Opportunities and Ideas for International Studies Students This page is designed to help you start looking for a job or internship. The university has excellent careers advising facilities at the career center and this page should merely be seen as a suppliment to those. Occasionally, there will also be announcements about calls for applications for internaships and the like that we receive in the department. they will be posted here as and when we receive them.
Ad Hoc Postings:
These will be posted as and when they arrive. posted July 15, 2009: Senator Murray (D-WA) Internship. posted July 24, 2009: Rice Political Consulting Trainee. posted August 25, 2009: Center for Advanced Defense Studies Internship. posted September 14, 2009: Scoville Fellowship in DC for College Graduates posted September 17, 2009: Institute for International Public Policy Fellowship Governmental Opportunities:
Most government agencies have internship programs, and are also a good place to look for employment after graduating. Keep in mind that you have to plan far in advance to apply to most government internship programs. For example, at the State Department, deadlines tend to be November 1 for summer internships, July 1 for the fall and March 1 for the spring. Below, you’ll find some ideas for agencies you can apply to, but remember that there’s a lot more out there. A central website for many Federal jobs: A central website for all U.S. government jobs:
http://www.thejobpage.gov The State Department
http://careers.state.gov/
The Central Intelligence Agency
https://www.cia.gov/careers/index.html The U.S. Congress
The House website has an employment section (see http://www.house.gov/cao-hr/). You can also check the websites of specific senators and representatives- they sometimes advertise openings for interns and legislative assistants. Another good way to search for job opportunities on Capitol Hill is combing through the classified sections of Roll Call and The Hill (the online versions of these newspapers have employment advertisements). Finally, you should call the offices of your senators and representatives to ask if they are aware of any specific internship opportunities. Research Organizations and Think Tanks
A good place to start looking for an internship or employment in a think tank is the National Institute for Research Advancement’s (NIRA) World Directory of Think Tanks (http://www.nira.or.jp/past/ice/index.html). The directory will give you descriptions of research organizations around the world, as well links to their websites. For most of the think tanks—especially the ones in the United States and Canada-- you can go to the website and find the employment or career opportunities section. Often, this is listed under the “About Us” link.
Additionally, here are a few well-respected, major research organizations that have regular internship programs:
The Brookings Institution The Council on Foreign Relations The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars The Peterson Institute of International Economics does not offer internships but has career information
Non Profits and NGO’s
Idealist.org (http://www.idealist.org/if/as/Find?sid ) is a great website that lists thousands of job opportunities with non profit organizations and NGOs. It is a pretty large database, and at the very least, it will help you get some ideas about particular kinds of organizations you may be interested in working with.
Human Rights Organizations
A job board for human rights maintained by Human Rights Internet see http://www.hri.ca/internships-jobs.aspx
Amnesty International Human Rights First Human Rights Watch Embassies
You might also try looking for opportunities in the embassies of foreign countries in Washington D.C. There is no central place (that I know of) that lists such opportunities, but if you have a country in mind, try visiting the website of its mission in the United States. Alternately, through the State Department, you can also look into internships at U.S. embassies in other countries.
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