harvard University
Sarah Cleveland (A.B. 1987) – Louis Henkin Professor of Human and Constitutional Rights, Columbia Law School
Jennifer Daskal (A.B. 1994) – Professor of Law, Washington College of Law at American University
Lawrence Douglas (A.B. 1982) – James J. Grosfeld Professor of Law, Jurisprudence and Social Thought, Amherst College
Justin Driver (A.B. 1997) – Robert R. Slaughter Professor of Law, Yale Law School
Heidi Li Feldman (A.B. 1986) – Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center
Daniel Fischel (A.M. 1974) – Lee and Brena Freeman Professor Emeritus of Law and Business and Dean Emeritus, University of Chicago Law School
James Forman Jr. (A.B. 1988) – J. Skelly Wright Professor of Law, Yale Law School; Pulitzer Prize-winning writer, Locking Up Our Own: Crime and Punishment in Black America
Kent Greenfield (A.B. 1984) – Professor of Law and Dean's Distinguished Scholar, Boston College Law School
Henry B. Hansmann (A.B. 1967) – Oscar M. Ruebhausen Professor Emeritus of Law, Yale Law School
Harold Dexter Hazeltine (A.B. 1894) – Downing Professor of the Laws of England (1919–1942), University of Cambridge
Sonia Katyal (A.B. 1993) – Distinguished Haas Chair, UC Berkeley School of Law
David Kennedy (A.B. 1976) – Manley O. Hudson Professor of Law and Director of the Institute for Global Law and Policy, Harvard Law School
Larry Kramer (A.B. 1980) – Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Dean Emeritus, Stanford Law School; president of the Hewlett Foundation
Alexandra Lahav (A.B. 1993) – Anthony W. and Lulu C. Wang Professor of Law, Cornell Law School
Bruce H. Mann (A.B., A.M. 1972) – Carl F. Schipper Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, husband of U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren
Eric L. Muller (1984) – Dan K. Moore Distinguished Professor of Law in Jurisprudence and Ethics, University of North Carolina School of Law
Wendell Pritchett (A.B. 1986) – James S. Riepe Presidential Professor of Law and Education, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Alexander A. Reinert (A.B. 1994) – Max Freund Professor of Litigation & Advocacy, Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University
Vincent Rougeau (A.B. 1985) – President, College of the Holy Cross; Dean Emeritus, Boston College Law School
Paul M. Schwartz (A.B. 1981) – Jefferson E. Peyser Professor of Law, UC Berkeley School of Law
Harry Shulman (A.B. 1923) – Dean Emeritus, Yale Law School
Kenneth Starr (A.M. 1969) – Duane and Kelly Roberts Dean Emeritus, Pepperdine University School of Law; Solicitor General of the United States (1989–93); Independent Counsel for the Whitewater controversy; 14th President of Baylor University
Francis Wayland III (A.B. 1846) – Dean Emeritus, Yale Law School
Medicine and public health
Cheryl A. M. Anderson (A.B. 1992) – Professor and Dean, Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health, UC San Diego
Louise Aronson (A.B. 1986) – author; Professor of Geriatrics, University of California, San Francisco
Ann Arvin (A.B. 1966) – Lucile Salter Packard Professor of Pediatrics and Professor of Microbiology and Immunology Emerita, Stanford University School of Medicine
Aaron T. Beck (A.B. 1942) – "father of cognitive behavioral therapy"; founder of the Beck Institute for Cognitive Behavior Therapy at the University of Pennsylvania; winner of the Lasker Award
Jonathan Berek (M.MSc 1973) – Laurie Kraus Lacob Professor, Stanford University School of Medicine
John M. Barry (A.B. 1968) – author; Professor, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine
Linda Bartoshuk (PhD 1965) – Presidential Endowed Professor of Community Dentistry and Behavioral Science, University of Florida
Mark S. Blumenkranz (A.B. 1972, M.D. 1975, M.MSc 1976) – H.J. Smead Professor Emeritus, Stanford University School of Medicine
Atul Butte (A.B. 1991, M.D. 1995) – Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg Distinguished Professor, University of California, San Francisco; Director, Baker Computational Health Sciences Institute
Christopher G. Chute (A.B. 1977, M.D. 1982) – Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Health Informatics at Johns Hopkins University
Barbara E. Ehrlich (Sc.B. 1974) – Professor of Pharmacology and of Cellular And Molecular Physiology, Yale School of Medicine
Nancy Etcoff (A.B.) – Assistant Clinical Professor in Psychology, Harvard Medical School
Stanley Falkow (PhD 1961) – father of microbiology, discoverer of the molecular nature of antibiotic resistance; Robert W. and Vivian K. Cahill Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine; winner of the Lasker Award
James D. Griffin (A.B. 1970) – Professor, Harvard Medical School; Chair of Medical Oncology, Dana–Farber Cancer Institute; Director of Medical Oncology, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Tina Hartert (A.B. 1985) – Lulu H. Owen Chair in Medicine and Vice President for Translational Research, Vanderbilt University
Arthur L. Horwich (A.B. 1972, M.D. 1975) – Sterling Professor of Genetics and Professor of Pediatrics, Yale School of Medicine; winner of the Lasker Award, Shaw Prize, and Breakthrough Prize; discoverer of the functions and mechanisms of chaperone-mediated protein folding
Howard Hu (BSc 1976) – Flora L. Thornton Chair and Professor of Population and Public Health Sciences, Keck School of Medicine of USC; Founding Dean, Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto
William Kessen (Sc.M. 1950) – Eugene Higgins Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Professor of Pediatrics, Yale University
Jim Yong Kim (A.B. 1982) – President, Dartmouth College; co-founder of Partners in Health; Professor of Medicine and Social Medicine and Chair of the Department of Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School; Chief of the Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities at Brigham and Women's Hospital; Director of the François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights; former director of the World Health Organization's HIV/AIDS department; recipient of the Macarthur fellowship; 12th President of the World Bank
Beth Levine (A.B. 1981) – Charles Cameron Sprague Distinguished Chair in Biomedical Sciences, UT Southwestern Medical Center
Jonathan S. Lewin (A.B. 1981) – Executive Vice President for Health Affairs, Emory University; Professor, Emory School of Medicine and Rollins School of Public Health
David C. Lewis (A.B. 1957) – Professor Emeritus of Medicine and Community Health and Donald G. Millar Distinguished Professor of Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University.
Stacy Tessler Lindau (M.D. 1996) – Catherine Lindsay Dobson Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Director of the Program in Integrative Sexual Medicine Director, University of Chicago
George Makari (A.B. 1982) – Professor of Psychiatry and Director of the De Witt Wallace Institute for the History of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medicine
Joseph Matarazzo (A.B. 1946) – 98th President of the American Psychological Association, chair of the first department of medical psychology in the United States
Jessica Meir (A.B. 1999) – NASA astronaut; former Assistant Professor of Anesthesia, Harvard Medical School
Craig C. Mello (Sc.B. 1982) – Nobel laureate (2006, Physiology or Medicine); Blais University Chair in Molecular medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Lloyd B. Minor (Sc.B. 1979, M.D. 1982) – Carl and Elizabeth Naumann Dean, Stanford University School of Medicine; former Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, Johns Hopkins University
Mark Musen (Sc.B. 1977, M.D. 1980) – Professor of Biomedical Informatics and of Biomedical Data Science, Stanford University; Director, Stanford Center for Biomedical Informatics Research
Srihari S. Naidu (Sc.B. 1993, M.D. 1997) – Professor of Medicine, New York Medical College
Jordan S. Orange (A.B., PhD, 1996, M.D., 1997) – Chair of Pediatrics, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons; Pediatrician-in-Chief of New York-Presbyterian/Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital
Thomas G. Plante (Sc.B. 1982) – clinical psychologist; Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J. University Professor of Psychology, Santa Clara University
Paul Ridker (BSc. 1981) – Eugene Braunwald Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Director of the Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Janet Sinsheimer (BSc 1979) – Professor of Biostatistics, Biomathematics, and Human Genetics, Fielding School of Public Health, UCLA
Thomas A. Wadden (A.B. 1975) – Albert J. Stunkard Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania
Augustus A. White (A.B. 1957) – Ellen and Melvin Gordon Distinguished Professor of Medical Education and Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Harvard Medical School
Natural sciences
Anthony Aguirre (Sc.B. 1995) – Faggin Family Presidential Chair for the Physics of Information, UC Santa Cruz
Stephon Alexander (PhD 2000) – theoretical physicist and musician, Professor of Physics, Brown University
Edgar Allen (Sc.B. 1915, A.M. 1916, PhD 1921) – anatomist and physiologist, discoverer of estrogen and father of endocrinology
Amy Arnsten (A.B. 1976) – Albert E. Kent Professor of Neuroscience and Professor of Psychology, Yale University
Raymond Arvidson (PhD 1974) – James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis
Biman Bagchi (PhD 1980) – biophysical chemist, theoretical chemist; Amrut Mody Professor, Indian Institute of Science
Mark Bear (PhD 1984) – Picower Professor of Neuroscience, Picower Institute for Learning and Memory, MIT; former Howard Hughes Medical Investigator
Joy M. Bergelson (Sc.B. 1984) – Dorothy Schiff Professor of Genomics, New York University
Marianne Bronner (Sc.B. 1975) – Edward B. Lewis Professor of Biology; Director of the Beckman Institute, California Institute of Technology
Stephen L. Buchwald (Sc.B. 1977) – Camille Dreyfus Professor of Chemistry, MIT; developed Buchwald-Hartwig amination
Sankar Das Sarma (PhD 1979) – Distinguished University Professor and Richard E. Prange Chair in Physics, University of Maryland, College Park
Richard E. Carson (Sc.B. 1977) – Professor of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging and of Biomedical Engineering, Yale University
Andrew G. Clark (Sc.B. 1976) – Jacob Gould Schurman Professor of Population genetics and Chair of Computational Biology, Cornell University
Julia Clarke (A.B. 1995) – John A. Wilson Professor in Vertebrate Paleontology, University of Texas at Austin
Tejal A. Desai (Sc.B. 1994) – bioengineer and therapeutic nanotechnologist; Sorensen Family Dean of Engineering, Brown University School of Engineering
Michael H. Dickinson (Sc.B. 1984) – Zarem Professor of Bioengineering and Biology, California Institute of Technology; recipient of the Macarthur fellowship
Neil Donahue (BSc 1985) – atmospheric chemist; Thomas Lord Professor of Chemical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University
John Donoghue (PhD 1979) – H.M. Wriston Professor of Neuroscience and Engineering, Brown University
Bethany Ehlmann (M.S. 2008, PhD 2010) — president of The Planetary Society; Professor of Planetary Science, California Institute of Technology; Rhodes Scholar
Anne Fausto-Sterling (PhD 1970) – major contributor to sexology and biology of gender; Nancy Duke Lewis Professor of Biology and Gender Studies, Brown University
W. Tecumseh Fitch (A.B. 1986, PhD 1994) – Professor of Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna
Raymond Fuoss (PhD 1932) – Sterling Professor Chair of Chemistry, Yale University
Paul Garabedian (A.B. 1946) – Director of the Division of Computational Fluid Dynamics, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Margaret Gardel (Sc.B. 1998) – Horace B. Horton Professor of Physics, University of Chicago
Miriam B. Goodman (BSc 1986) – Mrs. George A. Winzer Professor of Cell Biology, Stanford University; Chair, Stanford Neuroscience Institute
Andrew V. Granato (PhD 1955) – Professor Emeritus of Physics, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
Alan Grossman (Sc.B. 1979) – Praecis Professor of Biology and Department Head of Biology, MIT
David Grinspoon (A.B., Sc.B.) – astrobiologist; Senior Scientist, Planetary Science Institute
James W. Head (PhD 1969) – Louis and Elizabeth Scherck Distinguished Professor Emeritus of the Geological Sciences, Brown University
Arthur Hoag (A.B. 1942) – astronomer; discoverer of Hoag's Object
Michael R. Hoffmann (PhD 1973) – John S. and Sherry Chen Professor of Environmental Science, Caltech
Albrecht Hofmann (PhD 1969) – Director Emeritus, Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, ForMemRS
John Edwards Holbrook (A.B. 1815) – zoologist, herpetologist, and naturalist
Donald C. Hood (PhD 1969) – James F. Bender Professor in Psychology and Professor of Ophthalmic Science, Columbia University
Arthur L. Horwich (A.B. 1972, M.D. 1975) – Sterling Professor of Genetics and Professor of Pediatrics, Yale School of Medicine; winner of the Lasker Award, Albany Medical Center Prize, Shaw Prize, and Breakthrough Prize; discoverer of the functions and mechanisms of chaperone-mediated protein folding
Richard Ivry (A.B. 1981) – Distinguished Professor in the Department of Psychology, UC Berkeley
Bor-ming Jahn (MSc 1967) – Distinguished Chair Emeritus in Geosciences, National Taiwan University
Lucy Jones (A.B. 1976) – seismologist
Richard Kaner (A.B. 1980) – Dr. Myung Ki Hong Endowed Chair in Materials Innovation, UCLA
Suzanne Mahlburg Kay (PhD 1975) – William & Katherine Snee Professor of Geological Sciences Emeritus, Cornell University
Brian Keating (MSc 1995, PhD 2000) – Chancellor's Distinguished Professor of Physics, UC San Diego
Steven Kliewer (BSc 1985) – Diana K. and Richard C. Strauss Distinguished Chair in Developmental Biology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Philip Kocienski (PhD 1971) – Professor Emeritus of Organic Chemistry, University of Leeds
Clifford Kubiak (Sc.B 1975) – Distinguished Professor and Harold C. Urey Chair in Chemistry, UC San Diego
Krishna Kumar (PhD 1996) – Robinson Professor in Chemistry, Tufts University
Ka Yee Christina Lee (Sc.B. 1986) – 14th Provost (2020–23) and David Lee Shillinglaw Distinguished Service Professor of Chemistry, University of Chicago
Wen-Hsiung Li (PhD 1972) – James Watson Professor of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago
Robert Bruce Lindsay (A.B., Sc.M. 1920) – Chair of the Physics Department and Dean of the Graduate School, Brown University; recipient of the ASA Gold Medal
David Lobell (Sc.B. 2000) – Gloria and Richard Kushel Director at the Center on Food Security and the Environment and Professor in the Department of Earth System Science, Stanford University; recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship
Robert H. MacArthur (A.M. 1953) – founding figure in evolutionary ecology; Professor, University of Pennsylvania and Princeton University
Nick McCave (PhD 1967) – Woodwardian Professor of Geology, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge; fellow, St John's College, Cambridge
Warren Meck (PhD 1982) – Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University
Kenneth R. Miller (Sc.B. 1970) – Professor of Biology, Brown University
David D. Moore (A.B. 1974) – Professor and Chair of Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology, University of California, Berkeley; discoverer of constitutive androstane receptor, farnesoid X receptor, and small heterodimer partner.
John F. Mustard (MSc 1986, PhD 1990) – Professor of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences, Brown University
Myung Kyungjae (PhD 1999) – biologist, Distinguished Professor, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology
Samuel M. Nabrit (PhD 1932) – first African American to receive doctorate degree from Brown University; first African American trustee at Brown University; first African American appointed to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission; second president of Texas Southern University
Michael Paradiso (PhD 1984) – Sidney A. Fox and Dorothea Doctors Fox Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Science and Professor of Neuroscience, Brown University
Robert L. Park (PhD 1964) – Professor Emeritus of Physics, University of Maryland, College Park; former Director of Public Information at the American Physical Society
Robert Parr (A.B. 1942) – Professor Emeritus of Chemistry, UNC Chapel Hill; co-founder of quantum chemistry
Ainissa Ramirez (Sc.B. 1990) – material scientist and science communicator
Maureen Raymo (Sc.B 1982) – paleoclimatologist; Bruce C. Heezen/Lamont Research Professor and Director of the Lamont-Doherty Core Repository, Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory; Co-Founding Dean, Columbia Climate School
Collin Roesler (Sc.B. 1985) – William R. Kenan Professor of Earth and Oceanographic Science, Bowdoin College
Rachel Rosen (Sc.B.) – Associate Professor of Physics, Columbia University
Carolyn Rovee-Collier (MSc 1964, PhD 1966) – Professor of Psychology, Rutgers University; pioneering developmental psychologist
David M. Sabatini (Sc.B. 1990) – Professor of Biology, MIT (2002–2021); Member, Whitehead Institute; Howard Hughes Medical Investigator; discoverer of mTOR
Jenny Saffran (A.B. 1991) – Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of Psychology, University of Wisconsin
Ellery Schempp (PhD 1967) – physicist, primary student involved in the landmark 1963 Supreme Court case, Abington School District v. Schempp
William Seeley (A.B. 1993) – Zander Family Endowed Professor in Neurology, UC San Francisco, recipient of the Macarthur fellowship
Michael Shadlen (A.B. 1981, M.D. 1988) – Professor of Neuroscience, Columbia University, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator
Vijay Balakrishna Shenoy (PhD 1998) – Professor of Physics, Indian Institute of Science
Gabriela Schlau-Cohen (BSc 2003) – Associate Professor of Chemistry, MIT
Barbara Shinn-Cunningham (Sc.B. 1986) – Director, Carnegie Mellon Neuroscience Institute, George A. and Helen Dunham Cowan Professor, Carnegie Mellon University
Steven H. Simon (Sc.B. 1990) – Professor of Physics, University of Oxford
Daniel L. Stein (Sc.B. 1975) – Professor of Physics and Mathematics, New York University
Eliot Stellar (MSc 1942, PhD 1947) – Provost Emeritus, University of Pennsylvania; one of the founders of behavioral neuroscience
James W. Stigler (A.B. 1976) – Distinguished Professor of Psychology, UCLA
Jesse Thaler (Sc.B. 2002) – Professor of Physics, MIT; Director, NSF AI Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Fundamental Interactions
Jessica Tierney (A.B. 2005, MSc 2008, PhD 2010) – Associate Professor of Geosciences and Thomas R. Brown Distinguished Chair in Integrative Science, University of Arizona
Jan Peter Toennies (PhD 1957) – Director Emeritus, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization; Professor Emeritus of Physics, University of Göttingen
Stefanie Tompkins (MSc 1993, PhD 1997) – Director, DARPA; former vice president for Research and Technology Transfer, Colorado School of Mines
Mark Trodden (MSc, PhD 1995) – Fay R. and Eugene L. Langberg Professor and Department Chair of Physics, Co-Director of the Penn Center for Particle Cosmology, University of Pennsylvania
Fyodor Urnov (PhD 1996) – Professor of Genetics, Genomics, and Development, University of California, Berkeley
John S. Werner (PhD 1979) – Distinguished Professor in the Departments of Ophthalmology and Vision Science and Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior, UC Davis
Xi-Cheng Zhang (PhD 1986) – Parker Givens Chair of Optics, University of Rochester; Director of Institute of Optics
Maria Zuber (PhD 1986) – E. A. Griswold Professor of Geophysics and Vice President for Research, MIT; NASA planning advisor; Co-chair of the Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
Social sciences
Massimo Livi Bacci (1960–61) – Professor Emeritus of Demography, University of Florence
Mary Beaudry (A.M. 1975, PhD 1980) – Professor of Archaeology, Anthropology, and Gastronomy, Boston University
Peter Bearman (A.B. 1978) – Jonathan R. Cole Professor of the Social Sciences, Columbia University
Aaron Belkin (A.B. 1988) – Professor of Political Science, San Francisco State University; authority on LGBT people in the United States Armed Forces
Adia Benton (A.B. 1999) – cultural and medical anthropologist, Associate Professor of Anthropology at Northwestern University
Kenneth A. Bollen (A.M. 1975, PhD 1977) – Henry Rudolph Immerwahr Distinguished Professor in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, UNC Chapel Hill
Jason Bordoff (A.B. 1994) – Co-Founding Dean of the Columbia Climate School, Founding Director of the Center on Global Energy Policy, School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University
Selmer Bringsjord (PhD 1987) – Chair of the Department of Cognitive Science, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Melani Cammett (A.B. 1991) – Clarence Dillon Professor of International Affairs, Harvard University; Director, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs; Professor, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
Prudence Carter (BSc 1991) – Sarah and Joseph Jr. Dowling Professor of Sociology, Brown University; Mary E. Pardee Professor and Dean of the Graduate School of Education, UC Berkeley (2016–2021)
Neta Crawford (A.B. 1985) – Montague Burton Professor of International Relations, Oxford University
Lee Drutman (A.B. 1999) – Senior Fellow, New America; Lecturer, Johns Hopkins University
Emily Falk (Sc.B. 2004) – Professor of Communication, Psychology, and Marketing, Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania
William H. Frey (A.M. 1971, PhD 1974) – Senior Fellow in the Metropolitan Policy Program, Brookings Institution
Ester Fuchs (A.M. 1974) – Professor of International and Public Affairs and Political Science, Columbia University SIPA
Robert M. Gagné (Sc.M 1939, PhD 1940) – educational psychologist; Professor, Florida State University; author of Conditions of Learning
John Ghazvinian (A.B. 1996) – Executive Director, Middle East Center, University of Pennsylvania
John Wesley Gilbert (A.B. 1888, A.M. 1891) – first African American to receive an A.M. from Brown, first African American archaeologist
Michael Inzlicht (Sc.M. 1999, PhD 2001) – Professor of Psychology, University of Toronto Scarborough
David Kertzer (A.B. 1969) – Paul Dupee University Professor of Social Science, Brown University; recipient of the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography
Michael Kimmel (M.A. 1974) – Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Stony Brook University
Eric Klinenberg (A.B. 1993) – Professor of Sociology and Helen Gould Shepard Professor in Social Science, New York University
Prema Kurien (A.M. 1989, PhD 1993) – Professor of Sociology, Syracuse University
Harold Leavitt (Sc.M. 1944) – pioneer in management psychology; Walter Kenneth Kilpatrick Professor of Organizational Behavior, Stanford University
Jacob T. Levy (A.B. 1993) – Tomlinson Professor of Political Theory and Chair of the Department of Political Science, McGill University
Ogden Lindsley (A.B. 1948, Sc.M. 1950) – developer of precision teaching; Professor, University of Kansas
Geoffrey Loftus (A.B. 1967) – Professor Emeritus of Psychology, University of Washington
Sabina Magliocco (A.B. 1980) – Professor of Sociocultural Anthropology, University of British Columbia
Leslie McCall (A.B. 1986) – Presidential Professor of Political Science and Sociology, Graduate Center, CUNY
Ruth Milkman (A.B. 1975) – Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Graduate Center, CUNY; former president, American Sociological Association
Melissa Nobles (A.B. 1985) – Chancellor and Professor of Political Science, MIT; Kenan Sahin Dean of the MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences (2015–2021)
Lloyd Ohlin (A.B. 1940) – sociologist and criminologist; Professor Emeritus, Harvard University, Columbia University, University of Chicago
Hal Pashler (A.B. 1980) – Distinguished Professor of Psychology, UC San Diego
Thomas Pepinsky (A.B. 2001) – Walter F. LaFeber Professor of Government, Cornell University
Nelson W. Polsby (A.M. 1957) – Heller Professor of Political Science, UC Berkeley, member, Council on Foreign Relations
Imam Prasodjo (PhD 1997) –Professor in the Department of Social and Political Science, University of Indonesia
Jennifer Richeson (Sc.B. 1994) – Philip R. Allen Professor of Psychology, Yale University; Macarthur fellowship recipient
Bruce Riedel (A.B. 1975) – Senior Fellow, Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution; Professor, Johns Hopkins SAIS
Lisa Rofel (A.B. 1975) – Professor Emerita of Anthropology, UC Santa Cruz
Eldar Shafir (A.B. 1984) – Class of 1987 Professor of Behavioral Science and Public Policy and Professor of Psychology and Public Affairs, Princeton University
Patrick Sharkey (A.B. 2000) – Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs, Princeton University
William Herbert Sheldon (A.B. 1919) – psychologist, creator of the field of somatotype and constitutional psychology
Rachel Sherman (A.B. 1991) – Professor and Chair of Sociology, The New School for Social Research
Adam T. Smith (A.B. 1990) – Distinguished Professor of Arts and Sciences in Anthropology, Cornell University
Richard Solomon (A.B. 1940, A.M. 1942, PhD 1947) – experimental psychologist; author of the opponent-process theory of emotion; James M. Skinner University Professor of Science, University of Pennsylvania
Erroll Southers (A.B. 1978) – Director of the Safe Communities Institute and Homegrown Violent Extremism Studies, USC Price School of Public Policy
Deborah A. Thomas (A.B. 1988) – R. Jean Brownlee Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Center for Experimental Ethnography, University of Pennsylvania
Fred Turner (A.B. 1984) – Harry and Norman Chandler Professor of Communication, Stanford University
Khachig Tölölyan (PhD 1975) – founding figure in diaspora studies; Professor Emeritus of English and Letters, Wesleyan University
Jeffrey K. Tulis (A.M. 1974) – Professor of Government, The University of Texas at Austin
Sam Wineburg (Class of 1980) – Margaret Jacks Professor of Education Emeritus, Stanford University
Deborah J. Yashar (A.B. 1985) – Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University
Others
Asger Aaboe (PhD 1957) – Professor Emeritus of the History of Science, Mathematics and of Near Eastern Languages and Literatures, Yale University
Ryan S. Baker (BSc 2000) – Professor, University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education; Director, Penn Center for Learning Analytics
Albert T. Corbett (A.B. 1972) – Associate Research Professor Emeritus of Human–Computer Interaction, Carnegie Mellon University
Julie Beth Lovins (A.B. 1968) – computational linguist who developed the first stemming algorithm for word matching
Jamie Metzl (A.B. 1990) – futurist; Senior Fellow, Atlantic Council
Pedro Noguera (A.B. 1981, A.M. 1982) – Dean, USC Rossier School of Education
Bina Venkataraman (A.B. 2002) – Director of Global Policy Initiatives, Broad Institute
Noah Wardrip-Fruin (PhD 2006) – Professor of Computational Media, University of California, Santa Cruz
Science, technology and innovation
Willis Adcock (PhD 1948) — chemist, professor of electrical engineering, grew silicon boules for construction of the first silicon transistor at Texas Instruments
Katherine L. Adams (A.B. 1986) – General Counsel and Senior Vice President of Legal and Global Security, Apple Inc.
Zachariah Allen (1813) – Inventor of the steam engine automatic cut-off valve
Seth Berkley (Sc.B. 1978, M.D. 1981) – CEO of GAVI, founder and former President and CEO of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative
John Seely Brown (A.B. 1962) – inventor of spellcheck
Walter Guyton Cady (1895) – physicist and electrical engineer; developed the first quartz crystal oscillator
Bryan Cantrill (BSc 1996) – one of the three authors of DTrace, CTO of Oxide Computer Company, former CTO of Joyent
John H. Crawford (1975) – chief architect, Intel386 and Intel486 microprocessors; co-managed the development of the Pentium microprocessor; Intel Fellow, Enterprise Platforms Group
John Cumbers (PhD 2011) – British molecular biologist, founder of SynBioBeta
Helen Wendler Deane (PhD 1943) – American histophysiologist
Lisa Gelobter (1991) – developed visual programs such as Shockwave
Lillian Moller Gilbreth (PhD 1915) – one of the first working female engineers; arguably the first true industrial/organizational psychologist; mother of twelve children as described by the book Cheaper by the Dozen
David Shrier (Sc.B. 1995) – American futurist and author
Ken Silverman (Sc.B. 2000) – writer of the Build engine
Marion Elizabeth Stark (A.B. 1916, A.M. 1979) – one of the first female American mathematics professors
Gordon Kidd Teal (PhD 1931) – inventor of the commercial silicon transistor
John Tukey (Sc.B. 1936, Sc. M. 1937) – co-developed the Cooley–Tukey fast Fourier transform algorithm; coined the terms bit, byte, software and cepstrum, recipient of the National Medal of Science
Bob Wallace (Class of 1971) – ninth Microsoft employee, inventor of the term shareware
Space science and exploration
Brian Binnie (Sc.B. 1975, Sc.M. 1976) – test pilot, privately funded experimental spaceplane SpaceShipOne
James B. Garvin (Sc.B. 1978, Sc.M. 1981, PhD 1984) – Chief Scientist, NASA Mars and lunar exploration programs
David Grinspoon (Sc.B. 1982) – astrobiologist, senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute
Wesley Huntress (Sc.B. 1964) – president, The Planetary Society
Byron K. Lichtenberg (Sc.B. 1969) – NASA astronaut
Sarah Milkovich (Sc.M. 2002, PhD 2005) – Lead of Science Operations for the Mars 2020 rover at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Jessica Meir (A.B. 1999) – NASA astronaut; one of two women to participate in the first all-female spacewalk
Lynn J. Rothschild (PhD 1985) – evolutionary biologist and astrobiologist at NASA's Ames Research Center Thomas O. Paine (A.B. 1942) – third Administrator of NASA, oversaw first seven Apollo crewed missions
Ellen Stofan (PhD 1989) – NASA Chief Scientist (2013–2016), John and Adrienne Mars Director, National Air and Space Museum
Suzanne Smrekar (BSc 1984) – Deputy Principal Investigator for the Mars InSight lander
Paul Spudis (Sc.M. 1977) – noted lunar scientist associated with the NASA Office of Space Science
Winslow Upton (Sc.B. 1875) – astronomer, director of Ladd Observatory
George Wallerstein (Sc.B. 1951) – astronomer, winner of the Henry Norris Russell Lectureship
Maria Zuber (PhD 1986) – Principal Investigator of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission
Government, law and public policy
Governors
Philip Allen (A.B. 1803) – 22nd Governor of Rhode Island (1851–1853), U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1853–1859)
Oliver Ames (1851–1853) – 35th Governor of Massachusetts (1887–1890)
Henry B. Anthony (A.B. 1833) – 21st Governor of Rhode Island (1849–1851), U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1859–1884), President pro tempore of the U.S. Senate
Augustus O. Bourn (1855) – 36th Governor of Rhode Island (1883–1885)
Donald Carcieri (A.B. 1965) – 73rd Governor of Rhode Island (2003–2011)
Norman S. Case (A.B. 1908) – 56th Governor of Rhode Island (1928–1933)
Lincoln Chafee (A.B. 1975) – 74th Governor of Rhode Island (2011–2015), U.S. Senator, Rhode Island
William Claflin (Class of 1837) – 27th Governor of Massachusetts (1869–1872)
John H. Clifford (1827) – 21st Governor of Massachusetts (1853–1854)
Samuel Cony (1829) – 31st Governor of Maine (1864–1867)
Elisha Dyer (A.B. 1829) – 25th Governor of Rhode Island (1857–1859)
Elisha Dyer Jr. – 45th Governor of Rhode Island (1897–1900)
James Fenner (A.B. 1789) – 7th, 11th, and 17th Governor of Rhode Island (1807–1811, 1824–1831, 1843–1845)
John Brown Francis (A.B. 1808) – 13th Governor of Rhode Island (1833–1838)
William Gaston (1840) – 29th Governor of Massachusetts (1875–1876)
Theodore Francis Green (1887) – 57th Governor of Rhode Island (1933–1936); U.S. Senator, D–Rhode Island (1937–1961)
Maggie Hassan (A.B. 1980) – 81st Governor of New Hampshire (2013–2017); U.S. Senator, D–New Hampshire (2017–)
James H. Higgins (A.B. 1898) – 50th Governor of Rhode Island (1907–1909)
Charles Evans Hughes (A.B. 1881) – 36th Governor of New York (1907–1910)
Charles Jackson (A.B. 1917, A.M. 1920) – 18th Governor of Rhode Island (1845–46)
Otto Kerner Jr. (1930) – 33rd Governor of Illinois – (1961–1968)
Samuel Ward King – 15th Governor of Rhode Island (1839–1843)
Frank Licht (A.B. 1938) – 67th Governor of Rhode Island (1969–1973)
William L. Marcy (A.B. 1808) – Justice of New York State Supreme Court (1829); 11th Governor of New York (1833–1839); U.S. Secretary of War (1845–1849); U.S. Senator from New York; U.S. Secretary of State (1853–1857)
Jack Markell (1982) – 18th United States Ambassador to the OECD, 73rd Governor of Delaware (2009–2017)
Marcus Morton (A.B. 1804, A.M 1807) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1817–1821), 16th & 18th Governor of Massachusetts (1825, 1840–1844)
Pendleton Murrah (1848) – 10th Governor of Texas (1863–1865)
Philip W. Noel (1954) – 68th Governor of Rhode Island (1973–1977)
Robert E. Quinn (1915) – 58th Governor of Rhode Island (1937–1939), Judge for the Rhode Island Superior Court
Edward C. Stokes (1883) – 32nd Governor of New Jersey (1905–1908)
John Milton Thayer (1841) – 2nd Governor of Wyoming Territory (1875–1878) and 6th Governor of Nebraska (1887–1892)
David Rogerson Williams (1792–1795) – 45th Governor of South Carolina (1814–1816)
Jared W. Williams (A.B. 1818) – 21st Governor of New Hampshire (1847–1849)
William D. Williamson (1804) – 2nd Governor of Maine (1821–1821), U.S. Congressman, Maine (1821–1823)
Legislators
United States senators
Philip Allen (A.B. 1803) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1853–1859), Governor of Rhode Island (1851–1853)
Henry B. Anthony (A.B. 1833) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1859–1884), President pro tempore of the United States Senate (1875–1875), Governor of Rhode Island (1849–1851)
Samuel G. Arnold (A.B. 1841) – U.S. Senator from Rhode Island
James Burrill Jr. (A.B. 1788) – U.S. Senator from Rhode Island
Lincoln Chafee (A.B. 1975) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1999–2007); Governor of Rhode Island (2011–2015)
John Hopkins Clarke (A.B. 1809) – U.S. Senator from Rhode Island
Nathan F. Dixon I (A.B. 1799) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island
Nathan F. Dixon III (A.B. 1869) – U.S. Senator from Rhode Island
James Fenner (A.B. 1789) – U.S. Senator from Rhode Island
Dwight Foster (A.B. 1774) – U.S. Senator from Massachusetts
Lafayette S. Foster (A.B. 1828) – U.S. Senator, Connecticut (1855–1867), President pro tempore of the Senate (1865–1867)
Theodore Foster (A.B. 1770) – U.S. Senator from Rhode Island
John Brown Francis (A.B. 1808) – U.S. Senator from Rhode Island
Theodore F. Green (A.B. 1887) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1937–1961)
Maggie Hassan (A.B. 1980) – 81st Governor of New Hampshire (2013–2017); U.S. Senator, D–New Hampshire (2017–)
Nathaniel P. Hill (A.B. 1856) – U.S. Senator, Colorado (1879–1885)
John Holmes (A.B. 1796) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1817–1820), U.S. Senator, Maine (1820–1827, 1829–1833)
Jeremiah B. Howell (A.B. 1789) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1811–1817)
William Hunter (A.B. 1791) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1811–1821)
Edward L. Leahy (A.B.) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1949–1950)
Henry F. Lippitt (A.B. 1878) – U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1911–1917)
William L. Marcy (A.B. 1808) – U.S. Senator, New York (1831–1833)
Blair Moody (A.B. 1922) – U.S. Senator, Michigan (1951–1952)
John Ruggles (A.B. 1813) – U.S. Senator from Maine (1835–1841)
Frederic M. Sackett (1890) – U.S. Senator, Kentucky (1924–1930), U.S. Ambassador to Germany (1930–1933)
John Milton Thayer (1841) – U.S. Senator, Nebraska (1867–1871)
Jared W. Williams (A.B. 1818) – U.S. Senator, New Hampshire (1853–1854); U.S. Congressman, New Hampshire (1837–1841); 21st Governor of New Hampshire (1847–1849)
Members of the United States House of Representatives
Benjamin Adams (A.B. 1788) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1816–1821)
Jeremiah Bailey (1795) – U.S. Congressman, Maine (1835–1837)
John Bailey (1807) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1824–1831)
John Baldwin (A.B. 1797) – U.S. Congressman, Connecticut (1825–1829)
Gideon Barstow (1803) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1821–1823)
William Baylies (1795) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1809–1809, 1813–1817, 1833–1835)
William H. Bates (1940) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1950–1969)
Barnabas Bidwell – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1805 –1807)
William Daniel Brayton – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1857–1861)
Franklin E. Brooks (1883) – U.S. Congressman, Colorado (1903–1907)
George H. Browne (1840) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1861–1863)
Tristam Burges (A.B. 1796) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1825–1835)
David Cicilline (A.B. 1983) – first openly gay mayor of a state capital–Providence, Rhode Island; U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (2011–2023).
Gil Cisneros (M.A. 2015) – U.S. Congressman, California (2019–2021), 10th Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness
William Claflin – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1877 –1881)
Stephen A. Cobb (1858) – U.S. Congressman, Kansas (1873–1875)
Howard A. Coffin (1901) – U.S. Congressman, Michigan (1947–1949)
Samuel S. Cox (1846) – U.S. Congressman, Ohio, New York, U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire
Samuel L. Crocker (1822) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1853–1855)
Robert Lee Davis – U.S. Congressman, Pennsylvania (1932–1933)
Nathan F. Dixon II (1833) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1849–1851, 1863–1871)
Job Durfee (A.B. 1813) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1821–1825)
Samuel Eddy (1787) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1819–1825), Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court (1827–1835)
Frederick D. Ely (1859) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1885–1887)
James Ervin (1797) U.S. Congressman, South Carolina (1817–1821)
Horace Everett (A.B. 1797) – U.S. Congressman, Vermont (1829–1843)
Thomas Ewing Jr. – U.S. Congressman, Ohio (1877–1881)
George Fisher (1813) – U.S. Congressman, New York (1829–1830)
Dwight Foster (A.B. 1774) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1793–1800)
George B. Francis (1904) – U.S. Congressman, New York (1917–1919)
Daniel L. D. Granger (1874) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1903–1909)
Julian Hartridge (1848) – U.S. Congressman, Georgia (1875–1879)
Nathaniel Hazard (1792) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1819–1820)
Aaron Hobart (1805) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1820–1827)
Thomas Jenckes (1838) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1859–1863)
Piyush "Bobby" Jindal (Sc.B. 1992) – U.S. Congressman, Louisiana (2004–2008)
George Gordon King (1825) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1849–1853)
Oscar Lapham (1864) – U.S. Congressman, Rhode Island (1891–1895)
Dan Maffei (A.B. 1990) – U.S. Congressman, D-New York (2009–2011, 2013–2015)
Seth Magaziner (A.B. 2006) – U.S. Congressman, D-Rhode Island (2022–)
Horace Mann (A.B. 1819) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1848–1853)
James Brown Mason (A.B. 1791) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1815–1819)
Charles D. Millard (1897) – U.S Congressman, New York (1931–1937)
Marcus Morton (A.B. 1804, A.M 1807) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1817–1821); Governor of Massachusetts (1825, 1840–1844)
John J. O'Connor (1906) – U.S. Congressman, New York (1923–1939)
Richard Olney II (1892) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1815–1921)
James Tallmadge Jr. (1798) – U.S. Congressman, New York (1817–1819), President of New York University (1830–1846)
Eli Thayer (1845) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1857–1861)
Benjamin Thomas (1830) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1861–1863)
Charles R. Train (1837) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1859–1863)
Daniel Wardwell (1811) – U.S. Congressman, New York (1831–1837)
Ezekiel Whitman (1795) – U.S. Congressman, Maine (1835–1837)
David Rogerson Williams (1792–1795) – U.S. Congressman, South Carolina (1811– 1813), Governor of South Carolina (1814–1816)
Henry Williams (1826) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1839 –1831, 1843–1845)
William D. Williamson (1804) – U.S. Congressman, Massachusetts (1809–1811) and Maine (1821–1822)
William Widnall (1926) – U.S. Congressman, New Jersey (1950–1975)
John W. Wydler (1947) – U.S. Congressman, New York (1963–1981)
State legislators
Sullivan Ballou (Class of 1852) – member of Rhode Island House of Representatives; Major in Rhode Island militia; killed at First Battle of Bull Run
Brian Benjamin (A.B. 1998) – member of the New York State Senate ( 2017–present), Lieutenant Governor of New York (2021–2022)
Antonio F. D. Cabral (1997) – member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1990–present)
Dan Greenberg (A.B. 1988) – member of the Arkansas General Assembly (2006–2011)
Elijah Hamlin – member of the Maine House of Representatives (1830–1832)
Steve Harrison (1990) – member of the West Virginia State Senate (2003–2006) and the West Virginia House of Delegates (1993–2002)
Wingate Hayes (1844) – Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives from 1859 to 1860
Ratcliffe Hicks (1864) – member of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1866–1895), benefactor of the University of Connecticut
Walter M. D. Kern – politician who served in the New Jersey General Assembly from 1978 to 1990, where he represented the 40th Legislative District.
Dana Levenberg (1986)- member of the New York State Assembly (2023–present), Town Supervisor of Ossining (2016–2022)
Mee Moua (1992) – Minnesota State Senator, first elected Hmong-American politician
Mark Strama (1990) – member of the Texas House of Representatives
Austin Volk (1941) – member of the New Jersey General Assembly and mayor of Englewood, New Jersey
Aaron Regunberg (2012) – member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives and 2018 Democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island
Kyle Evans Gay – member of the Delaware Senate
Mayors
Kostas Bakoyannis (A.B. 2000) – Mayor of Athens, Greece (2019–present)
David Cicilline (A.B. 1983) – first openly gay mayor of a state capital–Providence, Rhode Island; U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (2011–).
Buddy Dyer (Sc.B. 1980) – 32nd Mayor of Orlando, Florida (2003–)
Henry Loeb (1943) – Mayor of Memphis, Tennessee (1960–1963, 1968–1971)
Alex Morse (A.B. 2011) – 44th Mayor of Holyoke, Massachusetts (2012–2021); elected youngest mayor of Holyoke at age 22
Freddie O'Connell (A.B., BSc 2000) – 10th Mayor of Nashville, Tennessee
Chelsie J. Senerchia – 26th Mayor of Miami, Florida (1951–1953)
Solomon Sibley (A.B. 1794) – 1st Mayor of Detroit, Michigan (1806–1806)
Sumbul Siddiqui (A.B. 2010) – Mayor of Cambridge, Massachusetts (2020–); first Muslim mayor in Massachusetts history
Samuel Starkweather (1822) – 7th and 15th Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio (1844–1845, 1857–1858)
Konstantinos Zervas (Sc.M. 1989) – Mayor of Thessaloniki, Greece (2019–)
Diplomats
Willard L. Beaulac (1918) – U.S. Ambassador to Paraguay (1944–1947), Colombia (1947–1951), Cuba (1951–1953), Chile (1953–1956) and Argentina (1956–1960)
W. Randolph Burgess (1912) – U.S. Ambassador to NATO (1957–1961)
William H. Courtney (PhD 1972) – U.S. Ambassador to Georgia (1995–1997) and Kazakhstan (1992–1994)
Samuel S. Cox (1846) – U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire (1885–1886)
Nathaniel Davis (1944) – U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland (1976–1977), Chile (1971–1973), Guatemala (1968–1971), and Bulgaria (1965–1966); Director General of the Foreign Service (1973–1975)
Roy T. Davis (A.B. 1910) – U.S. Ambassador to Costa Rica (1922–1930), Panama (1930–1933), and Haiti (1953–1957)
Rosemary DiCarlo (A.B. 1969, M.A. 1971, PhD 1979) – acting U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations (2013)
Norm Eisen (A.B. 1985) – U.S. Ambassador to the Czech Republic (2011–2014)
Ana A. Escrogima (A.B. 2001) – nominee for U.S. Ambassador to Oman
Rufus Gifford (A.B. 1996) – U.S. Ambassador to Denmark (2013–2017), Deputy Campaign Manager for Joe Biden's 2020 presidential campaign, Chief of Protocol of the United States
John Hay (A.B. 1858) – 37th U.S. Secretary of State (1898–1905)
Richard Holbrooke (A.B. 1962) – U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations (1999–2001), U.S. Assistant Secretary of State, U.S. Ambassador to Germany (1993–1994) , former Chairman of the Asia Society, member of the Atlantic Council of the United States, Counselor to the Council on Foreign Relations, Founding Chairman of the American Academy in Berlin
Charles Evans Hughes (A.B. 1881) – 44th U.S. Secretary of State (1921–1925)
Noble Brandon Judah (1904) – U.S. Ambassador to Cuba (1927–1929)
Suzan G. LeVine (A.B. 1993) – U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland and Lichtenstein (2014–2017)
Frederick Irving (A.B. 1943) – U.S. Ambassador to Iceland (1972–1976)
Roberta S. Jacobson (A.B. 1982) – U.S. Ambassador to Mexico (2016–2018)
William L. Marcy (A.B. 1808) – 21st U.S. Secretary of State (1853–1857), 20th United States Secretary of War (1845–1849)
Anthony Dryden Marshall (1950) – U.S. Consul in Istanbul, 1958–59; U.S. Ambassador to Malagasy Republic, (1969–71), Trinidad and Tobago (1972–74), Kenya (1973–77), Seychelles (1976–77); theatrical producer; felon
Adam Namm (A.B. 1985) – U.S. Ambassador to Ecuador (2012–2015)
James D. Nealon (A.B. 1980) – U.S. Ambassador to Honduras (2014–2017)
Victoria Nuland (A.B. 1983) – Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs (2021–), U.S. Ambassador to NATO (2005–2008)
Richard Olson (A.B. 1981) – U.S. Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates (2008–2011) and Pakistan (2012–2015)
Richard Olney (A.B. 1856) – 34th U.S. Secretary of State (1895–1897), 40th United States Attorney General (1893–1895)
Ely Palmer (A.B. 1907) – U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan (1948)
Nit Phibunsongkhram (A.M. 1967) – Foreign Minister of Thailand (2006–2008), Thai Ambassador to the United States (1996–2000)
David Pressman (A.B. 1999) – U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations for Special Political Affairs (2014–2017), U.S. Ambassador to Hungary (2022–), co-founder Not on Our Watch
Frederic M. Sackett (A.B. 1890) – U.S. Senator, Kentucky (1924–1930), U.S. Ambassador to Germany (1930–1933)
John J. Sullivan (A.B. 1981) – U.S. Ambassador to Russia (2020–2022), U.S. Deputy Secretary of State (2017–2019), acting U.S. Secretary of State (2018)
Stephanie S. Sullivan (A.B. 1980) – U.S. Ambassador to Ghana (2019–2022), and Republic of the Congo (2013–2017)
William H. Sullivan (A.B. 1943) – U.S. Ambassador to Laos (1964–1969), the Philippines (1973–1977), and Iran (1977–1979)
W. Stuart Symington (A.B. 1974) – U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria (2016–2019) and Rwanda (2008–2011)
Thomas J. Watson Jr. (A.B. 1937) – U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union (1979–1981); 2nd President of IBM (1952–71); 11th national president of the Boy Scouts of America (1964–68); recipient of the 1964 Presidential Medal of Freedom
Henry Wheaton (A.B. 1802) – U.S. Minister to Denmark (1827–1835) and Prussia (1837–1846)
Curtin Winsor Jr. (A.B. 1961) – U.S. Ambassador to Costa Rica (1983–1985)
Advisors and officials
Charles "Chuck" Colson (1953) – chief counsel to Richard Nixon (1969–1973); figured in the Watergate Scandal; founder of Prison Fellowship
Thomas Corcoran (1922) – member of President Franklin Roosevelt's "brain trust"; guided New Deal legislation; high-powered Washington lobbyist
Tad Devine (A.B. 1978) – political consultant, senior adviser in Al Gore's 2000 and John Kerry's 2004 Presidential campaigns, chief strategist for Bernie Sanders' 2016 presidential campaign
David F. Duncan (1995) – domestic policy advisor to Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton; co-originator of the self-medication hypothesis of drug addiction
John Hay (1858) – U.S. Secretary of State under presidents William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt (1898–1905), private secretary and assistant to Abraham Lincoln
Charles Hill (A.B. 1957) – Senior Lecturer in the Humanities, Brady-Johnson Distinguished Fellow in Grand Strategy, Yale University; former executive aid to former U.S. Secretary of State George P. Shultz; research fellow, Hoover Institution
E. Howard Hunt (1940) – author, OSS & CIA officer, worked under President Richard Nixon; figured in the Watergate scandal
Randall Kroszner (A.B. 1984) – member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Ira Magaziner (1969) – Clinton advisor, current chairman of Clinton AIDS Initiative; co-instigator of Brown's New Curriculum
Seema Nanda (1992) – United States Solicitor of Labor, CEO of the Democratic National Convention
Annette Nazareth (A.B. 1979) – former Securities and Exchange Commissioner, partner at Davis Polk & Wardell
Richard Olney (1856) – United States Attorney General (1893–1895), United States Secretary of State (1895–1897)
David Onek (1991) – candidate for District Attorney of San Francisco
Thomas Perez (A.B. 1983) – Chair of the Democratic National Committee, former United States Secretary of Labor (2013–2017)
John A. Rizzo (A.B. 1969) – Acting General Counsel and Deputy General Counsel at the Central Intelligence Agency noted for his role in "laying the legal groundwork" for the War on Terror
Tahesha Way (A.B. 1993) – Secretary of State of New Jersey (2018–2023), Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey (2023–)
Janet Yellen (A.B. 1967) – United States Secretary of the Treasury, former Chair of the Federal Reserve, former President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco; Trefethen Professor of Business Administration and Professor of Economics, University of California, Berkeley
International politicians
Junaid Ahmad (A.B.) – Bangladeshi economist, World Bank country director for India
Ichirō Fujisaki – Japanese Ambassador to the United States (2008–12), Japanese Ambassador to the United Nations, Chairman of the Executive Committee of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (1995–99)
Shigeyuki Goto (A.M. 1984) – Minister of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan (2021–present)
Martín Guzmán (PhD 2013) – Minister of Economy of Argentina (2019–2022)
Nitya Pibulsonggram (A.M. 1967) – Minister of Foreign Affairs of Thailand (2006–2008)
Nadiem Makarim (2006) – Minister of Education and Culture of Indonesia (2021–present)
Eduardo Montealegre (Sc.B. 1976) – Nicaraguan politician, Deputy to the National Assembly, Minister of Foreign Affairs
Aeneas Mackay, 15th Lord Reay – Member of the House of Lords Excepted Hereditary (2019–present)
Uttama Savanayana (Sc.B. 1982) – Former Minister of Finance (2019–2020), Industry (2016–2018), and Digital Economy and Society of Thailand (2015–2016)
Tarek Shawki (MSc 1983, MSc 1985, PhD 1985) – Minister of Education and Technical Education of Egypt
Ijyaraj Singh (Sc.B. 1987) – Member of the Lok Sabha representing Kota (2009–2014)
Julio Velarde (M.A. 1977, PhD 1978) – Chairman of the Central Reserve Bank of Peru (2006–present)
Activists, reformers, and thought leaders
Junaid Ahmad (A.B. 1983) – economist; World Bank Country Director for India
Benjamin Boas (A.B. 2007) – Cool Japan Ambassador to the Cabinet Office of Japan and cultural consultant
John Bonifaz (1987) – founder, National Voting Rights Institute, recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship
Geoffrey Bowers – plaintiff an early HIV/AIDS discrimination case
Katherine Chon (Sc.B. 2002) – co-founder and Board President of anti-human trafficking non-profit Polaris Project
Bhupendranath Datta (M.A. 1914) – Indian revolutionary, sociologist and anthropologist
Sean Eldridge (A.B. 2009) – political activist and former congressional candidate
Derek Ellerman (Sc.B. 2002) – co-founder and Board Chairman of anti-human trafficking non-profit Polaris Project, former Ashoka fellow and current Ashoka Ambassador
John Dix Fisher (1820) – founder of the Perkins Institution for the Blind—the first school for the blind established in the U.S.
Kathryn S. Fuller (A.B. 1968) – chairman of the Board Ford Foundation former president and CEO of non-governmental organization World Wildlife Fund – U.S. (1989–2005)
Samuel Gridley Howe (1821) – prominent physician, abolitionist, advocate of education for the blind
Gene Karpinski (1974) – President, League of Conservation Voters
Kerry Kennedy (A.B. 1981) – activist, writer; President of Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights; former wife of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo; daughter of Robert F. Kennedy
Maya Keyes – anarchist and gay rights activist
Alfie Kohn (A.B. 1979) – proponent of progressive education
Nancy Lublin (1993) — founder of Crisis Text Line
Horace Mann (A.B. 1819) – educationist; father of American public school education
Nancy Northup (A.B. 1981) – President, Center for Reproductive Rights
Nawal M. Nour (A.B. 1988) – physician, founder of the first hospital center in the United States devoted to the medical needs of African women who have undergone FGM, recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship
Michael Parenti (A.M. 1957) – political scientist, social critic, and author
Jesselyn Radack (A.B. 1992) – national security and human rights attorney
Cecile Richards (1980) – President, Planned Parenthood Federation of America
George Lincoln Rockwell (Class of 1942) – founder of the American Nazi Party; dropped out after second year to join the Navy
Kenneth Roth (A.B. 1978) – Executive Director of Human Rights Watch (1993–2022)
Malika Saada Saar (A.B. 1992) – Director of the Human Rights Project for Girls; co-founder of Rebecca Project for Human Rights
Rinku Sen (A.B. 1988) – Co-president of the Women's March board of directors, former executive director of Race Forward
Martha Sharp (A.B. 1926) – Unitarian who aided hundreds of Jews in escaping the Holocaust
Michael Soussan (A.B. 1996) – whistleblower and author
Irving Stowe (A.B. 1936) – founder of Greenpeace
Jurists and attorneys
Leslie Abrams Gardner (A.B. 1997) – District Judge, United States District Court for the Middle District of Georgia
Asa Aldis (A.B. 1796) – Chief Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court
Peleg Arnold (A.B.) – Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court from 1795 to 1812; represented Rhode Island as a delegate to the Continental Congress in the 1787–1788 session; incorporator of the Providence Society for the Abolition of Slavery in 1790
Haiganush R. Bedrosian (A.B. 1965) – Chief Justice, Rhode Island Family Court
Francisco Besosa (A.B. 1971) – District Judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Puerto Rico
Theodore R. Boehm (A.B. 1960) – Justice, Supreme Court of Indiana
Charles S. Bradley (A.B. 1838) – Chief Justice, Rhode Island Supreme Court
George Moulton Carpenter (A.B. 1864) – Federal Judge for United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island
Zachary A. Cunha (A.B. 1998) – United States Attorney for the District of Rhode Island
Herbert F. DeSimone (A.B. 1910) – Attorney General of Rhode Island and Assistant Secretary of Transportation
Samuel Eddy (1787) – U.S Congressman, Rhode Island (1819–1825), Chief Justice, Rhode Island Supreme Court (1827–1835)
John Patrick Hartigan (A.B. 1951) – Rhode Island Attorney General, 1933–1939; US District Court, 1940–1951; US Court of Appeals, First Circuit, 1951–1968
Richard Hertling, (A.B. 1982) – Judge, United States Court of Federal Claims
Charles Evans Hughes (A.B. 1881) – 11th Chief Justice of the United States (1930–1941); Governor of New York (1907–1910); U.S. Secretary of State (1921–1925)
Charles Evans Hughes Jr. (A.B. 1909) – 20th United States Solicitor General; son of Charles Evans Hughes
Alfred H. Joslin (A.B. 1936) – Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court (1963–1979)
Lino S. Lipinsky de Orlov (A.B. 1979) – Judge of the Colorado Court of Appeals
Patrick C. Lynch (1987) – Rhode Island Attorney General (D)
Lewis Linn McArthur – Associate Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court
Theron Metcalf (A.B. 1805) – Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
Marcus Morton (1838) – Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (1882–1890)
Michael Newdow (Sc.B. 1974) – atheist doctor and lawyer who unsuccessfully argued Elk Grove Unified School District v. Newdow before the U.S. Supreme Court
Thomas J. Perrelli (A.B. 1988) – former United States Associate Attorney General
Solomon Sibley (A.B. 1794) – Chief Justice, Michigan Supreme Court; first United States Attorney for the Michigan Territory; territorial Delegate to Congress
Kenneth Starr (M.A. 1969) – former U.S. Solicitor General; former U.S. appeals court judge; special counsel in Bill Clinton impeachment proceedings and namesake of the Starr Report; President of Baylor University
Norman O. Tietjens (Ph.B. 1925, M.A. 1927) – judge of the United States Tax Court
Ojetta Rogeriee Thompson (A.B. 1973) – federal judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and former Rhode Island Superior Court judge
William Tong (A.B. 1995) – Attorney General of Connecticut (2019–)
Anne Rachel Traum (A.B. 1991) – Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Nevada
Craig Waters (A.B. 1979) – communications counsel to the Florida Supreme Court
Business
Lawrence D. Ackman (1960) – real estate entrepreneur, father of billionaire Bill Ackman
Giovanni Alberto Agnelli (1986) – heir apparent and designated future chairman of the Fiat group
Akash Ambani (A.B. 2013) – Director of Jio and Reliance Retail; eldest son of Mukesh Ambani and Nita Ambani
George S. Barrett (A.B. 1977) – CEO of Cardinal Health (2009–2017)
John Berylson (A.B. 1975) – American investor
Marvin Bower (Sc.B. 1925) – co-founder of McKinsey & Company
Aneel Bhusri (Sc.B. 1988) – billionaire, co-founder and CEO of Workday
Alfred S. Bloomingdale (1938) – co-founder and President, Diners Club International
Orlando Bravo (1970) – first Puerto Rican billionaire businessman
Willard C. Butcher (1948) – former chairman and CEO, Chase Manhattan Bank
Adam Cahan (A.B. 1993) – former Senior Vice President of Mobile and Emerging Products, Yahoo!
Arthur L. Carter (1953) – investor, namesake of the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at New York University
Lisa Caputo (A.B. 1986) – chief marketing officer, Citigroup
Finn M. W. Caspersen (A.B. 1963) – financier, chairman and chief executive of the Beneficial Corporation
John S. Chen (Sc.B. 1978) – chairman and CEO of BlackBerry Limited
Chung Yong-jin (A.B. 1994) – South Korean billionaire, vice chairman and CEO of Shinsegae Group
Glenn Creamer (A.B. 1984) – billionaire, Senior managing director of Providence Equity Partners
Dan DiMicco (BSc 1972) – CEO (2000–12) and chairman (2006–12) of Nucor
Tanya Dubash (A.B. 1991) – Indian businesswoman
David Ebersman (A.B. 1991) – former chief financial officer of Facebook, Inc.; founder, Lyra Health
Donna M. Fernandes (Sc.B 1981) President and CEO, Buffalo Zoo 2000–2017
Dylan Field (Class of 2013½) – founder and CEO of Figma
Devin Finzer (BSc 2013) – billionaire, CEO and co-founder of OpenSea
George M. C. Fisher (Sc. M. 1964, PhD 1966) – former CEO of Motorola and Eastman Kodak Company
Sidney Frank (Class of 1942) – billionaire founder of Grey Goose and Jägermeister
Tom Gardner (A.B. 1990) – co-founder and co-chairman of the Motley Fool
Kenneth Gaw (1992) – Hong Kong businessman
Charles Giancarlo (BSc 1979) – chairman and CEO of Pure Storage, former chief technology officer at Cisco Systems
Jeffrey W. Greenberg (A.B. 1973) – chairman and CEO of Marsh & McLennan Companies
Theresia Gouw (Sc.B. 1990) – investor, wealthiest female venture capitalist in the United States
Ross Greenburg (1977) – president of HBO Sports
Oliver Haarmann (1990) – founding partner of Searchlight Capital Partners
James Harmon (A.B. 1957) – investor; President and CEO, Export–Import Bank of the United States (1997–2001)
Walter Hoving (Ph.B. 1920) – CEO of Tiffany & Co.
Nina Jacobson (A.B. 1987) – former president, Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
Parth Jindal (A.B. 2012) – managing director of JSW Cement, son of Sajjan Jindal
Craig Kallman (A.B. 1987) – chairman and CEO of Atlantic Records Group
Ray Kassar (1948) – former CEO of Atari
Paul Kazarian (M.A. 1980) – billionaire investor
Dara Khosrowshahi (Sc.B. 1991) – CEO of Uber, former CEO of Expedia Group
Martin Bernheimer (1958) – Pulitzer Prize–winning music critic
Duncan B. Black, aka Atrios (PhD 1999) – political blogger
Elizabeth Bruenig (2014–2015) – opinion writer at The New York Times and formerly The Washington Post
Robert Conley (1953) – founding member and former general manager of NPR; creator and original host of All Things Considered; former New York Times front-page correspondent; National Geographic writer; reporter and anchor for NBC and the Huntley-Brinkley Report
Gareth Cook (A.B. 1991) – Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting, Boston Globe, for writing about stem cell research
David Corn (1981) – Washington, D.C. bureau chief for Mother Jones
Dana Cowin (A.B. 1982) – Editor-in-Chief of Food & Wine
Lyn Crost (A.B. 1938) – World War II correspondent and author, Honor by Fire:Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific
Adrian Dearnell (A.B. 1994) – Franco-American financial journalist, CEO and founder of EuroBusiness Media
Larry Elder (A.B. 1974) – columnist; radio personality; TV talk show host, The Larry Elder Show; author; unsuccessful Republican candidate in the 2021 California gubernatorial recall election
Chip Giller (A.B. 1993) – environmentalist, founder of Grist
Ira Glass (A.B. 1982) – host and producer, National Public Radio, This American Life
Jerry Green (A.B. 1950) – sports journalist, member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Catherine Gund (A.B. 1988) – documentary filmmaker; activist
Chris Hayes (A.B. 2001) – Editor of The Nation and host of All in with Chris Hayes on MSNBC
Tony Horwitz (1980) – journalist, Wall Street Journal, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting
A. J. Jacobs (1990) – journalist and author, The Know-It-All: One Man's Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World, The Year of Living Biblically
Edward Davis Jones (Class of 1877) – co-founder of The Wall Street Journal, namesake of the Dow Jones Industrial Average
Sasha Frere-Jones (Class of 1988) – writer, music critic, and musician
John F. Kennedy Jr. (A.B. 1983) – lawyer; journalist; publisher of George magazine; son of President John F. Kennedy; killed in an airplane crash on July 16, 1999
Glenn Kessler (A.B. 1981) – diplomatic correspondent for The Washington Post
Noel King (A.B. 2004) – co-host of Morning Edition and Up First
Hiroko Kuniya (A.B. 1979) – Japanese news anchor
Erik Kuselias (1991) – host of hosts Sportsline and CBS Sports
Sharon LaFraniere (A.B. 1977) – Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist at The New York Times
Josh Levin (2002) – National Editor at Slate
Irving R. Levine (1944) – former NBC News correspondent
Mara Liasson (A.B. 1977) – NPR correspondent
Bill Lichtenstein (1978) – journalist, documentary filmmaker, president of LCMedia, Inc.; recipient of Guggenheim Fellowship and Peabody Award
Andrew Marantz (2006) – staff writer at The New Yorker
Mark Maremont (1980) – senior special writer for the Wall Street Journal; two-time Pulitzer Prize winner
Scott Poulson-Bryant (A.B. 2008, originally Class of 1989) – co-founding editor of VIBE Magazine
Andrew Revkin (A.B. 1978) – environmental journalist, New York Times; recipient of 2008 Columbia University Journalism School John Chancellor Award
Quentin Reynolds (1924) – World War II war correspondent.
James Risen (1977) – journalist for The Intercept; author of two books about the Central Intelligence Agency; broke the 2005 story of warrantless NSA wiretapping; winner of the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting
David S. Rohde (A.B. 1990) – Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist; escaped from 7-month Taliban captivity in 2009
Kevin Roose (Class of 2009) – technology columnist for The New York Times
Alissa J. Rubin (A.B. 1980) – Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, Baghdad Bureau chief, The New York Times
Margaret Russell (1980) – Editor-in-Chief, Elle Decor magazine; design judge, Top Design
Laura Secor (A.B.) – journalist
Aaron Schatz (1996) – ESPN NFL analyst, founder of Football Outsiders
Kathryn Schulz (A.B. 1996) – Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, staff writer at The New Yorker
Julia Flynn Siler (A.B. 1983) – journalist and nonfiction author
Elissa Silverman (A.B. 1995) – journalist, member of the Council of the District of Columbia at-large (2015–2023)
Amy Sohn (A.B. 1995) – columnist, New York magazine; novelist, Run Catch Kiss and Sex and the City: Kiss and Tell
Doreen St. Félix (2014) – staff writer at The New Yorker
Alison Stewart (A.B. 1988) – host, MSNBC's The Most with Alison Stewart
A. G. Sulzberger (A.B. 2003) – publisher, The New York Times; chairman of The New York Times Company
André Leon Talley (A.M. 1973) – Vogue magazine editor-at-large; first African-American male creative director of Vogue; regarded as "fashion icon"
Wallace Terry (A.B. 1959) – African-American journalist, author, and oral historian known for his coverage of Black soldiers in the Vietnam War
Krista Tippett (A.B. 1983) – host, NPR's Speaking of Faith, and creator and host of On Being
Larry Tye (A.B. 1977) – journalist
Alex Wagner (A.B. 1999) – host, Alex Wagner Tonight, MSNBC
David Wallace-Wells (A.B. 2004) – opinion columnist, The New York Times; author of The Uninhabitable Earth
Ivan Watson (A.B. 1997) – senior international correspondent, CNN
Curtis Yarvin (1992) – blogger, political theorist, software engineer, and internet entrepreneur associated with the Dark Enlightenment
Sachi Cunningham (1994) – PBS FRONTLINE/World producer and director of photography, Los Angeles Times video journalist
Literature
Lauren Acampora (A.B. 1997) – author
David Allyn (A.B. 1991) – author, Make Love, Not War, I Can't Believe I Just Did That, playwright, Baptizing Adam
Donald Antrim (A.B. 1981) – author, Elect Mr. Robinson for a Better World, The Verificationist, The Hundred Brothers, recipient of the MacArthur fellowship
Jacob M. Appel (A.B. 1995) – author, playwright, Arborophilia, Creve Coeur, The Mistress of Wholesome
Mona Awad (M.F.A. 2014) – novelist and short story writer
Peter Balakian (PhD 1980) – Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, Ozone Journal
Edward Ball (A.B. 1982) – National Book Award-winning nonfiction writer, Slaves in the Family, The Genetic Strand
Mark Baumer (M.F.A. 2011) – writer and environmental activist
Josh Bazell (A.B. 1992) – novelist
Bill Berkson (1957–1959) – poet and critic
Lisa Birnbach (A.B. 1978) – author, The Official Preppy Handbook
Kate Bornstein (née Albert Bornstein) (A.B. 1969) – transgender activist, performance artist, playwright, gender theorist, and author
Andrew Chaikin (A.B. 1978) – author, A Man on the Moon
Jessamine Chan (2000) – author, The School for Good Mothers
Susan Cheever (A.B. 1965) – author
Frank Chipasula (A.M. 1980, PhD 1987) – Malawian writer
Franny Choi (A.B. 2011) – poet
Mallika Chopra (A.B. 1993) — author and self-help entrepreneur
Ted Chiang (Sc.B. 1989) – Nebula Award, Locus Award, and Hugo Award-winning science fiction writer; author of Story of Your Life, the basis for the film Arrival
Brian Christian (A.B. 2006) – author, The Most Human Human
Zinzi Clemmons (A.B. 2007) – author
Nicole Cooley (A.B. 1988) – poet, Professor of English, Queens College, City University of New York
Nilo Cruz (M.F.A. 1994) – Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright, Anna in the Tropics
Edwidge Danticat (M.F.A. 1993) – American Book Award-winning author, Breath, Eyes, Memory, The Dew Breaker, recipient of the MacArthur fellowship
Cyrus Grace Dunham (2014) – author, A Year Without A Name: A Memoir
David Ebershoff (A.B. 1991) – Lambda Literary Award-winning author, The Danish Girl, editor-at-large at Random House, professor at Columbia University
Jeffrey Eugenides (A.B. 1983) – Pulitzer Prize–winning author, Middlesex, The Virgin Suicides, The Marriage Plot
Percival Everett (A.M. 1982) – novelist, poet; Distinguished Professor of English, University of Southern California
Rudolph Fisher (A.B. 1919, A.M. 1920) – author, musician, physician; a leader of the Harlem Renaissance
Richard Foreman (A.B. 1959) – playwright/avant-garde theater pioneer; founder, Ontological-Hysteric Theater, recipient of the MacArthur fellowship
Sam Walter Foss (A.B. 1882) – poet
Sarah Gambito (M.F.A. 1999) – poet; director of creative writing, Fordham University
Deborah Garrison (A.B. 1986) – poet
Peter Gizzi (M.F.A. 1991) – poet, professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst's MFA Program for Poets & Writers
Xochitl Gonzalez (A.B. 1999) – author and screenwriter, Olga Dies Dreaming; staff writer at The Atlantic
Jaimy Gordon (A.M. 1972, A.D. 1975) – National Book Award-winning author, Lord of Misrule
Andrew Sean Greer (A.B. 1992) – Pulitzer Prize–winning author, Less
Jennifer Haley (M.F.A. 2005) – playwright, winner of the 2012 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize
Scott Haltzman (1982, M.D. 1985) – psychiatrist, self-help author
Jordan Harrison (M.F.A. 2003) – playwright, finalist for the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for Drama
Tony Horwitz (A.B. 1980) – Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, author of Confederates in the Attic,Blue Latitudes
Shelley Jackson (M.F.A. 1994) – hyperfiction writer, author of Patchwork Girl
Steven Johnson (A.B. 1990) – writer and popular science author
Winthrop Jordan (PhD 1960) – American Civil War and racial history writer, winner of the National Book Award and Bancroft Prize
Gayl Jones (M.A. 1973, PhD 1975) – novelist, poet, and playwright; "literary legend" of Black literature
Zeyn Joukhadar (PhD 2014) – novelist
Bess Kalb (A.B. 2010) – author and television writer
Phil Kaye (A.B. 2010) – poet and spoken word artist
Sarah Kay (A.B. 2010, M.A.T. 2012) – poet and spoken word artist
Jonathan Karp (A.B. 1986) – publisher, CEO of Simon & Schuster
Caroline Kepnes (A.B. 1999) – American author and screenwriter, You, Hidden Bodies, Providence
Alexandra Kleeman (A.B. 2007) – writer
T. E. D. Klein (A.B. 1969) – horror fiction writer and magazine editor
Caroline Knapp (A.B. 1981) – essayist and author, Drinking: A Love Story
Richard Kostelanetz (A.B.1962) – cultural historian, fictioner, poet, experimental writer, critic of avant-garde arts and artists, anthologist
Geoffrey A. Landis (PhD 1988) – Nebula Award and Hugo Award-winning scientist-writer and hard science fiction author
Reif Larsen (A.B 2003) – professor at Columbia University; author, The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet
Marie Myung-Ok Lee (A.B. 1986) – author and essayist
Joanne Leedom-Ackerman (A.M. 1969) – author and journalist
Ben Lerner (A.B. 2001, M.F.A. 2003) – poet, author of Angle of Yaw, Leaving the Atocha Station, 10:04, The Topeka School, and The Lichtenberg Figures, recipient of the MacArthur fellowship
Steven Levenson (A.B. 2006) – author, Dear Evan Hansen, winner of the 2017 Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical
David Levithan (A.B. 1993) – author, Boy Meets Boy, Will Grayson, Will Grayson, Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist
Alan Levy (A.B. 1952) – author
David Lipsky (A.B. 1987) – author, Three Thousand Dollars, The Art Fair, Absolutely American
Sam Lipsyte (A.B. 1990) – author, Home Land, Venus Drive, The Fun Parts
Lois Lowry (Class of 1958) – Newbery Medal-winning author, The Giver
Thomas Mallon (A.B. 1973) – author, Henry and Clara, Bandbox, Dewey Defeats Truman, Two Moons
Ben Marcus (M.F.A. 1991) – author, The Age of Wire and String, Notable American Women
Alex McAulay (A.B.) – author, Bad Girls, Lost Summer, Oblivion Road, Shelter Me
Emily Arnold McCully (A.B. 1961) – Caldecott Award-winning children's author, Mirette on the High Wire
Mark C. McGarrity (A.B. 1966) – wrote crime fiction under the name Bartholomew Gill
Roland Merullo (A.B. 1975, A.M.) – author
Madeline Miller (A.B. 2000, A.M. 2001) – Women's Prize for Fiction-winning author of The Song of Achilles and Circe
Steven Millhauser (1968–71) – Pulitzer Prize–winning author, Martin Dressler
Rick Moody (A.B. 1983) – author, The Ice Storm, Garden State, Purple America, The Diviners
Kass Morgan (A.B.) – author, The 100
Rebecca Morris (M.F.A. 1986) – nonfiction author, Ted and Ann, If I Can't Have You, A Killing in Amish Country
Ottessa Moshfegh (M.F.A. 2011) – writer, author of My Year of Rest and Relaxation
Jandy Nelson (M.F.A. 1992) – author, I'll Give You the Sun
Emily Nemens (A.B. 2005) – writer, editor, The Paris Review
Naomi Novik (A.B. 1995) – fantasy author, His Majesty's Dragon
Dan O'Brien (M.F.A. 1999) – playwright and poet, author of The Body of an American
Nicanor Parra (1943–1945) – Chilean poet, author of Poemas y antipoemas, winner of the 2011 Miguel de Cervantes Prize
S. J. Perelman (Class of 1925) – humorist, The New Yorker; author; Academy Award-winning screenwriter, Around the World in Eighty Days
Nathaniel Philbrick (A.B. 1978) – nonfiction writer; National Book Award winner, author of In the Heart of the Sea
Marilynne Robinson (A.B. 1966) – Pulitzer Prize and Orange Prize-winning author, Gilead, Housekeeping, Home
Ariel Sabar (A.B. 1993) – author, National Book Critics Circle Award 2009 for My Father's Paradise
Joanna Scott (M.A. 1985) – author, recipient of the MacArthur Foundation Fellowship and the Lannan Literary Award for Fiction
Dana Schwartz (A.B. 2015) – author
David Shenk (A.B. 1988) – author, The Forgetting,Data Smog,The Immortal Game
Reginald Shepherd (M.F.A. 1988) – poet and author
Daniel Sherrell (A.B. 2013) – author and climate organizer
David Shields (A.B. 1978) – author, Reality Hunger
Scott Snyder (A.B. 1998) – author of the story collection Voodoo Heart and writer of Vertigo Comics's ongoing original series American Vampire
Gustaf Sobin (A.B. 1957) – poet, expatriate
Brian Kim Stefans (M.F.A. 2006) – poet, professor of English at UCLA
Nathanael West (Ph.B. 1924) – author, Miss Lonelyhearts, The Day of the Locust
Meg Wolitzer (A.B. 1981) – author, The Wife, The Interestings, The Position
Adelle Waldman (A.B. 1988) – author, The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P.
Afaa M. Weaver (M.F.A. 1987) – poet, author, and editor
Sherley Anne Williams (A.M. 1972) – poet and novelist
Kevin Young (M.F.A. 1996) – poetry editor, New Yorker; director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture
Joshua M. Zeitz (A.M. 1998, PhD 2002) – historian
C Pam Zhang (2011) – author, How Much of These Hills Is Gold
Medicine and public health
Samuel Warren Abbott (A.M. 1858) – first medical examiner and first secretary of Massachusetts's first state board of health from 1886 to 1904
Justin M. Andrews (Ph.B. 1923) – Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2nd Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Aaron T. Beck (A.B. 1942) – "father of cognitive behavioral therapy"; founder of the Beck Institute for Cognitive Behavior Therapy at the University of Pennsylvania; winner of the Lasker Award
Seth Berkley (Sc.B. 1978, M.D. 1981) – CEO of GAVI, founder and former President and CEO of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative
Tom Catena (A.B. 1986) – Catholic medical missionary working in central Sudan
William A. Catterall (A.B. 1968) – Chair and Professor of Pharmacology, University of Washington School of Medicine, ForMemRS
Charles V. Chapin (A.B. 1876) – Providence Superintendent of Health (1884–1932), pioneer in public health research and practice, first president of the American Epidemiological Society, professor of physiology at Brown
Tina L. Cheng, Chair of Pediatrics at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.
Lynda Chin (A.B. 1988) – Department Chair and Professor of genomic medicine, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center; Scientific Director, MD Anderson Institute for Applied Cancer Science
James J. Cimino (BSc 1977) – Professor of Medicine and director, Informatics Institute, University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine
George E. Coghill (A.B. 1896, PhD 1902) – anatomist
Solomon Drowne (A.B. 1773) – physician, academic, and surgeon during the American Revolution
Jacqueline A. French (M.D. 1982) – neurologist, professor, NYU Langone Health, and Chief Scientific Officer of the Epilepsy Foundation
Nora Groce (PhD) – Leonard Cheshire Chair of Disability and Inclusive Development, Institute of Epidemiology & Health, University College London
Tina Hartert – Lulu H. Owen Endowed Chair in Medicine at Vanderbilt University
Andrew C. Hecht (1989) – Chief of Spine Surgery, Mount Sinai Hospital; Associate Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery and of Neurologic Surgery, Icahn School of Medicine
Insoo Hyun (PhD 1998) – Professor of Bioethics, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine; Senior Lecturer, Harvard Medical School
Judith V. Jordan (1965) – co-director, Jean Baker Miller Institute; Assistant Professor of Psychology, Harvard Medical School
Mark L. Kahn (A.B. 1984, M.D. 1987) – Edward S. Cooper, M.D./Norman Roosevelt and Elizabeth Meriwether McLure Professor of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania
Philip Kantoff (1976, M.D. 1979) – former Chairman of Medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Jerome and Nancy Kohlberg Professor of Medicine Emeritus at Harvard Medical School
William Williams Keen (A.B. 1859) – first American brain surgeon
Linda Liau (A.B., S.B. 1987) – W. Eugene Stern Chair of the Department of Neurosurgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
Lloyd B. Minor (Sc.B. 1979, M.D. 1982) – Carl and Elizabeth Naumann Dean, Stanford University School of Medicine; former provost, Johns Hopkins University
Christine Montross (M.D. 2006, M.MSc 2007) – Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Alpert Medical School at Brown University
Nawal M. Nour (A.B. 1984) – Chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Brigham and Women's Hospital; Associate Professor, Harvard Medical School
Michael Polydefkis (BSc 1988) – Director, Cutaneous Nerve Lab, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator
Megan Ranney (M.P.H. 2010) – Dean, Yale School of Public Health
Joan Reede (Sc.B. 1976) – physician, Dean for Diversity and Community Partnership, Harvard Medical School
Griffin P. Rodgers (Sc.B. 1976, M.MSc & M.D. 1979) – Director of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
Matthew Sacchet (A.B. 2010) – Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
Sally Satel (M.D. 1984) – Lecturer in Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine
Erica Schwartz (Sc.B. 1994, M.D. 1998) – Deputy Surgeon General of the United States (2019–2021)
Harry Selker (M.D. 1978) – Dean and professor, Tufts University School of Medicine
Manny Sethi (A.B. 2000) – physician, president and founder of the non-profit Healthy Tennessee
Neel Shah (Sc.B. 2004, M.D. 2009) – Executive Director of Costs of Care, Assistant Professor at Harvard Medical School
Military
John F. Aiso (1931) – highest-ranking Japanese American in the U.S. Army during World War II, first Japanese American judge in the contiguous U.S.
William C. Chase (A.B. 1916) – Major general during World War II
G. Edward Buxton (Ph.B. 1902) – commanding officer of Sergeant Alvin C. York; first assistant director of the OSS
Thomas Ewing Jr. (Class of 1856) – Union Army general during the American Civil War, first chief justice of Kansas
Ployer Peter Hill (BSc 1916) – test pilot, namesake of Hill Air Force Base in Utah
James Mitchell Varnum (A.B. 1769) – General in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War and justice of the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territory
Performing arts
Music
Sean Altman (A.B. 1983) – founding tenor member of Rockapella, known for the theme song of Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?
Charles Ansbacher (1965) – founder and conductor of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra
MC Paul Barman (A.B. 1997) – cult rapper
Marco Beltrami (Sc.B. 1988) – two-time Academy Award-nominated film score composer, Scream (1996), Resident Evil (2002), Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003), Hellboy (2004), Live Free or Die Hard (2007), 3:10 to Yuma (2007), Max Payne (2008), Mesrine (2008), The Hurt Locker (2009), The Wolverine (2013), Warm Bodies (2013), World War Z (2013), Free Solo (2018), Ford v Ferrari (2019), and the video game Fortnite
Clare Burson (1997) – singer-songwriter
David Buskin (A.B 1965) – singer-songwriter (Modern Man), jingle composer, Clio Award winner (1983)
Julia Cafritz – musician, known for Pussy Galore
Wendy Carlos (A.B. 1962) – composer and electronic musician, Switched-On Bach (1968); film score composer, A Clockwork Orange (1971), Tron (1982)
Mary Chapin Carpenter (A.B. 1981) – country singer-songwriter
Chubb Rock – rapper and radio host
Joel Cohen (A.B. 1963) – director of the Boston Camerata
Alvin Curran (A.B. 1960) – avant-garde composer
Catie Curtis (1987) – contemporary folk singer-songwriter
Dave Dederer (A.B.) – guitarist, singer, and founding member of rock band The presidents of the United States of America
Shelby Gaines (1991) – musician and artist
Tucker Halpern (2013) – musician and DJ, one half of electronic pop group Sofi Tukker
Dhani Harrison (2001) – son of George Harrison, composer, guitarist
Sophie Hawley-Weld (2014) – musician, one half of electronic pop group Sofi Tukker
Lili Haydn (1992) – singer-songwriter, violinist
Dave Harrington (2009) – multi-instrumentalist and producer
Lingua Ignota (M.F.A. 2016) – multidisciplinary artist and instrumentalist
Nicolás Jaar (A.B. 2012) – avant-garde electronic music producer, owner and founder of record label and art house Clown & Sunset
Gabriel Kahane (2003) – singer-songwriter
Elliott Kerman (Sc.B. 1981) – founding baritone member of Rockapella
Tad Kinchla (1995) – bassist for jam band Blues Traveler
Richard Kostelanetz (A.B. 1962) – electro-acoustic composer (New York City Oratorio, America's Game), writer on innovative musics and musicians
Damian Kulash (A.B. 1998) – lead singer and founding member of indie rock band OK Go
Erich Kunzel (1964) – conductor, Cincinnati Pops Orchestra
Lawrence – soul-pop group founded by Clyde Lawrence '15 and Gracie Lawrence (Class of 2020)
Lisa Loeb (A.B. 1990) – Grammy Award-winning alternative singer-songwriter; first unsigned artist to top the American charts
The Low Anthem – indie folk band that includes alums Ben Knox Miller (2006), Jeff Prystowsky (2006) and Jocie Adams
Erin McKeown (2000) – folk singer-songwriter
Elizabeth Mitchell (1990) – musician, member of indie folk–pop band Ida; played in a band with Lisa Loeb and Duncan Sheik while at Brown
Will Oldham (Class of 1992) – indie rock/alternative country singer-songwriter who also performs under the names Bonnie 'Prince' Billy and Palace
Dan Prothero – producer / engineer and owner of Fog City Records
The Range – DJ and electronic musician
Sebastian Ruth (A.B. 1997) – violinist, 2010 MacArthur Fellow and faculty member of the Yale School of Music
Susan Salms-Moss (A.B. 1967) – soprano
Theodore Shapiro (A.B. 1993) – film score composer, State and Main (2000), Old School (2003), Starsky & Hutch (2004), The Devil Wears Prada (2006), Marley & Me (2008), Tropic Thunder (2008), I Love You, Man (2008), We're the Millers (2013), The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013), Ghostbusters (2016), The Eyes of Tammy Faye (2021), Severance (2022)
Duncan Sheik (A.B. 1992) – alternative rock singer-songwriter; top 10 hit for the song "Barely Breathing"; Grammy and two-time Tony Award-winning composer, Spring Awakening
Sasha Spielberg (2012) – musician, Wardell; daughter of Steven Spielberg and Kate Capshaw
Susie Suh (A.B. 2002) – alternative rock singer-songwriter
Saleka (A.B. 2018) – R&B singer-songwriter; daughter of M. Night Shyamalan
Jon Spencer – singer and composer, known for Pussy Galore and Boss Hog
Sally Taylor (1996) – musician, daughter of Carly Simon and James Taylor
Gwyneth Walker (A.B. 1967) – composer
J. Mayo Williams (1920) – first African-American producer at a major record label
Jamila Woods, (A.B. 2011) singer, songwriter and poet signed to Jagajaguwar
ZOX – SideOneDummy recording artist, composed of John Zox '02, Eli Miller '02, Daniel Edinberg '02, and Spencer Swain
Film
Andrew Ahn (2008) – director, Spa Night,Driveways
Eva Amurri (2007) – actress, Loving Annabelle, Saved!, The Banger Sisters; daughter of Susan Sarandon
Scott E. Anderson (Sc.B. 1986) – Academy Award-winning Visual Effects Supervisor, Babe, and nominee Starship Troopers, Hollow Man
Bess Armstrong (1975) – actress, The Four Seasons (1981), High Road to China
Raymond J. Barry (A.B) – actor, Born on the Fourth of July, Steel City
David Bartis (A.B. 1988) – producer, The Wall, Edge of Tomorrow, Fair Game
Randall Batinkoff (1990) – actor, For Keeps, School Ties
Steve Bloom (A.B. 1978) – screenwriter, James and the Giant Peach, The Sure Thing, Tall Tale, Jack Frost
Joseph Bologna – actor, My Favorite Year, Blame It on Rio
Sara Colangelo (A.B. 2001) – writer and director, Little Accidents,Worth
David Conrad (A.B. 1990) – actor, Wedding Crashers, Ghost Whisperer
Michael Costigan (1990) – producer, Brokeback Mountain, American Gangster, Under the Banner of Heaven
Louis Ozawa Changchien (M.F.A. 2006) – actor, Predators, The Bourne Legacy, Bosch
Yaya Da Costa (A.B. 2004) – actress, Take the Lead, Honeydripper, The Kids Are All Right, The Butler; fashion model
Lucy DeVito (A.B. 2005) – actress, Melissa and Joey, Leaves of Grass
Tom Dey (A.B. 1987) – director, Shanghai Noon, Showtime, Failure to Launch, Marmaduke, Wedding Season
Richard Fleischer (A.B. 1939) – director, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954), The Narrow Margin, Fantastic Voyage, Tora! Tora! Tora!, The Boston Strangler, Doctor Dolittle, Mandingo, Soylent Green; Academy Award-winning documentary producer, Design for Death
Josh Friedman (1989) – screenwriter, War of the Worlds, The Black Dahlia; executive producer, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles; developer, Snowpiercer
Liz Garbus (A.B. 1992) – Academy Award-nominated documentary filmmaker, What Happened, Miss Simone?, The Farm: Angola, USA, Killing in the Name, All In: The Fight for Democracy, Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
Francesca Gregorini (A.B. 1990) – Italian-American writer and film director
Davis Guggenheim (1986) – Academy Award-winning documentary film director, An Inconvenient Truth, It Might Get Loud, and Waiting for "Superman"; film director for Gracie, Gossip (2000), and episodes of 24, Alias, The Shield, ER, NYPD Blue
John Hamburg (A.B. 1992) – director, I Love You, Man, Along Came Polly; screenwriter, Zoolander, Meet the Parents, Meet the Fockers
Josh Hamilton (1991) – actor, Eighth Grade, 13 Reasons Why
Hill Harper (A.B. 1988) – actor, Constellation, Lackawanna Blues, CSI: NY
Phil Hay – screenwriter, Destroyer, The Invitation, Ride Along
Todd Haynes (A.B. 1983) – Academy Award-nominated writer/director, Mildred Pierce, I'm Not There, Far from Heaven, Velvet Goldmine, Safe (1995), Poison, Dark Waters, The Velvet Underground
David Hedison (Class of 1949) – film, television, and stage actor
Sean Hood (1988) – screenwriter, Conan the Barbarian, Halloween: Resurrection, Cursed, Cube 2: Hypercube
Ruth Hussey (A.B. 1933) – Academy Award-nominated actress, The Philadelphia Story
Oren Jacoby (1977) – Academy Award-nominated documentarian, Constantine's Sword
Kirsten Johnson (1987) – documentarian, director, and cinematographer, Dick Johnson Is Dead, Cameraperson
Rory Kennedy (A.B. 1991) – independent filmmaker, Moxie Firecracker Films, Inc.; Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
Simon Kinberg (A.B. 1995) – screenwriter and producer, X-Men: Days of Future Past, Sherlock Holmes, Jumper (2008), X-Men: The Last Stand, Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005)
Alison Klayman (A.B. 2006) – documentary filmmaker and journalist, Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry
Paul Kowalski (A.B. 2004) – film director and screenwriter, Paper Tiger (2020)
John Krasinski (A.B. 2001) – playwright, actor, director, and producer, The Office, Jack Ryan, A Quiet Place, A Quiet Place Part II, Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, License to Wed, 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi
Ellen Kuras (1981) – cinematographer, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Blow, He Got Game, Summer of Sam, Be Kind Rewind
Jonathan Levine (A.B. 2000) – writer/director, Warm Bodies, 50/50 (2011), The Wackness, All The Boys Love Mandy Lane
Doug Liman (A.B. 1988) – director and producer, The O.C., Edge of Tomorrow, Fair Game (2010),Jumper (2008), Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), The Bourne Identity (2002), The Bourne Supremacy, Go (1999), Swingers (1996)
Laura Linney (A.B. 1986) – three-time Academy Award and two-time Tony Award-nominated actress, The Big C, The Savages, The Nanny Diaries, The Squid and the Whale, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, Kinsey, Mystic River, Love Actually, You Can Count on Me, The Truman Show, Absolute Power, Primal Fear, Ozark
Kurt Luedtke (A.B. 1961) – Academy Award-winning screenwriter, Out of Africa
Kátia Lund (A.B. 1989) – co-director, Cidade de Deus (City of God) (2002)
George Macready (A.B. 1921) – actor of film, stage, and television, Tora! Tora! Tora!, Paths of Glory
Eli Marienthal (Class of 2008) – actor, Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, The Iron Giant, Jack Frost (1998)
Matt Manfredi – screenwriter, Crazy/Beautiful, Ride Along, The Mysterious Benedict Society
Ross McElwee (A.B. 1970) – documentary filmmaker, Sherman's March (1986) and Bright Leaves
Leah Meyerhoff (A.B. 2001) – Student Academy Award-nominated writer/director, Twitch
Tim Blake Nelson (A.B. 1986) – actor, Lincoln (2012), The Incredible Hulk, Syriana, Minority Report, O Brother, Where Art Thou?, The Thin Red Line (1998); director, Leaves of Grass, O, The Grey Zone
Lorraine Nicholson (2012) – actress, Soul Surfer, daughter of Jack Nicholson
Matthew Reeve (002 )– producer and director, son of Christopher Reeve
Yoruba Richen (A.B. 1994) – film director, screenwriter, and producer
Jane Rosenthal – founder of the Tribeca Film Festival
Danny Rubin (A.B. 1979) – screenwriter, Groundhog Day
Michael Showalter (A.B. 1992) – actor/writer/director, Wet Hot American Summer, The Baxter and the series The State, Stella and Michael & Michael Have Issues
Leelee Sobieski (Class of 2005) – actress, Eyes Wide Shut,Never Been Kissed, Here on Earth, Joy Ride (2001), The Glass House (2001), Wicker Man (2006), 88 Minutes, Public Enemies (2009); nominated for an Emmy for Joan of Arc
Alison Stewart (A.B. 1988) – radio and television journalist; filmmaker
Matthew Sussman – actor, documentary filmmaker
Sara Tanaka (A.B. 2000) – actress, Rushmore, Old School, Imaginary Heroes
Astra Taylor (Class of 2001) – activist and filmmaker, Zizek!, Examined Life, What Is Democracy?
Christine Vachon (A.B. 1983) – acclaimed independent film producer, I'm Not There, Infamous (2006), The Notorious Bettie Page, Far From Heaven, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Boys Don't Cry (1999); executive producer, This American Life
Andrew Wagner (A.B. 1985) – writer, director, Starting Out in the Evening, The Talent Given Us
Earl Wallace (A.B. 1955) – Academy Award-winning screenwriter, Witness
Julie Warner (A.B. 1987) – actress, Doc Hollywood, Tommy Boy
Emma Watson (A.B. 2014) – actress, model, and activist, Harry Potter, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Beauty and the Beast (2017), Little Women (2019)
Betsy West (1973) – filmmaker and director, RBG, My Name Is Pauli Murray; Fred W. Friendly Professor of Professional Practice in Media Society Emeritus, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism
JoBeth Williams (A.B. 1970) – actress, The Big Chill, Poltergeist
Elizabeth Woodward – producer, The Great Hack, The Vow, You Resemble Me.
Janet Yang (A.B. 1978) – first Asian-American president, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (2022–); producer, The Joy Luck Club, The People vs. Larry Flynt
Jeff Zimbalist (2000) – filmmaker, Favela Rising
Television
Sosie Bacon (Class of 2014) – actress, 13 Reasons Why, Loverboy, Smile; daughter of Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick
Iris Bahr (1998) – actress, Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector, Curb Your Enthusiasm
Kenneth Biller (1986) – television producer, writer, and director
Julie Bowen (A.B. 1991) – actress, Modern Family, Boston Legal, Ed, Happy Gilmore
Roger Bowen (A.B.) – comedic actor, M*A*S*H; novelist
Jordan Carlos (A.B. 2001) – comedian, Stephen Colbert's "black friend"
Charise Castro Smith (A.B. 2005) actress, writer, playwright, producer, The Exorcist, The Haunting of Hill House, Encanto
Kitty Chen (A.B. 1966) – actress, Law & Order, writer
Nick Chinlund – actor, The X-Files
Jude Ciccolella (A.B. 1969) – actor, best known for his role as Mike Novick in 24
Julian Cihi (A.B. 2009) – Japanese and American actor
Yaya DaCosta (A.B. 2004) – actress and model
Joel de la Fuente (A.B. 1991) – actor, best known for his role as Dr. Johann Pryce in Hemlock Grove
Aunjanue Ellis (A.B. 1993) – actress, The Mentalist
India Ennenga (A.B.) – actress, Treme
Eve Gordon (A.B. 1978) – actress, Recount, Honey, We Shrunk Ourselves, Felicity, American Horror Story, Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23, Supernatural
Robin Green (1967) – Emmy Award-winning writer and producer, The Sopranos, Northern Exposure
Andy Greenwald (1999)– writer, podcaster, and producer
Jonathan Groff (A.B. 1983) – actor, BlackAF; producer, Black-ish; writer, The Jon Stewart Show and Late Night with Conan O'Brien
David Groh (1961) – actor, Rhoda
Marin Hinkle (1988) – actress, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Once and Again, Two and a Half Men
Adam Bock (1989) – Obie Award-winning playwright, The Thugs
Kate Burton (A.B. 1979) – actress; nominated for three Tony Awards; on Grey's Anatomy as Dr. Ellis Grey
Zoë Chao (A.B. 2008) – actress in theatre and star of her own television show The God Particles; currently starring as Isobel in Facebook Watch drama Strangers
Nilo Cruz (M.F.A. 1994) – Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright, Anna in the Tropics
Daveed Diggs (A.B. 2004) – actor, Tony Award-winning originator of the roles of Thomas Jefferson and Marquis de Lafayette in the Pulitzer-Prize winning 2015 musical Hamilton
Gina Gionfriddo (M.F.A. 1997) – playwright, two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist, Becky Shaw (2009) and Rapture, Blister, Burn (2013); producer, Law and Order
Ann Harada (A.B. 1985) – actress in the original Broadway casts of Avenue Q and Cinderella
Quiara Alegría Hudes (M.F.A. 2004) – Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright, Water by the Spoonful, In the Heights (Tony Award winner for Best Musical), Elliot, a Soldier's Fugue, In the Heights
Stephen Karam (2002) – playwright, Speech & Debate (2006); Tony Award winner, The Humans (2016); two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist, Sons of the Prophet (2012) and The Humans
James Naughton (A.B. 1967) – actor, two-time Tony Award winner for City of Angels (1992) and Chicago (1996); also featured in films such as The Paper Chase (1973), The Glass Menagerie (1987) and The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
John Ford Noonan (A.B. 1964) – actor and playwright best known for A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking
Lynn Nottage (A.B. 1986) – first female playwright to win the Pulitzer Prize twice, Macarthur fellowship recipient, Ruined, Sweat
Sarah Ruhl (A.B. 1997, M.F.A 2001) – playwright and two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist, recipient of the Macarthur fellowship, The Clean House, Eurydice, Passion Play, In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play)
Burt Shevelove (1937) – Tony Award-winning playwright, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
Miriam Silverman (A.B. 2001, M.F.A. 2005) – Tony Award winning actress, The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Alfred Uhry (1958) – playwright; Pulitzer Prize, Academy Award and Tony Award winner, Driving Miss Daisy, The Last Night of Ballyhoo
Amy Van Nostrand – actress, The Hothouse
David Yazbek (1982) – Tony and Emmy Award-winning writer, musician, composer, and lyricist, The Band's Visit (2017), The Full Monty (2000), Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (2005) and Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (2010)
John Lloyd Young (A.B. 1998) – actor; Tony Award winner for Jersey Boys (2006); lead vocalist, 2007 Grammy-winning Jersey Boys album for Clint Eastwood's 2014 Jersey Boys; member of President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities
Religion and theology
Alfred W. Anthony (A.B. 1883) – Professor at Bates College and Cobb Divinity School, author, Free Will Baptist minister
Mark E. Brennan (A.B. 1969) – Catholic auxiliary bishop of Baltimore
Alexander Viets Griswold (A.B. 1810) – Episcopal Bishop of the Eastern Diocese, which included all of New England with the exception of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut
Mark Antony DeWolfe Howe (A.B. 1828) – first Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania (now Diocese of Bethlehem)
William Bullein Johnson (A.M. 1814) – South Carolina Baptist leader; first president of the Southern Baptist Convention; instrumental figure in the founding Furman University, out of which emerged Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
Adoniram Judson (A.B. 1807) – Baptist missionary; due in part to his efforts, Myanmar has the third largest number of Baptists worldwide
Swami Kriyananda (1945–47) – founder of the Ananda movement
Yehuda Kurtzer (A.M. 2001) – President of the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America
Jonathan Maxcy (A.B. 1787) – President of Brown University and Baptist minister
George Maxwell Randall (A.B. 1835) – Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Colorado and Parts Adjacent
Katherine Sonderegger (PhD 1990) – William Meade Chair in Systematic Theology at Virginia Theological Seminary
Joshua Toulmin (A.M. 1769) – English dissenting minister with U.S. sympathies
Royalty and nobility
Prince Rahim Aga Khan (A.B. 1995) – eldest son of Prince Karim Aga Khan IV
Prince Alexander-Georg von Auersperg (1983) – son of Sunny von Bülow
Countess Cosima von Bülow Pavoncelli (1989) – daughter of Claus von Bülow and Sunny von Bülow
Prince Alexander von Fürstenberg (A.B. 1993) – businessman, son of Diane von Fürstenberg and Prince Egon von Fürstenberg
Princess Tatiana von Fürstenberg (A.B. 1991) –singer-songwriter, daughter of Diane von Fürstenberg and Prince Egon von Fürstenberg
Prince Faisal bin Al Hussein (Sc.B. 1985) – son of the late King Hussein of Jordan; Commander of the Jordan Royal Air Force
Lady Gabriella Kingston (A.B. 2004) – freelance writer and member of the royal family of the United Kingdom
Prince Nikolaos of Greece and Denmark (A.B. 1993) – member of the titular royal family of Greece
Princess Nissa Raad (A.B. 2002) – member of the Jordanian royal family
Princess Lila Pahlavi (A.B. 1992) – Princess of Iran; youngest daughter of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, deposed Shah of Iran
Princess Theodora of Greece and Denmark (A.B. 2006) – member of the titular royal family of Greece
Lady Gabriella Windsor (A.B. 2004) – member of the British royal family
Fine and applied arts
Architecture
Stan Allen (A.B. 1978) – architect; George Dutton '27 Professor of Architecture and former Dean (2002–2012), Princeton University School of Architecture
Edwin T. Banning (1885) – architect active in Rhode Island
Prescott O. Clarke (1880) – architect active in Rhode Island
Henry Atherton Frost – architect
Sarah Williams Goldhagen (A.B. 1982) – architectural critic
John G. Haskell – architect of Kansas public buildings, including the Kansas State Capitol
Raymond Hood (1898–99) – architect of the Tribune Tower in Chicago and Rockefeller Center in New York
Charles Evans Hughes III (A.B.) – architect, grandson of Charles Evans Hughes
Francis L. V. Hoppin (A.B.) – architect
Norman Isham (A.B. 1886, M.A. 1890) – Rhode Island historical architect
Harry Wild Jones – architect
John Black Lee – mid-century modern architect
Robert Somol (A.B. 1982) – architectural theorist
Laurinda Hope Spear (B.F.A. 1972) – architect, co-founder of Arquitectonica
Thomas Alexander Tefft (1851) – pioneer American architect
Design
Jonathan Adler (A.B. 1988) – potter, designer and author
Julie Carlson (A.B. 1983) – co-founder of Remodelista
Tom Geismar (A.B. 1953) – graphic designer, designer of the PBS and Mobil logos
Chuck Hoberman (1974–1976) – designer, inventor of the Hoberman sphere
Fashion
Montana Levi Blanco (A.M.) – costume designer, recipient of the 2022 Tony Award for Best Costume Design in a Play
Dana Buchman (A.B. 1973) – fashion designer
Kimberly Ovitz (A.B. 2005) – fashion designer
André Leon Talley (A.M. 1973) – Vogue magazine editor-at-large; first African-American male creative director of Vogue
Visual arts
David Aldrich (A.B. 1929) – watercolor painter
Deborah Aschheim (A.B. 1986) – new media artist
Marc Erwin Babej (A.B. 1992) – photographic artist, writer
Éric Baudelaire (A.B. 1994) – artist
Richard Benson (1961) – photographer, Dean of the Yale School of Art (1996–2006), recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship
Bill Bollinger (1961) – minimalist sculptor and installation artist
Susan Chen (A.B. 2015) – painter
Dawn Clements (A.B. 1986) – contemporary artist known for her panoramas
Dave Cole (A.B. 2000) – sculptor, visual artist
John Connell (Class of 1962) – sculptor and painter
Devon Dikeou (A.B. 1986) – artist and curator
Barnaby Evans (1975) – creator of the environmental art installation WaterFire
Ayana Evans (A.B. 1998) – performance artist
Brian Floca (A.B. 1991) – author and book illustrator
Coco Fusco (A.B. 1982) – interdisciplinary artist and feminist
Susan Freedman (A.B. 1982) – president of the Public Art Fund
Chitra Ganesh (A.B. 1996) – artist
Orly Genger (A.B. 2001) – contemporary sculptor and installation artist
Sanford Robinson Gifford (A.B. 1844) – landscape painter of the Hudson River School
Isca Greenfield-Sanders (A.B. 2000) – artist
Karl Haendel (A.B. 1998) – artist known for his pencil drawings
Ilana Halperin (A.B. 1995) – artist
George Hitchcock (A.B. 1872) – impressionist painter
Akiko Ichikawa (A.B. 1994) – interdisciplinary visual artist and writer
Bill Jacobson (A.B. 1977) – photographer
Ken Johnson (A.B. 1976) – art critic for the New York Times
Paul Ramirez Jonas (A.B. 1987) – contemporary artist; Chair of the Department of Art, Cornell University College of Architecture, Art, and Planning
Nina Katchadourian (A.B. 1989) – multimedia artist
Walter Liedtke (A.M. 1969) – curator of European paintings Metropolitan Museum of Art
Candice Lin (A.B 2001) – artist
Sarah Morris (A.B. 1988) – contemporary painter and filmmaker
Elizabeth Neel (A.B. 1997) – contemporary painter
Lisa Oppenheim (A.B. 1998) – multimedia artist
Sarah Oppenheimer (A.B. 1995) – sculptor and installation artist
Maureen Paley (A.B. 1975) – established the first East End gallery in London, represents the work of important contemporary artists
Bern Porter (Sc.M. 1933) – visual artist and scientist involved in the development of the cathode-ray tube and the Manhattan Project
Seth Price (A.B. 1997) – post-conceptual artist
Lauren Redniss (A.B. 1996) – artist and writer, recipient of Guggenheim Fellowship and Macarthur fellowship
Willoughby Sharp (A.B. 1957) – pioneer in conceptual and performance art
Jeff Shesol (A.B. 1991) – cartoonist, Thatch; scriptwriter for Bill Clinton
Taryn Simon (A.B. 1997) – multidisciplinary artist
Scott Snibbe (A.B. 1991, MSc 1994) – interactive media artist
Anne Morgan Spalter (A.B. 1987) – digital mixed media artist and pioneering computer art academic; founder of Brown's and RISD's original digital fine arts courses
Martha Tedeschi (A.B. 1980) – Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director of the Harvard Art Museums
Kerry Tribe (A.B. 1997) – installation artist
Mark Tribe (A.B. 1990) – artist; chair of the School of Visual Arts' MFA program
Marcus Waterman (1857) – Orientalist painter
Virgil Macey Williams (1847–1850) – painter, co-founder of the San Francisco Art Association
Saya Woolfalk (A.B. 2001) – multimedia artist
Game Design
Elizabeth Hargrave (1994) – board game designer
Athletics
Baseball
Bill Almon (1975) – professional baseball player for the San Diego Padres, New York Mets, Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics and Pittsburgh Pirates; No. 1 pick in the 1974 draft
Mark Attanasio (A.B. 1979) – financier and owner of the Milwaukee Brewers
Charley Bassett – professional baseball player
Tommy Dowd – professional baseball player
Dave Fultz – professional baseball player
Irving "Bump" Hadley (Class of 1928) – professional baseball player, pitcher for the Washington Senators and New York Yankees
Mike Lynch – professional baseball player
Frank Philbrick – professional baseball player
Lee Richmond – professional baseball player, pitched the first perfect game in major league baseball history
Fred Tenney – professional baseball player
William Edward White – possibly the first African-American to play major league baseball
Basketball
Lindsay Gottlieb (1999) – head coach, USC Trojans women's basketball
Bernard Muir (1990) – athletic director at Stanford University
Stephen Silas (1996) – head coach for the Houston Rockets
Football
Don Colo (1950) – professional football player, three-time Pro Bowl selection; played for the Cleveland Browns
Zak DeOssie (2007) – linebacker and long snapper for the New York Giants, two-time Pro Bowl selection (2008, 2010)
James Develin (2010) – fullback for the New England Patriots; 2014 and 2016 Super Bowl Champion; 2017 Pro Bowl selection
Mark Donovan (1988) – President of the Kansas City Chiefs
John W. Heisman (Class of 1891) – college football player and coach; namesake of the Heisman Trophy
Steve Jordan (Sc.B. 1982) – professional football player, six-time All-Pro tight end who played for the Minnesota Vikings
Sean Morey (1999) – Special Teams Captain of 2005 Super Bowl XL Champion Pittsburgh Steelers
Bill O'Brien (A.B. 1992) – Offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at the University of Alabama, former head Coach at Penn State, former NFL head coach of the Houston Texans
Curly Oden (1921) – National Football League running back and member of 1928 league champion Providence Steam Roller
Joe Paterno (A.B. 1950) – Head Coach for Penn State (1966–2011), all-time winningest Division I football coach
E. J. Perry (A.B. 2021) – quarterback for the Michigan Panthers
Fritz Pollard (A.B. 1919) – first black All-American halfback; first black National Football League head coach; as a player, led the Akron Pros to the NFL's first-ever championship in 1920; inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame
Edward North Robinson (1896) – football coach at University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Brown, Tufts, Boston University, and for the Providence Steam Roller; member of the College Football Hall of Fame
Wallace Wade (1917) – football coach at the University of Alabama and then Duke, member of the College Football Hall of Fame; namesake of Duke's football stadium
Ice hockey
Curt Bennett (1970) – professional ice hockey player, St. Louis Blues and Atlanta Flames
Yann Danis (A.B. 2004) – professional ice hockey goaltender for the New York Islanders
Brian Eklund (A.B. 2002) – professional ice hockey goaltender for the Tampa Bay Lightning
Garnet Hathaway (2014) – professional ice hockey forward for the Washington Capitals
Brian Ihnacak (1985) – professional ice hockey forward for HC '05 Banská Bystrica
Sam Lafferty (2018) – professional ice hockey forward for the Pittsburgh Penguins
Lacrosse
Timothy Kelly (2002) – general manager of the New York Titans of the National Lacrosse League
Dylan Molloy (2017) – player for the Chrome Lacrosse Club
Lars Tiffany (1990) – head coach of the Virginia Cavaliers men's lacrosse program at the University of Virginia
Dom Starsia (1974) – former head coach of the Virginia Cavaliers men's lacrosse program at the University of Virginia
Olympics
Gold
Tessa Gobbo (2013) – American rower, Olympic gold (2016) medalist in women's coxed eight rowing
Helen Johns Carroll (A.B. 1936) – American freestyle swimmer, Olympic gold (1932) medalist
Becky Kellar-Duke (1997) – Canadian ice hockey player, Olympic gold (2002, 2006, 2010) and silver (1998) medalist
Katie King (1997) – American ice hockey player, Olympic gold (1998), silver (2002), and bronze (2006) medalist
Tara Mounsey (Sc.B. 2001) – American ice hockey player, Olympic gold (1998) and silver (2002) medalist
Xeno Müller (2002) – Swiss rower, Olympic gold (1996) and silver (2000) medalist in the single scull
Albina Osipowich (A.B. 1933) – American freestyle swimmer, Olympic gold (1928) medals in the 100-meter freestyle and 4×100-meter freestyle
Alicia Sacramone (2010) – American gymnast, Olympic silver (2008) medal in the women's artistic team all-around
Jack Spellman (1924) – American wrestler, Olympic gold (1924) medal in the men's freestyle light heavyweight
Norman Taber (1913) – American runner, Olympic gold (1912) medal in the 3000m relay
Silver
Lauren Gibbs (2006) – American bobsledder, Olympic silver (2018) medalist in women's doubles bobsled
Jonathan Smith (1983) – American rower, Olympic silver (1984) and bronze (1988) medalist in the coxless four and men's eight
Sarah Herndon (1983)- American sailor, Olympic silver (2000) medalist in Women's 470 (crew) team
John Welchli (1950) – American rower, Olympic silver (1956)
Vincent Zhou (2023) – American figure skater, Olympic silver in the team event (2022)
Bronze
Igor Boraska (1995) – Croatian rower, Olympic bronze (2000) medal in the eights competition
Robert Bennett (1949) – American athlete, Olympic bronze (1948) medal in the men's hammer throw
Charles Thomas Butler (1955) – American bobsledder, Olympic bronze (1956) medal in the four-man
John Collier (1929) – American athlete, Olympic bronze (1928) medal in the 110-metre hurdles
Pam Dreyer (2003) – American ice hockey player, Olympic bronze (2006) medal in the women's tournament
Glen Foster (1952) – American sailor, Olympic bronze (1972) medal in the Tempest class
David Hall (1901) – American runner, Olympic bronze (1900) medalist in the 800-meter race
Kim Insalaco (2003) – American ice hockey player, Olympic bronze (2006) medal in the women's tournament
Kathleen Kauth (2001) – American ice hockey player, Olympic bronze (2006) medalist
Janet Leung (2016) – Canadian softball player, Olympic bronze (2020)
Ted Patton (1988) – American rower, Olympic bronze (1988)
Jimmy Pedro (A.B. 1994) – most decorated American male judo athlete; Judo World Champion (1999); two-time Olympic bronze medalist (1996, 2004)
Donald Whiston (1951) – American ice hockey player, Olympic bronze (1952) medal in the men's tournament
Competitors
Hanna Barakat (2022) – Palestinian–American runner, competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Dick Dreissigacker (1969) – American rower, competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics
Cicely Madden (2018) – American rower, competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Rajanya Shah (1996) – American rower, competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics
Jagger Stephens (2020) – Guamanian swimmer, competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Nikola Stojić (1997) – Serbian rower, competed in four consecutive Summer Olympics (2000, 2004, 2008, 2012)
Evan Weinstock (1914) – American bobsledder, competed at the 2018 Winter Olympics
Anders Weiss (2016) – American rower, competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Anna Willard (2006) – 2008 Olympic qualifier in 3000m steeplechase, American record holder in 3000m steeplechase
Joanna Zeiger (1992) – fourth in inaugural Olympic Women's Triathlon, 2000 Summer Olympics, Sydney; Olympic trial qualifier in marathon, triathlon and swimming; world champion in triathlon
Other sports
Rhett Bernstein (2009) – professional soccer player
Mark Donohue (1959) – professional race car driver; 1972 Indianapolis 500 winner; fatally injured in a crash in practice for the Formula One 1975 Austrian Grand Prix; inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America and the International Motorsports Hall of Fame (1991)
Charlie Enright (2008) – American sailor, winning skipper 2023 The Ocean Race
Cory Gibbs (2001) – professional soccer player, Charlton Athletic, FA Premier League
Fred Hovey (1890) – professional tennis player, US Open Men's Doubles Champion (1893) and Men's Singles Champion (1895)
Jeff Larentowicz (2005) – professional soccer player, New England Revolution, Major League Soccer
Bill Wirtz (1950) – owner of the Chicago Blackhawks
Colonial Era graduates (1769–1783)
Solomon Drowne (A.B. 1773) – physician
Dwight Foster (A.B. 1770) – United States Senator from Massachusetts, Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts
Theodore Foster (A.B. 1770) – United States Senator from Rhode Island
David Howell (A.M. 1769) – Delegate to the Congress of the Confederation
Joshua Toulmin (A.M. 1769) – English dissenting minister
James Mitchell Varnum (A.B. 1769) – leader of 1st Rhode Island Regiment, widely regarded as the first Black battalion in U.S. history
Samuel Ward Jr. (A.B. 1771) – delegate to the Hartford Convention
Unclassified
Michael V. Bhatia (A.B. 1999) – Medal of Freedom recipient
Susan Bennett (1971) – voice actress, original voice of Apple's Siri
Florencio Campomanes (A.M. 1951) – former president of the World Chess Federation
Amy Carter (Class of 1989) – daughter of former President Jimmy Carter; political activist
Andrew Dexter Jr. (A.B. 1798) – founder of Montgomery, Alabama
Isaac Haxton (2008) – professional poker player
Douglas Harriman Kennedy (A.B.) – tenth child of Robert F. Kennedy and Ethel Kennedy
Casey Johnson (2001) – socialite, heiress of Johnson & Johnson, daughter of Nancy Sale & Woody Johnson
Alexandra Kerry (A.B. 1997) – daughter of presidential candidate and U.S. Senator John Kerry
Sadad Ibrahim Al Husseini (M.S. 1970, PhD 1973) – oil and gas industry expert
Theodore Morde (1935–36) – famed explorer and adventurer who claimed to have discovered the "Lost City of the Monkey God" in Honduras
Cara Mund (Class of 2016) – Miss America 2018
Allegra Versace (Class of 2008) – heiress to Gianni Versace's fortune and daughter of Donatella Versace