ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė

Occidental One of Peace Corpsā€™ Top Volunteer-Producing Colleges

Jim Tranquada

ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė is once again one of the top producers of Peace Corps volunteers among the countryā€™s small collegesā€”a reflection of its long tradition of global engagement.

Occidental is ranked No. 15 among small schools on the Peace Corpsā€™ 2019 Top Volunteer-Producing Colleges and Universities list. There are 10 Tigers currently volunteering worldwide.

More than 260 ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė alumni have traveled abroad to serve as Peace Corps volunteers since the agency was founded in 1961.

ā€œWe have seen time and again that the colleges and universities than produce the most Peace Corps volunteers focus on cultivating global citizens in addition to promoting scholarship,ā€ says Peace Corps Director Jody Olsen.

ā€œMy interest in international development grew throughout my time at ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė,ā€ says English and comparative literary studies major Beatrice Spirakis ā€™15 of New York, who is currently serving as a health volunteer in Mozambique.

ā€œI took classes in postcolonial theory, global health, human rights, and globalization and justice, all of which gave me a critical foundation with which to approach issues in the global health arena,ā€ Spirakis says. ā€œI also had the opportunity to study in Hyderabad, India for a semester under the Richter research abroad program to explore connections between maternal and child health and improved water access. That framework combined with the international experiences ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė offered me made the Peace Corps a good fit.ā€

Occidental alumni are also currently serving in the Peace Corps in Indonesia, Ethiopia, Uganda, Mongolia, Benin, Ghana and Guinea.

The Peace Corps ranks its top volunteer-producing colleges and universities annually according to student body size. Among schools with fewer than 5,000 undergraduates, ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė is tied at No. 15 with Union, Furman, Skidmore, Whitworth and St. Michaelā€™s.

In 1958, Occidental became one of the first schools to participate in the Crossroads Africa program, a privately financed precursor of the Peace Corps that sent students to underdeveloped African nations to help develop needed infrastructure. More than 160 ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė students volunteered in the program through 1992.

Just one year prior to the launch of Crossroads Africa, ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė established the Stuart Chevalier Program in Diplomacy and World Affairs (DWA), which ever since has been one of the Collegeā€™s most popular majors. Closely aligned with the DWA program is ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀėā€™s unique Kahane United Nations Program, which since 1986 has allowed ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė students to live and study in New York while pursuing high-level internships at United Nations agencies and country missions.