Global approach. Local impact.

The W. P. Carey School of Business knows the problems facing the world are better tackled head-on, and together. We welcome students from more than 100 countries, partner with universities across three continents, and collaborate on research that impacts everyone—from farmers in Bolivia to aid workers in NGOs to executives in multinational corporations.
1,742
International undergraduate students
127
Countries represented
99
International faculty
26%
Faculty with international citizenship

China

Alumni across 29 different provinces in China, with additional alumni in Canada, the U.S., the UK, and Singapore.
EMBA in Shanghai
  • Partnership with Shanghai National Accounting Institute
  • Ranked No. 20 in the world by Financial Times
  • In 2005, the first W. P. Carey EMBA in Shanghai graduates received the first ASU degrees to be conferred outside of Arizona
Doctorate of Business Administration
  • First American DBA offered in China
Master in Management
  • Partnership with Shanghai National Accounting Institute

Mexico

This new international partnership welcomed its second cohort of 24 students.
EGADE — W. P. Carey Executive MBA
  • Partnership with Instituto Tecnológico De Estudios Superiores De Monterrey
  • Courses taught by faculty of both schools in Mexico City, with immersion sessions on the ASU Tempe campus

Egypt

Through an ASU collaboration with the Cintana Alliance, Galala University in Egypt is offering dual bachelor’s in business degrees to its students, allowing them the opportunity to earn an accredited degree from a top-ranked American university and from Galala University at the same time, without leaving Egypt.
  • W. P. Carey programs offered include business administration, marketing, and computer information systems
  • 21 students currently enrolled in a business program through the partnership
CARISCA
Center for Applied Research and Innovation in Supply Chain
United States Agency of International Development logo; Arizona State University logo; Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology logo
  • A global center for supply chain research in Ghana
  • Partnership with Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST)
  • Five-year, $15M project funded by USAID BRIDGE-Train program (June 2020 to June 2025)
CARISCA’s key objective is to support higher education institutions in building the capacity necessary to provide best-in-class degree programs and training, facilitate research translation and utilization, engage stakeholders in best practices and policy changes that strengthen supply chains, and increase inclusion and impact for women in supply chain management.

Internationally-funded research

W. P. Carey faculty partner with colleagues and institutions across the globe to complete impactful research that makes a difference in local economies. Here are a some exemplars of funded international research.
Financial Interactions Between Labor Markets and the Macroeconomy
  • 8 million Norwegian Krone (equivalent to ~$750,000)
  • Principal investigator — Andreas Køstol, assistant professor of economics
  • The Norwegian Research Council, 2021-2024
Self-Organization of the Shadow System: Blockchain Technology in Supply Chains
  • $43,000
  • Principal researcher — Artur Swierczek, University of Economics in Katowice, Poland; Foreign Advisor Thomas Choi, professor of supply chain management at W. P. Carey School of Business
  • Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange, 2021-Present
Creating Supply Chain Emergence through Blockchain Technology: Implications for the Network Rent in the Transitive Service Triads
  • $135,000
  • Principal researcher — Artur Swierczek, University of Economics in Katowice, Poland; Foreign Advisor — Thomas Choi, professor of supply chain management at W. P. Carey School of Business
  • Polish National Science Center, 2020-Present
Development and testing of a mobile learning app for supply chain management education for developing countries’ health care worker
  • $250,000
  • Principal investigator — Thomas Kull, professor of supply chain management
    Co-principal investigators — Adegoke Oke, professor of supply chain management, and Dale Rogers, professor of supply chain management
  • Partnership funding between ASU and Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Ghana