Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 38— - DEPARTMENT OF STATE › § 2719a
Require the State Department to improve and expand training and career development for its Foreign Service and Civil Service staff. The Director General must grow fellowship programs with short- and long-term placements at think tanks, universities, other agencies, industry, and NGOs, and not later than 180 days after December 23, 2022, must report to Congress on ways to expand the Pearson and Brookings fellowships so fellows can do follow-on assignments in congressional offices, including an assessment of current fellowships and options to make them more career-enhancing. The Secretary may set up a 12-member Board of Visitors for the Foreign Service Institute to give independent advice on management, planning, curriculum, and how training links to the Bureau for Global Talent Management. Board members must be non-federal, come from fields like diplomacy, national security, management, economics, technology, or education; at least 6 must have 10 years’ outside experience, and no more than 6 may be former senior Department officials. Members serve up to 3 years (staggered terms), meet at least twice a year, are unpaid but get travel expenses, and the Federal Advisory Committee Act applies. The Department must create a Provost position (Senior Executive Service level) to oversee the Foreign Service Institute curriculum, set up course evaluations, and link training results to personnel records used in promotion boards. Require the Secretary to let other national security agencies and congressional staff access FSI training, and not later than 180 days after December 23, 2022, report on opportunities, budget effects, and possible courses for congressional staff. Not later than 1 year after December 23, 2022, the Secretary must deliver a strategy for 21st-century diplomacy training that ties training to promotion rules; addresses democratic backsliding, state-sponsored disinformation (including the Global Engagement Center), cyber threats, aggression and malign influence by Russia, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, the Maduro Regime, and the Chinese Communist Party, climate change, and nuclear threats; studies residential A–100 training and a press freedom curriculum; expands external courses at universities; and consults other agencies and the Foreign Affairs Security Training Center in Blackstone, Virginia. Also within 1 year the Secretary must report on broadening professional development, how to implement it, needed resources, and how results will be measured, and then brief Congress within 1 year after that and annually for 2 years. The Secretary may create a language-incentive program like the Defense Department’s foreign language bonus, and must submit a detailed implementation plan, with resource needs, not later than 90 days after December 23, 2022.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 2719a
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73