Foreign Affairs and International Topics

Foreign affairs is a key issue in United States history. The Department of State is designated to lead in the overall direction, coordination, and supervision of American foreign policy and foreign relations, but records relating to your topic might be found among the files of other agencies, too. Since World War II, a community of agencies has evolved to deal specifically with foreign policy issues. In addition, many other agencies have taken on important roles in American national security affairs. The subject and focus of your research will determine the most appropriate records for you to use.

Much policy development takes place in the White House and is documented in the files of the Presidents and their extended staffs. The records and files of all Presidents since Herbert Hoover are located in the Presidential Libraries operated by the National Archives and Records Administration. In addition to White House files, the Libraries hold the files of the National Security Council and its staff and other high-level organizations.

Congress also has a role in American foreign policy. The Senate provides advice and consent to all treaties, and many committees have oversight on issues relating to foreign affairs. Of most importance are the records of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. The work of other committees also may touch on foreign relations matters and Congress has established numerous temporary committees and sub-committees to study special issues and matters relating to U.S. foreign affairs.

As you begin preparations for conducting research at the National Archives, we suggest you consult this FAQ on how to make your research visit more successful.

This reference paper on Getting Started provides information on the process for requesting records for use in the Research Room and the steps necessary to locate the information needed to prepare a pull slip.

This reference paper on Citing the Records contains useful guidance.

Links to more detailed information are found below.

Assistance from NARA Staff

As noted in the FAQ, communicating with the Reference Staff at the National Archives before you visit is likely to improve the results of your research experience. This is especially true in the following instances:

  1. if the records are dated from the 1960s and later
  2. if you are dealing with agencies involved with foreign affairs, intelligence, and law enforcement
  3. if you do not have precise file number citations to the files of various agencies or National Archives record group and entry numbers
  4. or if you are unsure that records exist

While the reference staff cannot undertake your research for you, they can do some preliminary work in order to identify the file categories in the Department of State’s central files likely to contain documentation of interest or locate other series with pertinent records. Doing that work takes time, however. It cannot be done effectively while you are waiting in the Research Room.

Reference staff is available at the National Archives at College Park Research Room from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, except legal holidays. For those wanting a more in-depth explanation of the records or with difficult or advanced research projects, a specialist in foreign affairs records is available for consultation. The specialist is in the National Archives at College Park Textual Research Room every Tuesday morning from 9AM to 10AM, and by request at other times subject to availability, and can answer questions about the organization and content of the records and help you plan a research strategy.

How to Approach Doing Research in Foreign Affairs Records

Here are some very basic hints on how to approach undertaking research in the records of the foreign affairs agencies. This guidance should be most helpful to novice researchers but can help those with more experience undertaking new avenues of research or working with different records for the first time.

Begin with FRUS

The Central Files of the Department of State

Beyond the Central Files/Other Agencies

Our Foreign Affairs Web Pages

To assist with preparing for a research visit, the National Archives has prepared this set of web pages. Here, you will find an explanation of the records of the Department of State and related foreign affairs agencies, including those of a temporary nature established during World War I and World War II and the more permanent agencies created during the Cold War. These pages include information on the following:

Department of State

World War I Special Agencies

World War II and Aftermath Records

Cold War Agencies

Genealogical Records

Department of State Publications and Websites

Other Agencies Relating to Foreign Affairs

Other Web Pages

The web pages listed below ink to sites that include information about records of interest to the foreign affairs researcher:

NARA Resources

[table striped="true" responsive="true"]
[large-box title="" icon="" icon-alt="" ] [/large-box]
[large-box title="" icon="" icon-alt="" ] [/large-box]
[large-box title="" icon="" icon-alt="" ] [/large-box]
[large-box title="" icon="" icon-alt="" ] [/large-box]
[/table]

Non-NARA Resources

[table striped="true" responsive="true"]
[large-box title="" icon="" icon-alt="" ] [/large-box]
[large-box title="" icon="" icon-alt="" ] [/large-box]
[large-box title="" icon="" icon-alt="" ][/large-box]
[large-box title="" icon="" icon-alt="" ] [/large-box]
[/table]

[free-text-block title="Foreign Affairs Research" ] [/free-text-block]
[free-text-block title="Other NARA Resources" ] [/free-text-block]