List of Duke University people
This list of Duke University people includes alumni, faculty, presidents, and major philanthropists of Duke University, which includes three undergraduate and ten graduate schools. The undergraduate schools include Trinity College of Arts and Sciences, Pratt School of Engineering, and Sanford School of Public Policy. The university's graduate and professional schools include the Graduate School, the Pratt School of Engineering, the Nicholas School of the Environment, the School of Medicine, the School of Nursing, the Fuqua School of Business, the School of Law, the Divinity School, and the Sanford School of Public Policy.
Famous alumni include U.S. President Richard Nixon; Chilean President Ricardo Lagos; former cabinet member and former Senator Elizabeth Dole; philanthropist Melinda French Gates; the chief executive officers of Apple (Tim Cook), Procter and Gamble (David S. Taylor), Bear Stearns (Alan Schwartz), Morgan Stanley (John J. Mack), Pfizer (Edmund T. Pratt, Jr.), McDonald's (Chris Kempczinski) and General Motors Corporation (Rick Wagoner); and the first United States Chief Performance Officer Jeffrey Zients. Notable alumni media personalities include Dan Abrams, the former general manager of MSNBC; Jay Bilas, a commentator on ESPN; Sean McManus, the president of CBS News and CBS Sports; Charlie Rose, the former host of his eponymous PBS talk show and a 60 Minutes contributor; and Judy Woodruff, an anchor at CNN. William DeVries (GME 1971–79) was the first doctor to perform a successful permanent artificial heart implantation, and appeared on the cover of Time in 1984.
Current notable faculty include Manny Azenberg, a Broadway producer whose productions have won 40 Tony Awards; Adrian Bejan, namesake of the Bejan number; and David Brooks, a columnist for The New York Times. Walter E. Dellinger III, formerly the United States Solicitor General, Assistant Attorney General, and head of the Office of Legal Counsel under Bill Clinton, serves as a law professor. Novelist and playwright Ariel Dorfman won the 1992 Laurence Olivier Award, while Peter Feaver was a member of the National Security Council under Clinton and George W. Bush. David Gergen served as an advisor to Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, and Bill Clinton. John Hope Franklin was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Bill Clinton, while William Raspberry, a syndicated columnist for The Washington Post, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1994. 15 Nobel Prize winners have been associated with the university.
International academic prizes
Nobel laureates
As of 2019, 15 Nobel laureates have been affiliated with Duke University. The following list includes only those who have graduated from Duke or spent at least one year as a postdoctoral researcher/medical resident/visiting professor or two years as a faculty member at Duke.
- Charles Townes (A.M. in physics, 1937), 1964 Nobel Laureate in Physics and winner of the 2005 Templeton Prize,[1] National Medal of Science (1982)
- Gertrude B. Elion (adjunct professor of pharmacology and of experimental medicine from 1971 to 1983 and Research Professor from 1983 to 1999), 1988 Nobel Laureate in physiology or medicine[2]
- George H. Hitchings (adjunct professor of pharmacology and of experimental medicine from 1970 to 1985), 1988 Nobel Laureate in physiology or medicine[3]
- Hans Dehmelt (Post-Doc. 1952–55), 1989 Nobel Laureate in physics,[4] recipient of the National Medal of Science (1995)
- Martin Rodbell (adjunct professor of cell biology from 1991 to 1998), 1994 Nobel Laureate in physiology or medicine[5][6][7]
- Robert Coleman Richardson (Ph.D. in physics, 1966), 1996 Nobel Laureate in Physics[8]
- Peter Agre (vice chancellor for science and technology at Duke University Medicine Center from 2005 to December 2007), 2003 Nobel Laureate in chemistry[9][10]
- Robert Lefkowitz (James B. Duke Professor of Medicine and Professor of Biochemistry and Chemistry, joined Duke in 1973), 2012 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry.[11] National Medal of Science (2007)
- Brian Kobilka (Post-Doc. 1984–1989), 2012 Nobel Laureate in chemistry[12]
- Paul L. Modrich (James B. Duke Professor of Biochemistry at Duke University, joined Duke in 1976), 2015 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry[13]
- William Kaelin Jr. (B.S. 1979, M.D. 1982), 2019 Nobel Laureate in Medicine[14]
- Gregg L. Semenza (Pediatrics Residency), 2019 Nobel Laureate in Medicine[14]
- George Smith (Visiting Professor 1983-1984), 2018 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry[15]
Turing Award laureates
In the absence of a Nobel Prize in Computer science, the Turing Award generally is recognized as the highest honor in the subject and the "Nobel Prize of computing". As of 2015, 3 Turing Award laureates have been affiliated with Duke University.
- Frederick P. Brooks (A.B. 1953), software engineer and computer scientist, known for managing the development of IBM's System/360 family of computers; National Medal of Technology and Innovation laureate in 1985, IEEE John von Neumann Medal laureate in 1993 and Turing Award laureate in 1999[16]
- Edmund M. Clarke (M.A. 1968; faculty, 1976 to 1978), computer scientist; academic; developed model checking; Turing Award laureate in 2007[17]
- John Cocke (B.S. 1945, Ph.D. 1956), considered the father of the RISC computer architecture, Turing Award laureate in 1987, National Medal of Technology and Innovation laureate in 1991 and National Medal of Science in 1994[18]
Alumni
Government, law, and public policy
- Note: individuals who belong in multiple sections appear in the most relevant section.
Heads of State
- Ricardo Lagos (Ph.D. 1966), former President of Chile[19]
- Richard Nixon (J.D. 1937), 37th President of the United States[20][21]
Cabinet members and White House staff
- David Addington (J.D. 1981), chief of staff to former Vice President Dick Cheney
- Claude Allen (J.D. 1990), White House domestic policy advisor
- Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy during World War I
- Elizabeth Dole (A.B. 1958), former United States Senator for North Carolina; former commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission; former United States Secretary of Transportation; former United States Secretary of Labor; former president of the American Red Cross
- W. Neil Eggleston (A.B. 1975), White House Counsel under President Barack Obama
- Danielle C. Gray (A.B. 2000), Cabinet Secretary, senior advisor to President Barack Obama
- John P. Hannah (A.B. 1984), Assistant for National Security to former Vice President Dick Cheney
- John Hillen (A.B. 1988), former Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs
- John Koskinen (A.B. 1961), Commissioner of Internal Revenue (2013–present), former deputy director of the White House Office of Management and Budget
- Juanita M. Kreps (A.M. 1944, Ph.D. 1948), United States Secretary of Commerce, 1977–79
- Reggie Love (A.B. 2005), personal aide to President Barack Obama[22]
- Derek Lyons (A.B. 2004, B.S. 2004), White House Staff Secretary and Counselor to President Donald J. Trump
- Stephen Miller (A.B. 2007), Senior Advisor to the President of the United States[23]
- Macon Phillips (A.B. 2000), White House Director of New Media with oversight responsibility for Whitehouse.gov
- Daniel Calhoun Roper (A.B. 1888), United States Secretary of Commerce under Franklin Delano Roosevelt
- Sonal Shah (M.A. 1994), director of the White House Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation, former head of the Global Development Initiative at Google.org
- Eric Shinseki (A.M. 1976), retired four-star general, 7th United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs (2009–2014), 34th Chief of Staff of the Army (1999–2003)
- Doug Sosnik (A.B. 1979), senior advisor and political director to former President Bill Clinton
- Tommy Sowers (A.B. 1998), Assistant Secretary for Public and Intergovernmental Affairs
- Kenneth Starr (J.D. 1973), former United States Solicitor General, Independent Counsel during the Whitewater Affair
- James Young (M.D. 1955), MC USN, Attending White House Physician to Kennedy and Johnson, 1963-1966
- Jared Weinstein (A.B. 2002), personal assistant to former President George W. Bush
- Jeffrey Zients (B.S. 1988), United States Chief Performance Officer
U.S. Senators
- Mo Cowan (A.B. 1991), former United States Senator from Massachusetts[24]
- Shelley Moore Capito (A.B. 1975), United States Senator from West Virginia, former U.S. Representative for West Virginia's 2nd congressional district[25]
- Elizabeth Dole (A.B. 1958), former United States Senator for North Carolina; former commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission; former United States Secretary of Transportation; former United States Secretary of Labor; former president of the American Red Cross[26]
- Edward Gurney (LL.M. 1948), former United States Senator from Florida[27]
- Rand Paul (M.D. 1988), United States Senator from Kentucky[28]
- Everett Jordan (A.B.), former U.S. Senator from North Carolina
- Ted Kaufman (B.S.E. 1960), United States Senator of Delaware
- Bob Krueger (A.M. 1959), former U.S. Representative and Senator from Texas[29]
- Lee Slater Overman (A.B. 1874), former United States Senator from North Carolina
- James B. Pearson (A.B. 1942), United States Senator from Kansas
U.S. Representatives
- Hugh Quincy Alexander (1932), former U.S. Representative from North Carolina (1953–1963)
- Robert Franklin Armfield, former Congressman from North Carolina, Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina
- Morris Brooks (A.B. 1975), U.S. Representative for Alabama's 5th congressional district
- Maurice G. Burnside (Ph.D. 1937), former Congressman from West Virginia
- Bradley Byrne (A.B. 1977), U.S. Representative for Alabama's 1st congressional district
- Jim Courter (J.D. 1966), former Congressman from New Jersey
- Nick Galifianakis (A.B. 1951, J.D. 1953), U.S. Representative from North Carolina (1967–1973)
- Lisa Gladden (A.B. 1986), Maryland State Representative, Annapolis, Maryland
- Hannibal Lafayette Godwin (A.B. 1897), Democratic US Representative from North Carolina
- Tom Grady (J.D., 1982), Republican U.S. Representative from Florida
- Robin Hayes (A.B. 1967), Congressman of North Carolina's 8th district (1998–present)
- Paul B. Henry (A.M., Ph.D. 1968), U.S. Representative from Michigan and Michigan State Senator
- Henry Hyde (X. 1947), former U.S. Representative of Illinois
- Robert D. Inglis (A.B. 1981), U.S. Representative of South Carolina
- Dan Lipinski (Ph.D. 1998), Congressman for Illinois' 3rd district (2005–present)
- Stan Lundine (A.B. 1961), Congressman from New York (1976–1987)
- Denise Majette (J.D. 1979), former Georgia state judge, former U.S. Representative of Georgia
- Ron Paul (M.D. 1961), U.S. Representative from Texas (1997-2013); 2008 Republican Presidential candidate
- Scott Peters (A.B. 1980), U.S. Representative for California's 52nd congressional district
- Ben Quayle (A.B, 1998), U.S. Representative from Arizona; son of former U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle
- Nick Rahall (A.B. 1971), Congressman for West Virginia (1977–2015)
- Dave Trott (J.D. 1985), U.S. Representative from Michigan (2015–2019)
- Basil Lee Whitener (J.D. 1937), U.S. Representative from North Carolina (1957–1968)
- Mike Levin (J.D. 2005), U.S. Representative for California's 49th congressional district (2018–present)
Diplomats
- George Venable Allen (A.B. 1920), U.S. Ambassador to Iran, 1946–1948; Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, 1948–1949; U.S. Ambassador to Yugoslavia, 1949–1953
- Robert Sherwood Dillon (A.B. 1951), U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon (1981–1983)
- William Eacho (A.B. 1976), U.S. Ambassador to Austria (2009–2013)
- Cynthia G. Efird (A.M.), U.S. Ambassador to Angola (2004-2007)
- Robert C. Frasure (Ph.D 1971), U.S. Ambassador to Estonia (1992-1994)
- Gordon D. Giffin (A.B. 1971), U.S. Ambassador to Canada (1997–2001)
- Richard Graber (A.B. 1978), former United States Ambassador to the Czech Republic
- Jaime Aleman Healy (J.D. 1978), Panamanian Ambassador to the USA (2009–2011)
- Stuart E. Jones (A.B. 1982), United States Ambassador to Jordan (2011-2014); United States Ambassador to Iraq (2014–present)
- Robert Jordan (A.B. 1967), former United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
- Bob Krueger (M.A. 1959), U.S. Ambassador to Burundi during administration of Bill Clinton
- Philip Lader (A.B. 1966), Ambassador to the United Kingdom, chairman of the WPP Group
- Steven Lett (B.S.E. 1980), diplomat; head of the International Cospas-Sarsat Programme
- Jack F. Matlock, Jr. (A.B. 1950), United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia and to the Soviet Union under Ronald Reagan
- Walter P. McConaughy (A.B. 1930), former United States Ambassador to Burma, South Korea, Pakistan, and Taiwan
- David McKean (J.D. 1986), U.S. Ambassador to Luxembourg (2016–2017), Director of Policy Planning (2013–2016)
- Geeta Pasi (A.B. 1984), U.S. Ambassador to Djibouti (2011–2017) and Chad (2016–2018)
- Manuel Sager (LL.M. 1985), ambassador of Switzerland to the United States
- Elizabeth Verville (A.B. 1961), Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Political and Military Affairs
Military
- William Atwater (M.A., Ph.D. 1982), retired captain in the US Marines; author, historian, and director of the US Army Ordnance Museum
- Walter E. Boomer (B.S. 1960), retired general, former assistant commandant, US Marine Corps, Desert Storm Commander; business executive
- Frank Bowman (B.S. 1966), retired admiral, former Chief of Naval Personnel, former director of Naval Nuclear Propulsion, US Navy; Honorary Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (KBE)
- Winston Choo (MA, History), retired lieutenant-general, former Chief of Defence Force (1974-1992) in the Singapore Armed Forces[30][31]
- Edward H. Deets (1979), rear admiral in the United States Navy
- Martin E. Dempsey (M.A. 1984), Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Charles S. Hamilton (B.S. 1974), rear admiral in the United States Navy
- John L. Helgerson (M.S., Ph.D.), former CIA Inspector General
- James W. Holsinger (M.D. 1964), retired major general in the United States Army Reserve, physician, nominated to become the 18th Surgeon General of the United States
- Gilmary M. Hostage III (B.S.E. 1977), United States Air Force four-star general, currently serving as the commander of Air Combat Command
- Vergel L. Lattimore, brigadier general in the Air National Guard
- Ng Jui Ping (MA, History), retired lieutenant-general; former Chief of Defence Force (1992-1995) in the Singapore Armed Forces[32]
- Eric Schoomaker (residency and fellowship), Surgeon General of the United States Army
- Eric Shinseki (A.M. 1976), retired four-star general, the 7th United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs; former 34th Chief of Staff of the Army
- Michael J. Silah (A.B. 1992), rear admiral in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Commissioned Officer Corps, Director, NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps, and Director, NOAA Office of Marine and Aviation Operations.
- Kevin R. Slates, retired rear admiral in the United States Navy
- Blake Wayne Van Leer, (B.S. 1945) Commander and Captain in the U.S. Navy. Led SeaBee program and the nuclear research and power unit at McMurdo Station during Operation Deep Freeze.
Judges
- Scott Brister (A.B.), former justice, Texas Supreme Court
- Patricia E. Campbell-Smith (B.S. 1987), former chief judge, United States Court of Federal Claims under President Barack Obama
- Aileen Cannon (A.B. 2003), United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida
- Robert L. Clifford (LL. B. 1950), former associate justice, New Jersey Supreme Court
- Ann Covington (A.B. 1963), former chief justice, Missouri Supreme Court
- Michael Dreeben (J.D. 1981), Deputy Solicitor General
- Allyson Duncan (J.D. 1975), judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
- Christine M. Durham (J.D. 1971), former chief justice, Utah Supreme Court
- Orinda Evans (A.B. 1965), senior judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia
- Richard Mark Gergel (A.B. 1975, J.D. 1979), judge, United States District Court for the District of South Carolina
- Karen L. Henderson (A.B. 1966), judge, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
- Todd M. Hughes (A.M. 1992, J.D. 1992), judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
- Susan Illston (A.B. 1970), senior judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of California
- Barbara Jackson (LL.M. 2014), associate justice, North Carolina Supreme Court
- Jeffrey W. Johnson (B.A. 1982), associate justice, California Court of Appeal
- Jill Karofsky (B.A. 1988), justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court
- Jane L. Kelly (A.B. 1987), judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
- Timothy J. Kelly (A.B. 1991), judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia
- Denise Majette (J.D. 1979), former Georgia state judge; former United States Representative of Georgia
- Michael R. Morgan (A.B. 1976), associate justice, North Carolina Supreme Court
- David Nahmias (A.B. 1986), associate justice, Supreme Court of Georgia; former US Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia
- Paul Martin Newby (A.B. 1977), associate justice, North Carolina Supreme Court
- Susan Owens (A.B. 1971), associate justice, Washington Supreme Court
- William H. Pauley III (A.B. 1974, J.D. 1977), judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
- Cary Douglas Pugh (A.B. 1987), judge, United States Tax Court
- Robin L. Rosenberg (J.D. 1989), Judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida
- Gary Stein (A.B. 1954, J.D. 1956), former associate justice, New Jersey Supreme Court
- Allison Jones Rushing (J.D. 2007), nominee to be a United States Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
- Vijay Shanker (A.B. 1994), President Donald J. Trump's nominee to be a Judge of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
- John J. Tharp, Jr. (A.B. 1982), judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
- Michael B. Thornton (J.D. 1982), former chief judge, United States Tax Court
- Patricia Timmons-Goodson (LL.M. 2014), former associate justice, North Carolina Supreme Court
- Gerald B. Tjoflat (LL.B. 1957), chief judge emeritus, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit
- John M. Tyson (M.B.A. 1988), judge, North Carolina Court of Appeals
- Peter Verniero (J.D. 1984), associate justice, New Jersey Supreme Court; former Attorney General of New Jersey
- Justin R. Walker (A.B. 2004), judge, United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
- Charles K. Wiggins (J.D. 1976), justice, Washington Supreme Court
- Don Willett (A.M. 1992, J.D. 1992), judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
Attorneys
- Ward Armstrong (B.A. 1977), lawyer and politician
- Charlie Condon (J.D. 1978), former Attorney General of South Carolina
- Jack Conway (A.B. 1991), Attorney General of Kentucky
- Marc Elias (J.D. 1993, M.A. 1993), Partner at Perkins Coie LLP, General Counsel for Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign and for John Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign
- Jeffrey L. Fisher (A.B. 1992), professor at Stanford Law School
- John Harmon (J.D. 1969), former United States Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel
- Stanley Hilton (J.D. 1975), lawyer and activist
- Larry Klayman (A.B. 1973), public interest lawyer[33]
- Jeffrey Lichtman (J.D. 1990), defense attorney for John Gotti, Fat Joe, and The Game[34]
- Andrew G. McCabe (A.B. 1990), former Acting Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation[35]
- Dan McCarthy (J.D. 1983), chief prosecutor of the Judge Advocate General's Corps of the United States Navy
- C. Allen Parker, presiding partner at Cravath, Swaine & Moore
- Wilhelmina Reuben-Cooke (A.B. 1967), professor of law at the University of the District of Columbia, one of the first five African American undergraduates admitted to Duke in 1963[36]
- Russell M. Robinson, II (LL.B. 1956), founding partner of Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson, P.A.
- Eric Rothschild (A.B. 1989), lead attorney for Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District
- Rodney A. Smolla (J.D. 1978), author; first amendment scholar; 11th president of Furman University
- Ellen Stiefler (A.B. 1980), intellectual property attorney
- Zephyr Teachout (A.M. 1999, J.D. 1999), associate professor of law at Fordham University, candidate for the Democratic Party nomination for Governor of New York
Public policy
- John H. Adams (J.D. 1962), co-founder of the Natural Resources Defense Council
- Maya Ajmera (M.P.P. 1993), founder and president of The Global Fund for Children[37]
- Barbara Arnwine (J.D. 1976), executive director of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law from 1989 to 2015
- William Barber II (M.Div. 1989), member of the NAACP national board of directors[38]
- Mary Duke Biddle (A.B. 1907), daughter of Benjamin Newton Duke and Sarah Pearson Angier Duke, founder of the Mary Duke Biddle Foundation
- Lisa Borders (A.B. 1979), chair of The Coca-Cola Foundation; vice president of Global Community Affairs at The Coca-Cola Company[39]
- Charlotte Bunch (A.B. 1966), author and human rights activist
- Susan Bysiewicz (J.D. 1986), Lt. Governor of Connecticut (since 2019), Secretary of the State of Connecticut (1999-2011)
- Benjamin Chavis, Jr. (MDiv 1980), civil rights activist, executive director of the NAACP
- Eugene A. Conti, Jr. (M.A. public policy, Ph.D. anthropology 1978), Asst. Secretary USDOT, Secretary of Transportation, NCDOT
- Peter Cook (A.B. 1989), Pentagon press secretary for Defense Secretary Ash Carter
- Pete Crossland (Ph.D. 1966), former member of the Ohio House of Representatives
- Chris Daly, former member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors
- Marjorie Dannenfelser (A.B. 1988), President of the Susan B. Anthony List, an organization that seeks to advance pro-life women in politics
- Chris Dorworth (M.B.A. 2006), member of the Florida House of Representatives
- Allan Fels (Ph.D.), chairperson of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
- Nelson M. Ford (B.A.), former United States Under Secretary of the Army
- Andrew Giuliani (A.B. 2009), Special Assistant to the President and Associate Director of the Office of Public Liaison for President Donald Trump[40]
- Susan M. Gordon (B.S. 1980), Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
- Eric Greitens (A.B. 1996), former Rhodes Scholar and Navy SEAL; CEO of The Mission Continues; named one of "The World's 100 Most Influential People" by Time magazine in 2013
- John Hanger (A.B. 1979), Pennsylvania Secretary of Environmental Protection, candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania
- Suhani Jalota (A.B. 2016), social activist[41]
- Deborah Lee James (A.B.), President Obama's nominee for United States Secretary of the Air Force
- Shavar Jeffries (A.B. 1996), civil rights attorney, candidate for Mayor of Newark, New Jersey
- B.J. Lawson (B.S.E 1996, M.D. 2000), Republican politician
- Jerry Meek (A.B. 1993, J.D. 1997), chairman of the North Carolina Democratic Party
- Kimeli Wilson Naiyomah (M.I.D.P,), Kenyan author
- Neil Newhouse (A.B. 1974), Republican pollster
- Brendan Nyhan (Ph.D. 2009), author and political columnist
- Jesse Panuccio (A.B. 2003), former acting Associate Attorney General of the United States; former executive director of the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity
- Muhammad Ali Pate (M.B.A. 2006), former Minister of State for Health in Nigeria
- Art Pope (J.D. 1981), Budget Director for North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory
- Robert Satloff (A.B. 1983), executive director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy
- Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans (A.B. 1939), philanthropist
- Claudia Scott (M.A., Ph.D. 19971), public policy professor
- Eleanor Smeal (A.B. 1961, LL.D 1991), political activist; president of the Feminist Majority Foundation; former president of the National Organization for Women
- Margaret Taylor Smith (A.B. 1947), chair, board of trustees, Kresge Foundation
- Damon Wilson (A.B. 1995), executive vice president at the Atlantic Council of the United States, former senior director for European affairs at the National Security Council
- Howard Wolfson (M.A. 1991), Democratic political strategist, deputy mayor of New York City for governmental affairs
Governors
- R. Gregg Cherry (A.B. 1913), Governor of North Carolina (1945-1949)
- Eric Greitens (A.B. 1996), Governor of Missouri (2017–2018)
- Claude R. Kirk, Jr. (B.S.), former Governor of Florida (1967-1971)
- William B. Umstead (J.D 1921), Governor of North Carolina (1953-1954)
- Bob Wise (A.B. 1970), Governor of West Virginia (2001-2005)
- J.B. Pritzker (A.B. 1987), Governor of Illinois (2018–present)
Mayors
- Ed Austin (A.B. 1948), mayor of Jacksonville (1991–1995)
- Bill Campbell (J.D. 1977), mayor of Atlanta (1994–2002)
- J. Kane Ditto (A.B.), former mayor of Jackson, Mississippi
- Sylvia Kerckhoff (M.A. 1960), mayor of Durham, North Carolina (1993–1997)
- Stan Lundine (A.B. 1961), former mayor of Jamestown, former Congressman and Lieutenant Governor of New York
- Enrique Peñalosa (A.B. 1978), mayor of Bogotá, Colombia (1998–2000, 2016–2019)
- Steve Schewel (A.B. 1973, Ph.D. 1982), mayor of Durham, North Carolina (2017–present)[42]
- Nick Tennyson (A.B. 1972) mayor of Durham (1997–2001)
State officials
- Austin M. Allran (A.B. 1974), member of the North Carolina General Assembly
- Daniel T. Blue, Jr. (J.D.), former member of the North Carolina House of Representatives, 1981–2002
- Bob Blumenfield (B.A. 1989), current Los Angeles City Council member, former California State Assembly member, 2009-2013,
- Samuel Bogley (A.B), former Lieutenant Governor of Maryland
- F. Vernon Boozer (A.B 1958), former member of Maryland Senate, 1981–1999
- Jason Carter (A.B. 1997), Democratic Party nominee for Governor of Georgia; member of the Georgia State Senate; grandson of President Jimmy Carter
- Mike Connolly (B.A. 2003), member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
- Justin Fairfax (A.B. 2000), Lieutenant Governor of Virginia[43]
- J.B. Fuqua (G.Hon 1973), chairman of the Georgia Democratic Party
- Raj Goyle (A.B. 1997), member of the Kansas House of Representatives
- Ember Reichgott Junge (J.D. 1977), former State Senator from Minnesota
- Herb Kirsh, former member of the South Carolina House of Representatives
- Bill Kramer (J.D. 1994), former Majority Leader, Wisconsin State Assembly
- Evelyn Murphy (A.B. 1965, Ph.D. 1981), former Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
- Robert Sheheen (A.B. 1965), former Speaker, South Carolina House of Representatives
- Lura S. Tally (A.B. 1942), member of the North Carolina House of Representatives, 1973–1983, and the North Carolina Senate, 1983–1995
- Mike Turzai (J.D. 1987), nominee for Speaker of the Pennsylvania House Representatives, former Republican Caucus (Majority) Leader
- Floyd McKissick, Jr. (J.D. 1983), member of the North Carolina Senate
- Kelli Ward (B.S. 1991), former state senator from Arizona[44]
- Scott Wiener (B.A. 1992), member of the California State Senate
Foreign officials
- Lekso Aleksishvili (M.A. 2004), former Georgian Minister of Finance
- Michael Bassett (Ph.D. 1961), former cabinet minister and member of the Parliament of New Zealand
- Arkady Dvorkovich (M.S. 1997), Russian deputy prime minister for industry and energy, former chief economic advisor to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
- Amit Mitra (Ph.D. 1978), Finance Minister of the Indian State of West Bengal; economist; member of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly
- Aditi Singh (M.M.S. 2013), member of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly
- David Usupashvili (M.A. 1999), chairperson of the Parliament of Georgia
- Samir Nuriyev (MIDP 2005), Head of the Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan
Foreign royalty
- Hashim bin Al Hussein (X), Prince of Jordan
- Al-Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani (B.A. 2005), 14th child of Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, the current Emir of Qatar
- Prince Charles-Henri de Lobkowicz (B.A.), third son of Prince Edouard de Lobkowicz and Princess Marie-Françoise of Bourbon-Parma
Other
- Paul Auerbach (B.S. 1973, M.D. 1977), physician; a leading voice in the area of wilderness medicine; founder and past president of the Wilderness Medical Society
- Bernard Chan Pak-li (Ph.D. 2003), Ping Shek representative in the Kwun Tong District Council of Hong Kong, 2007–2013
- Kevin J. Martin (M.P.P. 1993), chairman of the Federal Communications Commission
- Charlie Soong (X. 1881), Duke's first international student and patriarch of the Soong Dynasty
- Daniel Tarullo (M.A. 1974), member of the Board of Governors of the United States Federal Reserve, Nomura Professor of International Financial Regulatory Practice at Harvard Law School
- Paul Teller (B.A. 1993), executive director of the United States House of Representatives Republican Study Committee[45][46]
- Frederic Whitehurst (Ph.D. 1980), former supervisory special agent in the FBI Laboratory
- Mike Woodard (A.B. 1981), Durham, North Carolina City Council member
- Ken Harbaugh (B.S. 1996), president of Team Rubicon
- Alexander Volzhin, Russian chess grandmaster
Business
- Jeff Williams (M.B.A. 1991), COO of Apple
- Rex Adams (A.B. 1962), chairman of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), former VP of Mobil Corporation
- Howard Lerman (A.B. 2002), founder and CEO of Yext
- Chad Dickerson (A.B. 1993), CEO of Etsy
- Aaron Patzer (B.S.E 2002), founder and CEO of Mint
- Shaikha Al-Bahar, CEO of the National Bank of Kuwait; named the 85th most powerful woman in the world by Forbes
- John A. Allison IV (M.B.A. 1974), chairman (and former CEO), BB&T
- John Angelos, executive vice president of the Baltimore Orioles
- Steven Black (A.B. 1974), vice-chairman, JPMorgan Chase & Co.
- Roy J. Bostock (A.B. 1962), former chairman of Bcom3 Group, Inc.; on the board of directors for Morgan Stanley, Yahoo, and Northwest Airlines; namesake of Bostock Library
- Wallace E. Boston, Jr. (A.B. 1974), president and chief executive officer, American Public University System
- Jack O. Bovender, Jr. (A.B. 1967, MHA 1969), chairman and CEO of HCA
- Jonathan Browning (M.B.A.), CEO of Volkswagen Group of America
- Lewis B. Campbell (B.S.E. 1968), CEO of Textron
- John Canning, Jr., founder of private equity firm Madison Dearborn Partners; co-owner of the Milwaukee Brewers
- John Chambers (attended 1967-1968; X. 1968), CEO of Cisco Systems
- Mickey Conlon (A.B., 1998), celebrity real estate broker and star of HGTV's reality television series Selling New York
- Timothy D. Cook (M.B.A. 1988), CEO of Apple Inc.[47]
- Eddy Cue (B.S.), Apple's senior vice president of Internet Software and Services
- Tom Davin (B.A. 1979), former COO of Taco Bell Corporation and CEO of Panda Restaurant Group
- Grant DePorter (M.B.A.), restaurateur
- Gary Dickinson (B.S. 1960), automotive industry executive
- Clay Felker (A.B. 1951), Founding Editor of New York Magazine
- Jeffrey Fox (B.S. 1984), president and CEO of Convergys
- J. B. Fuqua (G.Hon 1973), chairman of the board of The Fuqua Companies, founder of the J.B. Fuqua Foundation, namesake of Duke's Fuqua School of Business
- Melinda Gates (A.B. 1986, M.B.A. 1987), co-founder of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; wife of Bill Gates[48]
- David Gibbs, (M.B.A. 1988), former CEO, Pizza Hut; CEO, Yum! Brands
- Andrew K. Golden (A.B. 1981), president of the Princeton University Investment Company, which manages the university's financial endowment
- David R. Goode (A.B. 1962), chairman, president, and CEO of Norfolk Southern
- William H. Gross (B.S. 1966), founder and chief investment officer, PIMCO, the world's largest bond fund
- Brian Hamilton (M.B.A. 1990), co-founder and former chairman, Sageworks;[49] founder, Inmates to Entrepreneurs[50]
- Jonathan Harmsworth, 4th Viscount Rothermere (A.B. 1991), British viscount; chairman of the Evening Standard and the Daily Mail; one of the wealthiest men in Britain
- Gerald Hassell (B.A. 1973), chairman and CEO, Bank of New York Mellon
- William A. Hawkins (B.S. 1976), CEO of Medtronic
- Sally Hogshead (B.A. 1991), CEO of Fascinate, Inc.
- Betsy Holden (A.B.), CEO of Kraft Foods, 2001–2003[51]
- Amy Hood (A.B. 1994), first female CFO of Microsoft
- Lisa Hook (B.A.), president and CEO of NeuStar
- John Idzik, Jr. (A.M. 1993), consultant for the Jacksonville Jaguars of the NFL; former general manager of the NFL's New York Jets[52]
- David Bronson Ingram (A.B. 1985), chairman of Ingram Entertainment
- W. Bruce Johnson (B.A., J.D., M.B.A.), interim chief executive officer and president, Sears Holdings Corporation
- William D. Johnson (B.A.), chairman, president and CEO of Progress Energy
- Tom Kain (A.B. 1986), Nike's director of Global Marketing (Soccer)
- Bruce Karsh (A.B. 1977), co-founder and president of Oaktree Capital Management
- Chris Kempczinski (A.B. 1991), CEO of McDonald's[53]
- Lesa Kennedy (B.A. 1983), CEO of International Speedway Corporation; member of the board of directors of NASCAR
- John A. Koskinen (A.B. 1961), president of US Soccer Foundation, former deputy director, Office of Management and Budget
- Michael Lamach (M.B.A.), CEO and Chairman of Ingersoll Rand
- David Lauren (B.A.), senior vice president at Polo Ralph Lauren
- Dylan Lauren (A.B. 1996), president and founder of Dylan's Candy Bar
- Dan Levitan (1979), co-founder and managing partner, Maveron
- Gérard Louis-Dreyfus (A.B., J.D.), French billionaire businessman
- Gary Lynch (J.D. 1975), former chief legal officer and vice chairman of Morgan Stanley
- John J. Mack (A.B. 1968), CEO of Morgan Stanley; former CEO of Credit Suisse First Boston
- Aslaug Magnusdottir (LL.M. 1998), co-founder and former CEO of Moda Operandi
- Marijke Mars (born 1965), billionaire heiress and businesswoman
- Mathew Martoma (born 1974 as Ajai Mathew Mariamdani Thomas), hedge fund portfolio manager, convicted of insider trading
- Steven Marks (A.B. 1989, J.D. 1992), general counsel for the Recording Industry Association of America
- Michael Marsicano (A.B. 1977, M.A. 1978, Ph.D. 1982), President and CEO of the Foundation for the Carolinas
- Aubrey McClendon (A.B. 1981), CEO, chairman, and co-founder of Chesapeake Energy
- Dan McCready (B.A. 2005), entrepreneur and candidate for US House of Representatives
- Bart McDade (A.B. 1981), former president and COO of Lehman Brothers, tasked with saving the firm towards the end of its existence
- Hardy McLain (born 1952), hedge fund manager, managing partner CVC Capital Partners
- Joey McMahon (A.B. 2009, M.B.A. 2013), founder and CEO of The Monday Life
- Lalit Modi (A.B. 1986), Modi Enterprises Scion, chairman and founder of Indian Premier League
- Carter Murray (A.B. 1997), CEO of DraftFCB
- Raymond Nasher (1943), real estate developer, philanthropist, namesake of Duke's Nasher Museum of Art
- Peter Nicholas (A.B. 1964), founder and chairman of Boston Scientific Corporation
- Edward Nixon (B.S. 1952), entrepreneur and last surviving brother of former US President Richard Nixon[54]
- Stephen Pagliuca (1977), part owner of the Boston Celtics, managing director of Bain Capital[55]
- Robert A. Pascal (A.B. 1957), entrepreneur and politician
- J. Michael Pearson (B.S. 1981), chairman and CEO of Valeant Pharmaceuticals
- Hilda Pinnix-Ragland (M.B.A. 1986). First African-American vice president at Progress Energy Inc and Duke Energy[56]
- Poman Lo (A.B. 1999), founder of Bodhi and Friends
- Edmund T. Pratt, Jr. (B.S.E. 1947), former CEO of Pfizer, philanthropist, namesake of Duke's Edmund T. Pratt School of Engineering
- Robert M. Price (B.S. 1952), CEO of the Control Data Corporation
- J.B. Pritzker (A.B.), managing partner and co-founder of The Pritzker Group, principal owner of Hyatt Hotels Corporation and TransUnion Corporation, one of the 400 richest Americans
- Joanna Rees (B.S.), venture capitalist
- Jeffrey Reich (A.B. 1979), former senior managing director of Bear Stearns
- Mark Reuss (M.B.A. 1990), head of global product development at General Motors; former president of GM North America
- William Neal Reynolds, president of RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company, brother of Richard Joshua Reynolds
- Allard Roen, businessman from Las Vegas, Nevada, and Carlsbad, California
- Andrew Rosen (A.B. 1982), chairman and CEO of Kaplan, Inc.
- Drew Rosenhaus (J.D. 1990), NFL sports agent
- David M. Rubenstein (A.B. 1970), billionaire co-founder of The Carlyle Group[57]
- Liu Ruopeng (Ph.D. 2009), billionaire co-founder of Kuang-Chi Group
- Georg Schaeffler (J.D. 1999), owner of the Schaeffler Group; currently the wealthiest person in Germany
- Alan Schwartz (A.B. 1972), CEO, Bear Stearns
- Granville Semmes, founder of 1-800-Flowers[58]
- Malvinder Mohan Singh (M.B.A. 1998), former chairman and CEO of Ranbaxy Laboratories; chairman of Fortis Hospitals and Religare Financial Services; one of the twenty richest Indians in the world
- Shivinder Mohan Singh (M.B.A. 2000), managing director of Fortis Healthcare; Advisory Board Member of AIESEC India; one of the twenty richest Indians in the world
- David B. Snow Jr. (M.S. 1978), chairman and CEO of Medco Health Solutions, a Fortune 100 company
- Jimmy Soni (A.B. 2007), managing editor of the Huffington Post
- Robert K. Steel (A.B. 1973), chairman of the Duke University Board of Trustees, president and CEO, Wachovia
- Joseph R. Swedish (M.H.A. 1979), CEO of WellPoint (now Anthem), the second-largest health insurance provider in the US
- David S. Taylor (B.S.E 1980), president and CEO at Procter & Gamble
- Christian Van Thillo (M.B.A. 1989), CEO of De Persgroep
- Bill Timmerman (1968), chairman, president, and CEO of SCANA
- Randall L. Tobias, former CEO of Eli Lilly and Company; served as U.S. Director of Foreign Assistance and Administrator of USAID, with the rank of ambassador
- David Trott (J.D. 1985), businessman; Republican politician
- Poornima Vijayashanker (B.S. 2004), entrepreneur and engineer
- James L. Vincent (B.S. 1961), chairman and CEO, Biogen Idec
- Jeffrey Vinik (B.S. 1981), chairman, president, and CEO of Vinik Asset Management, owner of Tampa Bay Lightning
- Karl von der Heyden (1962), vice chairman and CFO, Pepsico, Inc., namesake of the von der Heyden pavilion at Duke
- G. Richard Wagoner, Jr. (A.B. 1975), president and CEO, General Motors Corporation
- Gary L. Wilson (A.B. 1962), director of The Walt Disney Company; co-chairman of Northwest Airlines; namesake of Wilson Rec Center at Duke
- Charles Xiaolin Wang (J.D. 1999), Chinese lawyer, entrepreneur and financier
- Lee Waite (MBA 1983), President and CEO of Citigroup Holdings Japan
- Thomas S. White, Jr. (1965), asset manager
- William Wrigley, Jr. II (B.A.), chairman, president, CEO Wrigley Company
- Gao Xiqing (J.D. 1986), general manager and chief investment officer of the China Investment Corporation
University presidents and administrators
- Rick Brewer, president of Louisiana College
- Christopher Celenza (Ph.D. 1996), James B. Knapp Dean of the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences at Johns Hopkins University.
- John Chandler (B.D. 1952, Ph.D. 1954), former president of Williams College
- Margaret Cuninggim, dean of women at the University of Tennessee and at Vanderbilt University
- Charles L. Flynn, Jr. (Ph.D.), president of the College of Mount Saint Vincent
- W. Kent Fuchs (B.S.E. 1977), president of the University of Florida, former provost of Cornell University
- Pamela Gann (J.D. 1973), president of Claremont McKenna College and former dean of Duke University School of Law
- Geoffrey Garrett (Ph.D.), political scientist, dean of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania[59]
- Susan Henking (B.A. 1977), president of Shimer College; scholar of religious studies
- Susan Herbst (B.A. 1984), president of University of Connecticut; political scientist
- Matthew S. Holland (M.A., Ph.D.), president of Utah Valley University
- A. D. Kirwan (Ph.D., 1947), seventh president of the University of Kentucky
- Benjamin Ladner (Ph.D. 1970), former president of American University
- Theodore E. Long (A.M 1968), president of Elizabethtown College
- Mirta Martin (B.S. 1982), ninth president of Fort Hays State University
- Lloyd B. Minor (residency), scientist, surgeon, and dean of Stanford University School of Medicine
- Roy Kinneer Patteson, Jr. (Th.M. 1964, Ph.D. 1967), ancient language scholar; authority on the origin of the alphabet; former president of Southern Virginia University and King College
- David P. Roselle (Ph.D. 1965), president, University of Delaware
- David E. Sweet (Ph.D., 1968), founding president of Metropolitan State University and later president of Rhode Island College
- Jill Tiefenthaler (A.M., Ph.D.), president of Colorado College; former provost of Wake Forest University
- Beth Winkelstein (Ph.D. 1999), deputy provost of the University of Pennsylvania
- Theodore Ziolkowski (A.B. 1951), former dean of the graduate school, Princeton University
- Jeffrey Vitter (M.B.A. 2002), 17th chancellor of the University of Mississippi
Professors and academics
- Arun Agrawal (M.A. 1988, Ph.D. 1992), professor at the University of Michigan
- R. Michael Alvarez (Ph.D. 1992), professor of political science at the California Institute of Technology
- Dan Ariely (Ph.D. 1998), professor of behavioral economics at Duke and head of the eRationality research group at the MIT Media Lab, author of Predictably Irrational
- Susan Athey (A.B. 1991), professor of economics at Harvard University and winner of the John Bates Clark Medal
- Noël Bakhtian (B.S. 2005), director of the Berkeley Lab Energy Storage Center
- Roy Baumeister (M.A. 1976), psychologist, fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Stephen B. Baylin (B.S., M.D. 1968), Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Professor for Cancer Research at Johns Hopkins University
- Tomiko Brown-Nagin (Ph.D. 2002), Daniel P.S. Paul Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School
- Bill Brown (A.B.), distinguished professor of English at the University of Chicago
- Robin M. Canup (B.S.), astrophysicist; member of the National Academy of Sciences; recipient of the Harold C. Urey Prize
- Barry F. Cooper (Ph.D. 1969), Canadian political scientist
- Thomas Daniel (Ph.D.), biologist, won a MacArthur Fellowship in 1996
- Jon Danielsson (Ph.D. 1991), Director of the Systemic Risk Centre at the London School of Economics and Political Science
- Sara Danius (Ph.D. 1997), Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy, a Royal Academy which awards the Nobel Prize in Literature
- Kenneth A. Dodge (Ph.D. 1978), William McDougall Professor of Public Policy and professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University
- David L. Downie (A.B. 1983), author, professor of politics and environment policy at Fairfield University
- David Efird (A.B. 1995), philosopher and lecturer at the University of York
- Garrett Epps (J.D. 1991), legal scholar, professor at the University of Baltimore
- Thomas Eugene Flanagan (Ph.D.), conservative Canadian political scientist
- R. Edward Freeman (A.B. 1973), philosopher and professor of business administration, known for the stakeholder theory
- Maryellen Fullerton (B.A. 1968), lawyer and interim dean and law professor of law at Brooklyn Law School
- Ken Gergen (Ph.D. 1962), psychologist and professor at Swarthmore College
- John Graham (Ph.D. 1994), economist
- Huck Gutman, Ph.D. from Duke; professor of English at the University of Vermont and political advisor to Bernie Sanders
- Craig Hanks, Ph.D. from Duke; professor of philosophy at Texas State University
- Dagmar Herzog (A.B., 1983), distinguished professor of history, the Graduate Center, City University of New York
- Craig Henriquez (B.S.E., 1981, Ph.D., 1988), professor of biomedical engineering at Duke University
- Douglas Hodgkin (Ph.D.), political scientist; author; professor at Bates College
- D. Kern Holoman (B.A. 1969), Distinguished Professor of Music at the University of California, Davis[60]
- Robert A. Jarrow (B.S. 1974), Ronald P. and Susan E. Lynch Professor of Investment Management at the Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University
- Siddharth Kara (B.A.), expert on modern-day slavery and human trafficking
- Kevin Lane Keller (Ph.D. 1986), E. B. Osborn Professor of Marketing at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College
- Anne R. Kenney (B.A. 1972), Carl A. Kroch University Librarian, Cornell University Library
- M. A. R. Koehl (Ph.D. 1976), professor at the University of California, Berkeley; member of the National Academy of Sciences; awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 1990
- Juanita M. Kreps (A.M. 1944, Ph.D. 1948), professor, economist, United States Secretary of Commerce
- Josh Kun (B.A. 1993), professor of communication at the University of Southern California and MacArthur Fellow 2016
- Bruce R. Kuniholm (M.A. 1972, M.A.P.P.S. 1976, Ph.D. 1976), professor at the Sanford School of Public Policy; expert on U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East
- Luciano L'Abate (Ph.D. 1956), the father of relational theory; author of 50 books in the field of American psychology
- Frank Lentricchia (Ph.D. 1960), literary critic; professor of literature at Duke University
- Jerry B. Lincecum (Ph.D.), emeritus professor of English; author; affiliated with Austin College in Sherman, Texas[61]
- Jerome Loving (Ph.D.), professor of American literature and culture at the University of Texas at Austin[62]
- Marc Lynch (A.B.), professor of political science at George Washington University
- Khaled Mattawa (Ph.D. 2009), Libyan poet, awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2014
- Raven I. McDavid, Jr., linguist, dialectologist
- Lionel W. McKenzie (B.S. 1939), economist
- Allan Meltzer (A.B. 1948, A.M. 1955), economist who served on the Council of Economic Advisors for Presidents Kennedy and Ronald Reagan
- Jean-Paul C. Montagnier (Ph.D. 1994), musicologist
- Richard L. Morrill (Ph.D. 1968), chancellor of the University of Richmond
- Robert L. Morris (Ph.D. 1969), psychologist, Koestler professor at the University of Edinburgh
- Chip Mosher, education columnist, poet, teacher
- Noel Perrin (A.M., 1950), scholar, essayist, and critic; professor at Dartmouth College
- Joseph Gaither Pratt (A.B. 1931, M.A. 1933, Ph.D. 1936), psychologist
- Reynolds Price (A.B 1955), author and professor of literature at Duke
- Amélie Quesnel-Vallée (Ph.D. 2004), Associate Professor with joint appointment in the Departments of Sociology and Epidemiology, and Canada Research Chair in Policies and Health Inequalities at McGill University
- William Bee Ravenel III (M.A.), Head of the English Department at Episcopal High School (Alexandria, Virginia), mentor to Senator and Presidential Candidate John S. McCain III
- John A. Rich (M.D. 1984), chair of the department of health management and policy at Drexel University; 2006 MacArthur Fellowship
- Haun Saussy (A.B., 1981), university professor of comparative literature at the University of Chicago
- Shauna Shapiro, professor of psychology at Santa Clara University
- Baba Shiv (Ph.D. 1996), professor of marketing at Stanford's Graduate School of Business
- Eric Stach (B.S.E. 1992), materials scientist, professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Fellow of the American Physical Society
- Glen Stassen (Ph.D.), ethicist; Baptist theologian; son of former Minnesota governor and nine-time Presidential candidate Harold Stassen
- Omari Swinton (M.A. 2003, Ph.D 2007), economist, head of the National Economic Association
- Robert Tally (A.B. 1990, J.D. 2001), professor of English at Texas State University
- John E. Thomas (Ph.D. 1959), medical ethicist
- J. Anderson Thomson (A.B. 1970), trustee of the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science
- Robert M. Townsend (A.B. 1970), professor of economics at MIT and two-time winner of the Frisch Medal (1998, 2012)
- Jenny Tung (B.S. 2003, Ph.D. 2010), evolutionary anthropologist, received a MacArthur Fellowship in 2019
- Peter Turchin (Ph.D. 1985), Russian-American scientist, specializing in population biology and "cliodynamics"
- Sam Wang (Post Doc), neuroscientist, professor and best-selling author
- Daniel T. Willingham (A.B. 1983), professor of psychology at the University of Virginia
- Nikolai Khokhlov (Ph.D.), professor of psychology at California State University, San Bernardino, former KGB officer
- William Kaelin, Jr. (A.B. 1978, M.D. 1982), professor of medicine at Harvard University, recipient of the 2016 Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
Medicine, science and technology
- David H. Adams, heart valve surgery and mitral valve repair
- Raymond Delacy Adams (M.D. 1936), professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School; chief of neurology at Massachusetts General Hospital; Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Nita Ahuja (M.D. 1993), Chair of the Department of Surgery at Yale University School of Medicine
- Waleed Al-Salam (Ph.D. 1958), mathematician
- Eben Alexander (M.D. 1980), neurosurgeon and best-selling author
- Linda Austin (M.D. 1976), psychiatrist
- Lenox Baker (M.D. 1973), physician, public servant
- Lt. Andy Baldwin, The Bachelor, lieutenant, and doctor
- Ketan Ramanlal Bulsara (M.D. 1996), chief of neurosurgery at the University of Connecticut
- Ian Barbour (M.S. 1946), physicist, theologian, and recipient of the Templeton Prize in 1999
- Charles E. Brady, Jr. (M.D. 1975), astronaut
- John C. Browne (Ph.D.), former director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory
- Jerome Bruner (A.B. 1937), psychologist and professor
- David R. Bryant (Ph.D. 1961), organic chemist
- John Buse (Ph.D. 1985, M.D. 1986), former president of the American Diabetes Association
- C. Thomas Caskey (M.D. 1963), medical geneticist and biomedical entrepreneur
- Iain Cheeseman (B.S. 1997), assistant professor at MIT
- George M. Church (B.S. 1974), father of most current sequencing and array technologies; helped initiate the Human Genome Project; professor at Harvard Medical School
- Daniel J. Clancy (A.B. 1985), computer scientist, engineering director for Google Book Search
- Marcus Conant (B.S. 1957, M.D. 1961), dermatologist and AIDS researcher
- Richard Cytowic (B.A. 1973), neuroscientist and leading authority on the field of synesthesia
- Rose May Davis (Ph.D. 1929), chemist; first woman to be awarded a Ph.D. at Duke
- William DeVries (GME 1971–1979), pioneer of artificial organs
- Scott Dulchavsky (surgical fellowship), chairman of surgery and surgeon-in-chief at the Henry Ford Hospital
- Sylvia Earle (Ph.D., 1966), marine biologist; Chief Scientist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
- Jim Ellis, co-creator of Usenet with Tom Truscott
- Robert Everett (B.S. 1942), National Medal of Technology and Innovation laureate (1989)
- Paul Farmer (B.S. 1982), infectious disease specialist; winner of MacArthur Award; subject of Pulitzer Prize–winning author Tracy Kidder's biography Mountains Beyond Mountains
- Robert Fischell (B.S. 1951), physicist, inventor, holder of more than 200 U.S. and foreign medical patents, National Medal of Technology and Innovation laureate in 2015[63]
- C. Stephen Foster (B.S. 1965), ophthalmologist, developed the "step ladder approach to care" for treating patients with ocular inflammatory disease
- Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr. (M.D. 1958), cancer researcher; member of the National Academy of Sciences, the Institute of Medicine, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Association of American Physicians
- Irwin Fridovich (Ph.D. 1955), biochemist, member of the National Academy of Science
- Craig Gentry (B.S. 1995), computer scientist, MacArthur Fellow, recipient of the ACM's Grace Murray Hopper Award
- Ken Gergen (Ph.D. 1962), psychologist and professor at Swarthmore College
- Myron L. Good (Ph.D. 1951), particle physicist
- Antonella Grassi (Ph.D. 1990), mathematician; fellow of the American Mathematical Society
- Eugene Gu (M.D. 2015), president and CEO of the Ganogen Research Institute
- Scott Guthrie, executive vice president of the Cloud and Enterprise group at Microsoft
- Robert S. Haltiwanger (B.S. 1980, Ph.D. 1986), chairman of the Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology at Stony Brook University
- Mark S. Humayun (M.D. 1989), recipient of the National Medal of Technology and Innovation (2015), member of the National Academy of Medicine and the National Academy of Engineering
- Krithi Karanth (Ph.D.), conservation biologist
- George A. Keyworth, II (Ph.D. 1968), physicist; presidential science advisor; former board member of Hewlett Packard
- Cassie Kozyrkov (Ph.D. 2012), Chief Decision Scientist, Google
- Anita Layton (B.S. 1994), Robert R. & Katherine B. Penn Professor of Mathematics at Duke University
- Sarah Lisanby (B.S. 1987, M.D. 1991), psychiatrist; director of translational research at The National Institute of Mental Health
- Derek Lowe (Ph.D. 1988), medicinal chemist
- John M. MacDougal (Ph.D. 1984), botanist
- Robert Malkin (Ph.D. 1993), biomedical engineer; fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering
- Peter V. E. McClintock (Post-Doc. 1968), physicist
- Yi Fang Xiong (M.S. 2011), CEO of Ehang Technology
- Joe M. McCord (Ph.D. 1970), biochemist; discovered the enzyme superoxide dismutase
- Frank B. McDonald (B.S. 1948), astrophysicist; former chief scientist of NASA; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Michelle McMurry-Heath (M.D./Ph.D. 2000), doctor, immunologist, policymaker, and current CEO of the Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO)
- Delano Meriwether (M.D. 1967), physician, head of the United States Government 1976 swine flu immunization program
- Tony Mills (A.B. 1982, M.D. 1986), physician specializing in the treatment of HIV and AIDS
- Radhe Mohan (Ph.D. 1969), medical physicist and radiation treatment safety pioneer
- Harold A. Mooney (Ph.D. 1960), former president of the Ecological Society of America; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Robert Morris (Ph.D. 1969), psychologist, Koestler professor at the University of Edinburgh
- Terry Myerson (B.S. 1992), head of Microsoft's operating systems engineering group
- Bert W. O'Malley (residency), distinguished professor of molecular and cellular biology at Baylor College of Medicine; recipient of the National Medal of Science
- Dana S. Nau (Ph.D. 1979), professor of computer science at the University of Maryland; fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery
- George B. Pegram (B.A. 1895), conducted pioneering research on the behavior of neutrons and played a key role in the administration of the Manhattan Project
- Sheldon Pinnell (A.B.), dermatologist; lead scientist of SkinCeuticals
- Daniel Colón-Ramos (Ph.D. 2003), Dorys McConnell Duberg Associate Professor of Neuroscience and Cell Biology at Yale University School of Medicine
- Walter Rudin (A.B. 1947, Ph.D. 1949), mathematician, recipient of the Leroy P. Steele Prize awarded by the American Mathematical Society
- Michael Ryschkewitsch (Ph.D. 1978), NASA Chief Engineer
- Alan R. Saltiel (A.B. 1975), director of the Life Sciences Institute at the University of Michigan
- Sir John Skehel (Post-Doc 1968–1971), British virologist
- Dylan Smith, co-founder and chief financial officer of Box
- Henry Yan (B.S.E. 2016), Product Manager at Facebook, CPO of Hub Blockchain
- William Kennedy Smith, founder of Physicians Against Land Mines
- Michael Tomasello (B.A. 1972), director of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology; Professor at Duke University; member of the National Academy of Science
- Joseph Travis (Ph.D. 1980), biologist; fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; former president of the American Society of Naturalists
- Tom Truscott, co-creator of Usenet with Jim Ellis
- Luis von Ahn, inventor of CAPCHA and the Google image labeler; awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2006
- Olaf von Ramm (Ph.D. 1973), first patent on a 3-D ultrasound, later developed the first electronically steered matrix-array 3-D ultrasound imager
- Ge Wang, creator of the ChucK programming language
- Lewis W. Wannamaker (M.D. 1946), biochemist; recipient of the Robert Koch Prize; member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences
- R. Sanders Williams (M.D. 1974), president of Gladstone Institutes; professor of medicine at UCSF
- Blake S. Wilson (B.S.E.E 1974), co-developer of the cochlear implant; recipient of the 2013 Lasker Award for clinical research
- Melanie Wood (B.S. 2003), mathematician
- Ricardo J. Komotar (B.S. 1999), academic neurosurgeon
- John H. Gibbons (Ph.D. 1954), American scientist, nuclear physicist, and internationally recognized expert in technologies for energy efficiency and energy resource conservation
- Louis Pillemer, (B.S. 1932), immunologist; discoverer of properdin
- John H. Sampson (Ph.D. 1996, M.B.A. 2011), world-renowned neurosurgeon
- David Tab Rasmussen (Ph.D. 1986), paleontologist
- Brittany Wenger (B.S. 2017), winner of the Google Science Fair in 2012
- Anne D. Yoder (Ph.D. 1992), Braxton Craven Professor of Evolutionary Biology at Duke University
Literature
- Ainehi Edoro (Ph.D. 2016), founder and editor of Brittle Paper, described as "Africa’s leading literary journal"
- Arthur Talmage Abernethy (A.M. 1891, Trinity College), journalist, theologian, minister, first North Carolina Poet Laureate
- Dorsey Armstrong (Ph.D. 1998), editor-in-chief of Arthuriana
- Douglas Brunt (A.B. 1993), novelist and entrepreneur
- John W. Campbell (B.S. 1932), science fiction writer, described as "the most powerful force in science fiction" by Isaac Asimov
- Fred Chappell (A.B. 1961, A.M. 1964), North Carolina Poet Laureate, novelist
- Lucy Corin (A.B. 1992), novelist and short story writer; awarded Rome Prize by the American Academy of Arts and Letters
- Guy Davenport (B.A. 1948), author, Thasos and Ohio, National Review contributor
- G. William Domhoff (A.B. 1958), author of the controversial bestseller Who Rules America?
- David Drake (J.D. 1972), author of science fiction and fantasy literature
- Lee McGeorge Durrell (Ph.D. 1979), author, television presenter, zookeeper
- Elizabeth A. Fenn (A.B. 1981), American historian, recipient of the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for History
- Ben Fountain (J.D. 1983), award-winning author of fiction
- Josephine Humphreys (A.B. 1967), novelist
- Mac Hyman (A.B. 1947), author of No Time for Sergeants
- Russell Kirk (A.M. 1941), author, The Conservative Mind
- Nathaniel Lande (B.A. 1956), author, filmmaker, and former creative director of Time magazine
- Peter Maas (A.B. 1949), author of novels The Valachi Papers and Serpico, later made into movies
- Dan Mallory (A.B. 2001), best-selling author of The Woman in the Window
- Tucker Max (J.D. 2001), author of I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell
- Lydia Millet (M.E.M. 1996), author of novels Oh Pure and Radiant Heart, Everyone's Pretty
- Peggy Payne (1970), author, Sister India
- Noel Perrin (A.M., 1950), scholar, essayist, critic, professor at Dartmouth College
- Michael Peterson (A.B. 1965), author, politician, convicted of murdering his wife in 2003
- Reynolds Price (A.B 1955), author; James B. Duke professor of literature at Duke
- Lynn Veach Sadler, poet, author, and playwright
- Haun Saussy (A.B., 1981), university professor of comparative literature at the University of Chicago; formerly at Stanford University, where he chaired the comparative literature department, and Yale University
- William Seale (Ph.D. 1965), American historian and author
- Frank G. Slaughter (B.A. 1926), novelist and physician
- Margaret Taylor Smith (A.B. 1947), author, social activist, chair of Kresge Foundation
- William C. Styron (A.B. 1947), author, Pulitzer Prize winner, wrote The Confessions of Nat Turner and Sophie's Choice
- Anne Tyler (A.B. 1961), Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and writer of short stories
- Haim Watzman (B.A. 1978), writer
- Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove (MDiv), writer
- Richard Zimler (A.B. 1977), novelist, author of The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon,The Warsaw Anagrams and The Gospel According to Lazarus (novel)
Fine arts
- Michael Best (A.B. 1962), former principal artist of the Metropolitan Opera
- Les Brown (A.B. 1936), musician, Les Brown & The Band of Renown; Jazz Hall of Fame inductee, 1999
- Michael Ching (A.B. 1980), composer
- Bill Cunliffe (A.B. 1978), Grammy Award-winning composer, arranger, pianist[64]
- Mike Posner (B.S. 2010), musician
- William Stone (B.A., 1966), operatic baritone
- Oleg Timofeyev (Ph.D. 1999), musicologist
Entertainment
- Ian Abrams, co-creator of the CBS TV series Early Edition, Undercover Blues, Rolling Thunder
- Andy Baldwin (B.S. 1999), The Bachelor, lieutenant, and doctor
- Jayne Brook (1982), actress, Chicago Hope
- Ryan Carnes (X. 2004), actor, Desperate Housewives, Eating Out
- Bailey Chase (B.A. 1995), actor, Longmire
- Jack Coleman (A.B. 1980), actor, Heroes, Dynasty, Days of Our Lives
- Robert L. Cook (B.S. 1973), Academy Award-winning software-programmer whose computer-graphics program, RenderMan, is used in many contemporary films
- Kara DioGuardi (A.B. 1993), songwriter for musicians including Carlos Santana, Kelly Clarkson and Britney Spears, American Idol judge[65]
- Lee McGeorge Durrell (Ph.D. 1979), author, television presenter, zookeeper
- René Echevarria (A.B. 1984), producer, The 4400, Dark Angel, Now and Again; screenwriter, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
- Sean Flynn (X. 1963), actor and Vietnam War photojournalist
- Annabeth Gish (A.B. 1992), actress, X-Files, The West Wing
- Kevin Gray (A.B. 1980), Broadway actor, Phantom on Broadway after Michael Crawford[66]
- Emmett Grogan (attended), founder of the Diggers theatre
- John Gromada (A.B. 1986), Broadway composer and sound designer
- Jared Harris (B.F.A. 1984), Emmy-nominated actor, Mad Men, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
- David Hudgins, television writer, Friday Night Lights
- Ken Jeong (B.S. 1990), comedian, physician, actor, Community, Knocked Up, Role Models, The Hangover films[67]
- Eric Kirsten (A.B. 1991), screenwriter, Midnight Sun
- Belle Knox, pornographic actress[68]
- Cody Ko (A.B. 2012), YouTube personality and Computer Scientist[69]
- Martin Kratt (B.S. 1989), creator and star of PBS's Zoboomafoo
- Rossana Lacayo (B.S. 1979), Nicaraguan photographer and pioneer filmmaker
- Alisa Lepselter (A.B. 1985), editor of director Woody Allen's films since 1999
- Keith Lucas (attended law school), stand-up comedian, actor in 22 Jump Street, creator of Lucas Bros. Moving Co., writer and producer of Judas and the Black Messiah
- Bascom Lamar Lunsford (J.D. 1913), folk musician
- Russell Marcus, TV producer of Married With Children; creator of Family Rules, Brandy & Mr Whiskers and Corn & Peg[70]
- Tucker Max (J.D. 2001), author of the New York Times bestselling book I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell; internet celebrity (TuckerMax.com)
- Ben Mulroney (A.B. 1997), host of Canadian Idol and eTalk Daily; son of former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney
- Alexi Murdoch, singer-songwriter
- Stephanie (B.S. 2009) and Matthew Patrick (B.S. 2009), hosts of the webseries Game Theory on YouTube
- Ellary Porterfield (A.B. 2011), actress, The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio, Sugar, Hidden Palms
- Mike Posner (A.B. 2010), singer, songwriter, Cooler Than Me, Please Don't Go
- Charles Randolph-Wright, director, writer, and producer
- Retta (B.S. 1992), stand-up comedian and actress, Parks and Recreation
- Teddy Schwarzman (J.D. 2006), Academy Award-nominated film producer, The Imitation Game; former corporate lawyer at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
- Rebecca Sealfon (Ph.D. 2009), internet celebrity and winner of 1997 Scripps National Spelling Bee
- David H. Steinberg (J.D. 1993), screenwriter and film director; wrote screenplays for American Pie 2, Slackers, National Lampoon's Barely Legal, and American Pie Presents: The Book of Love
- Travis Lane Stork (B.S. 1994), reality star of ABC's Bachelor 8 and host of the Daytime Emmy Award winning daytime talk show, The Doctors (talk show)
- Mike Stud (A.B. 2010), singer, songwriter, A Toast to Tommy (2011), Relief (2013), Closer (2014), These Days (2016)
- Rita Volk (B.S. 2009), actress and model, known for her role as Amy Raudenfeld in the MTV hit romantic comedy series Faking It
- Randall Wallace (A.B. 1971), Academy Award-nominated screenwriter of Braveheart; also wrote screenplay for Pearl Harbor and wrote and directed The Man in the Iron Mask and We Were Soldiers
- Patrick Williams (A.B. 1961), Academy Award-nominated composer for movies and TV; Emmy and Grammy winner
- Robert Yeoman (A.B. 1973), Academy Award-nominated cinematographer, Bottle Rocket, Rushmore, The Royal Tenenbaums, The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, The Darjeeling Limited, and The Grand Budapest Hotel
Journalism and media
- Dan Abrams (A.B. 1988), chief legal correspondent for NBC News, host of Verdict with Dan Abrams, former general manager of MSNBC
- Diana Butler Bass (Ph.D. 1991), columnist and author
- J. Bowyer Bell (doctorate 1959), historian, artist and art critic
- Dan Bernstein (A.B.), sports journalist, WSCR radio host[71]
- John Carreyrou (A.B. 1994), Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist
- Jessica Faye Carter (J.D. 2002, M.B.A. 2002), author, columnist, social media entrepreneur[72]
- Seth Davis (A.B. 1992), Sports Illustrated columnist and college basketball analyst for CBS Sports[73]
- Laila el-Haddad (A.B. 2000), Palestinian journalist
- Alex Epstein (A.B.), writer, founder and president of the Center for Industrial Progress
- John Feinstein (A.B. 1977), sports journalist
- Clay Felker (A.B. 1951), Founding Editor of New York Magazine
- Sean Flynn (X. 1963), actor and Vietnam War photojournalist
- Cornelia Grumman (B.S. 1985), Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist
- Kerry Hannon (A.B. 1982), best-selling author
- Michelle Charlesworth (A.B. 1992), WABC-TV anchor and reporter
- Nia-Malika Henderson (B.A.), journalist, senior political reporter for CNN[74]
- Melissa Harris-Perry (Ph.D. 1999), author, television host and political commentator
- David Hartman (A.B. 1956), first host of Good Morning America on ABC
- John Harwood (A.B. 1978), National Political Editor of The Wall Street Journal, frequent panelist on Washington Week[75]
- Mangesh Hattikudur (A.B. 2001), co-founder of mental floss with Will Pearson
- Ben Jacobs (J.D.), political reporter for The Guardian
- Louis Isaac Jaffe, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- Hugo Lindgren (A.B. 1990), editor of The New York Times Magazine
- Mark Mazzetti (A.B. 1996), The New York Times national security correspondent and 2009 Pulitzer Prize winner
- Scott McCartney (A.B. 1982), travel editor and journalist for The Wall Street Journal, author
- Sean McManus (A.B. 1977), president of CBS News and CBS Sports
- Susannah Meadows (A.B. 1995), senior writer for Newsweek
- Richard A. Oppel, Jr. (A.B. 1990), journalist, reported for The New York Times from Iraq, Israel and Washington, D.C.
- Will Pearson (A.B. 2001), co-founder of mental floss with Mangesh Hattikudur
- Windland Smith Rice (X. 1992), photographer, daughter of Frederick W. Smith, billionaire founder of FedEx
- Charlie Rose (A.B. 1964, J.D. 1968), journalist, former CBS News anchor, 60 Minutes contributor[76]
- Jim Rosenfield (A.B. 1981), WCBS-TV anchor
- Michael Ruhlman (A.B. 1985), nonfiction author
- Monty Sarhan (J.D. 1999), publisher and CEO of national humor magazine Cracked
- Scott Savitt (A.B. 1985), author of Crashing the Party, recognized expert on China
- John Seigenthaler, Jr. (B.S. 1978), Al Jazeera America news anchor, formerly at NBC News and MSNBC
- A. M. Secrest (A.B. 1944, M.A. 1970, Ph.D. 1972), journalist and Nieman Fellow
- Elizabeth Spiers (A.B. 1999), founding editor of Gawker.com
- Susan Tifft (A.B. 1973), writer and editor for Time magazine; professor at Sanford School of Public Policy[77]
- Kelly Tilghman (A.B. 1991), broadcaster for The Golf Channel; the PGA Tour's first female lead golf announcer
- Jim Toomey (B.S.E. 1983), syndicated cartoonist of Sherman's Lagoon[78]
- Judy Woodruff (A.B. 1968), NBC's White House correspondent and Washington correspondent for the MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour, anchor at CNN[79]
- JJ Ramberg (A.B. 1992), host of MSNBC's weekend business program Your Business[80]
- Barry Svrluga (A.B. 1993), national baseball writer for The Washington Post
Athletics
- See also men's basketball players, women's basketball players, and football players.
American football
- Patrick Bailey, NFL linebacker, Pittsburgh Steelers[81]
- Brian Baldinger (1982), former National Football League offensive lineman; commentator for Fox[82]
- Dave Brown (1991), ten seasons in the NFL with the New York Giants and Arizona Cardinals[83]
- Charles Bowser (1982), NFL linebacker, 4th round draft pick[84]
- Wray Carlton (1965), American Football League all star, Buffalo Bills fullback and all-time leading rusher from the AFL years[85]
- Jeremy Cash (2016), NFL linebacker, All-American defensive back[86]
- Ross Cockrell (2014), NFL cornerback, New York Giants[87]
- Jamison Crowder (2014), NFL wide receiver, Washington Redskins[88]
- Mike Curtis, NFL All Pro linebacker with the Baltimore Colts; Super Bowl V champion[89]
- Al DeRogatis (1948), Pro Bowl tackle for the New York Giants; later lead analyst for the NFL on NBC[90]
- Anthony Dilweg (1989), former NFL quarterback, enjoyed brief success with the Green Bay Packers[91]
- Dave Dunaway, NFL wide receiver[92]
- Ryan Fowler, NFL linebacker, New York Jets[93]
- Lennie Friedman NFL offensive lineman, 2nd round draft pick[94]
- Thomas Hennessy, NFL long snapper
- Cedric Jones, NFL wide receiver[95]
- Daniel Jones, No.6 overall pick in 2019 NFL Draft, NFL Quarterback for New York Giants[96]
- Sonny Jurgensen, Hall of Fame quarterback who played for the Philadelphia Eagles and Washington Redskins[97]
- Kevin Lewis, NFL linebacker
- Thaddeus Lewis (2012), NFL quarterback,
- Patrick Mannelly, NFL long snapper
- George McAfee, Hall of Fame halfback who played for the Chicago Bears
- Max McCaffrey (2016), NFL wide receiver, San Francisco 49ers
- Scottie Montgomery, Arena Football League wide receiver/defensive back
- Ed Newman (1973), NFL offensive guard; 12 seasons with the Miami Dolphins; Super Bowl VIII champion[98]
- Ayanga Okpokowuruk, football player
- Clarence "Ace" Parker, Hall of Fame quarterback who played for the Brooklyn Dodgers, Boston Yanks, and New York Yankees[99]
- Lucas Patrick (2016), American football, guard, Green Bay Packers
- Tommy Prothro, former head coach of the Los Angeles Rams and San Diego Chargers
- Tawambi Settles, player of gridiron football
- Drew Strojny, NFL football offensive tackle
- Laken Tomlinson, NFL offensive guard, San Francisco 49ers; 1st round draft pick[100]
Baseball
- Wayne Ambler, professional baseball player
- Bob Brower, Major League Baseball (MLB) player
- Chris Capuano (2000), MLB player, Milwaukee Brewers
- Claude Corbitt, MLB player
- Lawrence "Crash" Davis, professional baseball player (see also Bull Durham)
- Nate Freiman, MLB player, currently with the Oakland A's[101]
- Bryce Jarvis, professional baseball player
- Ryan Jackson, professional baseball player[102]
- Kenny Koplove, professional baseball player[103]
- Bill McCahan, MLB player
- Dan Otero, MLB pitcher, Cleveland Indians
- Quinton McCracken, MLB player, member of 2001 World Series Champion Arizona Diamondbacks[104]
- Scott Schoeneweis, MLB pitcher, member of the 2002 World Series Champion Anaheim Angels, currently with the Boston Redsox[105]
- Al Spangler, MLB player
- Graeme Stinson, professional baseball player[106]
- Marcus Stroman (A.B. 2015), MLB starting pitcher, Toronto Blue Jays[107]
- Eric Tipton, MLB player[108]
- Mike Trombley, MLB pitcher
- Hal Wagner, MLB player
Basketball
- Alaa Abdelnaby, former professional basketball player, college basketball analyst[109]
- Mark Alarie, former professional basketball player[110]
- Grayson Allen (2018), No. 21 pick of the 2018 NBA Draft, professional basketball player, Memphis Grizzlies[111]
- Tommy Amaker, Harvard University head basketball coach[112]
- Tate Armstrong, former professional basketball player[113]
- William Avery, former professional basketball player[114]
- Kenny Blakeney, former professional basketball player[115]
- Marvin Bagley III, professional basketball player, No. 2 pick of the 2018 NBA Draft, NBA player for Sacramento Kings[116]
- Alison Bales, former professional player (WNBA)
- RJ Barrett, No.3 overall pick in the 2019 NBA Draft, NBA player for New York Knicks[117]
- Lexie Brown, WNBA player for the Connecticut Sun[118]
- Marques Bolden, professional basketball player[119]
- Shane Battier, former professional basketball player[120]
- Alana Beard, professional basketball player, Los Angeles Sparks in the WNBA (jersey retired)[121]
- Jay Bilas (A.B. 1986, J.D. 1992), ESPN sports commentator[122]
- Carlos Boozer (B.A. 2020), professional basketball player, Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA[123]
- Elton Brand, professional basketball player, Atlanta Hawks in the NBA[124]
- Henry Cole (1921), former basketball player and coach
- Seth Curry, NBA Player for Dallas Mavericks[125]
- Jeff Capel, men's basketball assistant coach, former head coach at the University of Oklahoma
- Chris Collins, men's basketball associate head coach
- Vernon Carey Jr., NBA player for Charlotte Hornets[126]
- Wendell Carter Jr., No. 7 pick of the 2018 NBA Draft, NBA player for Chicago Bulls[127]
- Quinn Cook (2015), NBA player, for Los Angeles Lakers[128]
- Andre Dawkins, professional basketball player[129]
- Brian Davis, former professional basketball player[130]
- Johnny Dawkins, University of Central Florida head basketball coach, former Duke associate head basketball coach and former professional basketball player (jersey retired)[131]
- Sean Dockery (2006), former professional basketball player[132]
- Kenny Dennard, former professional basketball player[133]
- Randy Denton, former professional basketball player[134]
- Luol Deng, professional basketball player, Minnesota Timberwolves[135]
- Charles "Lefty" Driesell, former college basketball coach (Davidson, Maryland, James Madison, Georgia State)
- Chris Duhon, former professional basketball player; assistant coach for Marshall University[136]
- Trevon Duval, professional basketball player[137]
- Mike Dunleavy, Jr., professional basketball player, Chicago Bulls in the NBA[138]
- Daniel Ewing, professional basketball player, Maccabi Ashdod of the Israeli Premier League[139]
- Danny Ferry, former Cleveland Cavaliers general manager, former professional basketball player, member of 2003 NBA Champion San Antonio Spurs (jersey retired)[140]
- Pat Garrity (M.B.A. 2011), former professional basketball player and investment professional
- Mike Gminski, ACC/ Raycom sports commentator (jersey retired)[141]
- Harry Giles, 20th pick of 2017 NBA Draft, NBA player for the Portland Trail Blazers[142]
- Haley Gorecki, professional basketball player (WNBA)[143]
- Dick Groat, former professional baseball and basketball player (jersey retired)[144]
- Michael Gbinije (Transferred to Syracuse), professional basketball player[145]
- Lindsey Harding, professional basketball player, Los Angeles Sparks in the WNBA (jersey retired)
- Dave Henderson, 1991 Israeli Basketball Premier League MVP[146]
- Gerald Henderson Jr., former professional basketball player[147]
- Phil Henderson, former professional basketball player[148]
- Art Heyman (1963), former professional basketball player (jersey retired)[149]
- Grant Hill (B.A. 1994), former professional basketball player, member of Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (jersey retired)[150]
- Rodney Hood, NBA player for the Portland Trail Blazers[151]
- Nick Horvath, West Sydney Razorbacks professional baseball player
- Bobby Hurley, former professional basketball player (jersey retired), head coach at Arizona State[152]
- Brandon Ingram, NBA player for New Orleans Pelicans, No. 2 pick in the 2016 NBA draft[153]
- Kyrie Irving, professional basketball player, Brooklyn Nets; No. 1 pick in the 2011 NBA draft; 2011–2012 NBA Rookie of the Year, 2016 NBA Champion[154]
- Frank Jackson, NBA player for Detroit Pistons[155]
- Billy King, president and general manager of the Brooklyn Nets[156]
- Nate James, former professional basketball player[157]
- Amile Jefferson, NBA player for the Minnesota Timberwolves[158]
- Chase Jeter (Transferred to Arizona), basketball player[159]
- Dahntay Jones, professional basketball player[160]
- Matt Jones (2017), professional basketball player[161]
- Tre Jones, NBA player for San Antonio Spurs[162]
- Tyus Jones, NBA player for Minnesota Timberwolves[163]
- Luke Kennard, NBA player for the Detroit Pistons[164]
- Antonio Lang, former professional basketball player[165]
- Christian Laettner (1992), professional basketball player (jersey retired)[166]
- Trajan Langdon, former professional basketball player[167]
- Corey Maggette, professional basketball player[168]
- Josh McRoberts, former professional basketball player[169]
- Jeff Mullins, professional basketball player for the Golden State Warriors and head basketball coach at UNC Charlotte (jersey retired)[170]
- DeMarcus Nelson, professional basketball player, Panathinaikos in Greece[171]
- Greg Newton, former professional basketball player[172][173]
- Martin Nessley, former professional basketball player[174]
- Jahlil Okafor, No. 3 of the 2015 NBA Draft, NBA player for Detroit Pistons[175]
- Cherokee Parks, former professional basketball player[176]
- Jabari Parker, professional basketball player, Sacramento Kings; No. 2 of the 2014 NBA Draft[177]
- Marshall Plumlee, NBA player for Milwaukee Bucks[178]
- Mason Plumlee, professional basketball player, Brooklyn Nets in the NBA[179]
- Miles Plumlee, professional basketball player, Phoenix Suns in the NBA[180]
- Haley Peters, professional basketball player[181]
- Shavlik Randolph, professional basketball player, Phoenix Suns in the NBA
- J. J. Redick (A.B. 2006), NCAA's all-time leader in three-point field goals, professional basketball player, New Orleans Pelicans (jersey retired)[182]
- Austin Rivers, professional basketball player, New York Knicks in the NBA[183]
- Cam Reddish, No.8 pick in the 2019 NBA Draft, NBA player for Atlanta Hawks[184]
- Jon Scheyer, American-Israeli McDonald's All American, All-American basketball player for national champion 2009–10 Duke basketball team,[185] current Duke men's basketball assistant coach
- Adam Silver (1984), commissioner and chief operating officer of the NBA[186]
- Cassius Stanley, NBA player for Indiana Pacers[187]
- Kyle Singler, NBA player for Oklahoma City Thunder[188]
- Nolan Smith (2011), 2010 national champion, current Duke men's basketball assistant coach[189]
- Quin Snyder, former University of Missouri head coach; former Austin Toros of the NBDL head coach; head coach of the Utah Jazz in the NBA
- Rasheed Sulaimon (transferred to Maryland), professional basketball player[190]
- Jim Spanarkel, former professional basketball player, NBA and college basketball commentator[191]
- Jayson Tatum, NBA player for the Boston Celtics, #3 overall pick in the 2017 NBA Draft[192]
- Gary Trent Jr., NBA player for the Portland Trail Blazers[193]
- Tyler Thornton (2014), professional basketball player[194]
- Lance Thomas (2010), 2010 national champion (captain); 10th on Duke's all-time list of offensive rebounds; professional basketball player, New York Knicks in the NBA[195]
- Michele Van Gorp, former professional basketball player (WNBA)
- Abby Waner, former professional basketball player (WNBA)[196]
- Elizabeth Williams, professional basketball player (WNBA)[197]
- Jason Williams, former professional basketball player (jersey retired), college basketball commentator and analyst for ESPN[198]
- Shelden Williams, Duke's all-time leader in rebounds and blocked shots, professional basketball player (jersey retired)[199]
- Justise Winslow, NBA player for Miami Heat[200]
- Jack White (2020), professional basketball player[201]
- Zion Williamson, No. 1 pick in the 2019 NBA draft, NBA player for the New Orleans Pelicans[202]
- Steve Wojciechowski, Marquette men's basketball head coach
Golf
- Skip Alexander, professional golfer[203]
- Beth Bauer, professional golfer[204]
- Laetitia Beck, Israeli professional golfer[205]
- Amanda Blumenherst, professional golfer[206]
- Céline Boutier, professional golfer
- Jenny Chuasiriporn, professional golfer
- Liz Janangelo, professional golfer
- Brittany Lang, professional golfer
- Leona Maguire (Irish), number 1 Women's World Amateur, Duke senior
- Lisa Maguire, Irish amateur golfer
- Joe Ogilvie, professional golfer
- Leif Olson, professional golfer
- Mike Souchak, professional golfer, winner of 15 PGA events
- Kevin Streelman, professional golfer
- Art Wall, Jr., professional golfer, winner of 1959 Masters[207]
Other
- Stephen Amritraj (B.A. 2006), professional tennis player
- Drew Cannon (B.S. 2012), statistician and sports writer; on Boston Celtics staff
- Jordan Cila (born 1982), Major League Soccer midfielder
- Matt Danowski, professional lacrosse player for New Jersey Pride; all-time leading points scorer in NCAA Lacrosse history; Tewaaraton Trophy winner in 2007; two-time Jack Turnbull Award winner; two-time Lt. Raymond Enners Award winner
- Andy Frankenberger, professional poker player and former equity derivatives trader
- Danielle Goldstein (born 1985), American-Israeli show jumper
- Paulie Harraka, NASCAR racer[208]
- Jay Heaps, Head Coach of the New England Revolution as of November 2011; former player for the New England Revolution MLS team; former Duke basketball and soccer player
- Nancy Hogshead, Olympic gold medal winner in swimming
- Hiroshi Hoketsu (A.M. 1968), Japanese equestrian rider who debuted in the 1964 Summer Olympics and continues to compete today in the 2012 Summer Olympics
- Matthew Jacobs, martial arts expert; frequently appears in Ultimate Fighting Championship
- Abigail Johnston won a silver medal in synchronized diving at the 2012 Summer Olympics while an undergraduate at Duke and competed in the 2016 Summer Olympics while attending Duke Medical School[209]
- Randy Jones, competed in four Olympics as member of U.S. bobsledding teams
- John Kerr, soccer player; winner of Hermann Trophy for top collegian; first American player in the Football League First Division (now known as the Premiership); Duke's head coach
- Jason Kreis, professional soccer player and coach
- Alison Levine (M.B.A. 2000), mountain climber and explorer; the only woman in the world to have completed the Explorers Grand Slam, reaching the summit of the highest mountain on each continent and skiing to the North and South Poles
- Nick McCrory, Olympic diver[210]
- Ibtihaj Muhammad (B.A. 2007), 2016 Olympic fencer and Bronze medalist
- Gunnar Peterson (B.A. 1985), fitness expert, author and motivational speaker
- Vanessa Rousso, professional poker player
- Shannon Rowbury, professional track athlete, middle distance runner
- Morgan Reid (2017), professional soccer player[211]
- Philip Schwalb, founder of National Sports Museum of America
- Jillian Schwartz, Olympic pole vaulter
- Dave Sime, champion sprinter, won a silver medal at the 1960 Rome Olympics
- Andrew Skurka (A.B. 2003), first person to complete the 7,700 sea-to-sea-route spanning North America
- Steven Solomon, Australian track and field, 2012 Olympics, Duke indoor 400m record holder
- Jessica Rae Springsteen, nationally ranked equestrian; daughter of Bruce Springsteen
- Becca Ward, 2008 Olympic bronze medalist in fencing; three-time NCAA champion in individual women's sabre (2009, 2011, 2012)[212]
- Sean Davis (soccer), captain of the New York Red Bulls
- Andrew Wenger, professional soccer player and first draft pick in the 2012 MLS SuperDraft
Fictional
- Ben Barry, a character played by Matthew McConaughey in How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, is a Duke alumnus.
- Myron Bolitar, a character in several of Harlan Coben's novels, attended Duke on a basketball scholarship.
- Lt. Colonel Sarah MacKenzie, USMC, a character played by Catherine Bell in the television series JAG, graduated from Duke University School of Law.
- Isobel Flemming-Saltzman, a character from The Vampire Diaries TV show
- Tori Frederking, a character played by Teresa Palmer in Take Me Home Tonight, attended Duke.
- Theo Huxtable's girlfriend Gwen, a character on The Cosby Show, was said to be very intelligent because she was "going to major in physics at Duke".
- Lieutenant Kif Kroker of Futurama mentions in Amazon Women in the Mood that he sang in the Duke Boy's Chorus.
- Dr. Jim Pomatter in Waitress
- Kelvin Jones in Outlaw is an ambitious honor student who dreamed of going to Duke
- Sloan Sabbith, a character played by Olivia Munn on HBO's The Newsroom, received her Ph.D. in Economics from Duke.
- Nick Savrinn, a character on Prison Break, attended Duke as an undergraduate.
- Nathan Scott, a character played by James Lafferty on the television series One Tree Hill, received a scholarship to play basketball at Duke.
- Sam Seaborn, a character portrayed by Rob Lowe (whose son attends Duke in real life) on The West Wing, graduated from Duke University School of Law.
- In the pilot episode of Privileged, billionaire Laurel Limoges hires recent Yale graduate Megan Smith to tutor her two granddaughters with the goal of getting them into Duke.
- Stingo, the narrator of William Styron's novel Sophie's Choice, attended Duke as an undergraduate (as did Styron).
- Stacy Warner lawyer and ex-girlfriend of main character Dr. House on the TV series House, played by Sela Ward, hired as the hospital's lawyer during season 2
- Charlotte York's brother Wesley on Sex and the City
- Quentin, the protagonist of the novel Paper Towns and its film adaptation, is an incoming freshman at Duke.
- Natalie, the protagonist of the movie Keith, is a high school tennis star who dreams of going to Duke.
- Nathan Scott, one of the protagonists of the television series One Tree Hill, though his offer was rescinded when he was caught point shaving
- Haley James Scott, one of the protagonists of the television series One Tree Hill, though she decided not to attend after she became pregnant with her son and her husband's offer was rescinded
Faculty
Current
- Bill Adair, founder of the Pulitzer Prize-winning website PolitiFact
- David Aers, James B. Duke Professor of English, expert on medieval and Renaissance literature and theology
- Pankaj K. Agarwal, computer scientist, known for his research on computational geometry
- Susan Alberts, primatologist, co-director of Amboseli Baboon Research Project
- John Aldrich, political scientist, fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Samuel Alito, associate justice of the US Supreme Court
- Nancy Andrews, vice chancellor for academic affairs and dean of the Duke University School of Medicine[213]
- Dan Ariely, professor of behavioral economics, author of Predictably Irrational
- Nancy Armstrong, Gilbert, Louis and Edward Lehrman Professor of English; critic of 18th- and 19th-century novels; editor of Novel: A Forum on Fiction
- Frank Asche, marine economist
- Valerie Ashby, dean of Trinity College of Arts and Sciences
- Owen Astrachan (M.S. 1989, Ph.D. 1992), distinguished computer scientist
- Emanuel Azenberg, producer of American theater who has won 40 Tony awards
- Lorena S. Beese, biochemist, fellow of the National Academy of Sciences
- Adrian Bejan, mechanical engineering professor, inventor of constructal theory and namesake of the Bejan number
- Ravi V. Bellamkonda, biomedical engineer
- Peter B. Bennett, founder and former president and CEO of the Divers Alert Network
- Philip Bennett, former managing editor of The Washington Post
- James Berger, statistician, member of the National Academy of Sciences, recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship
- Paul Berliner, ethnomusicologist
- Tim Bollerslev, economist, expert on autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity
- Raphael M. Bonelli, professor of neurology and psychiatry
- James Boyle, William Neal Reynolds Professor of Law
- Geoffrey Brennan, philosopher associated with rational actor theory
- Hubert Bray, mathematician, known for having proved the Riemannian Penrose inequality
- David Brooks, columnist for The New York Times
- Thomas Brothers, musicologist, received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2009
- Kelly D. Brownell, scientist, professor, expert on obesity; named as one of "The World's 100 Most Influential People" by Time magazine in 2006
- Caroline Bruzelius, art historian, expert on medieval architecture
- Robert Bryant, chairman of the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, fellow of the American Mathematical Society, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Allen Buchanan, philosopher
- Al Buehler, chairman of the Health, Physical Education, and Recreation department; United States Olympic Track coach at the 1972, 1984, and 1988 Summer Olympics; member of North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame[214]
- Robert Calderbank, former vice president of AT&T; recipient of the Shannon Award in electrical engineering
- Bruce Caldwell, economist
- William Chafe, American historian
- Rey Chow, postcolonial, cultural critic
- Dorie Clark, author and executive education professor
- Sarah Cohen, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist
- Philip J. Cook, professor of public policy
- Miriam Cooke, literary critic
- Missy Cummings, professor of aeronautics, one of the US Navy's first female fighter pilots
- Sandy Darity, Jr., economist
- Ingrid Daubechies, first woman president of the International Mathematical Union; recipient of MacArthur Fellowship, Guggenheim Fellowship, and NAS Award in Mathematics
- Cathy Davidson, author
- Geraldine Dawson, former chief science officer of Autism Speaks
- Walter E. Dellinger III, law professor, former United States Solicitor General under President Bill Clinton
- Martin E. Dempsey, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Kenneth A. Dodge, psychologist
- Bruce Donald, computer scientist, fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery and the IEE, recipient of the Presidential Young Investigator Award and a Guggenheim Fellowship
- Ariel Dorfman, novelist, playwright, human rights activist, 1992 winner of the Laurence Olivier Award
- Fred Dretske, philosopher of mind, winner of the Jean Nicod Prize
- Prasenjit Duara, historian
- Patrick Duddy, former ambassador to Venezuela
- Charles J. Dunlap, Jr., deputy Judge Advocate General
- Rick Durrett, mathematician, fellow of the National Academy of Sciences
- Victor J. Dzau, James B. Duke Professor of Medicine; pioneering translational research scientist
- Herbert Edelsbrunner, computer scientist, winner of the Alan T. Waterman Award
- Carla Ellis, computer scientist, fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery
- Sir Harold Evans, author; editor of The Times; exposed Soviet spies
- Wendy Ewald, photographer, awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 1992
- Peter Feaver, political scientist; served on the National Security Council staff under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush
- Michael Ferejohn, expert on ancient philosophy
- Eric Finkelstein, health economist, professor at Duke-NUS Medical School
- Anne Firor Scott, historian, recipient of the National Humanities Medal
- Owen Flanagan, philosopher of mind, Phi Beta Kappa Romanell lecturer
- Allen Frances, world renowned psychiatrist
- Connel Fullenkamp, Director of Undergraduate Studies in Economics, member of the IMF's finance team
- John Hope Franklin, civil rights activist, historian, awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Bill Clinton
- Ernestine Friedl, professor emerita in cultural anthropology; former president of the American Ethnological Society and the American Anthropological Association; known for her work on gender roles, rural life in modern Greece, and the St. Croix Chippewa Indians of Wisconsin
- Allan Friedman, neurosurgeon
- Takanori Fukushima, neurosurgeon
- Alan Enoch Gelfand, James B. Duke Professor of Statistics and Decision Sciences
- David Gergen, former Duke professor; Duke trustee; adviser to Presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan, and Clinton[215]
- Michael Allen Gillespie, political scientist
- Jay Golden, environmental engineer
- David Goldstein, population geneticist[216]
- Mark Goodacre, theologian
- Matthias Gromeier, developer of the PVSRIPO virus that has recently shown to be effective in treating cancer
- Gordon Hammes, biochemist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Moo-Young Han, discoverer of the quark color charge
- Michael Hardt, literature professor and Marxist, co-author with Antonio Negri of Empire and Multitude
- Brian Hare, evolutionary anthropologist, director of Duke Canine Cognition Center
- Campbell Harvey, economist
- Hashim Al-Hashimi, James B. Duke Professor of Chemistry and Molecular Biology; recipient of the 2020 NAS Award in Molecular Biology.
- Stanley Hauerwas, theologian and author
- N. Katherine Hayles, postmodern literary critic; fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Richard B. Hays, theologian
- Sheng Yang He, plant biologist; member of the National Academy of Sciences; Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator
- Dan Heath, bestselling author of Made to Stick
- Kieran Healy, Irish sociologist
- Amy H. Herring, biostatistician
- Oscar Hijuelos, novelist; first Hispanic to win a Pulitzer Prize for fiction
- Brigid Hogan, developmental biologist; member of the National Academy of Sciences, Institute of Medicine, and fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Kevin Hoover, economist
- Jerry F. Hough, political scientist, author, and professor
- Tony Jun Huang, William Bevan Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science
- Reinhard Hütter, Catholic theologian
- Fredric Jameson, Marxist literary theorist; former chair of the Literature Program
- Andrew Janiak, philosopher
- Erich Jarvis, neurobiologist, professor at Rockefeller University
- Abdul Sattar Jawad, literary theorist, fled Mustansiriya University after the 2003 Invasion of Iraq
- Bruce Jentleson, director of Sanford Institute of Public Policy; Senior Foreign Policy Advisor to Vice President Al Gore
- Wu Jinglian, economist
- Nan Marie Jokerst, electrical engineer, in the Duke University Pratt School of Engineering, Triangle Women in STEM leader
- James A. Joseph, former U.S. Ambassador to South Africa
- Samuel Katz, virologist, known for the development of the measles vaccine
- Richard Kay, paleontologist
- David Kirsch, oncologist
- Alexander Kiselev, mathematician
- Jack Knight, legal theorist
- Harold G. Koenig, psychiatrist
- Claudia Koonz, feminist historian
- Sally Kornbluth, provost and James B. Duke Professor of pharmacology and cancer biology
- Ashutosh Kotwal, Fritz London Distinguished Professor of Physics,[217] Fellow of AAAS,[218] APS[219] and Sloan Foundation[220]
- Rachel Kranton, economist, fellow of the Econometric Society, recipient of the Blaise Pascal Chair
- Timur Kuran, Turkish economist
- Kara Lawson, Duke women's basketball head coach (2020–present)
- Pedro Lasch, artist and assistant research professor, Department of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies
- Bruce Lawrence, Nancy and Jeffrey Marcus Humanities Professor of Religion
- Mark Leary, psychologist
- Frank Lentricchia, literary critic
- David F. Levi, jurist
- Nan Lin, sociologist
- Jason Locasale, Professor of Pharmacology, internationally recognized for his contributions to the modern understanding of metabolism
- Martin J. Lohse, German physician and pharmacologist doing research on G protein-coupled receptors
- Julian Lombardi, computer scientist, inventor
- Nathaniel Mackey, poet and novelist, recipient of the 2015 Bollingen Prize and the 2014 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize
- Nancy MacLean, historian
- Bruce Maggs, professor of Computer Science, founding employee of Akamai Technologies
- Robert Malkin, biomedical engineer, fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering
- J. Lorand Matory, chair of the department of African and African American Studies
- Achille Mbembe, philosopher and political scientist
- Mark McCahill, creator of Internet Gopher, POP mail, and Croquet; coined the phrase "surfing the Web"
- Mark McClellan, former Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration
- Thomas Carlos Mehen, nuclear physicist
- Walter Mignolo, literary theorist
- Terrie Moffitt, pioneering researcher in the development of antisocial behavior
- Toril Moi, literary theorist associated with feminist theory
- Christopher Monroe, quantum physicist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Ebrahim Moosa, religious scholar
- V. Y. Mudimbe, philosopher associated with philosophy of language, phenomenology, and structuralism
- Norman Myers, British environmentalist
- Mark Anthony Neal, author
- Lenhard Ng, mathematician, child mathematical prodigy
- Miguel Nicolelis, pioneer of brain-machine interfaces
- Emerson Niou, political scientist
- Mohamed Noor, evolutionary biologist known for experimentally demonstrating speciation by reinforcement; 2008 recipient of the Darwin-Wallace Medal[221]
- Wayne Norman, expert on political philosophy
- Jean Fox O'Barr, feminist teacher, scholar, and administrator; founded women's studies program at Duke
- Linwood Pendleton, former chief economist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
- Henry Petroski, civil engineer and writer
- Arlie Petters, pioneer in the mathematical theory and mathematical physics of gravitational lensing; professor of mathematics, physics, and business administration
- Lillian Pierce, mathematician
- Orrin H. Pilkey, geologist
- Robert Plonsey, biomedical engineer, member of the National Academy of Engineering
- Amilcare Porporato, civil engineer
- Reynolds Price, author and professor of literature
- Kathy Alexis Psomiades, associate professor of English, specializing in Victorian poetry and novel theory
- Dale Purves, professor of Neurobiology and Medical Doctor
- Anne Pusey, primatologist, director of Jane Goodall Institute Research Center
- Jonathan D. Quick, family physician and public health management specialist that focuses on global health security
- Christian R. H. Raetz, professor of biochemistry and member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Sarah Bloom Raskin, former member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, former United States Deputy Secretary of the Treasury
- William Raspberry, Knight Professor of the Practice of Communications and Journalism; syndicated columnist for The Washington Post; Pulitzer Prize winner
- Paul Rehak, archaeologist
- Madan M. Rehani, medical physicist
- John Reif, computer scientist; fellow of the AAAS, IEEE and ACM
- Jane S. Richardson, professor of biochemistry; developed the Richardson diagram, or ribbon diagram, method of representing the 3D structure of proteins, MacArthur Fellow
- Alexander Rosenberg, philosopher; winner of Lakatos Award in philosophy of science, Phi Beta Kappa Romanell lecturer
- Benjamin Rossman, computer scientist
- Kathy Rudy, social constructionist
- Omid Safi, professor of Islamic Studies
- David H. Sanford, philosopher
- Nicola Scafetta, physicist
- Tad Schmaltz, editor of the Journal of the History of Philosophy
- Christopher H. Schroeder, former assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Policy for the United States Department of Justice
- Barbara Ramsay Shaw, chemist, cancer researcher, expert on signal transduction
- Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, philosopher
- David Smith, invisibility cloak pioneer; awarded the Descartes Prize in 2005
- Tommy Sowers, Assistant Secretary for Public and Intergovernmental Affairs at the US Department of Veterans Affairs
- J. E. R. Staddon, behavioral psychologist
- Orin Starn, cultural anthropologist
- Kristine Stiles, art historian
- Vahid Tarokh, electrical engineer, recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship
- John Terborgh, conservation biologist, awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 1992, and the Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal of the National Academy of Sciences in 1996
- Jenny Tung, evolutionary anthropologist, awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2019[222]
- Timothy Tyson, historian
- Cindy Lee Van Dover, professor of biological oceanography
- Tuan Vo-Dinh, biophysicist
- Olaf von Ramm, Thomas Lord Professor of Engineering; first patent on a 3-D ultrasound
- Geoffrey Wainwright, Methodist theologian
- E. Roy Weintraub, economist
- Ben Wildman-Tobriner, physician; Olympic gold medalist
- Huntington F. Willard, human geneticist; former president of American Society of Human Genetics; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- E.O. Wilson, biologist, "the father of sociobiology and biodiversity", National Medal of Science (1976)
- Lauren Winner, author and journalist
- Tien Wong, ophthalmologist, professor at Duke-NUS Medical School
- Judy Woodruff, news anchor, journalist
- Vanessa Woods, internationally published Australian scientist, author and journalist
- Weitao Yang, chemist
- Anne Yoder, biologist, director of Duke Lemur Center[223]
- Hongkai Zhao, mathematician
- Anthony Zinni, decorated general
Former
- Norman B. Anderson, CEO of the American Psychological Association
- Wolfgang Bibel, one of the founders of the research area of artificial intelligence in Germany and Europe
- Kwame Anthony Appiah, philosopher, author of In My Father's House and The Ethics of Identity
- Srinivas Aravamudan, professor of English, literature and Romance studies; dean of humanities; specialist in 18th-century and postcolonial literature; author
- Clay Armstrong, physiologist; recipient of the Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research and the Gairdner Foundation International Award for contributions to medical science
- James Arthur, mathematician, former president of the American Mathematical Society
- George James Augustine, neuroscientist
- Katharine Banham, associate professor of psychology, emerita
- John Spencer Bassett, historian who initiated the Bassett Affair, an important victory for academic freedom
- Robert Bates, Eaton Professor in the Department of Government at Harvard University
- Upendra Baxi, legal scholar
- Andrea Bertozzi, mathematician
- Helen Bevington, poet and author
- Utpal Bhattacharya, expert on business ethics
- Lawrence Biedenharn, theoretical nuclear physicist
- Harry Binswanger, objectivist philosopher and philosopher of mind
- Mary L. Boas, mathematician
- Ralph Boas, mathematician, recipient of the Lester R. Ford Award
- James Bonk, chemist
- Edgar Bowers, poet, For Louis Pasteur, Bollingen Prize in Poetry in 1989, Guggenheim Fellowship twice
- David S. Broder, current Washington Post and former New York Times reporter
- H. Keith H. Brodie, psychiatrist, educator and eventual president of Duke
- David Allan Bromley, nuclear physicist, scientific advisor to US President George H.W. Bush, recipient of National Medal of Science (1988)
- Hubie Brown, assistant men's basketball coach (1969–1972); NBA coach and commentator
- John Buettner-Janusch, anthropologist
- Michael Byers, Canadian legal scholar and nonfiction author
- Leonard Carlitz, mathematician
- Tina Campt, associate professor of women's studies and history; director of Graduate Studies
- Ziv Carmon, professor of business administration at INSEAD
- John W. Cell, professor of History at Duke.[224]
- Erwin Chemerinsky, law professor, constitutional scholar
- Randolph Chitwood, first cardio-thoracic surgeon to perform robot-assisted heart valve surgery in North America
- Amy Chua, best-selling author
- George Elliott Clarke, author, poet
- G. Wayne Clough, president of the Georgia Institute of Technology
- Kalman J. Cohen, economist, pioneer of market micro-structure
- Roger Corless, theologian who made significant contributions to interfaith dialogue
- John Shelton Curtiss, historian, James B. Duke Professor
- Chuck Daly, assistant men's basketball coach (1963–1969); NBA coach[225]
- Barun De, historian
- Sara J. Dent, anaesthesiologist
- Burton Drayer, radiologist; authority on the use of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for diagnosing neurological disorders
- Mike Duffy, television host
- Eleanor Lansing Dulles, politician involved in the affairs of post-World War II Germany, Bretton Woods Conference, US State Department
- Paul Ebert, cardiovascular surgeon
- William M. Fairbank, physicist known for his work on liquid helium; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Stanley Fish, former chair of the English Department, deconstructionist literary critic
- Wallace Fowlie, author and poet, awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1947
- Clara Franzini-Armstrong, cell biologist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Bertram Fraser-Reid, organic chemist
- Robert C. Frasure, ambassador to Estonia
- Henry Louis Gates, chair of African-American Studies at Harvard[226]
- Erol Gelenbe, computer scientist, known for introducing the random neural network and the eponymous G-networks
- David Gergen, political analyst, adviser to Presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan, and Clinton
- John Jay Gergen, mathematician
- S. Malcolm Gillis, prominent economist, former president of Rice University
- René Girard, philosopher, literary critic, and historian; member of the Académie française
- Peter J. Gomes, preacher and theologian from Harvard University's Divinity School
- Craufurd Goodwin, economist
- Andrew Gordon, Japanese Historian
- Walter Gordy, physicist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Gail Goestenkors, Duke women's basketball head coach (1992–2007)[227]
- Phillip Griffiths, mathematician; fellow of the American Mathematical Society, recipient of the Wolf Prize
- Paul Magnus Gross, chemist, former President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
- Julia Grout, chair of the Women's Department of Health and Physical Education, 1924–1964
- Allan Gurganus, author
- Philip Handler, biochemist; two-term president of the National Academy of Sciences; winner of the National Medal of Science
- Gerald Heard, philosopher, historian
- Charles Honorton, parapsychologist
- Calvin B. Hoover, founder of the field of comparative economic systems, awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Harry Truman in 1947.
- Sally Hughes-Schrader, zoologist, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Aldous Huxley, novelist, mystic
- Daniel James, British historian
- Harold Jenkins
- Randy Jirtle, biologist, known for his contribution to the field of epigenetics
- Kristina M. Johnson, Under Secretary of Energy for the Obama Administration; former dean of the Pratt School of Engineering; former director of Boston Scientific Corporation
- Simon Johnson, former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund
- Edward E. Jones, social psychologist, developed fundamental attribution error
- Alice Kaplan, author, chair of the French department at Yale
- Lawrence C. Katz, neurobiologist
- Randall Kenan, author
- Robert Keohane, neoliberal scholar of international relations
- Kim Sung-Hou, structural biologist and biophysicist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Claudia Koonz, feminist historian
- Paul J. Kramer, biologist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Juanita M. Kreps, United States Secretary of Commerce
- Anne O. Krueger, World Bank Chief Economist
- Weston La Barre, anthropologist, worked in ethnography
- Thomas LaBean, leading researcher in the field of DNA nanotechnology
- Howard Nathaniel Lee, former mayor of Chapel Hill, North Carolina
- Bernard Lefkowitz, sociologist, journalist, investigative reporter
- Raphael Lemkin, human rights activist; coined the word "genocide"
- H. Gregg Lewis, labor economist
- Sarah Lisanby, psychiatrist
- Michael L. Littman, computer scientist
- Daniel A. Livingstone, limnologist, recipient of the G. Evelyn Hutchinson Award
- Fritz London, physicist, won the Lorentz Medal
- Alasdair MacIntyre, philosopher, virtue ethicist
- John Madey, developer of the free electron laser
- Ernest Mario, pharmaceutical industry executive
- William McDougall, psychologist, author of An Introduction to Social Psychology
- George McLendon, biochemist, winner of Eli Lilly Award in Biological Chemistry and Guggenheim fellowship
- Joanne P. McCallie, Duke women's basketball head coach (2007–2020)[228]
- Warren Meck, neuroscientist
- Karl Menger, mathematician
- Edwin Mims, professor of English literature
- John Wilson Moore, pioneering biophysicist
- David R. Morrison, mathematician; Guggenheim Fellow; member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Thom Mount, film producer; president of the Producers Guild of America
- Francis Joseph Murray, mathematician and founder of functional analysis; winner of the Outstanding Civilian Service Medal
- Toshio Narahashi, pharmacologist, the "founding father of neurotoxicology"
- Charles Nemeroff, psychiatrist, known for work in treating depression
- Hans Neurath, biochemist, leading researcher in the field of protein chemistry
- Laura Niklason, professor of anesthesiology and biomedical engineering
- Lothar Wolfgang Nordheim, theoretical physicist
- Albert Outler, Methodist theologian
- G. B. Pegram, key administrator of Manhattan Project
- William Howell Pegram, chemist
- Anton Peterlin, physicist
- Ernest C. Pollard, professor of biophysics
- David Price, United States Representative
- James Rachels, philosopher and cultural relativist
- Stojan Radic, electrical engineer
- Joseph B. Rhine, psychologist and parapsychologist; founder of modern studies of psychical phenomena
- Louisa E. Rhine, parapsychologist
- Sidarta Ribeiro, Brazilian neuroscientist
- John Ridpath, intellectual historian
- Sócrates Rizzo, former mayor of Monterrey; former governor of Nuevo León
- Dennis A. Rondinelli, international development policy expert at the Sanford School of Public Policy
- Mary Ellen Rudin, mathematician
- David Sabiston, cardiac surgeon, one of the pioneers of coronary bypass surgery
- Guy Salvesen, biochemist, known for his work in the field of apoptosis
- E. P. Sanders, British Academy member; leading figure in the third Historical Jesus movement
- Michael Scharf, lawyer, nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2005
- David Scheffer, diplomat
- William H. Schlesinger, biogeochemist, president of the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
- Knut Schmidt-Nielsen, figure in the field of comparative physiology, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, feminist theorist, literary theorist, expert in gender studies
- Lori Ann Setton, biomedical engineer
- Michael Sheetz, cell biologist, recipient of the Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
- Beth A. Simmons, international relations scholar, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Elwyn L. Simons, paleontologist and primate conservationist
- Barbara Herrnstein Smith, literary theorist
- Brian Cantwell Smith, scholar who conducts research in the fields of cognitive science, computer science, information studies, philosophy, and ontology
- Cordwainer Smith, author
- Joseph Tyree Sneed, III, U.S. Deputy Attorney General, judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
- Ralph Snyderman, biotech entrepreneur
- David Soskice, political economist
- Joseph J. Spengler, economist, statistician, and historian of economic thought
- Hertha Sponer, physicist
- Eugene A. Stead, medical educator, founder of the physician assistant profession
- William Stern, psychologist, philosopher
- Kenneth B. Storey, professor of biochemistry and molecular biology
- Charles Tanford, protein chemist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Edward D. Thalmann, expert in hyperbaric medicine
- Fritz Thurstone (1932–2005), pioneer of ultrasound technology
- Paul Tillich, theologian
- Peter Ungar, paleoanthropologist
- Sander Vanocur, ABC and NBC correspondent; The Washington Post television editor; The New York Times reporter
- W. Kip Viscusi, economist
- Steven Vogel, biologist, James B. Duke Professor of Biology[229]
- Robert Ward, composer
- Kenny Williams, author, winner of the MidAmerica Award
- Mary Lou Williams, composer
- Patricia J. Williams, legal scholar, awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2000
- William H. Willimon, Methodist theologian
- Kwasi Wiredu, philosopher
- Karl Zener, parapsychologist
Men's basketball head coaches
- 1981 to present: Mike Krzyzewski, five-time national champion men's basketball coach, member of the Basketball Hall of Fame[230]
- 1975 to 1980: Bill Foster
- 1974: Neill McGeachy
- 1970 to 1973: Bucky Waters
- 1960 to 1969: Vic Bubas, member of the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame
- 1951 to 1959: Harold Bradley
- 1943 to 1950: Gerry Gerard
- 1929 to 1942: Eddie Cameron, namesake of Cameron Indoor Stadium and member of the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame
- 1925 to 1928: George Buchheit
- 1923 to 1924: J.S. Burbage
- 1922: James Baldwin
- 1921: Floyd Egan
- 1920: W.J. Rothensies
- 1919: H.P. Cole
- 1917 to 1918: Chick Doak
- 1916: Bob Doak
- 1914 to 1915: Noble Clay
- 1913: Joseph Brinn
- 1906 to 1912: W.W. Card
Football head coaches
- 2007 to present: David Cutcliffe[231]
- 2003 to 2007: Ted Roof[232]
- 1999 to 2003: Carl Franks
- 1994 to 1998: Fred Goldsmith
- 1990 to 1993: Barry Wilson
- 1987 to 1989: Steve Spurrier, ACC Coach of the Year in 1988 and 1989
- 1983 to 1986: Steve Sloan
- 1979 to 1982: Shirley "Red" Wilson
- 1971 to 1978: Mike McGee
- 1966 to 1970: Tom Harp
- 1951 to 1965: William D. "Bill" Murray
- 1946 to 1950: Wallace W. Wade
- 1942 to 1945: Eddie Cameron, namesake of Cameron Indoor Stadium and member of the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame
- 1931 to 1941: Wallace W. Wade, namesake of Wallace Wade Stadium and member of the College Football Hall of Fame
- 1926 to 1930: James "Jimmy" DeHart
- 1925: James P. "Pat" Herron
- 1924: Howard H. Jones
- 1923: S.M. Alexander
- 1922: Herman Steiner
- 1921: James A. Baldwin
- 1920: Floyd J. Egan
- 1888 to 1889 : Dr. John F. Crowell
Duke University presidents
President | Tenure |
---|---|
Brantley York | 1838–1842[233] |
Braxton Craven | 1842–1863[234] |
William Trigg Gannaway* | 1864–1865 |
*Appointed president pro tempore during the break in Craven's presidency | |
Braxton Craven | 1866–1882[235] |
Marquis Lafayette Wood | 1883–1886 |
John Franklin Crowell | 1887–1894 |
John Carlisle Kilgo | 1894–1910 |
William Preston Few | 1910–1924[236] |
University officially established as Duke University in 1924 | |
William Preston Few | 1924–1940[237] |
Robert Lee Flowers | 1941–1948 |
Arthur Hollis Edens | 1949–1960 |
Julian Deryl Hart | 1960–1963 |
Douglas Knight | 1963–1969[238] |
Terry Sanford | 1969–1985[239] |
H. Keith H. Brodie | 1985–1993 |
Nannerl O. Keohane | 1993–2004 |
Richard H. Brodhead | 2004–2017[240] |
Vincent E. Price | 2017–present |
Major philanthropists
Donors who have contributed at least $20 million to the university or founding donors:
Donor | Total Amount | Year | Purpose |
---|---|---|---|
The Duke Endowment | $1.5+ billion[241][242][243][244] | 1924– 2006 | Various |
James B. Duke | $40 million ($458 million in 2006 dollars) | 1924 | For endowment; established The Duke Endowment later that year |
Lord Corporation | $261 million | 2019 | Unrestricted[245] |
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation | $106.5+ million | 2002–2007 | $46.5 million for AIDS research,[246] $30 million for a new science facility and $5 million for student life initiatives,[247] $15 million for DukeEngage, a civic engagement program,[248] $9 million for undergraduate financial aid and $1 million for Fuqua students financial aid[249] |
Bruce and Martha Karsh | $85 million | 2005–2011 | For student financial aid[250][251][252] |
Anne and Robert Bass | $70 million | 1996–2013 | $20 million for the FOCUS program and various endowed chairs, $50 million for interdisciplinary research[253][254] |
J. Michael and Christine Pearson | $50+ million | 2014 | $30 million to the Pratt School of Engineering to advance engineering and science education, $15 million to the School of Nursing and $7.5 million to the Fuqua School of Business[255] |
David Rubenstein | $50 million | 2002–2013 | $13.6 million to Duke Libraries, $20.75 million to the Sanford School of Public Policy, $10 million to Duke athletics[256][257] |
Edmund T. Pratt, Jr. | $35 million | 1999 | To endow the School of Engineering[258] |
David H. Murdock | $35 million | 2007 | For "translational medicine" research by the Duke Medical School[259] |
Disque Deane | $20 million ($34 million in 2005 dollars) | 1986 | To "establish a research institute on the human future"[260] |
Dr. Steven and Rebecca Scott | $30 million | 2013 | $20 million for Duke Sports Medicine, $10 million for Duke athletic facility |
Michael J. and Patty Fitzpatrick | $25 million | 2000 | For a center for advanced photonics and communications[261] |
William and Sue Gross | $23 million | 2005 | $15 million for undergraduate scholarships, $5 million for medical students' scholarships, and $3 million to support faculty members of the Fuqua School of Business[262] |
Peter and Ginny Nicholas | $20+ million | 1999– 2004 | $20 million for the School of the Environment and Earth Sciences;[263] $70 million pledged for the School of the Environment and $2 million pledged for Perkins library in 2003 still unpaid as of September 2010[264] |
Bill and Melinda Gates | $20 million | 1998 | For undergraduate scholarships[262] |
Washington Duke | $385,000 ($7.9 million in 2005 dollars) | 1892 | For original endowment and construction |
Julian S. Carr | N/A | 1892 | Donated site of East Campus |
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