Careers in International Affairs, Ninth Edition
Author
: Laura E. Cressey and Barrett J. Helmer, and Jennifer E. Steffensen
Subject
: International relations—Vocational guidance—United States, International economic relations—Vocational guidance
Publisher
: Georgetown University Press
Summary :This book is intended to assist those seeking a career in the international
affairs community. From my position as a career and internship coordinator
at Georgetown University’s Master’s of Science in Foreign Service
(MSFS) program, and my coeditors’ positions as graduate students in the
MSFS program, much of the content of the book is written with undergraduate
and graduate students in mind. But we hope that young professionals,
those seeking a career change, and those at an even earlier place in
their academic pursuits will also find value in the discussion of the different
sectors and organizations in which one can find challenging and enriching
internationally focused positions and careers.
Ironically, I used an earlier edition of this book while I was in college and
was trying to figure out where to go to graduate school and how to make
sense of all the government agencies involved in national security issues.
Admittedly, I focused on only one section of the book—the US government
and, to some extent, international organizations—given my firm desire to
work for the federal government. But my career path to date, which began
at the State Department working primarily on nonproliferation issues and
then meandered to consulting and to Georgetown, is one that I could not
have predicted while thumbing through the pages of this book. Yet I have
since discovered that careers spanning the public, private, and nonprofit
sectors are more frequent than not. In perusing this book I hope that you
recognize that which I often try to convey to my graduate students: Opportunities
in a particular field or function do not exist just in one organization,
or even in one sector, but usually exist across multiple organizations and
sectors. Taking my original focus of nonproliferation, for example, I could
have found opportunities in the US government (e.g., in the State, Defense,
Commerce, and Energy departments; the intelligence community, the
Treasury Department, the Office of Management and Budget, and the US
Congress); in the private sector, with any number of consulting firms and
government contractors; in international organizations (in the United Nations,
the International Atomic Energy Agency, and the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons); and in numerous nonprofits, think tanks,
and universities. It is extremely easy—and common, as I have repeatedly witnessed—for a person to focus his or her job search on attaining the one
perfect job at one specific organization. Hopefully, what you will take away
from this book is that it is advisable (and perhaps even essential) to broaden
your perspective and be as inclusive as possible in your search for a career in
international affairs.
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