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Diplomatic Academy (United Kingdom)
Diplomatic Academy (United Kingdom)
The creation of a new Diplomatic Academy was announced in a speech by William Hague,
Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, on 19 September 2013 on the
occasion of the opening of the FCO's new Language Centre.[1] The Academy began operating in
2014 and was opened officially by Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond on 10 February 2015.[2]
The Academy was a Directorate of the FCO. The first Director of the Academy (2014–17) was
Jon Davies. His successor as Director (2017-20) was Jon Benjamin.
The Academy was originally structured into 11 thematic areas, or "Faculties": These were:
International Policy, Diplomatic Practice, States and Societies, Understanding the UK, Consular
and Crisis Management, Economics and Prosperity, Europe, Multilateral, Security Defence and
Intelligence, Law, and Languages.[3] A twelfth Faculty - Trade Policy and Negotiations - was
added in 2016 after the UK vote to leave the European Union.[4]
In 2017 the Academy absorbed further internal responsibilities for management and leadership
training and for the FCO's overseas network of Regional Learning & Development Teams, which
became the Diplomatic Academy Regional Teams (DARTs). The Diplomatic Academy became
the principal learning and development (L&D) organisation of the FCO.
The administrative offices and training rooms of what is now the International Academy are
located in the main building of the FCDO in King Charles Street, London. A new learning facility
named the Mayhew Theatre (after Baroness Cicely Mayhew, the UK's first woman diplomat)
was officially opened on 4 March 2019 by Prince William, Duke of Cambridge.[5] The theatre
was given this name following a vote of FCO staff.[6]
The Academy's face-to-face and online programmes are aimed at FCDO employees and
employees of other UK government departments and agencies who are working in international
roles. It does not offer external enrolment on face-to-face courses, but it has experimented with
the concept of the Massive Open Online Course and has released two public courses. The first,
entitled Diplomacy in the 21st Century, was developed with the Open University and ran on the
FutureLearn platform in January–March and May-July 2019 with over 13,500 registrations in
total.[7] A second course entitled Introduction to British Diplomacy ran in February and May
2020.[8]
References
1. "Foreign Secretary opens Foreign Office language school" (https://www.gov.uk/government/
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