Sarah Wambaugh
- Born:
- March 6, 1882, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
- Died:
- Nov. 12, 1955, Cambridge, Mass.
- Subjects Of Study:
- plebiscite
Sarah Wambaugh (born March 6, 1882, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.—died Nov. 12, 1955, Cambridge, Mass.) was an American political scientist who was recognized as one of the world’s leading experts on the subject of plebiscites.
Wambaugh graduated from Radcliffe College, Cambridge, in 1902. She remained at the college as an assistant until 1906 while pursuing advanced studies in history and government. For a decade thereafter she worked with the Women’s Educational and Industrial Union of Boston and took part in the woman suffrage movement. In 1916 she resumed her studies at Radcliffe, and in 1917 she was awarded an M.A. degree in international law and political science. In that year she undertook a study of the theory, practice, and history of plebiscites, a field then new to systematic study.
Wambaugh’s Monograph on Plebiscites, with a Collection of Official Documents (1920), first prepared for use at the Versailles Peace Conference of 1919, established its author as the leading authority in the field. From 1920 to 1921, while studying at the London University School of Economics and at Oxford, Wambaugh worked in the administrative commissions and minorities section of the League of Nations secretariat. She then taught history at Wellesley (Massachusetts) College for a semester (1921–22). Thereafter she helped observe, plan, and administer a variety of plebiscites and advised governments and international bodies on the subject.
From 1934 to 1935 Wambaugh helped plan and administer the Saar (France; now in Germany) plebiscite, and in the latter year she lectured at the Institute for Advanced International Studies in Geneva. She served as an adviser to the United Nations mission that observed Greek elections (1945–46) and helped plan a plebiscite in Jammu and Kashmir, India (1949). Her works include La Pratique des plébiscites internationaux (1928), Plebiscites Since the World War (1933), and The Saar Plebiscite (1940), along with numerous articles.