Hi everyone! 
I finish Year 12 last year not so sure as what I wanted to do. As I progressed through school I developed an interest in both Theology and working abroad. My career dream as such is that of peacemaking in terms of religious tensions, maybe working with a multilateral organisation such as the U.N. etc.
During the application period last year I applied for a Bachelor of Arts (Global) at Monash and was accepted. But I didn't think it was entirely for me and eventually applied for a discontinuation of my course.
Now I'm at the application process again, and I'm sort of stuck. I've seen some very cool courses and am especially interested in the Bachelor of International Studies at Deakin as it seems right up my alley, but again I'm not so sure if it'll help with employment etc. (All those silly worries).
I was wondering if anyone have any feedback about that course, or maybe about a different course entirely? As I'm just really quite unsure.
Thank you! 
Just a random point.
You should think about why you want to work for the UN and the whole NATO/EU/IMF conglomerate.
As difficult as this is for me to say, they are all rather sinister organisations. If you want to work in aid/humanitarian stuff, don't work for them. Work for other organisations instead. There are many organisations that don't have the dodgy behind-the-scenes-unelected- bureaucracy that the organisations listed above have.
If you want to know why I said the above, PM me and I'll send you a whole bunch of info when I get time. The idea of 'peacemaking' through NATO/UN is a farce; every day they announce the aim to make 'world peace' and end starvation and save all children, and yet they still fund and are funded by huge weapons companies and call for war without proper analysis of circumstances. The recent NATO 'war talks' about Russia are a clear example of this.
Actually I'll just paste some stuff below.
These are some quotes from prominent EU proponents and illustrate their over-arching arrogance:
"We are working discreetly ........ and all the time we are denying with our lips what we are doing with our hands." - Arnold Toynbee - Historical researcher and founding father of the EU
"I have never understood why public opinion about European ideas should be taken into account." - Raymond Barre, former French Prime Minister
The following quote is from the founder of the European Movement, Jean Monnet in a private correspondence.
"Europe's nations should be guided towards the super state without their people understanding what is happening. This can be accomplished by successive steps, each disguised as having an economic purpose, but which will eventually and irreversibly lead to federation."
Jean Monnet again on 3rd April 1952: "The fusion of economic functions would compel nations to fuse their sovereignty into that of a single European State"
"It is as well to state this at the outset - no government dependent on a democratic vote could possibly agree in advance to the sacrifices which any adequate plan for European Union must involve. The people must be led slowly and unconsciously into the abandonment of their traditional economic defences....... No satisfactory economic plan for Europe can be devised without sacrifice of sovereignty by the nations concerned." - Peter Thorneycroft MP, June 1947
"I have never understood why public opinion about European ideas should be taken into account." - Raymond Barre, former French Prime Minister
This was Edward Heath in 1972:
"There is no question of eroding any national sovereignty; there is no blueprint for a federal Europe. There are some in this country who fear that in going into Europe, we shall in some way sacrifice independence and sovereignty. These fears I need hardly say are completely unjustified"
He later admitted to lying to both parliament and the British people. The same Edward Heath in 1990, in response to the question "Did you have in mind a United States of Europe in 1972?" replied "Of course, yes"
"Transforming the European Union into a single State with one army, one constitution and one foreign policy is the critical challenge of the age" - Joschka Fischer, German Foreign Minister The Guardian, London, 26th November 1998
"The Europe of Maastricht could only have been created in the absence of democracy." - Clause Cheysson, former French Foreign Secretary
"Above all, the European Economic Community Takes away Britain's freedom to follow the sort of economic policies we need." - Tony Blair, when standing for Parliament in 1982
"We'll negotiate a withdrawal from the EEC, which has drained our natural resources and destroyed jobs." - Tony Blair, when standing for Parliament in 1997
Then, Tony Blair, speaking to the EU in 2005: "I am a passionate pro-European. I always have been."
"We know that nine out of 10 people will not have read the Constitution and will vote on the basis of what politicians and journalists say. More than that, if the answer is No, the vote will probably have to be done again, because it absolutely has to be Yes. " - Jean-Luc Dehaene, Former Belgian Prime Minister and Vice-President of the EU Convention, Irish Times, 2nd June 2004