Radcliffe Fellowship Program in science, engineering, and mathematics
A fellowship year at Harvard Radcliffe Institute is an opportunity to step away from usual routines and dive deeply into a project.
A fellowship year at Harvard Radcliffe Institute is an opportunity to step away from usual routines and dive deeply into a project.
The Lisa Jardine Grant Scheme is named in memory of the eminent British historian Professor Lisa Jardine CBE FRS. The scheme encourages early career researchers to expand their interests in history of science and related interdisciplinary studies by travelling in order to use archival resources, to build relationships with the Royal Society and other institutions and to access training and networking opportunities for career development.
**Application Deadline: January 12, 2025 (Sun) 5:00pm EST
**Recommendation Letters Deadline: January 26, 2025 (Sun) 5:00pm EST
Department/Areas: social sciences; especially global Korean diaspora, Korea-US relations, international relations, and/or political economy
IAS CEU offers annually one Writer in Residence fellowship and one Visual/New Media Artist in Residence fellowship to provide selected artists with opportunities to conceptualize and create new works. These two residential fellowships (up to 5 months each with a minimum stay of 3 months) are offered on a competitive basis to writers and visual artists, working in creative writing (such as poetry, prose, drama, screen and playwriting) and in various visual media, including film and digital applications.
Applications are invited for a 3-year position as postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Psychology, University of Oslo. An extension of up to one year can be considered with the addition of up to 25% teaching and administrative duties, depending on the competence of the applicant and the needs of the department. The position is co-funded by the Research Council of Norway and the University of Oslo as part of a Large-scale Interdisciplinary Researcher Project (Fellesløftet).
The Human Past Residential Fellowship Programme, an initiative by the Center for the Human Past, is designed to foster a collaborative environment where early-stage and established scholars can converge across a wide range of disciplines, such as archaeology, population genetics and historical linguistics. These fields collectively explore the shared history of the world’s populations over the past 10,000 years, a period marked by the advent of agrarian food production, population growth and linguistic changes, as well as the emergence of early civilizations.
This programme gives renowned scientists from abroad the opportunity to cooperate with a Berlin host to set up their own research group. In contrast to typical visiting fellows who stay at an institution for one term, the goal of the Einstein Visiting Fellowship is to integrate researchers into Berlin’s science community on a sustainable basis. The programme thus enables the Berlin universities and Charité – Universitätsmedizin to establish long-term collaborations with the Einstein Visiting Fellow’s home institution.
BGC Visiting Fellowship applications for the 2025–26 academic year are now open; applications are due Saturday, March 1, 2025, at 11:59 pm EST. Fulbright applicants for the 2026–27 academic year are on a different timeline; please see below for more detail.