Professional Documents
Culture Documents
American Foreign Service Association
American Foreign Service Association
afsa.org/teaching-diplomacy
This page is broad in its definition of the terrain covered. A prime focus is on how to teach
the practice of diplomacy, and its coupling of strategic thinking with practical solutions.
Also included is the teaching of international affairs and the role of diplomacy, different
matters entirely.
AFSA considers this initiative not only a valuable service to members, but also a
significant step in building an understanding of diplomacy and its importance to the
security and prosperity of the United States, a critical part of AFSA’s mission.
Special thanks to Ambassador (ret.) Ronald Neumann, the President of The American
Academy of Diplomacy, who has generously shared the AAD’s treasure-trove of curricula,
for which a link is available below. Another special thanks to Ambassador (ret.) Barbara
K. Bodine, Distinguished Professor in the Practice of Diplomacy and concurrent Director
of the Study of Diplomacy at Georgetown University, who shares with us how to access
Georgetown’s Case Studies Library dedicated to diplomatic practice. Thank you also to
President Susan Rockwell Johnson of The Association for Diplomatic Studies and
Training, who saw to it that the Association’s impressive collection of oral histories,
publications, and other materials was made available to AFSA. And, finally, thank you to
Jillian Burns, an instructor at George Washington University, who has worked with AFSA
from the beginning on this initiative.
Below please find resources which can inform the teaching of diplomacy, development,
and international affairs. AFSA will continue to solicit input from the many FS educators
out there, many of whom have already volunteered to participate in this initiative.
Finally, you also will find a few sites that provide leads for employment
opportunities in relevant fields and a LinkedIn site, “Foreign Policy
Practitioners-Educators Network.”
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Dolores Marie Brown, Retirement Benefits Counselor
brown@afsa.org
(202) 944-5510
The American Academy of Diplomacy has put a number of resources on line for those,
particularly former diplomats, interested in teaching. The Academy has placed online a
collection of Summaries and Syllabi of Diplomatic Practice Courses, taught by AAD
members. It is indexed by university and course name for easy reference.
In addition, the Academy cooperated with the International Center for Jefferson Studies
in a conference on diplomacy and education. The discussion ranged from Jefferson’s
stress on the importance of an educated citizenry to alternative methods of teaching
employed by former senior ambassadors. Specific tools available are:
The Academy also offers a list of Suggested Readings on Diplomatic Practice on its
website.
ADST also supports the publication of books pertaining to diplomacy and the Foreign
Service. These books are useful resources for academic purposes. ADST’s publication
series include: Diplomats and Diplomacy and Memoirs and Occasional Papers. A list of
non-ADST books that may be of interest to researchers and educators is maintained on
ADST’s website as well. ADST’s material also includes video series, Podcasts, and articles
highlighting Moments in U.S. Diplomatic History; several of our resources have
overlapping content in different formats to increase accessibility. ADST even has six
lesson plans for educators available to the public. Country & Subject Readers compile our
oral histories by country or topic in order to facilitate research.
If interested in any of the resources ADST has to offer, please contact the Oral History
Program Manager at oralhistory@adst.org or by calling 703-302-6990 for questions
regarding the collection or assistance in research.
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Georgetown University
Georgetown University's Institute for the Study of Diplomacy (ISD) actively supports
scholars and practitioners engaged in teaching diplomacy at the high school,
undergraduate and graduate level. A primary tool is the Case Studies Library, a unique
online library dedicated to diplomatic practice. Modeled on the case study method at law
and business schools, each ISD case study examine a particular issue or event, the
historical context, the players and interests, the options and limitations, and the key
decision points. Students are encouraged to think through not solely what happened, but
why.
The cases cover all parts of the world and several decades of primarily US diplomatic
policy. The collection includes cases on the Balkans; the Arab Spring; health diplomacy
(e.g., Ebola or PEPFAR), women, peace and security; nuclear disarmament; and the First
Gulf War, among many others. Most are written by practitioners directly involved in the
event. And many have extensive teaching notes to guide instructors.
ISD also invites those interested to read Director Barbara K. Bodine's 2015 Foreign
Service Journal article on teaching diplomacy.
Inside a U.S. Embassy, the essential guide to the Foreign Service, was published in 2011
by FS Books, a division of the American Foreign Service Association. A unique
introduction to the Foreign Service, the book is used in colleges and universities
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nationwide. For a list of the universities that have adopted the book for a course, click
here. AFSA also is proud to write that the book was named a 2017 Washington Post
bestseller!
The Foreign Service Journal (FSJ) Digital Archive, which you can access by clicking here,
contains one hundred years of diplomatic history, a unique resource that is now online
and searchable. The site also provides access to Special Collections ranging from Frontline
Diplomacy to Human Rights, from Terrorism to Public Diplomacy and beyond.
Diplomacy Works Collection – Part I and Diplomacy Works Collection – Part II, are
compendiums of The Foreign Service Journal’s very own case studies. The FSJ reached
out to AFSA’s membership, asking for their stories of a time, an event, or a day when
diplomacy achieved an important objective. Written by active-duty and retired members
of the U.S. Foreign Service, these accounts offer vivid illustrations of the indispensable
everyday work of career diplomats and development professionals around the world.
The Economic Diplomacy Works Collection, like the Diplomacy Works Collections
described above, also is a compendium of The Foreign Service Journal’s case studies.
These studies, however, focus on powerful examples of the work Foreign Service
personnel perform around the world every day to promote U.S. business interests.
Department of State
The U.S. Diplomacy Center Education program connects high school and college students
with the work of diplomats. Teaching materials to facilitate diplomatic simulations are
available at USDC Simulations.
Dr. James Graham Wilson of the Office of the Historian graciously provided the links
below as useful for those building syllabi for courses on diplomacy and foreign relations.
The Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) series presents the official
documentary historical record of major U.S. foreign policy decisions and significant
diplomatic activity. The entirety of the series going back to 1861 is now digitized as well as
searchable and filterable by terms and dates at
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments.
In addition, there is a lot more information about the State Department’s institutional
history on the main site, https://history.state.gov, which lists principal officers, country
recognition, etc. although this may be a lesser priority for teaching purposes.
The Woodrow Wilson Center has an outstanding database of digitized primary documents
from foreign archives; it is the closest analog to a non-U.S. FRUS document repository. In
teaching a course on, say, “The Global Cold War,” this resource is as vital as the FRUS
series and is available at https://digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org/.
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Dr. Wilson also highly recommends the resources of the National Security Archive, which
is hosted at GWU (though not formally part of George Washington University). The
National Security Archive has more in the way of recent U.S. documents from the 1990s
and post-9/11 eras than FRUS. So, for teaching more recent topics—especially the years
during which FSOs served—it is an invaluable resource: https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/.
For any member who is considering teaching, Dr. Wilson also strongly recommends that
they consider joining the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations (SHAFR)
https://www.shafr.org/, which is the association of diplomatic historians. The dues are
modest (around $100 a year), while membership includes a subscription to Diplomatic
History, which remains the flagship journal, as well as Passport, which includes articles
and roundtables on teaching. SHAFR holds its annual 3-day conference every odd year
(2019, 2021, etc.) at the Renaissance Arlington Capital View. This most recent session
included a day hosted at Georgetown by the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy.
SHAFR's specific resources for teaching are available at
https://www.shafr.org/teaching/higher-education.
Finally, Dr. Wilson encourages folks to sign up for H-Diplo. It’s free, and it’s invaluable. A
recent roundtable is available here: https://networks.h-
net.org/node/28443/discussions/5548485/h-diploissf-roundtable-11-8-back-channel-
memoir-american.
Retired FSO, adjunct instructor at George Washington University, and AFSA member
Jillian Burns manages a LinkedIn network entitled Foreign Policy Practitioners-
Educators Network. This network is for foreign policy practitioners who transition into
teaching international relations at any educational level. It also is a platform for members
to seek advice on designing classes and assignments, share best practices and resources,
post job openings, etc. To join, send her a request at
https://www.linkedin.com/groups/12140565/.
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AFSA members who teach highly recommend The Council on Foreign Relations Academic
page, which directs you to multiple useful resources.
Chronicle Vitae
You can search for faculty and research jobs at Chronicle Vitae.
Global Jobs
The Global Jobs site isn’t specific to teaching, but you can plug in “professor of practice”
and get results. In general, it’s a great website for Foreign Service personnel looking for
their Next Stage job.
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