interning at a south american embassy while studying abroad in japan?

<p>I am interested in health/international relations/anthropology. Do S. American countries allow foreigners to intern for them? I would love to use spanish while abroad in Japan. I love Japan, but I think it would be cool to be involved with Spanish/japanese relations. It is very interesting to me. Any advice?</p>

<p>Breathe. Go to college a semester first before you start thinking about international internships.</p>

<p>Check out the summer internships on the State Department’s website. I have heard that they are very sought after, but perhaps your unique interests would set you apart.</p>

<p>Given that American embassies hire Americans for any foreign affairs-related task (maybe the custodian is a local though?), I’d assume that South American countries hire their own citizens exclusively too. Could be wrong though.</p>

<p>My wife did something like this a long time ago though it was a full-time job - not an internship. She was a citizen of one country, working in a second country for the organization that provided consular and immigration services for a third country. She had permanent residence status in the second country so that she could legally do this job.</p>

<p>I am starting to smell a ■■■■■… this poster has way too many crazy, ridiculous posts going back over the past several weeks.</p>

<p>Try looking at Japanese companies/organizations in Peru. Peru has a large ethnic-Japanese population. In fact the president (or former-president?) of Peru is/was an ethnic-Japanese. In Japan, I’ve met a few Spanish-speaking dual Japanese/Peruvians.</p>