Law | Scholarship for Nigerians and Africans - Part 40

International Dissertation Research Fellowship, USA

IDRF promotes research that is situated in a specific discipline and geographical region but is also informed by interdisciplinary and cross-regional perspectives. Research topics may address all periods in history, but applicants should be alert to the broader implications of their research as it relates to contemporary issues and debates. Seventy-five fellowships are awarded annually. Fellowship amounts vary depending on the research plan, with a per-fellowship average of $18,750. The fellowship includes participation in an interdisciplinary workshop upon the completion of IDRF-funded research.

Eligibility
The program is open to graduate students in the humanities and social sciences — regardless of citizenship — enrolled in doctoral programs in the United States. Applicants to the 2011 IDRF competition must complete all Ph.D. requirements except on-site research by the time the fellowship begins or by December 2011, whichever comes first.
The program invites proposals for empirical and site-specific dissertation research outside the United States. It 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-sited, comparative, and transregional research. Proposals that identify the U.S. as a case for comparative inquiry are welcome; however, proposals which 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.
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. The program does not accept applications from Ph.D. programs in law, business, medicine, nursing or journalism. Students who will have undertaken nine or more months of funded dissertation research in one country by July 2011 are not eligible to apply to the IDRF to extend the research time in the same country. The IDRF program will not support study at home institutions, foreign universities, conference participation, short research trips abroad, or projects relying primarily on labwork. For more information on the 2011 IDRF competition, please refer to our Frequently Asked Questions.
Selection Criteria
The IDRF program is committed to empirical and site-specific research that advances knowledge about non-U.S. cultures and societies (involving many kinds of fieldwork and surveys, 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. Research topics may address all periods in history, but applicants should be alert to the broader implications of their research as it relates to contemporary issues and debates.
The IDRF competition thus promotes a range of approaches and research designs beyond single site or single country research, including comparative work at the national and regional levels and explicit comparison of cases across time frames. The program is open to proposals informed by a range of methodologies in the humanities and social sciences, both quantitative and qualitative, that seek to answer research questions through sustained empirical, site-specific and source-driven investigations.
Applicants are expected to write in clear, intelligible prose for a selection committee that is multi-disciplinary and cross-regional. Proposals should display a thorough knowledge of the major concepts, theories, and methods in the applicant’s discipline and in other related fields as well as a bibliography relevant to the research. Applicants should specify why an extended period of on-site research is critical for successful completion of the proposed doctoral dissertation. The research design of proposals should be realistic in scope, clearly formulated, and responsive to theoretical and methodological concerns. Applicants should provide evidence of having attained an appropriate level of training to undertake the proposed research, including evidence of a degree of language fluency sufficient to complete the project. For more information on the 2011 IDRF competition, please refer to our Frequently Asked Questions

Closing Date: 3 November 2010
Program Director
Daniella Sarnoff
Program Coordinator
Elsa Ransom
Contact
• Samuel Zief

Further Fellowship Information and Application

Kofi Annan Fellowship to Full-time MBA candidate from a Developing Country

ESMT European School of Management and Technology was founded in October 2002 by 25 leading global companies and institutions. The international business school offers Full-time MBA and Executive MBA programs, as well
as executive education in the form of open enrollment and customized programs. The School also features in-house research-oriented consulting services in the areas of competition and regulation. ESMT is a private university based in Berlin, Germany, with an additional location in Schloss Gracht near Cologne.

– ESMT becomes academic member of the Kofi Annan Business School Foundation
– Full-tuition Fellowship for high-potential young professional from a developing country
– ESMT shows commitment to responsible leadership and sustainable management by signing on to UN Principles of Management Education

As an academic partner of the Kofi Annan Business School Foundation, ESMT European School of Management and Technology in Berlin is offering the Kofi Annan Business School Foundation Fellowship, a full-tuition scholarship including a monthly stipend for living expenses, and one return air ticket to an outstanding candidate from a developing country. The high-potential professional must not only meet the application criteria of the ESMT’s full-time MBA, but must also prove his or her need of financial support.

The Kofi Annan Business School Foundation aims to stimulate economic development, job creation, and poverty alleviation by educating a new generation of innovative and socially responsible managers. It offers study programs to motivated students who commit to returning to their home country to participate in the development of the regional economy. In addition the foundation also encourages knowledge exchange between business schools in Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin America. It is based in The Hague.
ESMT Associate Dean of Degree Programs Zoltán Antal-Mokos commented, “The guiding principles of the Kofi Annan Business School Foundation fit well with ESMT’s focus on responsible leadership and sustainability in management education.”
Showing its commitment to these fundamentals, ESMT has also signed on to the United Nations Principles of Management
Education (PRME). These principles include academic activities around the values of global social responsibility as portrayed in the UN Global Compact. The UN Global Compact is a United Nations initiative to encourage businesses worldwide to adopt sustainable and socially responsible policies, and to report on their implementation.
The PRME is an international voluntary engagement platform for business schools, supporting them in their contribution
to helping build prosperous and thriving societies through curricula, research, and advocacy.

More information about the Kofi Annan Business School Foundation: http://www.esmt.org/info/latest.
More information about the UN PRME: http://www.esmt.org/eng/mba-emba/esmt-scholarships/

For interview requests or more information, please contact us.

Contact Person:

Martha Ihlbrock
ESMT European School of Management and Technology GmbH
Schlossplatz 1
10178 Berlin
Germany
Tel: +49 (0)30 21231-1043
Fax: +49 (0)30 21231-1069
Mobile: +49 (0)175 939 0728
e-mail: martha.ihlbrock@esmt.org
Read more: http://scholarship-positions.com/kofi-annan-fellowship-to-full-time-mba-candidate-from-a-developing-country/2010/08/21/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ScholarshipPositions+%28International+Scholarships+and+Financial+Aid+Positions%29&utm_content=Yahoo%21+Mail#ixzz0y5VSjpV3

Reagan-Fascell Democracy International Fellowship Program, USA

The opportunity  is to spend five months at the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), in Washington DC, in order to un-dertake independent research on democracy in a particular country or region. While in residence, fellows reflect on their experiences; engage with counterparts; conduct research and writing; con-sider best practices and lessons learned; and develop professional relationships within a global network of democracy advocates.
Support: Located within NED’s International Forum for Democratic Studies, the program provides a rich intellectual setting for educational exchange and professional development. The Forum also publishes the Journal of Democracy, holds conferences, and provides access to NED’s library. The program offers the support of a research associate and facilitates fellows’ outreach to Washington’s advocacy, media, academic, and policy communities. All fellowships include a monthly stipend, health insurance, and roundtrip travel reimbursement. The program does not provide financial assis-tance for accompanying family or other dependents.
Participation: The program runs two five-month fellowship sessions per year, during which fellows work full time on their projects. Practitioners focus on strategies and best practices for developing de-mocracy in their country of interest; scholars conduct original research for publication. Projects may address the economic, political, social, legal, or cultural aspects of democratic development and include a range of methodologies and approaches. The program hosts an active calendar of events for fellows, including an introduction to NED and its partner institutions, seminars, roundtables, and other activi-ties. Fellows are expected to present their work and prepare a written product during their stay.
Eligibility: While the program is intended primarily for individuals from developing and aspir-ing democracies, distinguished scholars from the United States and other established democra-cies are eligible to apply. Practitioners and journalists are expected to have substantial work ex-perience in their fields, while scholars are expected to have a Ph.D., or academic equivalent, at the time of application. The program does not fund professional training, fieldwork, or students working toward a degree. A working knowledge of English is required.
Dates: Fall Session: October 2011–February 2012; Spring Session: March–July 2012.

Application: The application deadline is Monday, November 1, 2010. Applicants will be notified of the outcome in April 2011.

Further Fellowship Information and Application
Read more: http://scholarship-positions.com/reagan-fascell-democracy-international-fellowship-program-usa/2010/08/14/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ScholarshipPositions+%28International+Scholarships+and+Financial+Aid+Positions%29&utm_content=Yahoo%21+Mail#ixzz0y52y9hTo