NOTE: Many deadlines are anticipated deadlines, based on prior application cycles. Please check deadlines with the funding sources.
Minority Dissertation Fellowship
DEADLINE: February 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: An applicant must be a U.S. citizen who (1) is a member of an historically underrepresented ethnic minority group, including, but not limited to, African Americans, Alaskan Natives, American Indians or Native Americans, Asian Americans, Latino/as, Chicano/as, and Pacific Islanders; (2) is and has been a member of the AAA at least one month prior to submitting materials for this fellowship; (3) has a record of outstanding academic achievement; (4) is enrolled in a full-time academic program leading to a doctoral degree in anthropology; and (5) will be admitted to degree candidacy before the dissertation fellowship is awarded. The recipient of the fellowship must be in need of a fellowship to complete the dissertation.
ABSTRACT: The AAA invites minority doctoral candidates in anthropology who require financial assistance to complete the write-up phase of the dissertation to apply for a dissertation writing fellowship. The fellowship is intended to encourage members of ethnic minorities to complete doctoral degrees in anthropology, thereby increasing diversity in the discipline and/or promoting research on issues of concern among minority populations. Dissertation topics in all areas of the discipline are welcome.
URL: http://www.aaanet.org/about/Prizes-Awards/Minority-Dissertation-Fellowship.cfm
Short-Term Visiting Academic Research Fellowships
Peterson Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Doctoral candidates may apply.
ABSTRACT: The fellowships are for research on any topic supported by the collections. They are awarded to individuals engaged in scholarly research and writing, including doctoral dissertations, in any field of American history and culture through 1876.
URL: http://www.americanantiquarian.org/acafellowship.htm
American Dissertation Fellowships
DEADLINE: November 16, 2009. Applications must be submitted online by the deadline.
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be female U.S. citizens or permanent residents as of November 15, 2009. Applicants must have completed all coursework, passed all preliminary exams, and had the dissertation research proposal or plan approved by November 15, 2009. Students already holding a fellowship for the purpose of writing the dissertation the year before the fellowship year are not eligible to apply. Applicants may apply up to two times for a fellowship for the same dissertation project.
CITIZENSHIP: U.S. citizens are eligible.
ABSTRACT: Dissertation Fellowships offset a scholar's living expenses while she completes her dissertation. The fellowship must be used for the final year of writing the dissertation. Dissertation Fellows are not required to work in the USA. Funds may not be used for extended field research. American Fellowships are open to scholars in all fields of study.
URL: http://www.aauw.org/fga/fellowships_grants/american.cfm
International Fellowships
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009. Applications must be submitted online by 5:00 P.M., central time.
ELIGIBILITY: To be eligible for an International Fellowship, applicants must meet the following criteria:
1. Citizenship in a country other than the United States (dual citizenship is not allowed) or possession of a non-immigrant visa if residing in the United States;
2. Academic degree (earned in the U.S. or abroad) equivalent to a U.S. bachelor's degree completed by September 30, 2009;
3. Intention to devote herself full-time to the proposed academic plan during the fellowship year;
4. Intention to return to her home country to pursue a professional career;
5. Enrollment in an institution located in the United States. Applicants should note that foreign branches of U.S. institutions are considered outside of the U.S.
ABSTRACT: The International Fellowship program provides support for one year of graduate or postgraduate study in the United States to women who are not U.S. citizens or permanent residents. Women holding dual citizenship in the U.S. and another country are not eligible. Fellowships are available for study in the United States. A limited number of awards are available to women who are members of the International Federation of University Women for study or research in any country other than their own. Up to six International Fellowships will be renewable for a second year; renewal instructions will be provided to fellows during their fellowship year.
URL: http://www.aauw.org/fga/fellowships_grants/international.cfm
Law and Social Science Dissertation Fellowship and Mentoring Program
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Third-, fourth, and fifth year graduate students who specialize in the field of law and social science and whose research interests include law and inequality are invited to apply. Fellowship applicants should be students in a Ph.D. program in a social science department or an interdisciplinary program. Humanities students pursuing empirically based social science dissertations are welcome to apply.
CITIZENSHIP: U.S. citizens and permanent residents are eligible.
ABSTRACT: The Law and Society Association, in collaboration with the American Bar Foundation and the National Science Foundation , seeks applications for the Law and Social Science Dissertation Fellowship and Mentoring Program. Fellowships are held in residence at the ABF in Chicago, IL, where fellows are expected to participate in the intellectual life of the ABF, including participation in a weekly seminar series.
URL: http://www.americanbarfoundation.org/fellowships/Call_for_Doctoral_Fellows.html
Research Fellowship Program
DEADLINE: February 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: All applicants must be current members of the ACMS to be considered for the program. All applicants must be citizens of the United States or Canada. All applicants for dissertation fellowships must be able to demonstrate that they have completed required coursework for their programs and will have an accepted dissertation proposal prior to the start of their fellowship program. All postdoctoral fellows must have completed their Ph.D. within seven years of the start of their fellowship program.
ABSTRACT: The program annually supports fellows conducting doctoral dissertation or postdoctoral research in Mongolia on topics in the social sciences or humanities. The program seeks to promote research opportunities in Mongolia among scholars who have not included the country in their previous research, and to broaden the knowledge base of scholars already working in the country. Previous Mongolian Studies experience is not required, but projects should enhance knowledge of Mongolia and the Mongols within relevant academic disciplines or fields of study. Projects that link research conducted in Mongolia to research in other parts of Asia or across academic fields are especially encouraged. Fellowship recipients must be based in Mongolia for the duration of their fellowship, but research travel in the broader region is encouraged.
URL: http://www.mongoliacenter.org
Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships
DEADLINE: November 11, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be Ph.D. candidates in a humanities or social science department in the United States. Applicants from other departments may be eligible if their project is in the humanities or related social sciences, and their principal dissertation supervisor holds an appointment in a humanities field or related social science field. Applicants must have all requirements for the Ph.D. except the dissertation completed before beginning fellowship tenure and must be no more than six years in the degree program; awardees can hold this fellowship no later than their seventh year.
ABSTRACT: This program aims to encourage timely completion of the Ph.D. The fellowship tenure may be carried out in residence at the fellow's home institution, abroad, or at another appropriate site for the research. Appropriate fields of specialization include, but are not limited to, American studies; anthropology; archaeology; art and architectural history; classics; economics; film; geography; history; languages and literatures; legal studies; linguistics; musicology; philosophy; political science; psychology; religious studies; rhetoric, communication, and media studies; science, technology, and medicine studies; sociology; and theater, dance, and performance studies. Proposals in the social science fields listed above are eligible only if they employ predominantly humanistic approaches (e.g., economic history, law and literature, political theory). Proposals in interdisciplinary and cross-disciplinary studies are welcome, as are proposals focused on any geographic region or on any cultural or linguistic group.
URL: http://www.acls.org/grants/Default.aspx?id=512
Dissertation Fellowships in East European Studies
DEADLINE: November 11, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Currently enrolled graduate students who will have completed all requirements for the doctorate except the dissertation by June 2010 may apply for one-year support to complete the dissertation. Applicants must be citizens or permanent residents of the United States.
ABSTRACT: ACLS will offer support for writing dissertations in East European studies in all disciplines of the humanities and the social sciences. Applicants may apply for one of two categories of support: 1. Research Fellowships for use in Eastern Europe to conduct fieldwork or archival investigations.2. Writing Fellowships for use in the United States, after all research is complete, to write the dissertation. Applications should be for work on Eastern Europe: Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Kosovo/a, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, and Slovenia. Applicants may propose comparative work considering more than one country of Eastern Europe or relating East European societies to those of other parts of the world. Fellowships will be granted on the basis of the scholarly potential of the applicant, the quality and scholarly importance of the proposed work, and its importance to the development of scholarship on Eastern Europe. Research and Writing Fellowships are intended as sequenced support for completion of a dissertation. Recipients are therefore invited to apply the following year for the next level of funding.
URL: http://www.acls.org/grants/Default.aspx?id=532
Henry Luce Foundation/ACLS Grants to Individuals in East and Southeast Asian Archaeology and Early History
Grants for Applicants From the United States and Canada
Dissertation Fellowships
DEADLINE: November 13, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be residents of the United States or Canada and have their primary professional affiliation at an institution in this region. Applicants must be nearing completion of an advanced degree in a relevant discipline such as archaeology, anthropology, art history, literature, or history. Linguistic ability sufficient to conduct the work proposed is required.
ABSTRACT: The ACLS offers grants to individuals in the archaeology and early history of East and Southeast Asia for study of the peoples and cultures of early East and Southeast Asia. For the purposes of this program, "East and Southeast Asia" refers to Brunei, Burma/Myanmar, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Laos, Macau, Malaysia, Mongolia, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam. Comparative projects and those that build scholarly networks are especially encouraged. Proposals may cover prehistoric or historical periods, but must focus on research or training that involves excavations and/or excavated materials.
URL: http://www.acls.org/grants/Default.aspx?id=522
Research Grants
DEADLINE: February 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Only AHA members are eligible to apply. Grants are intended to further research already in progress. Preference is given to advanced doctoral students and junior faculty.
ABSTRACT: Grants in four categories are awarded annually: Albert J. Beveridge Grant: supports research in the history of the Western hemisphere; Michael Kraus Grant: supports research in colonial American history, with particular reference to the intercultural aspects of American and European relations; Littleton-Griswold Grant: supports research in U.S. legal history and the field of law and society: Bernadotte Schmitt Grants: support research in the history of Europe, Asia, and Africa.
URL: http://www.historians.org/prizes/Grants.htm
Grants Program for U.S. Citizens
DEADLINE: December 31, 2009 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: Graduate students currently enrolled in an M.A. or Ph.D. program are eligible to apply. All applicants must be U.S. citizens and members of AIMS at the time of application. Recipients of AIMS awards in either of the two previous funding cycles are ineligible to apply.
ABSTRACT: The program offers grants to U.S. scholars interested in conducting research on North Africa in any Maghrib country, specifically Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Libya, or Mauritania. These awards are made possible through grants from the U.S. Department of State.
URL: http://aimsnorthafrica.org/fellowships/lstuscitz_grants.cfm?menu=2
Dissertation Planning Grant
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants will normally be enrolled in a Ph.D. program (or equivalent) in a U.S. university. There are no citizenship requirements, but some of the funds available for this program may only be spent on awards for U.S. citizens. Applicants should have completed most of their graduate coursework by the time they take up their grant.
ABSTRACT: AISLS dissertation planning grants are designed to enable graduate students intending to do dissertation research in Sri Lanka to make a pre-dissertation visit to Sri Lanka to investigate the feasibility of their topic, to sharpen their research design, or to make other practical arrangements for future research. The grant is especially intended for students who are in the process of completing their dissertation proposals and preparing applications for funds to support their dissertation research, but other purposes may be proposed. Although language instruction is not the primary focus of these awards, successful applicants may simultaneously hold an AISLS language instruction grant.
URL: http://www.aisls.org/diss-plan.html
Fellowship Program
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be U.S. citizens or be enrolled in an institution of higher education in the USA. Predoctoral applicants should have completed all requirements for the Ph.D. except the dissertation.
ABSTRACT: Applications are invited for research fellowships at the predoctoral or postdoctoral level for short-term research projects. Funds may be used for research on materials relating to the history and culture of Pakistan in any country except Pakistan and the USA.
URL: http://www.pakistanstudies-a ips.org/English/fellowships.htm
Lewis and Clark Fund for Exploration and Field Research
DEADLINE: February 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Grants will be available to doctoral students. The competition is open to U.S. residents wishing to carry out research anywhere in the world. Foreign applicants must either be based at a U.S. institution or plan to carry out their work in the United States.
ABSTRACT: The fund encourages exploratory field studies for the collection of specimens and data and to provide the imaginative stimulus that accompanies direct observation. Applications are invited from disciplines with a large dependence on field studies, such as archeology, anthropology, biology, ecology, geography, geology, linguistics, and paleontology, but grants will not be restricted to these fields.
URL: http://www.amphilsoc.org/grants/lewisandclark
Phillips Fund Grant for Native American Research
DEADLINE: March 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: The committee prefers to support the work of younger scholars who have received the doctorate. Applications are also accepted from graduate students for research on master's theses or doctoral dissertations.
ABSTRACT: The fund provides grants for research in Native American linguistics, ethnohistory, and the history of studies of Native Americans, in the continental United States and Canada. Grants are not made for projects in archaeology, ethnography, psycholinguistics, or for the preparation of pedagogical materials. The committee distinguishes ethnohistory from contemporary ethnography as the study of cultures and culture change through time.
URL: http://www.amphilsoc.org/grants/phillips
Advanced Fellowships
DEADLINE: February 19, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: The school is open to qualified students and scholars at colleges or universities in the U.S. or Canada.
ABSTRACT: The American School of Classical Studies at Athens offers several predoctoral fellowships to students who have completed the Regular Program or one year as a Student Associate Member.
URL: http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/admission-membership/grants
Cotsen Traveling Fellowship for Research in Greece
DEADLINE: January 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Graduate students may apply. The school is open to qualified students and scholars at colleges or universities in the U.S. or Canada unless otherwise noted. The American School of Classical Studies at Athens does not discriminate on the basis of race, age, sex, sexual orientation, color, religion, national or ethnic origin, or disability when considering admission to any form of membership.
ABSTRACT: The Gennadius Library offers the Cotsen Traveling Fellowship, a short-term grant awarded once a year for scholars and graduate students pursuing research topics that require the use of the Gennadeion collections. The recipient is expected to take part in the activities of the library and of the school in addition to pursuing research.
URL: http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/admission-membership/grants/
Jacob Hirsch Fellowship
DEADLINE: January 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Applications will be accepted from students in the U.S. or Israel, who are Ph.D. candidates writing their dissertations in archaeology or recent Ph.D.s completing a project, such as the revision of a dissertation for publication, which requires a lengthy residence in Greece. Application for admission to the ASCSA should be made in conjunction with application for the Hirsch Fellowship.
ABSTRACT: The American School of Classical Studies at Athens offers the Jacob Hirsch Fellowship to American and Israeli scholars who are completing a project that requires a lengthy residence in Greece.
URL: http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/admission-membership/grants/
Northeast Asia Council
Japan Studies Grants
Research travel within the USA
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010 for spring/summer awards
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents who have not received funds in this category within the past five years. Ph.D. candidates are also eligible to receive support for doctoral dissertation research at appropriate collections.
ABSTRACT: The NEAC, in conjunction with the Japan-United States Friendship Commission, supports a variety of grant programs in Japanese studies designed to facilitate the research of individual scholars, to improve the quality of teaching about Japan on both the college and precollege levels, and to integrate the study of Japan into the major academic disciplines. Under the Research Travel within the USA category, grants are offered to persons who are engaged in scholarly research on Japan and wish to use museum, library, or other archival materials located in the USA.
URL: http://www.aasianst.org/grants/main.htm
Dissertation Grants for Graduate Students
DEADLINE: November 15, 2009 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be current AABS members, be enrolled currently in a Ph.D. program, and have completed all requirements for a Ph.D. except the dissertation.
ABSTRACT: The AABS invites applications for grants to support doctoral dissertation research and write-up in any field of Baltic Studies. Proposals will be evaluated according to the scholarly potential of the applicant, and the quality and scholarly importance of the proposed work, especially to the development of Baltic Studies.
URL: http://www.balticstudies-aabs.org/grants-dissertation.html
Canadian Studies Grant Program
Doctoral Student Research Award / Graduate Student Fellowship Program
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: This program is intended for doctoral students at accredited U.S. and Canadian four-year colleges and universities whose dissertations are related in substantial part to the study of Canada or Canada-U.S. relations. Candidates must be citizens or permanent residents of the United States and should have completed all doctoral requirements except the dissertation when they apply for a grant.
ABSTRACT: The award promotes research that contributes to a better knowledge and understanding of Canada, its relationship with the United States, and its international affairs. The award is designed to give doctoral students an opportunity to conduct part of their research in Canada. The program welcomes submissions from all fields in the social sciences and humanities. The Canadian Embassy is particularly interested in projects that have policy relevance for Canada-U.S. relations. Topics that are highly relevant to Canada-U.S. relations include smart and secure borders; North American economic competitiveness; regulatory cooperation; Canada-U.S. trade and investment partnership; energy security and sustainability; environmental sustainability; emergency planning and management; Canada-U.S. security and defense cooperation; Canada in Afghanistan; global health policy; and changing demographics in North America. The program strongly encourages projects that include collaboration with researchers at Canadian institutions.
URL: http://www.canadainternational.gc.ca/washington/
Predoctoral Residential Research and Teaching Fellowships
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: The competition for the Woodson Institute fellowship is open to qualified candidates without restriction as to citizenship or current residence. Applicants for the predoctoral fellowships must have completed all requirements for the Ph.D. except the dissertation prior to August 1, 2010.
ABSTRACT: The Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies at the University of Virginia invites scholars whose work focuses on Africa and/or the African Diaspora to apply for a predoctoral research fellowship. The predoctoral fellow must be in residence at the University of Virginia for the duration of the award period. Fellows are expected to make periodic presentations of their work to the Woodson fellows and the larger academic community.
URL: http://artsandsciences.virginia.edu/woodson/fellowship/predoc.html
Visiting Scholars Program
DEADLINE: November 15, 2009 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: Applications are welcome from political scientists and scholars in related social science disciplines at any career stage from "all but dissertation" to senior faculty.
ABSTRACT: The Center supports empirical research on democratic political processes and institutions, with a particular focus on the relationship between democratic theory and democratic practice. Applications are welcome from political scientists and scholars in related social science disciplines at any career stage from "all but dissertation" to senior faculty. Each visitor will pursue research and contribute to the intellectual life of the Center, the Department of Politics, and the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.
URL: http://web.princeton.edu/sites/wws/csdp/application.html
Charles Redd Fellowship Award in Western American History
DEADLINE: March 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants with a general scholarly interest in Mountain West history are encouraged to apply.
ABSTRACT: Fellowship awards will be made on an annual basis to students and scholars interested in pursuing research on the Mountain West in the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, which hold extensive manuscript materials documenting 19th and 20th century western American history. Manuscript collections number more than 9,000; almost one million photographic images are held by the L. Tom Perry Collections; and more than 300,000 rare books are available for use. Awards are to be used for scholarly projects including preparation of seminar papers, theses, dissertations, monographs, and book-length projects.
URL: http://reddcenter.byu.edu/Awards/Fellowship.dhtml
Mellon Fellowships for Dissertation Research in the Humanities in Original Sources
DEADLINE: November 13, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: To be eligible, an applicant will
- be enrolled in a doctoral program in a graduate school in the U.S. (master's thesis research is not eligible);
- complete all doctoral requirements except the dissertation and be ready to start research for it as early as June 1 and no later than September 1, 2010, with approval of the dissertation proposal six months before the starting date;
- plan to do dissertation research primarily in original source material in the holdings of archives, libraries, historical societies, museums, related repositories, or a combination; and
- write the dissertation and receive the Ph.D. degree in a field of the humanities or in a related element of the social sciences.
ABSTRACT: CLIR is pleased to offer fellowships funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation for dissertation research in the humanities in original sources. The purposes of this fellowship program are to help junior scholars in the humanities and related social-science fields gain skill and creativity in developing knowledge from original sources; enable dissertation writers to do research wherever relevant sources may be, rather than just where financial support is available; encourage more extensive and innovative uses of original sources in libraries, archives, museums, historical societies, and related repositories in the United States and abroad; and provide insight from the viewpoint of doctoral candidates into how scholarly resources can be developed for access most helpfully in the future.
URL: http://www.clir.org/fellowships/mellon/mellon.html
Research Fellowships
DEADLINE: March 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Predoctoral applicants must have passed their department's Ph.D. comprehensive or qualifying exams before applying.
ABSTRACT: The David Library offers research fellowships for the study of America in the last half of the eighteenth century to qualified doctoral candidates and postdoctoral researchers. The fellowship is intended primarily for researchers using the collections assembled at the David Library. Project descriptions must demonstrate how the collections will be utilized. The library’s resources include documentation on virtually every aspect of the era of the American Revolution.
URL: http://www.dlar.org/#Research_Fellowships
Grants for Independent Research on Venetian History and Culture
DEADLINE: December 15, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be citizens or permanent residents of the United States; have experience in advanced research at the graduate level or equivalent; and, if graduate students, have fulfilled all doctoral requirements except completion of the dissertation (but including acceptance of dissertation proposal) by December 15, 2009.
ABSTRACT: The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation announces its 2010-2011 program of grants (predoctoral and postdoctoral) for travel to and residence in Venice and the Veneto. Grants will be awarded for historical research specifically on Venice and the former Venetian empire, and for study of contemporary Venetian society and culture. Disciplines of the humanities and social sciences are eligible areas of study, including (but not limited to) archaeology, architecture, art, bibliography, economics, history, history of science, law, literature, music, political science, religion, and theater.
URL: http://www.delmas.org/guidelines/v_ir_a.html
Congressional Research Awards
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: The competition is open to individuals with a serious interest in studying Congress. The center encourages graduate students who have successfully defended their dissertation prospectus to apply and awards a significant portion of the funds for dissertation research.
ABSTRACT: The Dirksen Congressional Center invites applications for grants to fund research on congressional leadership and the U.S. Congress. The center's first interest is to fund the study of the leadership in the Congress, both House and Senate. Topics could include external factors shaping the exercise of congressional leadership, institutional conditions affecting it, resources and techniques used by leaders, or the prospects for change or continuity in the patterns of leadership. In addition, the center invites proposals about congressional procedures, such as committee operation or mechanisms for institutional change, and Congress and the electoral process. The center also encourages proposals that link Congress and congressional leadership with the creation, implementation, and oversight of public policy. Proposals must demonstrate that Congress, not the specific policy, is the central research interest.
URL: http://www.dirksencenter.org/print_grants_CRAs.htm
Summer Research Fellowship
DEADLINE: March 15, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: This is a competitive annual fellowship open to scholars, students, and general researchers.
ABSTRACT: The fellowship is offered annually by the Archives and Special Collections on Women in Medicine of MCP Hahnemann University. The award is for research completed in residence at the Archives and Special Collections. In addition to materials related to the history of the Woman's Medical College/Medical College of Pennsylvania, the collections have particular strengths in the history of women in medicine, nursing, medical missionaries, the American Medical Women's Association, American Women's Hospital Service, and other women in medicine organizations. The majority of the collections fall within the period 1850 to the present.
URL: http://archives.drexelmed.edu/fellowship.php
Graduate Dissertation Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 15, 2010
ABSTRACT: The Economic History Association announces a dissertation awards program that is intended to foster graduate student research in economic history. The dissertation award is intended to be the equivalent of a fellowship and is designed for students whose thesis topic has been approved and who have made some progress towards writing their dissertation.
URL: http://eh.net/eha/grants/dissertation-fellowships
Filson Fellowships
DEADLINE: February 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Applicant must be a Ph.D. or equivalent or a doctoral candidate at the dissertation stage.
ABSTRACT: The society is pleased to announce the continuation of the Filson Fellowships, which encourage the scholarly use of its nationally significant collections by providing support for travel and lodging. The Society's collections are especially strong for the frontier, antebellum, and Civil War eras of Kentucky history. It is anticipated that fellows will publish the results of their research in Ohio Valley History, a peer-reviewed journal published jointly by The Filson, the Cincinnati Museum Center, and the University of Cincinnati.
URL: http://www.filsonhistorical.org/fellowships.html
Dissertation Fellowship Program for Minority Students
DEADLINE: Review of applications begins December 1, 2009
ABSTRACT: The fellowship program provides one year in residence at one of the campuses (Amherst College, Hampshire College, Mount Holyoke College, Smith College, or University of Massachusetts-Anherst) for graduate students who have completed all requirements for the doctoral degree except the dissertation. The program supports scholars from under-represented groups, or scholars with unique interests and histories, whose engagement in the academy will enrich scholarship and teaching. Each Fellow is hosted within an appropriate department or program at one of the member colleges of the Five College consortium.
URL: http://www.fivecolleges.edu/academic_programs/academprog_fellowship.html
Cohen Fund for Doctoral Dissertation Fellowships in Jewish Studies
DEADLINE: December 12, 2009 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE; APPLICATIONS MAY NOT BE ACCEPTED YEAR.
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants for the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowships must be citizens or permanent residents of the United States and must have completed all academic requirements for the doctoral degree, except the dissertation, by the date of submission; demonstrate significant course work in Jewish studies at the graduate level; provide evidence of proficiency in a Jewish language adequate for pursuing an academic career in their chosen field; and have a proposal or prospectus that has been approved by a thesis committee. Preference is given to individuals preparing for academic careers in Jewish studies, although occasional grants are awarded to students in other fields of the humanities or social sciences who demonstrate a career commitment to Jewish scholarship. A strong preference will be given to individuals who indicate that they will pursue their careers in Jewish studies in the United States.
ABSTRACT: The Maurice and Marilyn Cohen Fund for Doctoral Dissertation Fellowships in Jewish Studies encourages scholarly research, publication, and teaching in the various disciplines of Jewish studies. The fellowships are made for one academic year, to support the final stages of completing a dissertation, typically in the fifth year of study. The Foundation for Jewish Culture (formerly the National Foundation for Jewish Culture) invests in creative individuals and ideas in order to nurture a vibrant and enduring American Jewish identity, culture, and community.
URL: http://stage.jewishculture.org/?pid=scholarship&ss=cohen
Grants-in-Aid
DEADLINE: November 15, 2009
ABSTRACT: Grants-in-Aid are awarded to support research on the "Roosevelt Years" and clearly related subjects. The awards are made to assist scholars in conducting research at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library in Hyde Park, New York. Grants are intended especially to assist younger scholars, and scholars from the emerging democracies and the Third World. Priority is given to proposals that utilize library resources, and which have the greatest likelihood of publication.
URL: http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu
Predoctoral Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 31, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: To qualify for this one-year residential fellowship in the 2010-2011 academic year, an applicant will need to have completed and passed the following before the end of this (2009-2010) academic year: (1) all required courses; (2) qualifying oral and/or written exams; (3) written at least one chapter of the dissertation (the chapter becomes part of the application package).
ABSTRACT: The Predoctoral Fellowship is awarded annually to a graduate student of any university who studies aspects of the African and African-American experience. This fellowship does not come with any teaching obligation, but will require the fellow to work with the institute's director in organizing colloquiua, lectures, and other events. The principal aim of this award is to expedite the completion of the fellow's dissertation. All fellows receive opportunities to interact and collaborate with scholars of their respective disciplines within the university. Fellows must be in full-time residence during the tenure of their awards and are expected to be engaged in scholarly activity on a full-time basis. They must, for example, be available for consultation with students and professional colleagues; make at least two formal presentations based upon their research; and contribute generally to the intellectual discourse on African and African-American studies.
URL: http://www.rochester.edu/college/AAS
Berlin Program for Advanced German and European Studies
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: The program accepts applications from U.S. and Canadian nationals or permanent residents. Applicants for a dissertation fellowship must be full-time graduate students who have completed all coursework required for the Ph.D. and must have achieved ABD (all but dissertation) status by the time the proposed research stay in Berlin begins. Applicants should show German fluency adequate to complete the project and participate in the seminar at the Freie Universitat Berlin, which is conducted in German.
ABSTRACT: The Berlin Program for Advanced German and European Studies was established at the Freie Universitat Berlin to provide a new generation of young North American scholars with specialized knowledge of modern and contemporary German and European affairs. The program supports scholars in the social and political sciences and economics, modern and contemporary historians, as well as Germanists interested in similar questions. The Berlin Program is a residential program offering a stimulating academic environment that integrates research opportunities with intellectual and cultural interaction. Fellows have access to Berlin's broader intellectual community and extensive libraries.
URL: http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~bprogram/
Summer Graduate Research Fellowships
DEADLINE: February 2, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: The fellowship is open to law and Ph.D. students.
ABSTRACT: The Summer Graduate Research Fellowship is a non-residential research and writing program sponsored by the Institute for Humane Studies. It is open to advanced graduate students (doctoral or law), intending academic or research careers and conducting research germane to the classical liberal intellectual tradition. The fellowship provides an opportunity to work on a thesis chapter or a publishable paper and to participate in interdisciplinary seminars under the guidance of a faculty supervisor.
URL: http://www.theihs.org/ContentDetails.aspx?id=499
Dissertation Writing Grants
DEADLINE: March 19, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: To be eligible for a dissertation writing grant, applicants should be
- graduate students in any field of the social sciences or humanities;
- U.S. citizens or permanent residents at the time of the application;
- currently enrolled in a Ph.D. degree program in the United States; and
- have completed all Ph.D. requirements except their dissertation by March 2009.
CITIZENSHIP: United States citizens and permanent residents are eligible.
ABSTRACT: The grants are intended for advanced students who have finished the research stage of their dissertation , and they may not be used for dissertation research. The dissertation writing grants will be awarded only to applicants who certify that they will not be involved in teaching beyond the half time level.
URL: http://www.turkishstudies.org/index.php?s=grants_about
Research Travel Grants Program
DEADLINE: March 15, 2010
ABSTRACT: The Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation awards grants of up to $2,000 each in support of research in the holdings of the Gerald R. Ford Library. A grant defrays travel, living, and photocopy expenses of a research trip to the Ford Library.
URL: http://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/library/foundationgrants.asp
Transatlantic Doctoral Seminar
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: GHI accepts applications from doctoral students whose dissertations are at an advanced stage but who will be granted their degrees after June in the year of the seminar.
CITIZENSHIP: Europe; United States
ABSTRACT: The seminar brings together young scholars from Europe and North America who are nearing completion of their doctoral degrees. The institute plans to invite eight doctoral students from each side of the Atlantic to discuss their research projects. The organizers welcome proposals on any aspect of German history from 1945 to 1990. Doctoral students working in related disciplines, such as art history, legal history or the history of science, are also encouraged to apply, as are students working on comparative projects or on the history of Austria or German-speaking Switzerland. The discussions will be based on papers (in German or English) submitted in advance of the conference. The seminar will be conducted bilingually, in German and English.
URL: http://www.ghi-dc.org/index.php
Program in Research for Understanding and Reducing Violence, Aggression, and Dominance
Dissertation Fellowships
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Grants are made to Ph.D. candidates who are in the writing stage of the dissertation. Usually, this means that fieldwork or other research is complete and writing has begun. Both the applicant and the applicant's advisor are asked to assure the foundation that the dissertation will be complete within the grant year.
ABSTRACT: Dissertation fellowships are awarded each year to individuals who will complete the writing of the dissertation within the award year. These fellowships are designed to contribute to the support of the doctoral candidate to enable him or her to complete the thesis in a timely manner. Applications are evaluated in comparison with each other and not in competition with the postdoctoral research proposals. Highest priority is given to research that can increase understanding and amelioration of urgent problems of violence, aggression, and dominance in the modern world. Particular questions that interest the foundation concern violence, aggression, and dominance in relation to social change, the socialization of children, intergroup conflict, drug trafficking and use, family relationships, and investigations of the control of aggression and violence. Priority will also be given to areas and methodologies not receiving adequate attention and support from other funding sources.
URL: http://www.hfg.org/df/guidelines.htm
Library Institute Grants
DEADLINE: April 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Graduate students and postdoctoral scholars are particularly encouraged to apply. Preference will be given to projects that have application to enduring public policy and foreign policy issues and that have a high probability of being published or publicly disseminated in some other way. The potential contribution of a project to an applicant’s development as a scholar will also be considered.
ABSTRACT: Grants are intended to enable graduate students, postdoctoral scholars and other researchers to come to the Harry S. Truman Library for one to three weeks to use its collections. Awards are to offset expenses incurred for this purpose only.
URL: http://www.trumanlibrary.org/grants/
Program on Negotiations
Graduate Research Fellowships
DEADLINE: February 12, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Doctoral candidates must have completed all degree requirements except for the dissertation.
ABSTRACT: The Program on Negotiation Graduate Research Fellowships are designed to encourage young scholars from the social sciences and professional disciplines to pursue theoretical, empirical, or applied research in negotiation and dispute resolution. Consistent with the goal of fostering the development of the next generation of scholars, this program provides support for one year of dissertation research and writing in negotiation and related topics in alternative dispute resolution, as well as giving fellows an opportunity to immerse themselves in the diverse array of resources available at the Program on Negotiations. Doctoral candidates in the fields of economics, psychology, sociology, anthropology, international relations, public policy, urban planning, business, and law are encouraged to apply.
URL: http://www.pon.harvard.edu/research/fellowship.php
Herbert Hoover Travel Grant
DEADLINE: March 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Current graduate students, postdoctoral scholars, and qualified nonacademic researchers are eligible to apply.
ABSTRACT: The purpose of the Herbert Hoover Travel Grant is to fund travel to the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library in West Branch, Iowa. The program, funded entirely through contributions from private individuals, corporations, and foundations, is specifically intended to promote the study of subjects of interest and concern to Herbert Hoover, Lou Henry Hoover, their associates, and other public figures as reflected in the library's collections.
URL: http://www.hooverassociation.org/grantsawards/travel_grant.php
Heckman Stipends
DEADLINE: November 15, 2009 for visits between January 1, 2010 and June 30, 2010.
ELIGIBILITY: Undergraduate, graduate, or postdoctoral scholars are eligible.
ABSTRACT: The Hill Monastic Manuscript Library invites applications for research stipends, made possible by the A.A. Heckman Fund. The stipends may be used to defray the cost of travel, room and board, microfilm reproduction, photo-duplication, and other expenses associated with research at the library. The program is specifically intended to help scholars who have not yet established themselves professionally and whose research cannot progress satisfactorily without consulting materials to be found in the collections of the Hill Monastic Manuscript Library, which represents one of the largest and most comprehensive archives of medieval and Renaissance sources in the world. The collection includes substantial holdings from Germany and Austria (including the National Library in Vienna), Spain, Portugal, England, Malta, Ethiopia, and smaller collections from other countries. Virtually every subject of knowledge - theology, philosophy, law (canon and civil), music, art, science and medicine, the mechanical arts, and the liberal arts - is reflected in this vast collection. More than a repository of manuscripts, HMML is one of the best research libraries in medieval studies in the country.
URL: http://www.hmml.org/research06/opportunities/heckman.htm
Dissertation Year Grant
DEADLINE: January 11, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be citizens of the U.S. or Canada, or legal immigrants.
ABSTRACT: The institute will award six dissertation fellowships per year throughout the life of the program to applicants who are "all but dissertation." The purpose of the award is to help the awardee devote as much time as possible to writing. It is expected that the applicant will complete the dissertation by the end of the award year. The institute will also provide the dissertation year awardee with skilled editorial support in order to facilitate a timely completion of the dissertation; and a mid-year workshop to monitor and encourage the writing process, to provide a time for discussion of dissertation, and to provide collegial support.
URL: http://www2.ptsem.edu/hti/index.aspx
Doctoral Grants
DEADLINE: December 7, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: This award is for full-time minority doctoral students (Ph.D., Ed.D., Th.D. or equivalent only) and requires that the student's institution partners with HTI in providing the student with a tuition scholarship.
ABSTRACT: This award is aimed at supporting the student for a maximum of two years of full-time coursework. If an applicant applies during the first year of doctoral coursework, the HTI award will be for a one year period only. This award may not be applied to the year the student is doing his or her doctoral exams while not taking courses. In addition to monetary support, the HTI will provide the doctoral-level awardee with a Latino/a faculty member to serve as a mentor who will monitor and encourage the student's progress in the doctoral process.
URL: http://www2.ptsem.edu/hti/index.aspx
Dibner History of Science Program
Short-Term Grants
DEADLINE: December 15, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants for short-term awards must be doctoral candidates at the dissertation stage.
ABSTRACT: The Dibner History of Science Program offers long and short-term fellowships that are designed to further study in the Burndy Library and the other history of science and technology resources at The Huntington.
URL: http://www.huntington.org/huntingtonlibrary.aspx?id=566#dibner
National Security Education Program
David L. Boren Graduate Fellowships for International Study
DEADLINE: January 28, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Graduate students are eligible to apply for an NSEP Boren Fellowship if they are U.S. citizens and are enrolled in or applying to a graduate degree program at an accredited U.S. college or university located within the United States, and include a plan for language study in a modern language other than English in the application.
ABSTRACT: The National Security Education Program David L. Boren Graduate Fellowships support students pursuing the study of languages, cultures, and world regions that are critical to United States interests (including Africa, Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, Eurasia, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Middle East). NSEP areas of focus include the following: 1. U.S. National Security Focus\NSEP focuses on geographic areas, languages, and fields of study deemed critical to United States national security. It draws on a broad definition of national security applied by the President in his annual National Security Strategy, recognizing that the scope of national security has expanded to include not only the traditional concerns of protecting and promoting American well-being, but also the challenges of global society, including \- sustainable development, \- environmental degradation, \- global disease and hunger, \- population growth and migration, and \- economic competitiveness. 2. International Focus\NSEP Boren Fellowships are intended to provide or add to the international component of U.S. graduate students' educations. NSEP Boren Fellowships provide support for overseas study, domestic study, or a combination of both. Although study outside the United States is not required, successful applications generally include a significant overseas component. 3. Language Study\Study of a foreign language appropriate to the identified country or region must be an integral part of each application. The language component must incorporate opportunities to develop, maintain, or advance proficiency in a language, including instruction and application inside and outside the classroom setting.
URL: http://www.borenawards.org/boren_fellowship
Fellowship Program
DEADLINE: March 18, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be conducting serious research in some area relating to the history of North American Jewry. Typically, fellowships will be awarded to postdoctoral candidates, Ph.D. candidates who are completing dissertations, and senior or independent scholars.
ABSTRACT: The fellowship program supports research and writing at the Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, located on the Cincinnati campus of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. The program will support serious research in some area relating to the history of North American jewry.
URL: http://www.americanjewisharchives.org/programs_fellowship.php
Short-Term Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 10, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: These fellowships are open to Americans and foreign nationals who are engaged in pre- or postdoctoral, or independent, research. Graduate students must have passed their preliminary or general examinations at the time of application.
ABSTRACT: The John Carter Brown Library is an independently administered and funded center for advanced research in history and the humanities located on the campus of Brown University. Sponsorship of research at the JCB is reserved exclusively for scholars whose work is centered on the colonial history of the Americas, North and South, including all aspects of the European, African, and Native American involvement. Recipients of all fellowships are expected to relocate to Providence and to be in continuous residence at the JCB for the entire term of the award.
URL: http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/
Kennedy Research Grants
DEADLINE: March 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Preference is given to dissertation research by Ph.D. candidates working in newly opened or relatively unused collections, and to the work of recent Ph.D. recipients who are expanding or revising their dissertations for publication.
ABSTRACT: The John F. Kennedy Library Foundation provides funds to award a number of research grants. The purpose of these grants is to help defray living, travel, and related costs incurred while doing research in the textual and nontextual holdings of the library in Boston, Massachusetts. Grant applications are evaluated on the basis of expected utilization of available holdings of the Library, the degree to which they address research needs in Kennedy period studies, and the qualifications of applicants. Preference will be given to projects not supported by large grants from other institutions.
URL: http://www.jfklibrary.org/JFK+Library+and+Museum
Josephine de Karman Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 31, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: To qualify for a fellowship applicants must be in the final year of a Ph.D. program and able to defend their dissertation by June 2011.
ABSTRACT: The purpose of this fellowship program is to recognize and assist students whose scholastic achievements reflect Professor de Karman’s high standards. Special consideration will be given to applicants in the humanities.
URL: http://www.dekarman.org/
Graduate Study and Research in Poland
DEADLINE: January 15, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: Applicant must be a United States citizen or a legal permanent resident of the U.S. and be a graduate student or university faculty member, and possess the level of Polish language proficiency needed to carry out the proposed research project.
ABSTRACT: The Graduate Studies and Research in Poland Program allows American graduate students and university faculty members to conduct research at universities in Poland with financial support from the Polish Ministry of Education and Sport and the Kosciuszko Foundation.
URL: http://www.thekf.org/EDScholarships_US_Research.html
Lemmermann Foundation Scholarship Awards
DEADLINE: March 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants should be students holding a B.A. or M.S. who are attending a recognized university course and have a basic knowledge of the Italian language.
ABSTRACT: The foundation awards scholarships to university students who need to study in Rome to carry out research and prepare their theses concerning Rome and the Roman culture from the pre-Roman period to the present day in classical studies. The scholarships are reserved for humanities and classics scholars only, and are not applicable to language study.
URL: http://www.nexus.it/lemmermann/
Dissertation Fellowship
DEADLINE: March 1, 2010
ABSTRACT: The Library Company of Philadelphia's new Program in Early American Economy and Society is designed to promote scholarship in early American economy and society, broadly defined, from its colonial beginnings to roughly the 1850s. The fellowship will provide a scholar with the opportunity to use the extensive print and manuscript collections related to the history of commerce, finance, technology, manufacturing, agriculture, internal improvements, and political economy that are held by the Library Company and by numerous other institutions in its vicinity. The fellow will also have many opportunities to participate in the intellectual life of the program at the Library Company and in the community of scholars in the area.
URL: http://www.librarycompany.org/Economics/EFellowships.htm
Dissertation Fellowship Program
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010
ABSTRACT: The dissertation fellowship program is designed to support the final year of Ph.D. or Th.D. dissertation writing for students engaged in research pertaining to North American Christianity, especially projects related to Christian faith and life, religious institutions, and pastoral leadership.
URL: http://www.louisville-institute.org/Grants/programs/dfdetail.aspx
Mitchem Dissertation Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 5, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: Persons are eligible to apply who have not earned a doctoral degree at any time or in any field; are U.S. citizens; have completed all other requirements for the Ph.D.; are well into the writing stage of their dissertation work; and belong to a racial-cultural group historically underrepresented in the U.S. professoriate: African American, Native American, and Hispanic American candidates are especially encouraged to apply.
ABSTRACT: The primary goal of the Arnold L. Mitchem Dissertation Fellowship Program is to help increase the presence of currently underrepresented racial and cultural groups in the U.S. professoriate by supporting doctoral candidates in completing the final academic requirement, the dissertation. Mitchem Fellowships provide one year of support for two students with advanced candidacy in their doctoral programs in other U.S. universities. Fellows are to be in residence at Marquette University for the academic year during which they teach one course in their area of specialization, interact with faculty and undergraduate students, and devote their primary energies to the completion of their dissertations. During their residence, Mitchem Fellows will participate in a mentoring process, collaborating with a senior faculty mentor in the fellow's discipline, who is appointed by the Dean. Consult the web site for a listing of eligible fields for 2010-2011.
URL: http://www.marquette.edu/as/graduate_mitchem.shtml
Short-Term Research Fellowships
DEADLINE: March 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Advanced graduate students who are U.S. citizens or foreign nationals holding the appropriate U.S. government documents are eligible.
ABSTRACT: Fellowships support four weeks of research at the Society.
URL: http://www.masshist.org/fellowships/short_term.cfm
Ford Foundation Diversity Dissertation Fellowships
DEADLINE: November 9, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: The following are eligible to apply for a dissertation fellowship:
1. All citizens or nationals of the United States regardless of race, national origin, religion, gender, age, disability, or sexual orientation (must have become a U.S. citizen by November 28, 2008);
2. Individuals with evidence of superior academic achievement (such as grade point average, class rank, honors or other designations);
3. Individuals committed to a career in teaching and research at the college or university level;
4. Ph.D. or Sc.D. degree candidates studying in an eligible research-based discipline at a U.S. educational institution;
5. Individuals who have not earned a doctoral degree at any time, in any field.
Membership in one or more of the following ethnicities and races will be considered a positive factor: 1. Alaska Natives (Eskimo/Aleut); 2. Black/African Americans; 3. Mexican American/Chicanas/Chicanos; 4. Native American Indians; 5. Native Pacific Islanders (Polynesian/Micronesian); 6. Puerto Ricans.
ABSTRACT: Through its program of Diversity Fellowships, the Ford Foundation seeks to increase the diversity of the nation's college and university faculties by increasing their ethnic and racial diversity, to maximize the educational benefits of diversity, and to increase the number of professors who can and will use diversity as a resource for enriching the education of all students. Awards will be made for study in research-based Ph.D. or Sc.D. programs in most major disciplines and related interdisciplinary fields.
URL: http://www7.nationalacademies.org/FORDfellowships/forddiss.html
Short-Term Fellowships
DEADLINE: March 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: This short-term fellowship is restricted to postdoctoral scholars and Ph.D. candidates from outside of the Chicago area who have a specific need for Newberry collections.
ABSTRACT: a number of fellowships support scholars, including dissertation students, who have a specific need for research in the collections of the Newberry Library. The tenure of these fellowships varies from one to two months.
URL: http://www.newberry.org/research/felshp/short-term.html
Arthur W. Page Center
Page and Johnson Legacy Scholars Grants
DEADLINE: March 5, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: Page and Johnson Legacy Scholars may come from a variety of academic disciplines and professional fields, including scholars and researchers, either university-based, think-tank, or independent; doctoral candidates, who will have completed their coursework and examinations and are at the dissertation-writing stage during the year of the award.
ABSTRACT: The Arthur W. Page Center is a research center at the Penn State College of Communications dedicated to the study and advancement of ethics and responsibility in corporate communication and other forms of public communication. Recipients of Page and Johnson Legacy Scholars Grants will be designated either a Page Legacy Scholar or Robert Wood Johnson Legacy Scholar.
URL: http://pagecenter.comm.psu.edu/index.php
Scholar Awards
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: An applicant for a P.E.O. Scholar Award is required to be nominated by a local P.E.O. chapter and to be a citizen of the United States or Canada at the time of the nomination. At the time the first award payment is made (August 1), she must be within two years of completing her doctoral level or postgraduate studies or research, and she must have one full academic year of work remaining.
CITIZENSHIP: Women who are citizens of Canada and the United States are eligible to apply.
ABSTRACT: P.E.O. Scholar Awards are one-time competitive, merit-based awards for women of the United States and Canada who are either pursuing a doctoral level degree or are engaged in postdoctoral research at an accredited university. In addition to recognizing and encouraging excellence in higher education, these awards provide partial support for study and research for women who will make significant contributions in their varied fields of endeavor. Priority is given to women who are well established in their programs, study or research.
URL: http://www.peointernational.org/about/
Graduate Student Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be formally enrolled in a graduate program of study, must have completed at least one semester, and must not yet have been advanced to candidacy in a doctoral program.
ABSTRACT: Fellowships at the Smithsonian Institution provide students and scholars with opportunities to pursue independent research projects in association with members of the Smithsonian professional research staff. Persons interested in conducting research at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory should apply to that bureau directly. Graduate fellowships allow students to conduct research for ten-week periods in association with Smithsonian research staff members. Applicants to the fellowship programs must propose research in a field pursued at the Smithsonian. A specific and detailed research proposal indicating why the Smithsonian is an appropriate place to conduct the studies proposed is required. Fellowships are only offered to support research within Smithsonian facilities or programs. Fellows are expected to spend most of their tenure in residence at the Smithsonian, except when arrangements are made for periods of field work or research travel. For all fellowships, appropriate members of the Smithsonian professional staff must be willing to serve in the capacity of principal advisor or host, and space and facilities must be available to accommodate the proposed research. Fields of research at the Smithsonian include American history, American material and folk culture, and the history of music and musical instruments; history of science and technology, history of art, design, crafts, and the decorative arts; anthropology, archaeology, linguistics, and ethnic studies; evolutionary, systematic, behavioral, environmental biology, and conservation; geological sciences and astrophysics; and materials characterization and conservation.
URL: http://www.si.edu/ofg/Applications/SIFELL/SIFELLapp.htm
International Dissertation Research Fellowship Program
DEADLINE: November 3, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: The program is open to full-time graduate students in the humanities and social sciences, regardless of citizenship, enrolled in doctoral programs in the United States. Applicants must complete all Ph.D. requirements except on-site research by the time the fellowship begins or by December 2010, whichever comes first. Students enrolled in Ph.D. programs in public policy, public health, and education may be eligible to apply if their research projects engage directly with broader theoretical and analytical issues in the humanities and social sciences.
ABSTRACT: The International Dissertation Research Fellowship program supports distinguished graduate students in the humanities and social sciences conducting dissertation research outside the United States. The IDRF program is committed to empirical and site-specific research that advances knowledge about non-U.S. cultures and societies (involving fieldwork, research in archival or manuscript collections, or quantitative data collection). The program promotes research that is situated in a specific discipline and geographical region and is engaged with interdisciplinary and cross-regional perspectives. The program will consider applications for dissertation research grounded in a single site, informed by broader cross-regional and interdisciplinary perspectives, as well as applications for multi-site, comparative, and transregional research. Proposals that identify the U.S. as a case for comparative inquiry are welcome; however, proposals that focus predominantly or exclusively on the United States are not eligible. Proposals may cover all periods in history, but must address topics that have relevance to contemporary issues and debates.
URL: http://www.ssrc.org/programs/idrf/
Dissertation Fellowships
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
Nominations and supporting materials must be received by the deadline.
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be actively working on dissertations dealing with some aspect of U.S. foreign relations history. Applicants must have satisfactorily completed all requirements for the doctoral degree except the dissertation or must hold the Ph.D. Membership in the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations is not required.
ABSTRACT: The grants are intended to promote research by doctoral candidates. A limited number of grants of varying amounts will be awarded annually to help defray the costs of domestic or international travel necessary to conduct research on significant scholarly projects.
URL: http://www.shafr.org/members/prizes-and-fellowships/#travel
Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies
Center for International Security and Cooperation
Predoctoral Fellowships in International Security
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Fellowships are available to Ph.D. candidates who have made substantial progress toward the completion of their dissertation. The center invites applications from a variety of areas of expertise, including anthropology, economics, history, law, political science, sociology, medicine, and the natural and physical sciences. Stanford University encourages women and minority applicants.
ABSTRACT: CISAC offers predoctoral fellowships for concentrated study in a multidisciplinary environment. Fellows spend the academic year at Stanford University, where they participate in seminars and interact with each other as well as faculty and researchers. They are expected to produce a research product (e.g., dissertation chapters, draft articles, a book manuscript). The center considers applicants working within a broad range of topics related to peace and international security.
URL: http://cisac.stanford.edu/fellowships/
ASECS/Clark Fellowships
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Fellowship holders must be members in good standing of the ASECS.
ABSTRACT: Fellowships jointly sponsored by the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and the Clark Library are available to postdoctoral scholars and to all-but-dissertation graduate students with projects in the Restoration or the eighteenth century.
URL: http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/c1718cs/content/postdoc-sup.htm
Kanner Fellowship in British Studies
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: The fellowship is open to both postdoctoral and predoctoral scholars.
ABSTRACT: The Kanner Fellowship is available to support research at the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library in any area pertaining to British history and culture. The William Andrews Clark Memorial Library is part of the University of California, Los Angeles library system. It is a rare books and manuscripts collection, with particular strengths in English literature and history (1641 to 1800), Oscar Wilde, and fine printing. It is administered by UCLA's Center for Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Studies.
URL: http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/c1718cs/content/postdoc-sup.htm
Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies
Visiting Scholar Programs
DEADLINE: November 24, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Doctoral candidates working on their dissertations are eligible.
ABSTRACT: The Center awards fellowships to support significant research and writing about the Holocaust. The Center welcomes proposals from scholars in all relevant disciplines including history, political science, literature, Jewish studies, philosophy, religion, psychology, comparative genocide studies, law, and others.
URL: http://www.ushmm.org/research/center/fellowship/application
Jennings Randolph Peace Scholarship Dissertation Program
DEADLINE: January 5, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Fellowships are open to citizens of any country. Applicants must be enrolled in recognized doctoral programs (for example, Ph.D., S.J.D., Ed.D., Th.D.) in accredited universities in the United States. Successful candidates must have completed all course work and examinations towards their doctoral degrees by the time their fellowships begin.
ABSTRACT: The Jennings Randolph Program for International Peace awards these nonresidential scholarships to students enrolled in U.S. universities who are researching and writing doctoral dissertations on topics related to peace, conflict, and international security. Dissertation proposals from all disciplines are welcome. Proposals should be consistent with the Institute's mandate and present a research agenda with clear relevance to policy issues. Historical topics are appropriate if they promise to shed light on contemporary issues. Area studies projects and single case studies will be competitive if they focus on conflict and its resolution, apply to other regions and cases, or both. Peace Scholars carry out their fellowship work at their universities or other sites appropriate to their research. They are expected to devote full attention to their work and provide periodic reports to the institute.
URL: http://www.usip.org/grants-fellowships
Travel and Research Grants
DEADLINE: March 15, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Fellowships are open to scholars working on doctoral dissertations or conducting postdoctoral research. A researcher's topic need not be specific to the history of Michigan, but in all cases it must require significant use of the holdings of the Bentley Library.
ABSTRACT: The travel and research grant program is designed to encourage research and writing based on the holdings of the Bentley Historical Library. The named fellowships that constitute the program provide a modest amount of support to facilitate travel to the library and to underwrite research related expenses. The Bentley Historical Library houses the Michigan Historical Collections and the University of Michigan Archives. The Michigan Historical Collections is a broadly conceived archival collection that documents the history of the state of Michigan. The library's holdings number over 8,000 collections and document every period of Michigan's history, from the territorial era to the present day.
URL: http://bentley.umich.edu/academic/travel/index.php
Dissertation Year Fellowship at the University of Notre Dame
DEADLINE: November 30, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: The program invites applications from African-American doctoral candidates in the arts, humanities, social sciences, and theological disciplines who have completed all degree requirements with the exception of the dissertation.
ABSTRACT: Fellows are expected to be in residence at the university and to devote most of their time to the completion of the dissertation. In addition, fellows participate in a public forum discussing a variety of aspects related to African American and African Diasporan life, culture, and traditions. Many fellows make guest lecture appearances in courses related to their disciplines and participate in short-term mutual learning events for faculty and students (e.g., brown bag series, roundtable discussion, etc.).
URL: http://africana.nd.edu/erskine/
McNeil Center for Early American Studies
Barra Foundation Dissertation Fellowship
DEADLINE: March 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Doctoral candidates from any Ph.D.-granting institution who are in the research or writing stage of the dissertation are eligible to compete for these fellowships.
ABSTRACT: The Barra Foundation Fellowship is designed primarily for candidates specializing in Early American art or material culture. All McNeil Center fellows are expected to be in residence in Philadelphia during the academic year and to participate regularly in the center's program of seminars and other activities. Any project dealing with the histories and cultures of North America in the Atlantic world before 1850 will be considered. Proposals dependent on the use of Philadelphia-area archives and libraries are particularly welcome. Applications are encouraged from students of all relevant disciplines, including African American studies, American studies, anthropology, economics, folklore, gender studies, history, law, literature, music, political science, religion, urban studies, and women’s studies.
URL: http://www.mceas.org/dissertationfellowships.htm
McNeil Center for Early American Studies
E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Fellowship in Early American Religious Studies
DEADLINE: March 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Doctoral candidates from any Ph.D.-granting institution who are in the research or writing stage of the dissertation are eligible to compete for these fellowships.
ABSTRACT: The E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Fellowship in Early American Religious Studies is open to Ph.D. candidates in any discipline who are in the research or writing phase of a dissertation on any aspect of religion in North America in the Atlantic world before 1850. All McNeil Center fellows are expected to be in residence in Philadelphia during the academic year and to participate regularly in the center's program of seminars and other activities. Any project dealing with the histories and cultures of North America in the Atlantic world before 1850 will be considered. Proposals dependent on the use of Philadelphia-area archives and libraries are particularly welcome. Applications are encouraged from students of all relevant disciplines, including African American studies, American studies, anthropology, economics, folklore, gender studies, history, law, literature, music, political science, religion, urban studies, and women's studies.
URL: http://www.mceas.org/dissertationfellowships.htm
Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
Dissertation Fellowships
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: Fellowships are designated for graduate students who are working on doctoral dissertations. United States citizens and foreign nationals are eligible to apply.
ABSTRACT: The Harry Ransom Center announces its 2010-2011 Research Fellowship program. The Ransom Center awards fellowships to support scholarly research projects in all areas of the humanities, including literature, photography, film, art, the performing arts, music, and cultural history. Six fellowships jointly sponsored by the Ransom Center and The University of Texas at Austin Office of Graduate Studies are designated for graduate students who are working on doctoral dissertations.
URL: http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fellowships/application/
Weston A. Cate, Jr. Research Fellowship
DEADLINE: March 31, 2010
ABSTRACT: The Vermont Historical Society awards a fellowship to encourage research in any aspect of Vermont history. The grantee is expected to complete research and writing on his or her topic within the period of the fellowship. Insofar as possible, the project should involve the use of the collections of the Vermont Historical Society's library or museum. In making the fellowship award, the selection committee will favor applications that address topics designed to fill research gaps in the state's history.
URL: http://vermonthistory.org/index.php
Research Fellowship Program
DEADLINE: February 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: The society welcomes applications from doctoral candidates who have been admitted to Ph.D. candidacy.
ABSTRACT: To promote the interpretation of Virginia history and access to its collections, the Virginia Historical Society, funded by a matching grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and gifts from individuals, offers fellowships of up to three weeks a year. The society makes awards on the basis of the applicants' scholarly qualifications, the merits of their proposals, and the appropriateness of their topics, as demonstrated by citation to specific sources in our collections. Applicants whose research promises to result in significant publication, including the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, will receive primary consideration. The society expects recipients to work on a regular basis in the society's reading room during the period of their award.
URL: http://www.vahistorical.org/research/fellowships.htm
Visiting Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 15, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ABSTRACT: The Lewis Walpole Library, a department of the Yale University Library, has significant holdings of eighteenth-century British prints, drawings, manuscripts, books, and paintings. It is able to support advanced research in most aspects of British eighteenth-century studies. The library offers visiting fellowships, normally for four weeks, as well as travel grants of lesser duration, to scholars engaged in postdoctoral or equivalent research and to doctoral candidates at the dissertation stage.
URL: http://www.library.yale.edu/walpole/html/information/fellowships.html
Gaius Charles Bolin Fellowship for Minority Graduate Students
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: The Bolin Fellowships are awarded to applicants from underrepresented groups, including ethnic minorities, those who are first-generation college graduates, women in predominantly male fields, or disabled scholars. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents who intend to pursue a professorial career in the U.S.A., and who have completed all doctoral work except the dissertation by the end of the current academic year. MFA candidates who will receive their degrees in 2009 are also eligible to apply.
ABSTRACT: The fellowships are designed to promote diversity on college faculties by encouraging students from underrepresented groups to complete a terminal graduate degree and to pursue careers in college teaching. Fellows devote the bulk of the first year to the completion of dissertation work - or in the case of MFA applicants, building their professional portfolios - while also teaching one course as a faculty member in one of the college's academic departments or programs. The second year of residency (ideally with degree in hand) is spent on academic career development while again teaching just one course. During the period of residence at Williams, the Bolin Fellows will be affiliated with an appropriate department or program, and will be expected to teach one one-semester course each year, normally in the fall semester of year one and the spring semester of year two.
URL: http://www.williams.edu/admin/deanfac/fellowships/bolin.php
Lois F. McNeil Dissertation Research Fellowships
DEADLINE: January 5, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: The McNeil Dissertation Fellowships are specifically for doctoral candidates conducting dissertation research.
ABSTRACT: McNeil Dissertation Fellowships are one- or two-semester fellowships for doctoral candidates conducting dissertation research. Winterthur Library is a recognized center for advanced study and is dedicated to the understanding and appreciation of America's artistic, cultural, social, and intellectual history from colonial times into the twentieth century. Fellows have conducted research in the areas of material culture, architecture, decorative arts, design, consumer culture, garden and landscape studies, Shaker studies, travel and tourism, the Atlantic World, childhood, sentimental literary culture, and many other areas of social and cultural history. Winterthur's museum and library collections are rich and diverse, and Winterthur welcomes applications that offer fresh approaches to the resources.
URL: http://www.winterthur.org/research/fellowship.asp?sub=fellowships_avail
Research Fellowship Program
DEADLINE: January 5, 2010 –ANTICIPATED DEADLINE
ELIGIBILITY: Winterthur invites academic, independent, and museum scholars and advanced graduate students to apply for residential research fellowships.
ABSTRACT: Winterthur Library is a recognized center for advanced study and is dedicated to the understanding and appreciation of America's artistic, cultural, social, and intellectual history from colonial times into the twentieth century. Fellows have conducted research in the areas of material culture, architecture, decorative arts, design, consumer culture, garden and landscape studies, Shaker studies, travel and tourism, the Atlantic World, childhood, sentimental literary culture, and many other areas of social and cultural history.
URL: http://www.winterthur.org/research/fellowship.asp?sub=fellowships_avail
Charlotte Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship
DEADLINE: November 15, 2009
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants for the Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship must
- be candidates for Ph.D. or Th.D. degrees in doctoral programs at graduate schools in the United States: Candidates working on D.Min., law, and other professional degrees are not eligible;
- be able to fulfill all pre-dissertation requirements by the application deadline, including approval of the dissertation proposal, and expect to submit completed dissertations by summer 2010;
- be in the writing stage of the dissertation: Usually, this means that fieldwork or other research is complete and writing has begun by the time of the award;
- have never held a similar national award for the final year of dissertation writing: Applicants who have won such awards as the ACLS, AAUW, Ford, MacArthur, Mellon, Pew, Spencer, or Whiting fellowship are not eligible;
- plan to write on topics where ethical or religious values are a central concern; and
- have never applied for the fellowship before. Previous applicants may not apply.
ABSTRACT: The Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowships are designed to encourage original and significant study of ethical or religious values in all fields of the humanities and social sciences, and particularly to help Ph.D. candidates in these fields complete their dissertation work in a timely manner. In addition to topics in religious studies or in ethics (philosophical or religious), dissertations appropriate to the Newcombe Fellowship competition might explore the ethical implications of foreign policy, the values influencing political decisions, the moral codes of other cultures, and religious or ethical issues reflected in history or literature.
URL: http://www.woodrow.org/fellowships/religion_ethics/index.php
Eastern European Studies Short-Term Grants
DEADLINE: December 1, 2009; March 1, 2010
ELIGIBILITY: These grants are available to American academic experts and practitioners, including advanced graduate students, engaged in specialized research requiring access to Washington, DC and its research institutions.
ABSTRACT: With funding provided by Title VIII (the Act for Research and Training for Eastern Europe and Independent States of Former Soviet Union), EES offers short-term grants to scholars working on policy relevant projects on East Europe. Special consideration will be given to projects on Southeast Europe, or projects that can be credibly linked to issues in the Western Balkans. Projects should focus on fields in the social sciences and humanities including, but not limited to, anthropology, history, political science, Slavic languages and literatures, and sociology. All projects should aim to highlight their potential policy relevance.
URL: http://www.wilsoncenter.org/index.cfm
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