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  1. The Global Business major provides students an opportunity to combine a basic education in business with all the political, economic, language, cross-cultural, and research proficiencies they gain at SFS. This major aims to produce a new breed of graduates who are fluent in the global languages of business, politics, economics, and culture.

  2. Walsh School of Foreign Service ICC 301 · 37th and O St NW Washington, DC 20057. P. +1 (202) 687-5696

  3. ma.ibp@georgetown.edu – Master of Arts in International Business and Policy (MA-IBP) +1 (202) 687-0971. Home Graduate Applications Graduate Applications SFS graduate programs look for students with strong academic records, international experience, and a commitment to our values. You can submit your application online via a secure system ...

  4. Established in January 2019, the Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET) at Georgetown’s Walsh School of Foreign Service is a research organization focused on studying the security impacts of emerging technologies, supporting academic work in security and technology studies, and delivering nonpartisan analysis to the policy community.

  5. Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service was established in 1919, immediately after the First World War, because of the need to adjust to a changing world. It was the first school of international affairs in the United States, predating the creation of the U.S. State Department Foreign Service.

  6. Our Mission. Prominent Alumni. LEFT IMAGE: 42nd President of the United States Bill Clinton (SFS’68) gives his third lecture in a Georgetown University series, talking about purpose, vision and ‘radical inclusion’ as the hallmarks of successful leaders, April 2015. RIGHT IMAGE: From the left, moderator Melanne Verveer, former Ambassador ...

  7. In 1919, the Walsh School of Foreign Service was founded as a direct response to the involvement of the United States in the First World War. Prepared for Global Service As the new dean, Fr. Walsh said the following in his dedicatory remarks: