AFS alumni are Active Global Citizens: people whose informed, compassionate, and ethical compass drives them to lead lives and make decisions that contribute to a better world.

AFS alumni are making an impact across industries, in the private and public sectors and at the forefront of important international issues and social causes. For some, helping others is their life’s work. For many, volunteerism and social action are central to their personal values.

AFS Alumni Open Up About the Impact of AFS

Anders Adlercreutz, Minister for European Affairs in the Government of Finland and AFS alumnus (Finland to Portugal, 1987)

AFS taught me a lot about myself. It built my confidence, it showed me that I can adapt, overcome obstacles, wander outside my comfort zone. It was instrumental in helping me make the decision to start studying architecture. And on a more practical level, it gave me not only a new language but also the keys to Latin culture as a whole.

Anders Adlercreutz is the Minister for European Affairs and Ownership Steering in the Government of Finland, responsible for matters related to the European Union like representing Finland in the EU General Affairs Council. He studied abroad with AFS in 1987, going from Finland to Portugal, and has also served as a host family with AFS Finland several times. Find out more.

Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank and AFS alumna (France to USA, 1973)

I got to learn so much. Discovering a new culture, learning a new language, studying at a new school or interning at the U.S. Capitol in Washington D.C. during the Watergate hearings. Should I have ever felt homesick, my AFS host family, the Atkins, were always there to provide support, warmth and affection, and a home away from home. Thank you.

These are the words of Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank and AFS alumna (France to USA, 1973), speaking to the impact of AFS exchange programs. Ms Lagarde recorded a powerful video message on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of AFS exchanges, celebrated by our global Network of organizations in 2022. 

Gabriel Boric, President of Chile and AFS alumnus (Chile to France, 2001)

Chile’s youngest president elected in December 2021, Gabriel Boric, studied abroad with AFS in 2001 (to France). More than 20 years after his AFS exchange program, on the night he was elected President of  Chile, Boric famously called his host family in France to share the good news.

Boric became a leader of education protests across the country in 2011, in which thousands of students demanded free, high-quality education for all. He was elected to Chile’s congress and served two terms as a deputy, becoming one of the first members of congress to come from beyond Chile’s two traditional coalitions in the process.

brian atwood 2

Remarks from an AFS alumnus

Measure your own worth by what you give, not by what you take

“Go forth from this experience and dedicate yourself to giving back to society. Embrace the beautiful diversity of the human race. Take the best from every society and apply it to your own. Measure your own worth by what you give, not by what you take. The future of the world is in your hands now. I have every confidence that you will leave it in a better place.”—Brian Atwood at the AFS Youth Assembly in New York City, August 2023.

An AFS student in Luxembourg, Atwood has chaired the AFS International Board of Trustees. He served as the Head of the world’s largest bilateral foreign aid agency, the US Agency for International Development and has chaired the OECD Development Assistance Committee. He has been a professor at Harvard, Brown and dean of the Hubert Humphrey School at the University of Minnesota. He believes that the key to world peace is intercultural understanding foreign relations.

Find out more

The Impact of an AFS exchange on life and career. A report on a Global AFS Alumni Survey

Explore our new, global research report, Creating Global Citizens: The AFS Effect, focusing on the Impact of an AFS exchange on life and career. This report is the first large-scale, global survey of the AFS alumni community based on responses from over 10,500 former AFS participants across 80 countries.

Explore the Report
In over 70+ years of AFS study abroad programs, our alumni have gone on to achieve some impressive accomplishments in their careers. Here is a (by no means extensive) list of some of AFS alumni are:
  • Anders Adlercreutz is the Minister for European Affairs and Ownership Steering in the Government of Finland, responsible for matters related to the European Union like representing Finland in the EU General Affairs Council. He studied abroad with AFS in 1987, going from Finland to Portugal, and has also served as a host family with AFS Finland several times. Read his interview with AFS where he talks about how his AFS experiences have impacted his life and career.
  • Chile’s youngest ever president elected in December 2021, Gabriel Boric, studied abroad with AFS in 2001 (to France). Boric became a leader of education protests across the country in 2011, in which thousands of students demanded free, high-quality education for all. He was elected to Chile’s congress and served two terms as a deputy, becoming one of the first congresspeople to come from beyond Chile’s two traditional coalitions in the process.
  • César Augusto Gaviria Trujillo served as the President of Colombia from 1990 to 1994. In 1964, he went on an AFS high school exchange to the U.S—Fresno, California, staying with the Watt family. Gaviria is a Colombian economist and politician who was also Secretary General of the Organization of American States from 1994 to 2004 and National Director of the Colombian Liberal Party from 2005 to 2009.
  • NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel (USA) studied abroad with AFS in Italy and, today, is a member of the President’s Council at AFS-USA. Hear him speak to the importance of AFS, the immense value of AFS-USA’s Volunteers, and his hope that we will soon be able to resume AFS’ in-person exchanges restricted by the Covid-19 pandemic.
  • Ravinatha P. Aryasinha (Sri Lanka) studied abroad with AFS in 1978. In 2020 he started his service as Sri Lanka’s Ambassador Designate to the United States of America, having previously served in various diplomatic positions such as the Foreign Secretary, Ambassador, Permanent Representative to the United Nations and Consul General. A pioneer in the setting up of Rupavahini – Sri Lanka TV, he was a Political Correspondent before starting his political career.
  • Pedro de Castro da Cunha e Menezes (Brazil) is a career diplomat who works at ICMBio (Brazil’s  National Parks Service). He is the former permanent representative of Brazil at the United Nations Environmental Organization and a Brazilian negotiator at the World Environmental Conventions about climate change, biodiversity, conservation. 
  • Álvaro Carrasco Arriaza (Chile) is the Executive Director and creator of “Brave Up”, an organization that prevents and educates about cyberbullying and school harassment. Through technology and workshops, “Brave Up” creates safe environments and fosters inclusion in schools. 
  • Alessandra Pellizzeri (Italy) is a Programme Officer at the Peacebuilding Fund at the United Nations for Sub-Saharan countries. In 2018 she worked in Niger, Burkina Faso, Mauritania and Nigeria to tackle local conflicts, including preventing violent extremism among youth and women, working cross-border projects to promote peace and social cohesion between local communities.
  • Joanne Berger-Sweeney, PhD, (USA) President of Trinity College (in Connecticut, USA) and a member of AFS-USA’s Board of Directors. Joanne is the first woman and the first African American to be the President of Trinity College. In 2018, she was appointed to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 
  • Dr. Kentaro Onishi (Japan) has a sports physician for the International Olympic Committee since the 2018 PyeongChang Games. Meet Kentaro in his interview with AFS.
  • Austrian researcher and economist Gudrun Biffl (Austria to USA, 1966), was awarded the Gabriele Possanner Appreciation Award 2017 in recognition of her scientific lifetime achievement in the field of economics and gender studies.
  • Social entrepreneur Vandré Luis Meneses Brilhante (Brazil to USA, 1987) founded the Centro Integrado de Estudo e Programas de Desenvolvimento Sustentável (Integrated Center for Sustainable Development Studies and Programs), which partners with public and private institutions throughout Brazil. Over the past 20 years, the Center has delivered more than 400 social impact projects serving 500,000+  Brazilians.
  • Tech innovator Regina Agyare Honu (Ghana to Norway, 2000), Ghanaian changemaker and founder of Soronko Academy and Tech for Girls, was named one of the BBC 100 Women for empowering women and girls with technology skills. Since 2020, Regina has been serving on the AFS International Board of Trustees. Meet Regina in her interview with AFS.
  • Motivated by the desire to empower young people with intercultural understanding, respect for differences and foreign language skills, Jenny K. Messner (USA to Brazil, 1970) and her husband, Michael Messner, established the Speedwell Foundation Study Abroad Scholarship Program. The Foundation also supports inner-city education, college scholarships, and the restoration and expansion of urban parks and green spaces. “My exchange to Brazil in 1970 so profoundly changed my life that when I was able to give back, I knew exactly what I would do […] The program we created with AFS is one of the best returns on investment that we have experienced.”
  • Social entrepreneur Jason Grullón (Dominican Republic to Germany, 2008) co-founded the ethical fashion company, Virtù, which promotes fair prices and empowers the people and communities (in the Dominican Republic and around the world) that produce his quality clothes. The CEO credits his AFS experiences with his motivation to help others. “My AFS experience is so ingrained in the way I approach both personal and business decisions that I consider it one of the main drivers of my ventures.”
  • After spending 16 years helping build Amazon into a groundbreaking global empire, Diego Piacentini (Italy to USA, 1977) made a major mid-career pivot to put his international business experience to work for his home country. The former vice president of Amazon’s international consumer business provided pro bono services to the Italian government. While on leave from Amazon, he acted as the Government Commissioner for the Digital Agenda leading Italy’s digital transformation by simplifying the relationship between the public administration, citizens and businesses. Like technology, Diego claims that his “[study abroad] experience was a real game changer.”
  • “The fundamental richness of human beings is in understanding the other,” says Susana Malcorra (Argentina to USA, 1971), the former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Argentina. An engineer by training, these words have served the former Head of the Executive Office at the United Nations well in her impressive career in public service. Over the years the Argentine alumna has advocated for intercultural dialogue as a tool for resolving global challenges such as the current refugee crisis and fostering peace in the world. Having served as Chief Operating Officer and Deputy Executive Director of the World Food Programme, Susana also knows first hand what it takes to provide humanitarian aid in more than 80 countries.
  • Anies Rasyid Baswedan, Ph. D., Governor of Jakarta, Indonesia (Indonesia to USA, 1987) founded the “Gerakan Indonesia Mengajar” (Teaching Indonesia Movement), which enables young educators to volunteer at elementary schools and donate books to schools and children in rural areas. Recognized for his groundbreaking accomplishments, Anies was the moderator of the historic and first presidential debate in the country, the youngest president of a university and the spokesperson for a national anti-corruption group.
  • The work of Ulrike Lunacek, former Vice-President of the European Parliament (Austria to USA, 1973), in foreign affairs positions her as an ideal advocate for civil liberties and human rights—including the rights of women, ethnic and sexual minorities. Ulrike also promotes fair trade and corporate social responsibility to protect the environment. This global citizen was the first openly lesbian politician in her home country, Austria, and the first openly lesbian woman to hold a senior position in a European Union institution. In 2014, Ulrike handed Pope Francis a rainbow scarf (as a symbol for peace, indigenous peoples and the LGBTQ community) on his visit to the European Parliament.
  • Morten Kjærum, Director of the Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (Denmark to USA, 1974) is a longtime human rights activist with an impressive track record. Morten created and led the Danish Institute for Human Rights (DIHR) from 1991 to 2008 and then became the first director of the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights. Today, he is the Director of the Raoul Wallenberg Institute in Sweden, which promotes universal respect for human rights and humanitarian law, in affiliation with Lund University. For six years Morten was a member of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and today he is the chair of ECRE—the biggest non-governmental network of humanitarian organizations assisting refugees in Europe.
  • Jakub Walenda, Chair of Gemeinsam TECHO e.V. (Germany to Chile, 2011) and Maddalena Andolfato, Volunteer for TECHO (Italy to Costa Rica, 2014): These two outstanding AFS alumni from different countries volunteer for TECHO, a youth-led non-profit organization. TECHO collaborates with local families in 19 Latin American countries and the Caribbean to eradicate extreme poverty. Jakub Walenda was the first chair of the TECHO volunteer organization in Germany after returning from his AFS program in Chile. Under his leadership, TECHO Germany has raised money, recruited hundreds of young volunteers and enabled dozens of young people to become changemakers. As a Europe Coordinator, Jakub helped establish volunteer teams in Belgium, France, UK, Switzerland and Germany, raising approximately USD 150,000 for social projects in Latin America. During her AFS program in Costa Rica, Maddalena Andolfato was deeply impacted by her volunteering experiences for TECHO. In a powerful gesture of support, Maddalena celebrated her 18th birthday with a crowdfunding campaign that raised over 7,000 EUR—enough for two houses in Costa Rica, and the campaign is still open.
  • Margaret Marshall J.D., Senior Counsel, Choate, Hall & Stewart LLP, Boston, USA (South Africa to USA, 1962) began her lifelong journey as a human rights advocate leading the National Union of South African Students’ fight against apartheid while attending college in Johannesburg. Over the years, many milestones have marked her distinguished legal career. She was the first woman to hold positions such as Vice President and General Counsel of Harvard University and Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. As Chief Justice, Marshall wrote the landmark 2003 decision in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health to allow same-sex marriage in Massachusetts. The ruling helped spark the marriage equality debate worldwide. Chief Justice Marshall is the recipient of many honorary degrees and other professional awards, including an honorary degree from her undergraduate alma mater in South Africa, and one from her law school alma mater, Yale University. In 2014, Marshall’s contributions to civil rights and civil liberties were recognized by the American Bar Association with the prestigious Thurgood Marshall Award, named for the late Justice Marshall who was the first African American to sit on the United States Supreme Court.
  • From negotiating conflict resolutions to providing critical humanitarian aid, Jan Eliasson, former Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations (Sweden to USA, 1957), has devoted his life to the service of others. Today, the former Swedish Foreign Minister and Ambassador to the U.S. serves as the Deputy Secretary General and second-in-command of the United Nations. In keeping with his roots as a key UN mediator and human relief director, Eliasson helped launch the Human Rights Up Front initiative, which represents an important step forward for human rights at the UN. Rights Up Front ensures that the UN System (which includes specialized agencies and affiliated organizations) takes early and effective action to prevent or respond to large-scale violations of human rights or international humanitarian law.
  • So, does AFS provide an adventure of a lifetime—or the promise of a lifetime of adventure? For Samantha Cristoforetti, European Space Agency Astronaut on the International Space Station (Italy to USA, 1994), both are true. Italian Air Force Captain Cristoforetti started her “out of this world” journey with a visit to the U.S. Space Camp during her AFS exchange. Today, she is the first Italian woman in space. On November 23, 2014, Cristoforetti and two other astronauts successfully docked at the International Space Station. Her mission included a variety of scientific experiments. A true inspiration to the next generation of space travelers, the U.S. Space Camp Hall of Famer enjoys communicating with space enthusiasts on Twitter as @AstroSamantha. She also serves as the spokesperson for Mission X: Train Like an Astronaut, which engages children ages 8 to 12 in science, fitness and nutrition activities.
  • Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank (France to USA, 1973) was ranked the fifth most powerful woman in the world in 2014 by Forbes magazine. She previously served at the head of the International Monitory Fund (IMF), and as the French Finance Minister has urged policymakers to reform fiscal policies, invest in infrastructure and create jobs. The noted antitrust and labor lawyer and longtime advocate for women’s equality has also renewed the IMF’s efforts to strengthen the role of women in the world economy.
  • Matthew Naylor, Ph.D., President and CEO, The National World War I Museum and Memorial, USA (Australia to USA, 1980), joined the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City (USA) just in time to oversee the highly anticipated 100th centennial commemoration of the Great War, which he describes as “the most dramatic period of social change in human history.” Ranked one of the top 25 museums in the United States and top 10 museums devoted to military history, the museum holds the most diverse collection of WWI objects and documents in the world, including objects of the American Field Service. It is also known for its dynamic public programs, often hosting scholars from around the world.
  • Renat Heuberger, CEO of South Pole Carbon (Switzerland, 1993): Who says you can’t do good and build a successful business? Social entrepreneur Renat Heuberger has turned his passion for sustainability into a thriving international enterprise headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland, with 12 offices worldwide and operations in 25 countries. South Pole Group helps companies reach their sustainability targets through innovative, award-winning products and solutions that address climate change and promote renewable energy. Partnering with over 1,000 leading global companies, South Pole Group has enabled around 300 projects worldwide in the field of renewable energy, energy efficiency, waste handling, agriculture and forestry. These projects reduced 50 million tons of CO2, saved over 20,000 hectares of forests (approximately 77 square miles or 200 square kilometers) and created more than 20,000 jobs.
  • Isais Salas Herrera, M.D., Ph.D., Director of National Center for Pain Control and Palliative Care, Costa Rica (Costa Rica to USA, 1971) has dedicated his impressive career to improving the quality of life of patients suffering from acute and chronic pain. His research and clinical work in pain management and palliative care helps patients with cancer, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases and other debilitating illnesses. Palliative care takes a holistic approach to relieving physical, psychological, social and spiritual pain, and to compassionate end-of-life care. An internationally recognized pioneer in this field, Herrera founded the National Center for Pain Control and Palliative Care. This network of 45 centers serve between 60,000 to 70,000 patients and their families annually, offering low-cost and free medical care and assistance to those in need.

My years with AFS have taught me that there are different ways of achieving the same goal. That is extremely important to build a global consensus for environmental objectives. Although everyone wants a healthy planet, different cultures see different paths for achieving that goal. 

Pedro de Castro da Cunha e Menezes (Brazil)

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