Woodrow Wilson Center Fellowships
The Woodrow Wilson Center awards approximately 20-25 fellowships annually to individuals with project proposals in a broad range of the social sciences and humanities on national and/or international issues. Fellowships provide for residency and research within the United States (US). Topics and scholarship should relate to key public policy challenges or provide the historical and/or cultural framework to illuminate policy issues of contemporary importance. Fellows are expected to be in residence for the entire US academic year (early September through May, i.e., 9 months), although a few fellowships are occasionally awarded for shorter periods with a minimum of four months.
Eligibility
- Citizens or permanent residents from any country (foreign nationals must be able to hold a valid passport and obtain a US J1 Visa)
- Men and women with outstanding capabilities and experience from a wide variety of backgrounds (including government, the corporate world, professions, and academia)
- Academic candidates holding a Ph.D. (Ph.D. must be received by the application deadline of October 1)
- Academic candidates demonstrating scholarly achievement by publications beyond their doctoral dissertations
- Practitioners or policymakers with an equivalent level of professional achievement
- English proficiency (the Center is designed to encourage the exchange of ideas among its fellows.)
Primary themes are:
- governance, including such issues as the key features of the development of democratic institutions, democratic society, civil society, and citizen participation;
- the US role in the world and issues of partnership and leadership - military, political, and economic dimensions; and
- key long-term future challenges confronting the US and the world.
Ineligibility
- Applicants working on a degree (even if the degree is to be awarded prior to the proposed fellowship year)
- Proposals of a partisan or advocacy nature
- Primary research in the natural sciences
- Projects that create musical composition or dance
- Projects in the visual arts
- Projects that are the rewriting of doctoral dissertations
- The editing of texts, papers, or documents
- The preparation of textbooks, anthologies, translations, and memoirs
The basic criteria for selection are:
- significance of the proposed research, including the importance and originality of the project;
- quality of the proposal in definition, organisation, clarity, and scope;
- capabilities and achievements of the applicant and the likelihood that the applicant will accomplish the proposed project;
- the relevance of the project to contemporary policy issues.
Click here for further information.
Click here for application information.
Click here to read about 2010-2011 Fellows.
The Ashoka Advantage newsletter, September 2010.
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