During her early life, Madeleine Albright’s father was a diplomat and he openly supported the Czech diplomats. Her father was serving as press-attache in Belgrade’s Czech Embassy when Madeleine Albright was born (Hirsh 1999). The family went into an exile because of the Munich Agreement in 1938 as Czechoslovakia got disintegrated by Adolf Hitler. She spent the war years in England while her father was posted in Benes. In England, Madeleine Albright was taken as a refugee child in a film that was made in order to promote feelings of sympathy for the war refugees that were based in London.
When the Nazis got defeated, the family moved back to Prague. Her father was later named as Czechoslovak Ambassador to Yugoslavia and thus the family moved to Belgrade. She was sent to Prealpina Institut in Chexbres, Switzerland where she learned French. She spent her teenage years in Denver and did her graduation from the Kent School in 1955. She also attended Wellesley College from where she majored in political science and thus did her graduation in 1959. She became a US citizen in 1957. As far as her political developments were concerned, Madeleine Albright joined the Georgetown University in Washington, DC as a lecturer in political science and international relations.
She specialized in teaching Eastern European Studies. She also headed the University’s initiative to address the role of women in global politics. She briefed the Vice-Presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro in 1984 and the Presidential candidate Michael Dukakis in 1988, but unfortunately both the campaigns saw defeat at the end. In the year 1992, Bill Clinton became the President of the US and Madeleine Albright was given the responsibility to look after the transition to the new administration at the National Security Council (Mihalkanin 2004).
In 1993, Clinton appointed her as the US
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