January 2016

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Inside:

Travel & Hotels and Education Special Sections Education A Special Section of The Washington Diplomat

VOLUME 23, NUMBER 1

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January 2016

JANUARY 2016

WWW.WASHDIPLOMAT.COM

Overseas Opportunities U.S. Lags Behind Foreign

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Diplomacy

Paris Summit Seeks To Find Consensus On Climate Change For delegations preparing for major multilateral conferences, managing expectations is a big part of the workload. So even before over 40,000 delegates headed to Paris for two weeks of climate change talks, officials were keen to tamp down expectations, while working behind the scenes to lock down a historic accord. / PAGE 7

SOUTH AMERICA Brazil is hoping that the Olympic Games this summer — South America’s first-ever Olympics — will usher in a turnaround for the battered country whose prestige on the world stage has been dented by a worsening economic crisis and a string of corruption scandals. / PAGE 13

Paris, Beirut Attacks Inspire Varying Degrees of Sympathy Just before the Islamic State killed 130 in Paris, it launched a spectacular attack on Beirut. There was an outpouring of grief, but the widely varying reactions to the two tragedies had many people asking why one group of people appeared to be more deserving of sympathy than another. / PAGE 10

Women Artists Pave Own Path Women artists embraced alternative avenues and materials to leave their mark on midcentury modernism. / PAGE 32

BY KARIN ZEITVOGEL

People of World Influence

Terrorism

Culture

Counterparts in Study Abroad t

he American victim of the attacks in Paris in November was California State University-Long Beach exchange student, Nohemi Gonzalez, 23. Gonzalez was having a drink with a friend at La Belle Equipe bistro when heavily armed gunmen opened fire on Nov. 13. The assault the gifted industrial in which design student was killed was one of a series in which 130 people of attacks died, many of them young adults.

Two years ago, when two homemade bombs exploded at the finish line of the Boston Department and the victims was Chinese graduate Marathon, one of the three Education (IIE). Both nonprofit Institute of International student Lingzi Lu, also 23. young women had immersed had gone to Copley Square Lu selves in the culture themwith two friends to watch of their host country and marathon, the way thousands were the of Bostonians, adoptive and their passion when their lives were cut short. There living born-and-bred, do every are over 17,000 American students year. living and studying in France, Gonzalez and Lu are among and roughly 300,000 Chinese studying in the United States. dents who leave their countriesthe growing number of stuLast year, a total of travel abroad to study, according of origin every year and countries and traveled 4.5 million students left their home abroad to study. Nearly 1 to the “Open Doors” port that was released in million of mid-November by the U.S. reState 20

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Ex-Trade Official Praises Asia Pivot When the U.S. negotiated key details of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), Wendy Cutler was at the center of the deal-making as acting deputy U.S. trade representative. Now, she’s taking her trade expertise to the Asia Society, where she’ll continue to focus on the fastest-growing region in the world — a mission that dovetails with President Obama’s Asia pivot. / PAGE 5

Diplomatic Spouses

BRAZILIAN

REBOUND

Iceland’s Power Couple Comes to D.C. Geir H. Haarde is an Icelandic political veteran who has been through electoral success and bruising battles. His wife, Inga Jona Thordardottir, intimately understands the trials and tribulations of a career in politics, having had one herself. / PAGE 33


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