Contents: Special International Careers Issue
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Meet Nathan Reyes, who works as a Protection Delegate with the ICRC

Nathan Reyes has kindly agreed to be profiled in our new Careers for Globetrotters series.  We are taking a look into the lives and backgrounds of people who are living their dream of working abroad - and find out the steps they took to get there.

Nathan speaks four languages and has worked in conflict zones around the world, including a UN Peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo. With an LLM in International Law, and a Master's in International Development, at the time of interview, Nathan was working on his third mission with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) as a special delegate in Colombia.

This special issue is a series of video interviews with Victor. Watch the series of videos below.

You can read the full interview with Nathan Reyes here >

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    Careers for Globetrotters

  • article dek:

    Meet Nathan Reyes.  Nathan is the latest globetrotter to be featured in our new Careers for Globetrotters series.  We'll be taking a look into the lives and backgrounds of people who are living their dream of working abroad - and find out the steps they took to get there.

     

  • Issue Text: Latest Issue

Careers for Globetrotters: Meet Nathan Reyes

  • Protection Delegate (Urban Violence) - International Committee of the Red Cross

    When Nathan Reyes decided to continue his undergraduate degree in the French language, he barely spoke it. It was a big gamble, but it paid off for Nathan, who now speaks four languages and travels to conflict zones around the world. He talks to us about landing a job with a 1% success rate, meeting with leaders of armed rebel groups, and the one skill he's commended on the most - and suggests you start working on, right now!

    Watch his series of videos below.

Videos

Tell us about the organization you work for and your role there.

Meet Nathan Reyes. Find out how the International Committee of the Red Cross guards and enforces the international law of armed conf

How did you get to where you are now? Tell us about your career trajectory.

It’s never too late to start learning a language.

Wow, so you decided to study in French, while not really speaking French all that well. What happened after that? How did that lead to the ICRC?

Find out what Nathan did that gave him an edge, and his CV a boost, when it came to attracting his dream employer.

Talk to us about that “first real job.”

Nathan talks to us about the UN Volunteers program.

What was the interview process like with UN Volunteers?

Why the position you apply for may not be the one you get.

How did this all lead to the ICRC?

Nathan tells us the pros and cons of working for the International Committee of the Red Cross, versus the UN.

How does one go about getting in their foot in the door at the ICRC?

Nathan breaks down what the ICRC is looking for and process of getting in.

Tell us about how you, specifically, got your position with the ICRC.

Nathan gives us insight into the internal training at the International Committee of the Red Cross, and his year-long recruitment process.

Looking back, what do you think got you the position?

Ten thousand people apply for this position every year, and only 100 are accepted. Nathan gives us some insight on being in the 1%.

What’s an average week like at the ICRC?

Nathan talks to us about the field work and cases involved with being a protection delegate.

Can you tell us about the challenges of this job? You must have some stories.

We can bet your Sundays aren’t as eventful as Nathan’s. He talks to us about meeting with the leader of an armed rebel group.

What about some more common, everyday challenges?

Nathan talks about the reality of being “the rich guy” in a population that makes $1 a day.

What tips do you have for someone who is about to undertake this work?

Nathan talks about the fine line between dealing with gruesome realities and becoming desensitized to them.

Can you talk to us about getting your foot in the door in this sector?

Nathan admits the Catch-22 of getting work in humanitarian field, and gives his best tips on getting around it.

You have an LLM, and legal background. Do you think it helped you? Are there certain subjects that will serve someone better in this field?

Nathan’s co-workers have backgrounds working in delivery for Fed-Ex and DHL, but also in accounting, activism, and the oil and gas sector.

Are there any common mistakes you see people make when trying to get into this sector?

Nathan says take risks, and don’t look too closely at “chances for success.”

Can you talk to us about networking and how it applies to this sector?

Nathan says networking in this sector won’t get you the job, but it can get you on the right track.

Any last tips?

Nathan tells us the one thing he is complemented on the most and what’s really helped him in his career.

Insights

  • Insights: Working for the International Committee of the Red Cross

    Every opportunity I have had—whether it was to study in my undergrad or to take a year off and travel or then to go and do an internship or whatever—I have managed, at first through luck and then through conscious decision, to incorporate language into that. And I think that's really gotten me far. I grew up speaking just one language to the age of near 20, and now I speak four language at near enough to fluency, if not full fluency, that I am able to work efficiently in them. Importantly, for the career that I have since I got into, I did a lot of extracurricular things. I wrote papers on a given human rights topic, or something that I was learning about in my studies. I knew people who were organizing a conference on different human rights issues at a more theoretical, abstract level, but I talked to them, interested them in what I was interested in, and I managed to get to spot on a panel speaking about it. I worked as a research assistant and teaching assistant to a professor, and in that way I was also able to delve more into issues of constitutional law, Indigenous law, things that ultimately gave me valuable experience to put on a CV. I that this, more than my studies themselves, more than my work at the Department of Justice, really highlighted an interest of mine that was ultimately flagged by my first real job. People would actually just come to our office and say, "Yesterday, there was fighting near my farm, and it caught fire and half of it burned down, and we had to flee, and now we're here and we have nowhere to sleep and can you please help us?" We would talk, and explain what we can do, what we can’t do. As much as the language opens doors, anyone who finds themselves working in a language that is their second language—a language that they did not grow up with, but learned as an adult— at some points you will find yourself, or feel yourself, to be handicapped by this. At times, you are "the rich guy" to a population that makes a dollar a day, no matter how much you want to just go and grab a beer with them. It's just hard to get over that—more so, I think, than the culture language itself in terms of making friends. These are not things that one can deal with alone, I think, or at least not easily. And so, having friends at home, even if they have no real idea of the kind of the day-to-day reality you're living, but who you can still reach out to... that's a big thing. It’s a fine line. I did I have, and continue to see, colleagues who I think have crossed the line and to kind of de-sensitivity towards this kind of thing— people who have seen it too often, and their way of dealing with it has become to just stop caring. I think for those who have stopped caring, there's no more reason to work in this field of work, and they shouldn't, and I don't think it's healthy. I'd say, those are the two best: internship programs, and programs in UNV. Otherwise, like I said, motivation and general knowledge of the field definitely do help. So, if you're able to get involved locally with NGOs, with a nonprofit or Red Cross, for example. Red Cross, recruit volunteers all the time. Do I think of graduate studies as being necessary? Yes, at least for the work that I do, involvement in the ICRC period, or work in the United Nations in any substantive and rewarding way. And, for that matter, I think it is necessary even with more the more respected and known NGOs, such as Doctors Without Borders, or Norwegian Refugee Council—having a master's degree is a minimum. Unless you have perhaps a decade or two of very relevant experience, the door will be closed to the majority of really interesting positions in the humanitarian sphere, at least internationally. Networking while it is omnipresent in every sector, it is less important, I think, than in most private sectors. What people will get through contacts is they'll get put on the right track with the right advice. That is where networking will really help you, at least in my experience in this sphere of work.
  • The Red Cross Movement: A Primer

    The Red Cross: the name is synonymous with the alleviation of suffering in disasters and emergencies worldwide. But, did you know that this movement—which is the largest humanitarian network in the world—is not a single organization, but a vast worldwide network?
  • Recruitment practices for humanitarian work positions

    What organizations look for in a humanitarian worker, and what to expect on those highly secretive "recruitment days".

About

Travel with purpose; travel for good. Articles, resources and events for ethical and meaningful travel, volunteering, working and studying abroad.

Verge believes in travel for change. International experience creates global citizens, who can change our planet for the better. This belief is at the core of everything we do.

Vol. 2023 - Issue 1

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