
Working under the overall direction of the Chief of Mission, and under the direct supervision of the Team Leader of the Korea Visa Application Center (KVAC), the intern will assist with the daily operational
activities of the KVAC. Tasks will be included.
Assist the KVAC team on daily activities, including but not limited to receiving and sort visa
applications delivered by post, passport and document logistics, ordering visa application
supporting documents according to relevant checklist.
Assist the KVAC team on document completeness checks for certain visa types, including but not
limited to university degree (D-2), Korean language trainee (D-4), Exchange student (D-2-6),
confirmation of visa issuance (CVI) visa applications, in due coordination with the Visa Support
Assistant.
Assist the KVAC team with communications to the beneficiaries, following the standard operating procedures in place, including contacting visa applicants for missing documents or for passport collection.
Attend project meetings and training sessions with the project coordinator and other KVAC teams (Paris, London, The Hague, and Ulaanbaatar).
Assist the KVAC team with the preparation of daily, weekly, and monthly reports.
Undertake any other task that may be assigned.
Student or graduate; preferably in colleague of Humanities and Social Sciences or similar.

Established in 1951, the International Organization for Migration is the leading intergovernmental organization in the field of migration and is committed to the principle that humane and orderly migration benefits migrants and society.
IOM works with its partners in the international community to assist in meeting the growing operational challenges of migration, advance understanding of migration issues, encourage social and economic development through migration and uphold the well-being and human rights of migrants.
More people are on the move today than at any other time in recorded history: 1 billion people – comprising a seventh of humanity. A variety of elements – not least the information and communications revolutions – contribute to the movement of people on such a large scale. The forces driving migration as a priority issue are: climate change, natural and manmade catastrophes, conflict, the demographic trends of an ageing industrialized population, an exponentially expanding jobless youth population in the developing world and widening North–South social and economic disparities.