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What careers does International Relations degree lead to - in reality?

47 replies

NotDonna · 24/05/2025 21:38

Really interested in what careers this degree actually leads to. The uni websites obviously state diplomats, NGOs etc but I’d love to know how realistic this is.

OP posts:
dreamingbohemian · 24/05/2025 21:51

It can lead to careers in government, international organisations like the UN, NGOs around the world, media, risk analysis, OSINT analysis, lots of things.

Very competitive so helps to go to a better programme, be good at networking and have a foreign language.

I'm an IR-adjacent academic and see students go on to amazing careers but we are a very good London programme which helps a lot.

clary · 24/05/2025 22:07

A friend of DD's studied IR at uni (no MFL tho) and now works in an HR/PM role in the NHS. She’s on decent money and it seems to be a flexible job wrt wfh so I think she is happy.

NotDonna · 24/05/2025 22:13

dreamingbohemian · 24/05/2025 21:51

It can lead to careers in government, international organisations like the UN, NGOs around the world, media, risk analysis, OSINT analysis, lots of things.

Very competitive so helps to go to a better programme, be good at networking and have a foreign language.

I'm an IR-adjacent academic and see students go on to amazing careers but we are a very good London programme which helps a lot.

Is it worthwhile without an MFL, including no gcse MFL?

OP posts:
NotDonna · 24/05/2025 22:15

@clary I’m assuming the nhs wanted a ‘grad’ in general?

OP posts:
Lovenpic · 24/05/2025 22:17

My degree was politics and IR, and I work in (domestic) policy in the City. I love it!

There are plenty of people doing my role with my sort of degree.

People doing something more obviously international do tend to have a second (or third…) language. For some institutions it’s a requirement, even if in practice everyone works in English.

QueenCelestia · 24/05/2025 22:18

I have a First in International Relations with a language and I'm a primary school teacher 😆

clary · 24/05/2025 22:21

NotDonna · 24/05/2025 22:15

@clary I’m assuming the nhs wanted a ‘grad’ in general?

Yeh I think so. Tbf her mum works in a similar role (at a much higher level haha) so I wonder if she was inspired or influenced by her (not saying in any way that the mum had any sway over her dd’s appointment).

Rameneater · 24/05/2025 22:25

It's the new name for a politics degree. Language by no means necessary. Lots of occupations you can go into like many social science and humanities subjects.

parsnippot · 24/05/2025 22:27

Rameneater · 24/05/2025 22:25

It's the new name for a politics degree. Language by no means necessary. Lots of occupations you can go into like many social science and humanities subjects.

Not that new - I got mine in the eighties!

I’ve worked in the public sector all my life at a local authority.

HarryVanderspeigle · 24/05/2025 22:27

The two people I know went on to become a teacher and journalist.

JennieTheZebra · 24/05/2025 22:35

My sister has an IR degree and now works for the British embassy in Beijing-she does have a masters degree in mandarin too though! Generally speaking, for diplomatic/foreign office type jobs they do expect a language or at least the skills to pick one up quickly. For niche languages the FO does provide tuition.

dreamingbohemian · 24/05/2025 22:44

NotDonna · 24/05/2025 22:13

Is it worthwhile without an MFL, including no gcse MFL?

Yes it's just a MFL will make you more competitive. French is a good shout as many international organisations have English/French as official languages.

dreamingbohemian · 24/05/2025 22:46

Rameneater · 24/05/2025 22:25

It's the new name for a politics degree. Language by no means necessary. Lots of occupations you can go into like many social science and humanities subjects.

IR is not the same as politics
It's a subfield of political science but has its own distinct theory and practice

Rollofrockandsand · 24/05/2025 22:49

Mine has an IR degree, no MFL and works for a strategy consultancy in their policy team. Uni still seems to be of relevance: he’s RG but from the lowest uni, it’s mainly Oxbridge, Durham / St Andrews etc.

Lovenpic · 25/05/2025 07:37

Rameneater · 24/05/2025 22:25

It's the new name for a politics degree. Language by no means necessary. Lots of occupations you can go into like many social science and humanities subjects.

It’s really not. There’s overlap and lots of politics degrees will cover some IR. But the content is very distinct.

RedBeech · 25/05/2025 07:42

DS did IR. One friend now works in uni admin, one for the UN, one for a think tank, two are doing Oxbridge post grads. DS works in product development for an international company and loves it.

2025ishere · 25/05/2025 07:50

The world of work is changing, lots of AI coming in, I don’t think it’s predictable what jobs will be available in the future. My advice to my DC has been to follow their enthusiasm and do a degree they are interested in . They might use the specific things they learnt in future work , or they might ‘just’ use the research , writing and analytical skills (verbal and numerical) that they will learn in many degrees.

jeanclaude · 25/05/2025 08:02

I did IR 20 years ago and work in HR. It’s a god degree for research, analysis, and constructive debate.

JustShhhhh · 25/05/2025 10:39

I have a degree in Politics and IR and work in the Civil Service - I joined as a direct entrant rather than faststream. Not sure the subject of my degree helped me get in, more that I had one. The politics part has helped in that I had a good understanding of how government worked which is useful in a policy role.

TizerorFizz · 25/05/2025 13:04

@NotDonna I think the difference is whet a student thinks they should be able to get for a job and reality. The difficulty with IR is the international bit? There’s not many jobs and often some are poorly paid. No MFL is a hindrance and for international jobs grads compete against international highly skilled grads. When universities list jobs, the question should always be “how many!” Probably a handful of international students for some areas of work.

As part of her MFL degree, DD went to the university of Geneva. Every flatmate spoke French, German and English as a minimum. They were heading for NGOs in Geneva. They were very different grads from the IR grad here with no MFLs.

The civil service and general grad jobs are of course open but I’d steer away from thinking this is a vocational degree. Like many degrees, it’s a means to an indeterminate end that any History, MFL, law, politics, philology, sociology, English etc etc etc grad could do. Therefore this precise degree won’t matter. It’s your cv. Work experience, university, leadership roles and additional skills all need to be honed because every single job is competitive now.

Grads don’t get a good job because of a IR degree. They get one because they stand out in the selection process and many degrees are equivalent in the civil service, nhs, NGOs etc.

dreamingbohemian · 25/05/2025 13:18

It's not a vocational degree but it absolutely does open doors in certain sectors that an English or sociology degree would not.
There's a virtual pipeline between our IR programme and large risk analysis firms/consultancies because they know our grads will already have a good grounding in International politics and current events, their coursework prepared them for writing policy reports, they can hit the ground running.

TizerorFizz · 25/05/2025 15:27

@dreamingbohemian You are talking about one job! The point I was making that the grads from the degrees I’ve listed (and more) are going for a myriad of jobs. Risk management is a bit niche to be honest. Look at accountancy, civil service, LAs and general employers and IR is the same as the others. Lots of grads won’t want risk analysis either and do you think other grads cannot do the same?

dreamingbohemian · 25/05/2025 15:52

Yes one job as an example, I think that's clear. We've all been posting about lots of jobs. I mentioned an example of a job where it absolutely is an advantage to have an IR degree not just any old job.

I don't think you know much about the field to think risk analysis is a niche job. It's an extremely popular choice among today's students as it can be anything from corporate work advising clients on civil wars and climate risks to working for NGOs on early warning migration tools, civil service on biosecurity risks, really it's very broad and interesting.

Runwayqueen · 25/05/2025 15:57

I did Geography with IR. I worked in aviation (non flying) for 20 years and now I’m HR.

saraclara · 25/05/2025 16:15

I know quite a few people with IR degrees who work abroad for NGOs or government aid agencies.

If I was going to uni now, it's a degree I'd be really interested in taking.

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