Saudi Arabia Maintains Lead in QS University Rankings: Arab Region

Saudi Arabia Maintains Lead in QS University Rankings: Arab Region

Laura Bridgestock

Updated January 16, 2020 Updated January 16

This year’s edition of the QS University Rankings: Arab Region, released today, sees Saudi Arabian universities maintain their lead, despite a sustained challenge from institutions in the United Arab Emirates. Saudi Arabia’s King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals holds onto the top spot, with Lebanon’s American University of Beirut also retaining second place.

Saudi Arabia is home to 19 of the 100 institutions featured, followed by Egypt with 15. When considering only the top 50, however, the United Arab Emirates is on a par with Saudi Arabia – each has 10 institutions ranked at this level.

Meanwhile, the very top of the table is relatively unchanged year-on-year – with the exception of Qatar University’s climb from 11th to 9th; this pushes Cairo University into 10th and displaces Jordan University of Science and Technology, now 13th.

Top 10 Universities in the Arab Region

Based on the QS University Rankings: Arab Region 2016

2016

2015

Institution

Country

1

King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals (KFUPM)

Saudi Arabia

2

American University of Beirut (AUB)

Lebanon

3

King Saud University (KSU)

Saudi Arabia

4

King Abdul Aziz University (KAU)

Saudi Arabia

5

American University in Cairo

Egypt

6

United Arab Emirates University

United Arab Emirates

7

American University of Sharjah

United Arab Emirates

8

University of Jordan

Jordan

11

Qatar University

Qatar

10 

9

Cairo University

Egypt

See the full ranking results

 

First published in 2014, the QS University Rankings: Arab Region has been extended this year to cover just under 200 universities in the region (previously 150). A total of 17 countries are represented, with Somalia and Libya now appearing for the first time, following the expansion of the published range.

The ranking is compiled using nine performance indicators, reflecting academic reputation, employer reputation, faculty/student ratio, online impact, proportion of staff with a PhD, research publications, citations per paper, and proportion of international faculty and students. The full methodology can be reviewed here, and the published results can be sorted based on each individual indicator.

This article was originally published in June 2016 . It was last updated in January 2020

Written by

The former editor of TopUniversities.com, Laura oversaw the site's editorial content and student forums. She also edited the QS Top Grad School Guide and contributed to market research reports, including 'How Do Students Use Rankings?'

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