Public Diplomacy Fellow 2022-2024

Our current public diplomacy fellow is Chris Teal. Previously he was the director of the State Department’s Career Development and Assignments Mid-Level Division, heading up a 35-member team in charge of global diplomatic assignments for Mid-Level Foreign Service Officers, some 9,000 officials in total.

He also served a faculty assignment at the Inter-American Defense College at Fort McNair in Washington, D.C.  There he taught graduate classes to senior-level Latin American officials on diplomacy, civil/military relations, human rights, peace keeping, and media/security policy. 

Prior to that, Chris was awarded the Una Chapman Cox Fellowship, where he directed, wrote, and produced a documentary on the first African American diplomat, Ebenezer D. Bassett.  The film, A Diplomat of Consequence, tells the story of this groundbreaking diplomat 150 years after his appointment. 

Christopher Teal speaks on camera while seated

Overseas assignments include Consul General at the U.S. Consulate in Nogales, Mexico, and public affairs positions in Sri Lanka; Mexico; Peru; and the Dominican Republic.  At the State Department, he also held public affairs positions in the European Bureau and at the Foreign Press Center.

Before joining the Foreign Service, Chris worked with award-winning journalist Juan Williams on their biography Thurgood Marshall: American Revolutionary about the former U.S. Supreme Court Justice. Published In 1998, The New York Times listed it among its most notable nonfiction works of the year.  Chris also wrote a biography about Ebenezer Bassett, entitled Hero of Hispaniola, published in 2008.

Chris has a B.A. from the University of Arkansas and an M.A. from George Washington University’s Columbian College, where he graduated in 1997.

Other Public Diplomacy Fellows over the years are:

2019-2021 Emilia A. Puma

2018-2019 Karl Stoltz

2017-2018 Robert Ogburn

2015-2015 Thomas Miller

2014-2015 Patricia Kabra

2013-2014 Jonathan Henick