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The role of women

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Famous female political leaders such as Cleopatra VII, Isabella I, and Elizabeth I were enormously influential in the history of diplomatic relations, but historically women largely played a secondary—but substantial—role as the wives of diplomats. Without large fortunes or many servants, diplomatic wives were forced to shoulder greater burdens as they coped with a nomadic lifestyle, housewifery, hectic social schedules, and endless cooking for obligatory entertaining. The strain became so severe that many ambassadors retired early. In response, Japan adopted the practice of paying diplomatic wives a salary to compensate them for the time they spent entertaining. In 1972 the United States stopped evaluating wives in rating their spouses; entertaining and attending functions were no longer required, though they were still expected. Diplomatic wives also increasingly wished to pursue their own careers. Some of these were portable; if not, efforts were made with host countries to permit employment.

In 1923 the Soviet Union became the first country to name a woman as head of a diplomatic mission. The United States, which began admitting women into the newly established American career service only in 1925, followed a decade later by appointing a woman as minister to Denmark. France permitted a woman to enter its diplomatic service by examination in 1930, though at the time it still did not appoint women as heads of missions.

After World War II, increasing numbers of women were making a career of diplomacy, and more women became ambassadors, both by political appointment and by career progression. Despite these changes, some countries, particularly in the developing world, continued not to hire women as diplomats, and sending women envoys to them was deemed unwise. In 1970, for example, the Vatican rejected a proposed minister from West Germany because she was female. With these exceptions, however, women became an accepted and rapidly growing minority in the diplomatic, including the ambassadorial, ranks. As the 20th century closed, a number of American women, some accompanied by dependent spouses, were serving as ambassadors in Arab and Islamic countries long considered inhospitable to women.

Before this trend began, women seemed to face almost insuperable difficulties in combining marriage with the nomadic career of diplomacy. After 1971 the U.S. Foreign Service no longer required women to resign upon marriage, but if the husband's profession was not easily movable, problems arose. These problems were particularly pronounced for “tandem couples,” in which both husband and wife were in the Foreign Service. Since postings together to large embassies or to a department headquarters could not always be arranged, husband and wife often would alternate in taking leave when not posted in adjacent countries. Despite these problems, at the end of the 20th century, the U.S. Foreign Service employed more than 500 tandem couples, including more than one pair serving simultaneously as ambassadors.


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