Our History and Mission
Founded in 1919 to educate students and prepare them for leadership roles in international affairs, the School of Foreign Service remains committed to intercultural understanding and service in the global arena, ideals held by its founder and first dean, the Rev. Edmund A. Walsh, S.J. Today, the School conducts an undergraduate program for over 1,400 students and graduate programs to the Master's level for some 500 students
For the upcoming year, the student body of the School represents over 70 nationalities. Located in the heart of Washington, D.C., students at the School of Foreign Service benefit from opportunities in a unique environment which is not only the seat of the nation's government but also the headquarters of major international organizations and non-profit institutions, trade and consulting groups, and high technology firms.
The School's liberal arts undergraduate program includes a two-year required core curriculum followed by two years of multidisciplinary electives. Major fields of study include history, international politics, international economics, comparative and regional studies, culture and politics, and science and technology. Six interdisciplinary graduate programs -- four regional studies programs as well as the Master of Science in Foreign Service and the Security Studies Program-- are designed to teach students to think about, analyze, and act in the world of the twenty-first century with imagination, good judgment, and compassion.
Events
- February 9, 12:00 pm - 1:15 pm Why Do We Need a United States of Europe
- February 10, 1:30 am - 3:00 pm Murder in the Amazon
- February 10, 12:00 pm Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies
- February 10, 12:15 pm - 2:00 pm 'Do Political Parties Still Make A Difference in Politics?'
- February 10, 1:00 pm Saúde Criança: Alleviating Poverty in Brazil’s Favelas
- February 11, 8:15 am - 5:00 pm Jews and Muslims in France***CANCELLED***
- February 11, 12:00 pm Energy as a Tool of Foreign Policy
- February 11, 12:30 pm Japan and North Korea: Hostility or Reconciliation?
- February 12, 10:30 am - 12:00 pm Education Under Attack: Violence in Armed Conflicts
Remembering the Man who Tried to Stop the Holocaust
Jan Karski (1914-2000)
From 1952-1992, Georgetown University and the SFS were enriched by Jan Karski, Professor of Government. At great personal risk, Karksi escaped from occupied Poland during World War II to tell the Allied powers about the plight of Jews in Europe.
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