Imagine this: You arrive at Seton Hall University for breakfast bright and early on
                                       a Monday morning. School of Diplomacy Senior Associate Dean and UN scholar, Dr. Courtney
                                       Smith, introduces you to a cohort of professionals, graduate and advanced undergraduate
                                       students, who will become your colleagues over the next five days. You board your
                                       private bus to New York City for a briefing by Dean Smith on the day's action packed
                                       agenda. After a welcome and introduction from the Executive Director of the United
                                       Nations Association of the USA, you will be ushered straight into the UN Security
                                       Council Chamber for your first exclusive meeting. Before you know it, the bus pulls
                                       up at UN Headquarters. As you step out in your best blazer, you can't help but be
                                       captivated by the 193 member nation flags standing tall around the perimeter. You
                                       pinch yourself as you realize, this is just the beginning.
                                 
                                  For the last 19 years, The UN Intensive Summer Study Program has immersed a select group of participants from around the world in the political
                                    dynamics of the United Nations. Through a series of seminars led by UN officials and
                                    representatives of governments and civil society, the program familiarizes students
                                    with the inner workings of the UN by bringing them together with distinguished practitioners
                                    working in the field of multilateral diplomacy.
For the last 19 years, The UN Intensive Summer Study Program has immersed a select group of participants from around the world in the political
                                    dynamics of the United Nations. Through a series of seminars led by UN officials and
                                    representatives of governments and civil society, the program familiarizes students
                                    with the inner workings of the UN by bringing them together with distinguished practitioners
                                    working in the field of multilateral diplomacy.
                                 
                                  A typical program day begins and ends at Seton Hall where participants get to know
                                    their diverse peers over a meal. The delegation attends official sessions at UN Headquarters
                                    together as well as briefings at the United Nations Association of the USA and the
                                    United Nations Foundation. Students actively participate in dialogue and discussion
                                    with guest speakers and peers alike. Past key topics have included peacekeeping and
                                    disarmament, human rights and refugees, the status of women and children, member state
                                    policies towards the UN, the role of civil society and the private sector in the UN,
                                    UN reform, the environment, and sustainable development. Outside of their UN scheduled
                                    activities, participants have the opportunity to enjoy cultural activities in New
                                    York City.
A typical program day begins and ends at Seton Hall where participants get to know
                                    their diverse peers over a meal. The delegation attends official sessions at UN Headquarters
                                    together as well as briefings at the United Nations Association of the USA and the
                                    United Nations Foundation. Students actively participate in dialogue and discussion
                                    with guest speakers and peers alike. Past key topics have included peacekeeping and
                                    disarmament, human rights and refugees, the status of women and children, member state
                                    policies towards the UN, the role of civil society and the private sector in the UN,
                                    UN reform, the environment, and sustainable development. Outside of their UN scheduled
                                    activities, participants have the opportunity to enjoy cultural activities in New
                                    York City.
                                 
                                  Faculty and students alike praise the program's ability to provide a space to engage
                                    with pressing global concerns and with each other, creating a model for what global
                                    interactions should look like. School of Diplomacy notes that, "There is only one place in the world where everybody can speak with everybody
                                    else. For the students to be here, it is an invitation to change the world." Before
                                    they get there, past participant Luis Rafael Sosa Santiago, B.S. '15 suggests that
                                    the program offers a front row seat to critically examine global cooperation, "It's
                                    great to experience how delegates interact with one another and how they come together
                                    to reach consensus on decisions that affect the entire planet."
Faculty and students alike praise the program's ability to provide a space to engage
                                    with pressing global concerns and with each other, creating a model for what global
                                    interactions should look like. School of Diplomacy notes that, "There is only one place in the world where everybody can speak with everybody
                                    else. For the students to be here, it is an invitation to change the world." Before
                                    they get there, past participant Luis Rafael Sosa Santiago, B.S. '15 suggests that
                                    the program offers a front row seat to critically examine global cooperation, "It's
                                    great to experience how delegates interact with one another and how they come together
                                    to reach consensus on decisions that affect the entire planet."
                                 
                                 Senior Associate Dean, Dr. Courtney Smith, who has been facilitating this program since its inception, is enthusiastically
                                    preparing for this summer's 20th cohort. He says, "The UN Summer Program is a wonderful
                                    example of the many active learning opportunities the students have at the School
                                    of Diplomacy. The opportunity to go out and actually experience diplomacy while you're
                                    studying it."
                                 
                                 Interested professionals, graduate students and advanced undergraduate students are
                                    encouraged to visit the Applications for the program are now open and will be accepted until April 1st. Candidates will be notified of their status
                                    by April 15th. Get a glimpse of what your summer at the UN could look.