Generated by GPT-5-mini| University of New Brunswick School of Business | |
|---|---|
| Name | University of New Brunswick School of Business |
| Established | 1910s |
| Type | Public business school |
| Parent | University of New Brunswick |
| City | Fredericton |
| Province | New Brunswick |
| Country | Canada |
| Campus | Fredericton Campus |
| Affiliations | Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business |
University of New Brunswick School of Business is the business faculty located on the Fredericton campus of the University of New Brunswick. The school offers undergraduate and graduate programs with professional streams connecting students to regional partners and global networks. It engages in disciplinary and interdisciplinary research and maintains partnerships with corporations, government bodies, and non-governmental organizations.
The School traces its origins to early 20th-century commerce education initiatives contemporaneous with institutions such as McGill University, Queen's University, University of Toronto, Dalhousie University, and University of British Columbia. During the interwar period the School expanded alongside faculties at Harvard University, London School of Economics, Columbia University, Yale University, and Princeton University as part of broader professionalization seen at University of Pennsylvania, Cornell University, Stanford University, and University of California, Berkeley. Postwar curricular reforms paralleled developments at Northwestern University, University of Chicago, Indiana University Bloomington, University of Michigan, and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. In the late 20th century the School pursued accreditation and cooperative agreements similar to those secured by Rotman School of Management, Schulich School of Business, Ivey Business School, Desautels Faculty of Management, and Saïd Business School. Recent decades brought collaborations echoing ties between MIT Sloan School of Management, Kellogg School of Management, Tuck School of Business, Simmons University, and HEC Montréal.
Programs include bachelor's, master's, MBA, post-degree diplomas, and executive education mirroring structures at Harvard Business School, INSEAD, London Business School, IMD, and Wharton School. Undergraduate majors and concentrations draw analogies with offerings at York University, Simon Fraser University, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Brock University, and University of Waterloo. Graduate streams feature specializations found at Rotterdam School of Management, ESADE Business School, IE Business School, McMaster University, and University of Calgary. Professional development and certificate programs align with standards practiced by Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada, CFA Institute, Project Management Institute, CPA Australia, and International Coaching Federation.
Research portfolios span accounting, finance, marketing, management, entrepreneurship, supply chain, and public policy, comparable to centers at National Bureau of Economic Research, Institute for Fiscal Studies, Brookings Institution, RAND Corporation, and Centre for International Governance Innovation. The School hosts research units and applied centres reflecting models used by Telfer School of Management, DeGroote School of Business, Schulich Centre for Research in Management, Sauder School of Business and Haskayne School of Business. Faculty publish in outlets associated with Journal of Finance, Academy of Management Journal, Strategic Management Journal, Journal of Marketing, and Accounting Review. Collaborative projects connect scholars with Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Export Development Canada, and New Brunswick Innovation Foundation.
The School pursued international accreditation frameworks similar to Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, European Quality Improvement System, Association of MBAs, and Conférence des Grandes Écoles. Comparative rankings reference methodologies used by Times Higher Education, QS World University Rankings, Financial Times, Maclean's, and U.S. News & World Report. Professional program accreditation aligns with standards endorsed by CFA Institute, Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants, Society for Human Resource Management, and Association for Information Systems.
Located on the Fredericton campus alongside faculties such as Faculty of Engineering, Faculty of Computer Science, Faculty of Arts, and Faculty of Science, the School shares research infrastructure and libraries comparable to Sir James Dunn Library, Harvard Library, Bodleian Library, Library of Congress, and Bibliothèque nationale de France. Facilities include lecture halls, case rooms, trading-sim labs, and incubator spaces analogous to those at Ryerson University, Vancouver Island University, Carleton University, University of Ottawa, and Concordia University. The campus is accessible via regional transport links including services that connect to Moncton, Saint John, Halifax, Montreal, and Toronto.
Student associations and clubs host activities paralleling student governance at Students' Union, Canadian Federation of Students, AIESEC, Enactus, and Beta Gamma Sigma. Industry-focused groups include finance clubs, consulting societies, entrepreneurship hubs, case competition teams, and volunteer networks similar to those at Rotman Commerce, Ivey Case Competition, Schulich Consulting Society, Queen's Commerce, and McGill Dobson Centre. Professional development events feature speakers from firms such as Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank, TD Bank, BMO Financial Group, and CIBC as well as consultancies like Deloitte, KPMG, PwC, EY, and McKinsey & Company.
Alumni work across sectors in organizations including Irving Group of Companies, NB Power, J.D. Irving, Bell Aliant, Stantec, and Brunswick News and hold roles similar to graduates employed at Google, Microsoft, Amazon (company), Apple Inc., and Siemens. Strategic partnerships and co-op placements have been developed with public and private partners akin to collaborations between Province of New Brunswick, Government of Canada, Export Development Canada, World Bank, and International Monetary Fund. The alumni network participates in mentorship, board service, and philanthropy like associations tied to Harvard Alumni Association, Oxford Alumni Office, Cambridge Alumni, Yale Alumni, and Columbia Alumni.
Category:Business schools in Canada