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New York · 2026
Fordham University is a private Jesuit university in New York City whose academic and civic mission is rooted in the Catholic intellectual tradition and the liberal arts. Founded in 1841, it operates three main campuses in the Bronx, Manhattan, and Westchester, giving it a distinctly urban and regional footprint while serving students across undergraduate, graduate, and professional education. The university organizes its work through schools and colleges that include Fordham College at Rose Hill, Fordham College at Lincoln Center, the Gabelli School of Business, the Graduate School of Education, the School of Law, the Graduate School of Social Service, and the School of Professional and Continuing Studies. Its programs span the humanities, sciences, business, law, education, social work, religion, and the arts, with a strong emphasis on ethics, service, and formation for leadership. Fordham also maintains a substantial research and public-facing role through centers and institutes, and it supports students with a broad financial aid structure that includes merit scholarships and need-based assistance. The university’s New York setting shapes many of its opportunities in internships, community engagement, and professional study, especially at Lincoln Center in Manhattan and Rose Hill in the Bronx. Athletics are another visible part of institutional life: Fordham fields NCAA Division I teams and competes in the Atlantic 10 Conference, with football in the Patriot League. As a Jesuit institution, Fordham links academic rigor with service to others and prepares students for careers and civic participation in New York, the United States, and international settings.