Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
engineering

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

University of Putra Malaysia

Public research university in Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia

University of Putra Malaysia

Public research university in Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia

FieldValue
nameUniversity of Putra Malaysia
native_nameUniversiti Putra Malaysia (Malay)
image_nameCoat of Arms of Universiti Putra Malaysia.png
image_size150px
captionEmblem of UPM
mottoBerilmu Berbakti
mottoengWith Knowledge We Serve
established
typePublic research university
chancellorSultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah
vice_chancellorAhmad Farhan Mohd Sadullah
academic_staff1,807 (Dec 2024)
administrative_staff5,257 (Dec 2024)
students30,720 (Dec 2024)
undergrad18,602 (Dec 2024)
postgrad12,118 (Dec 2024)
addressPersiaran Universiti
citySerdang
postalcode43400
stateSelangor
countryMalaysia
campus_typeUrban
campus_size1245.056 hectare
former_namesSchool of Agriculture (1931–1947)
College of Agriculture Malaya (1947–1971)
Universiti Pertanian Malaysia (1971–1997)
coloursRed, grey and white
affiliations[AAACU](https://www.aaacuonline.org/), ACU, [APAARI](https://www.apaari.org/), [APUCEN](https://apucen.usm.my/), ASAIHL, ASEA-UNINET, AUAP, AUN, FUIW, UAiTED
website
logoUniversiti Putra Malaysia Full Logo.png

| vice-president = College of Agriculture Malaya (1947–1971) Universiti Pertanian Malaysia (1971–1997)

University of Putra Malaysia (Malay: Universiti Putra Malaysia), abbreviated as UPM, is a Malaysian public research university located in Serdang, Selangor. Formerly it was named Universiti Pertanian Malaysia (Agricultural University of Malaysia), focusing on agricultural sciences and related fields. Since the 1990s, the fields of study have expanded to include human ecology, languages, architecture, medicine, computer science and biotechnology. Currently there are 15 faculties, 11 institutes and 2 schools covering these as well as agriculture, forestry, veterinary medicine, economics, engineering, sciences, and education.

UPM has been recognised as a research university since 2006, one of five present in Malaysia. In 2010, self-accreditation status was awarded by Malaysian Qualifications Agency to simplify the procedure of accrediting academic programs, strengthening its own Internal Quality Assurance (IQA) system to compete among local universities.

History

Anjung Putra, the main entrance of UPM

On 21 May 1931, UPM was established as the School of Agriculture, located in Serdang on 22 acres (9 hectares) of land. The institution initially offered only two programmes: a three-year diploma programme and a one-year certificate course in agriculture. On 23 June 1947, the school was upgraded to the College of Agriculture Malaya, as declared by the then Governor of the Malayan Union, Sir Edward Gent.

On 29 October 1971, Universiti Pertanian Malaysia (literally "Agricultural University of Malaysia") was officially established through the merger of the College of Agriculture Malaya and the Faculty of Agriculture, University of Malaya. UPM began with three faculties: agriculture, forestry and veterinary medicine. On 23 July 1973, UPM opened its first academic session with an intake of 1,559 students. Four years later, on 30 July 1977, the university held its first convocation ceremony, during which Sultan Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah was installed as UPM's first Chancellor.

On 3 April 1997, UPM was renamed Universiti Putra Malaysia by then Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. The change reflected the university’s diversification into broader fields of study, particularly in science and technology. The word "Putra" honours Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj, the first Prime Minister of Malaysia, and also reflects the university’s proximity to Putrajaya. To correspond with the new name, UPM also adopted a new logo.

List of chancellors and vice-chancellors

#ChancellorsTerm in office
**1**Sultan Salahuddin of Selangor1 January 1977 – 30 July 1993
**2**Hamdan Sheikh Tahir the Governor of Penang1 August 1993 – 31 March 2002
**3**Sultan Sharafuddin of Selangor1 April 2002 – Incumbent
#Vice-ChancellorsAcademic qualificationTerm in office
**1**Mohd Rashdan BabaDiploma of Agriculture (College of Agriculture Malaya), Bachelor of Agricultural Science (Reading), PhD in Agricultural Science (Leeds).4 November 1971 – 28 February 1982
**2**Nayan AriffinDiploma in Agriculture (College of Agriculture Malaya), Bachelor of Agricultural Science (Louisiana), Master of Education in Advanced Science (Louisiana), PhD in Extension Education (Wisconsin).1 March 1982 – 4 June 1994
**3**Syed Jalaludin Syed SalimBachelor of Veterinary Science (Punjab), Master in Animal Science (London), PhD in Animal Science (London).5 June 1994 – 17 April 2001
**4**Zohadie BardaieDiploma of Agriculture (UPM), Bachelor of Science in engineering (California), Master of Engineering (California), PhD of Agricultural Engineering (Cornell).18 April 2001 – 31 December 2005
**5**Nik Mustapha Raja AbdullahDiploma of Agriculture (UPM), Bachelor of Economics (California), Master of Agricultural Science (Oregon), PhD of economics (Oregon).1 January 2006 – 31 December 2010
**6**Radin Umar Radin SohadiBachelor of Civil Engineering (Sheffield), Master of Engineering (Sheffield), PhD of engineering (Birmingham).1 January 2011 – 31 December 2012
**7**Mohd Fauzi RamlanDiploma of Agriculture (UPM), Bachelor of Science in agronomy (Iowa), Master of Science (Louisiana), PhD in biology (York).1 January 2013 – 31 December 2015
**8**Aini IderisBachelor of Veterinary Medication (UPM), Master of Veterinary Science (Liverpool), PhD in Veterinary Science (UPM).1 January 2016 – 30 June 2020
**9**Roslan SulaimanBachelor of Veterinary Medication (UPM), PhD in Nervous System Physiology (Edinburgh).1 September 2020 – 31 August 2023
**10**Ahmad Farhan Mohd SadullahBachelor of Civil Engineering (CUA), Master of Transportation (Imperial), PhD in Transportation Studies (UCL).2 October 2023 – Incumbent

Campus

Library at the Bintulu campus

Apart from its main campus in Serdang, UPM also operates a branch campus in Bintulu, Sarawak. In June 1987, the National Resources Training Centre was relocated to Bintulu from its temporary campus in Kuching. On 27 August 1987, the Bintulu campus officially became a branch campus of UPM, abbreviated as UPMKB. Today, the campus comprises two faculties — the Faculty of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences and the Faculty of Humanities, Management and Science — as well as one institute, the Institute of Ecosystem Science Borneo. It offers both undergraduate and postgraduate programmes, with a total student population of around 1,600.

UPM previously maintained another branch campus in Mengabang Telipot, Kuala Terengganu, from 1996 until the establishment of Terengganu University College in 1999. Originally functioning as the Centre for Fisheries and Marine Science under UPM, the Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Science was moved to Kuala Terengganu in June 1996, where it was upgraded into a UPM branch campus. On 5 May 1999, the campus was renamed Terengganu University College and became an associate campus of UPM. In 2001, it was granted autonomy and renamed Malaysian Science and Technology University College. In 2007, it achieved full university status as the Universiti Malaysia Terengganu.

Academic profile

UPM began its academic life in 1973 with three founding Faculties and a Division of Basic Sciences. The first intake of 1,559 students was for bachelor's degrees in Agricultural Science or Forestry Science, Doctor of Veterinary Medicine, Diploma in Home Technology, Diploma in Animal Health and Production, Diploma in Science with Education, and Preliminary Programme. As of 2024, UPM has 15 faculties, 11 institutes and 2 schools, offers 10 diploma programmes, 81 bachelor programmes, 75 Masters programmes by coursework and more than 300 fields of study in Master and Doctoral programmes by research. The Doctor of Medicine program provided by university was fully recognised by the Malaysia Medical Council on 5 June 2001. The School of Business and Economics (previously Faculty of Economics and Management) has been accredited by AACSB in 2012, EQUIS in 2022, and AMBA in 2025, became the only triple crown business school in Malaysia.

Faculties, schools and institutes

As of February 2024, UPM has 15 faculties, 11 institutes and 2 schools. File:Fakulti Pertanian UPM.JPG|Faculty of Agriculture File:Faculty of Forestry and Environment, UPM.jpg|Faculty of Forestry and Environment File:Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, UPM.jpg|Faculty of Veterinary Medicine File:School of Business and Economics, UPM (230421-1038).jpg|School of Business and Economics File:Faculty of Engineering, UPM (240103-0825).jpg|Faculty of Engineering File:Faculty of Educational Studies, UPM (240204-1736).jpg|Faculty of Educational Studies File:Faculty of Science, UPM (231016-1643).jpg|Faculty of Science File:Faculty of Food Science and Technology, UPM (231222-1702).jpg|Faculty of Food Science and Technology File:Faculty of Human Ecology, UPM.jpg|Faculty of Human Ecology File:Faculty of Modern Languages and Communication, UPM.jpg|Faculty of Modern Languages and Communication File:Faculty of Design and Architecture, UPM.jpg|Faculty of Design and Architecture File:Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, UPM.jpg|Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences File:Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology, UPM (240103-0959).jpg|Faculty of Computer Science and Information Technology File:Faculty of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, UPM.jpg|Faculty of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences File:Buildings of UPMKB.jpg|Faculty of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences & Faculty of Humanities, Management and Science File:School of Graduate Studies, UPM.jpg|School of Graduate Studies File:Institute of Bioscience, UPM.jpg|Institute of Bioscience File:Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, UPM.jpg|Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology File:Institute for Social Science Studies, UPM.jpg|Institute for Social Science Studies File:Malaysian Research Institute on Ageing, UPM.jpg|Malaysian Research Institute on Ageing File:Institute for Mathematical Research, UPM.jpg|Institute for Mathematical Research File:Halal Products Research Institute, UPM.jpg|Halal Products Research Institute File:Institute of Tropical Forestry and Forest Products, UPM.jpg|Institute of Tropical Forestry and Forest Products File:Institute of Tropical Agriculture and Food Security, UPM.jpg|Institute of Tropical Agriculture and Food Security File:Institute of Plantation Studies, UPM.jpg|Institute of Plantation Studies File:International Institute of Aquaculture and Aquatic Sciences, UPM.jpg|International Institute of Aquaculture and Aquatic Sciences

Campus life

Residential colleges

The Serumpun Colleges are consist of 11 blocks with 5 storeys each

The accommodation units in UPM are called "colleges", however, the colleges are not related to education, but built to provide accommodation for students, known as "residential college" or kolej kediaman. Before the UPM's Governance Transformation Plan, there were 17 residential colleges in Serdang campus and one in Bintulu campus. The residential colleges in Serdang campus can be divided into four zone, which are lembah, pinggiran, bukit and serumpun.

The Mohamad Rashid College (KMR) is the oldest residential college in UPM, it was once named as Kolej Kediaman Pertama. After it was renovated, it has been transformed into KMR OnePUTRA Residence and managed by UPM Holdings since 2019.

The Tenth College (K10) and the Tan Sri Mustaffa Babjee College (KMB) are two colleges at zon pinggiran because they are distant from other colleges, located at northeast and southwest of UPM respectively. K10 accommodate the students from Faculty of Engineering and Faculty of Design and Architecture while KMB accommodates the students from Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences.

The Twelfth College (K12) and Fourteenth College (K14) are located at zon serumpun and known as "Serumpun Colleges". They are built by PJS Development, a private construction company through the form of BOT. Currently, part of Serumpun zone is now included into Tan Sri Aishah Ghani College as KTAG zone B.

The Tan Sri Aishah Ghani College (KTAG), formerly known as Thirteen College (K13) and Kolej Matrikulasi (KOMAT), has undergone several mergers and name changes over the years.

The Sri Rajang College (KSR) is the only residential college in Bintulu campus, consists of 10 blocks that could accommodate up to 1,560 students.

The Governance Transformation Plan in 2019 has restructured the residential colleges in Serdang campus. Most of them have been merged with another college to save costs and improve administrative efficiency. As of 2024, the list of residential colleges which are managed by UPM is as follow:

  1. Tun Dr. Ismail College (KTDI)
  2. Chancellor College (KC)
  3. Sultan Alaeddin Suleiman Shah College (KOSASS)
  4. Pendeta Za'ba College (KPZ)
  5. Tenth College (K10)
  6. Twelfth College (K12)
  7. Tan Sri Aishah Ghani College (KTAG)
  8. Fourteenth College (K14)
  9. Tan Sri Mustaffa Babjee College (KTMB)
  10. Sri Rajang College (KSR)

Libraries

The main library of UPM

UPM has one main library and three branch libraries in Serdang campus, and one library in Bintulu campus.

The Sultan Abdul Samad Library (Malay: Perpustakaan Sultan Abdul Samad, abbreviation: PSAS) is the main library of UPM. It existed before the establishment of UPM in 1971. The library was renamed the Sultan Abdul Samad Library and inaugurated on 23 May 2002, named after Sultan Abdul Samad, the fourth Sultan of Selangor. PSAS consists of block A and B (completed in 1982 and 1969 respectively), with total floor area of 19,007 square metres. The Anjung Siswazah located at block B is a space specially for postgraduate students, its collection are including printed materials, media and electronics.

Another three branch libraries in Serdang campus are Medicine and Health Sciences Library (1998), Veterinary Medicine Library (1999), and Engineering and Architecture Library (2008). The library in Bintulu start operating when the campus was reopened in 2001. The operating hour of each library might varying based on the academic period of semester.

Main hall

The main hall of UPM

The Sultan Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah Arts and Cultural Centre (Malay: Pusat Kebudayaan dan Kesenian Sultan Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah, abbreviation: PKKSSAAS) is the main hall in Serdang campus. It was completed in 1978 and known as the Great Hall of UPM (Dewan Besar UPM) before its name was changed. On 25 April 1996, the hall was inaugurated by Sultan Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah, the eighth Sultan of Selangor. Since then, UPM renamed the Great Hall to its current name. PKKSSAAS is the venue for orientation, convocation, and even examinations.

The Experimental Theatre (Panggung Percubaan) is part of PKKSSAAS. It is a place for workshops on culture and arts, suitable for theatre performances and debate competition. It can also be used as a platform for the trial of performances.

Mosque

The UPM Mosque (Malay: Masjid UPM) is the university mosque that built to fulfill the prayer needs of Muslim community from UPM and Taman Sri Serdang. The construction started in 1987 and completed in 1989, with total area of 9 hectares. The exterior design of the mosque is inspired by Saladin's war helmet, symbolising the spirit of Jihad in Islam. The mosque consists of 2 floors, able to congregate 9,500 people at the same time. The University Islamic Centre, founded on 1 October 1988, is responsible for managing the mosque and Islamic affairs of UPM.

Expo Hill

There is a dock on the second pond

The Expo Hill (Malay: Bukit Ekspo) is a recreational place in UPM, located at south of Thirteenth College and northwest of UniPutra Golf Club. With the area approximately 12 hectares, it has divided into five zones. Another 13 hectares is made up of 5 freshwater fish ponds which are rearing 5 different fish species (Lampam, Tilapia, Rohu, Belida and Sepat). The Expo Hill was used as the venue of the Agricultural Expo and Convocation Festival for the first time during the first convocation of UPM in 1977. There is an elevated railway track crossing the Expo Hill, travelled by KLIA Ekspres and KLIA Transit, to which the nearest station is Bandar Tasik Selatan station.

Transportation accessibility

UPM bus at K10 bus station

In Serdang campus, UPM buses travel between faculties and residential colleges to bring students to their destination. Starting from August 2023, UPM diminished the bus service to minimise carbon footprint and reduce expense. However, the MRT feeder buses with route number T568 are alternative transportation for the public including the UPM students. Passengers pay RM 1.00 with Touch 'n Go card from any station to any station.

The MRT of Putrajaya line has been fully operational since 16 March 2023, the UPM MRT station is located at the northwest edge of UPM, adjacent to the Family, Adolescent and Child Research Centre of Excellence (FACE). Except the Trek Rides demand-responsive transport service powered by Selangor Mobility, the MRT station is also accessible by feeder buses which their frequency is between 20 minutes and 1 hour, depends on the estimated peak hours.

Although e-hailing is available in campus, students can get downtown by the SJ04 Smart Selangor bus. The stations are including South City Plaza, The Mines, Serdang Jaya MRT station and the Serdang KTM station as the terminus.

Controversy

Killing of stray dogs

On 3 October 2025, an environmental group called Pertubuhan Pelindung Khazanah Alam (PEKA) alleged that between December 2024 and January 2025, the university had unlawfully killed at least 18 stray dogs and 5 puppies in its university compound by way of shooting and poisoning. The group accused that, based on whistleblower's information, UPM had hired a third-party pest control company named PCH Care Services to kill stray dogs by firearms in two operations, with a cost of RM6,000 or RM7,000 per operation, or RM400 for each dog. PEKA also stated that they have received reports of university staff poisoning puppies and presumably burried their carcasses within the university compound.

The group alleged that the number of dogs killed could be as high as 20 to 30 dogs based on an invoice between UPM and the company, but so far the group could only independently verify the death of 18 dogs and 5 puppies based on photographic evidence. The group subsequently claimed that UPM and the company may have violated the Animal Welfare Act 2015, which prohibits killings of dogs and cats by firearms, and the act of inflicting undue pain and suffering on animals. They also questioned how the company could obtain firearms under Malaysia's strict firearms law, and whether proper procedures were complied with, such as notifying the police before their operation. PEKA also argued that UPM should have taken a more humane approach such as the trap-neuter-release method to address stray dogs issue through the university's own Faculty of Veterinary Medicine.

In response to the allegations, UPM through a statement issued on 4 October expressed its regret over the incident and pledged to launch an internal investigation over the matter. The university stated that "As an institution that upholds the aspiration of planetary health, including animal welfare and well-being, the university will not compromise on what has occurred." However, PEKA criticised the university's response as "misleading, illogical and an attempt to downplay criminal offences", arguing that UPM has failed to admit responsibility and is trying to downplay the incident into a management issue instead of a criminal matter where police intervention is required.

On 7 October, the group filed a police report against UPM, Veterinary Service Department and the company, urging the police to investigate them under the Animal Welfare Act 2015, Arms Act 1960 and Firearms (Increased Penalties) Act 1971. It also threatened to stage a protest at the university's entrance if no proper actions were taken by UPM by 10 October. Its lawyer also revealed that based on their query with the company, the actual cost per dog killed is RM220, however UPM was charged with RM400 per dog, therefore the remaining spending of RM180 per dog were missing. A day later, the police confirmed a criminal investigation has been launched under Section 30(1) of the Animal Welfare Act 2015.

On 14 October, UPM issued an official apology over the matter and relieved the duties of its Occupational Safety and Health Management Office director, who previously ordered the culling of stray dogs. It also suspended all stray dogs management activities pending the development of a new set of standard operating procedures.

Rankings

The graphs below show the QS Rankings and THE Rankings respectively. The rankings by region (Asia) are not same as the Asian universities' ranking filtered from world rankings because QS changed the indicators and weightings; THE also recalibrated their results to reflect priorities and attributes of Asian universities. In the 2021 rankings, QS Top 50 Under 50 and THE Young University Ranking ranked UPM for the last time because 50 years had passed since it was established as a university in 1971.

y2:125.5 is 121-130 y3:125.5 is 101-150; 175.5 is 151-200; 225.5 is 201-250 --

THE Impact rankings

Times Higher Education Impact Rankings are the global performance tables that assess universities against the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

YearRank
2019201-300
2020101-200
2021201-300
2022201-300
2023201-300
2024401-600
2025401-600

UI GreenMetric

As the energy transition initiative namely SURIA 16 was implemented, solar panels has been installed on the roof of university buildings since 2022

In 2024, Universiti Putra Malaysia is ranked 24th in the world. The ranking of UI GreenMetric is based on six criteria:

  • Setting & infrastructure (15%)
  • Energy & climate change (21%)
  • Waste (18%)
  • Water (10%)
  • Transportation (18%)
  • Education & research (18%)
YearOverall rankingsTotal score
201067698.60
2011177204.60
2012196570.03
2013166672.85
2014426628
2015176491
2016346543
2017276420
2018327575
2019288000
2020288125
2021278425
2022258800
2023258900
2024249050
2025318975

Notable academics

:See also :Category:Academic staff of the University of Putra Malaysia

  • Dato' Abu Bakar Salleh, Enzyme and microbial technology scientist, Former Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research and Innovation
  • Chin Hoong Fong, Seed scientist, Professor Emeritus
  • Mohd Sapuan Salit, Material scientist and engineer
  • Tan Sri Omar Abdul Rahman (academic), Veterinary scientist, Former Deputy Vice-Chancellor Academic Affairs
  • Willie Soon, Astrophysicist and aerospace engineer
  • First Admiral (Retired) Sutarji Kasmin, Former navy special forces commander.
  • Datin Paduka Khatijah Yusoff, Virologist
  • Ahmad Zaharin Aris, Professor of hydrochemistry

Notable alumni

Politicians

  • Dato' Seri Dr. Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, Deputy Prime Minister of Malaysia
  • Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail, Minister of Home Affairs
  • Chang Lih Kang, Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation
  • Dato' Seri Amirudin Shari, Menteri Besar of Selangor
  • Tan Kar Hing, Member of Parliament (MP) for Gopeng
  • Penguang Manggil, State Deputy Minister of Public Health and Housing of Sarawak
  • Najwan Halimi, Member of the Selangor State Executive Council (EXCO)
  • Wong Siew Ki, Member of the Selangor State Legislative Assembly (MLA) for Seri Kembangan
  • Datuk Seri Ronald Kiandee, former Minister of Agriculture and Food Industries
  • Datuk Seri Haji Salahuddin Ayub, former Minister of Domestic Trade and Living Costs
  • Tan Sri Ong Kee Hui, former Minister of Science, Technology and Environment
  • Dato' Sri Hajah Rohani Abdul Karim, former Minister of Women, Family and Community Development
  • Datuk Seri Dr Mujahid Yusof Rawa, former Minister in the Prime Minister's Department (Religious Affairs)
  • Datuk Seri Wilfred Madius Tangau, former Deputy Chief Minister of Sabah
  • Chong Eng, former MP for Bukit Mertajam
  • Irwan Prayitno, 9th Governor of West Sumatra, Indonesia

Athletes

  • Cheng Chu Sian, archer
  • Mon Redee Sut Txi, archer
  • Syaqiera Mashayikh, archer
  • Wan Khalmizam, archer
  • Rachel Yeoh Li Wen, artistic gymnast
  • Sharul Aimy, artistic gymnast
  • Cheah Liek Hou, badminton player
  • Ann Osman, mixed martial artist
  • Roslinda Samsu, pole vaulter
  • Bibiana Ng, shooter
  • Johnathan Wong, shooter
  • Azreen Nabila Alias, sprinter
  • Nazmizan Muhammad, sprinter
  • Zaidatul Husniah Zulkifli, sprinter
  • Welson Sim, swimmer
  • Elaine Teo, Taekwondo practitioner
  • Hakimi Ismail, triple jumper
  • Leong Mun Yee, retired diver
  • Cheong Jun Hoong, retired diver
  • Yu Peng Kean, retired fencer
  • Diana Bong, retired wushu athlete

Academics

  • Ali Dehghantanha, Professor, University of Guelph
  • Faiza Darkhani, environmentalist, women's rights activist, and educator
  • Husaini Omar, Professor, researcher and geological engineer
  • Mahaletchumy Arujanan, biotechnologist, Global Coordinator of ISAAA
  • Moi Meng Ling, Professor, the University of Tokyo, virologist
  • Refaat Alareer, professor of literature and creative writing at the Islamic University of Gaza, Palestine

Businesspeople

  • Ebit Lew, founder of Elewsmart
  • Wen Shin Chia, founder of cooking oil recycling company Green Yards

Civil servants

  • Tan Sri Mazlan Lazim, retired Deputy Inspector-General of Police of Malaysia

Poets

  • Raja Rajeswari Setha Raman, poet

Notes

References

References

  1. "Facts & Figures". Universiti Putra Malaysia.
  2. "Facts & Figures".
  3. "ASEAN-European Academic University Network".
  4. "Association of Universities of Asia and the Pacific".
  5. "Federation of the Universities of the Islamic World".
  6. (December 2017). "Research Universities in Malaysia: What Beholds?". UiTM Press.
  7. "List of HEP (Self-Accredited)".
  8. "Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)".
  9. "Federation of Malaya: Annual Report 1946". [[The Stationery Office]].
  10. "The Story Behind UPM".
  11. "Malaysia Official Year Book 1972". [[Ministry of Communications (Malaysia).
  12. "Majlis Konvokesyen yang pertama". Universiti Putra Malaysia.
  13. "Pengisytiharan nama baharu". Universiti Putra Malaysia.
  14. "Previous UPM Chancellors". Universiti Putra Malaysia.
  15. "Previous UPM Vice-Chancellors". Universiti Putra Malaysia.
  16. "Statistic of UPMKB". UPMKB.
  17. "History of Universiti Malaysia Terengganu".
  18. "List of Medical Institutions (Second Schedule Medical Act 1971)".
  19. "Universiti Putra Malaysia".
  20. "EQUIS Accredited Schools".
  21. "UPM's business school attains prestigious triple crown accreditation".
  22. "Pelaksanaan Kolej-Kolej Kembar di UPM: Isu dan Cabaran". Majlis Perumahan Universiti Awam Malaysia (MAPUM).
  23. "COLLEGE INTRODUCTION".
  24. "SEJARAH KOLEJ".
  25. "LATAR BELAKANG KOSASS".
  26. "About Library".
  27. "Perpustakaan Sultan Abdul Samad". Universiti Putra Malaysia.
  28. "Library Guide".
  29. "Background".
  30. "Pusat Kebudayaan dan Kesenian Sultan Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah". Universiti Putra Malaysia.
  31. "Great Hall and Experimental Theatre".
  32. "Masjid UPM".
  33. Kenn Jin, Chan. (3 October 2025). "Peka claims public university killed 18 dogs and 5 puppies". [[Free Malaysia Today]].
  34. (3 October 2025). "RM400 seekor: Peka tuduh UPM upah syarikat bunuh anjing liar". [[MalaysiaKini]].
  35. Perimbanayagam, Kalbana. (3 October 2025). "Animal rights advocates slam shooting, poisoning of stray dogs on campus". [[New Straits Times]].
  36. Pragalath, K. (7 October 2025). "Police report lodged against UPM, private company over dog killing ops". Harapan Daily.
  37. Pragalath, K. (3 October 2025). "UPM, private company behind dog killing ops". Harapan Daily.
  38. Perimbanayagam, Kalbana. (4 October 2025). "UPM vows probe into claims of poisoning, shooting of dogs on campus". [[New Straits Times]].
  39. Jian Teng, Khoo. (4 October 2025). "Environmental group slams UPM's response to dog killings on campus". [[The Star (Malaysia).
  40. Perimbanayagam, Kalbana. (4 October 2025). "Peka slams UPM's stray dog response, calls internal probe 'illogical and inadequate'". [[New Straits Times]].
  41. Fairus, Salma. (7 October 2025). "Peka threatens protest if UPM dog shooting incident not investigated". [[The Star (Malaysia).
  42. Kenn Jin, Chan. (7 October 2025). "Peka files report on UPM dog killings". [[Free Malaysia Today]].
  43. Iskandar, Iylia Marsya. (8 October 2025). "Probe launched into alleged dog culling at UPM". [[New Straits Times]].
  44. (8 October 2025). "Cops open probe into UPM dog killings". [[Free Malaysia Today]].
  45. Al As, Mohamad. (14 October 2025). "UPM issues apology over stray dog culling on campus". [[New Straits Times]].
  46. "Universiti Putra Malaysia".
  47. "CWTS Leiden Ranking 2024 (Scientific impact)".
  48. "Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM)".
  49. "Universiti Putra Malaysia".
  50. "Universiti Putra Malaysia".
  51. "Universiti Putra Malaysia".
  52. (2 April 2019). "Impact Rankings 2019".
  53. (4 March 2020). "Impact Rankings 2020".
  54. (16 April 2021). "Impact Rankings 2021".
  55. (3 June 2022). "Impact Rankings 2022".
  56. (9 November 2023). "Impact Rankings 2023".
  57. (18 June 2024). "Impact Rankings 2024".
  58. (20 June 2025). "Impact Rankings 2025".
  59. "Overall Rankings 2010".
  60. "Overall Rankings 2011".
  61. "Overall Rankings 2012".
  62. "Overall Rankings 2013".
  63. "Overall Rankings 2014".
  64. "Overall Rankings 2015".
  65. "Overall Rankings 2016".
  66. "Overall Rankings 2017".
  67. "Overall Rankings 2018".
  68. "Overall Rankings 2019".
  69. "Overall Rankings 2020".
  70. "Overall Rankings 2021".
  71. "Overall Rankings 2022".
  72. "Overall Rankings 2023".
  73. "Overall Rankings 2024".
  74. "Overall Rankings 2025".
  75. "Three national wushu athletes graduated with Masters". Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about University of Putra Malaysia — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report