Quote: (11-15-2015 03:21 PM)polymath Wrote:
The FSOs I have met are all extremely smart, very nuanced in that they all had very interesting backgrounds, and just a little weird. For example, one of the diplomats I met had just finished assignment in Afghanistan and spent part of his 20s traveling with Central Asian nomads. If your eventual goal is to be a diplomat then you should enrich yourself with as many international and multicultural experiences as time and opportunity allow.
I second everything that has been said here.
I did an internship at an embassy, too, but more so did it for the experience than out of a desire to go into diplomacy later on. If you're keen about becoming a FSO I'd highly recommend such a stint. Not only because it will help you better understand what the job is all about, but also because it is a very nice parachute to have for later on should you decide to enter the private sector-- there's still a decent amount of prestige attached to having work experience from an embassy/the MFA of a country.
The MFA of my country recruits its future diplomats through a process that is way different from that of State, but all good diplomats have some universal traits. As polymath already mentioned, cultural understanding and interpersonal skills especially hold true.
I worked under an ambassador who almost always sealed the deal, so to say. I'd argue that close to always it was because of his people skills-- he could literally befriend
anybody. Talk about any topic. In five different languages. Fluently. As a bonus, he was redpill to the bone.
From the diplomats I've met, those of his kind are the best ones. He got appointments in the MFA on the very same day our embassy requested them, developed a personal friendship with the FM of the country, got wasted with members of parliament..you name it. All of this he managed to do because of his people skills, which of course came on top of a wealth of knowledge. But my point is that people skills are the most important ones for a diplomat, because you are basically a salesman for your government.
So as polymath wrote, go travel, spend time in places that are nothing like home, learn languages that are not Spanish/French/German and, most importantly, get to know how people from different cultures think and how they behave. Bang a lot of foreign chicks (you'd be surprised at how frequent hookups are within the diplomatic corps in a country). This is the best preparation that you could get.
Quote: (11-15-2015 09:21 PM)Osiris Wrote:
I'm kind of curious, what other opportunities do people know of in the IR field beyond State, the UN, etc...?
You have a load of think tanks, a billion of different NGOs, private intelligence agencies (Stratfor etc), and many, many international organizations that aren't part of the UN umbrella. Check out sites like Devex to get a better idea.