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Tuesday, November 19th 10 AM-3:30 PM Duke RDP Hosts a U.S. Foreign Service Career Day

On Tuesday, November 19th 2024, from 10am to 3:30pm The Duke Rethinking Diplomacy Program will be hosting a day-long Foreign Service Career Day. Students from across the Triangle and Triad are invited to attend the day’s events. Lunch is provided. No registration necessary for this event.

Location:

Rhodes Conference Room (Sanford 223), Sanford School of Public Policy, 201 Science Dr. Durham, NC 27708

Parking info here

Contact: rethinking.diplomacy@duke.edu for more information about this event.


RDP Foreign Service Career Day Schedule

Session I: 10 AM — “Diplomacy in Action. Consider a Career Path with Global and Local Impact”

State Dept. Foreign Service Institute Director, Ambassador Joan A. Polaschik shares her career experience and information on diplomatic career paths. A State Department Global Talent Management Recruiter will be available to speak with attendees after the talk. All majors welcome! (No registration needed)

Session II: 12 PM Public Lecture “Rethinking Diplomatic Training”

A conversation with Ambassador Joan A. Polaschik on the modernization of the US State Department and the growing importance of technical knowledge in global health, climate, and cybersecurity, among others- in diplomatic careers. (This Lecture is Open to the General Public. No Registration needed)

Session III: 1:30 PM Networking Event

Drop in for coffee and conversation with former ambassadors and veteran members of the Foreign Service. Learn about Foreign Service careers and life in the Foreign Service. All Majors Welcome! (No registration needed)

Background

Three years ago, Secretary of State Antony Blinken outlined a vision to modernize American diplomacy, grounded in a keen understanding that an entirely new set of global issues, including climate, global health, and cybersecurity, is redefining national security.  To successfully advance U.S. interests in this changing world, U.S. diplomats not only need fluency in these new issue sets, but they also need an organizational culture that values and rewards career-long learning.  As part of Secretary Blinken’s Modernization Agenda, the Foreign Service Institute has embarked on an ambitious, multi-year program to better align diplomatic training to U.S. strategic objectives and change the way the State Department thinks about learning.  

About the Speaker

Joan A. Polaschik was appointed as Director of the Foreign Service Institute (FSI) in May 2022. In this capacity, she serves as the Chief Learning Officer for the Department of State and the federal foreign affairs community. Ambassador Polaschik joined the FSI team in February 2020, serving as Dean of the School of Professional and Area Studies and the Institute’s Deputy Director prior to assuming her current role. She spent the 2019-2020 academic year as a Senior State Department Fellow at Georgetown University’s Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, teaching courses on U.S. diplomatic statecraft and North Africa.

Ambassador Polaschik’s career has focused on the Middle East and North Africa, with assignments as Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs (2017-2019) and U.S. Ambassador to Algeria (2014-2017). She previously served as Director of the State Department’s Office of Egypt and Levant Affairs; Director of the Office of Israel and Palestinian Affairs; Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S Embassy in Tripoli, Libya; Regional Refugee Coordinator based at the U.S. Embassy in Amman, Jordan; Political Officer in Tunisia; and other staff-level assignments in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs. She also has served in Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan.

Ambassador Polaschik holds a BA from the University of Virginia and an MSFS from Georgetown University. Thanks to the talented language instructors at FSI, she speaks French, Arabic, and some Russian and Azerbaijan.

This Rethinking Diplomacy Program event is part of a series of events on working towards an advanced, Anticipatory Diplomacy. The event is cosponsored by the Sanford School of Public Policy, the Duke Program in American Grand Strategy, Duke Global, and the John Hope Franklin Center (JHFC). Thanks especially to our Diplomat in Residence, Stephanie Hutchison, for her work mentoring future diplomats here at Duke and throughout North Carolina.

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