All Fellowships

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Rotalia Foundation Scholarships

The primary goal of this foundation is to provide financial support to various activities associated with Rotalia, such as academic scholarships, travel grants, and to support Rotalia's publications, libraries, archives, conferences and sporting events. Scholarships and research grants for individuals in the U.S. and abroad who read, speak, and understand Estonian. Grants are given at all levels undergraduate, graduate, postgraduate, and for research. The foundation is particularly interested in supporting qualified individuals in the U.S. to study in Estonia, and individuals in Estonia to study in the U.S.

Award Type

  • Research Funding Graduate
  • Research Funding Undergraduate
  • Study Abroad and Language Study

Location

  • Domestic
  • International

Roy Scrivner Memorial Research Grants

The Roy Scrivner Research Grants provide graduate student grants of $11,000 for empirical or applied research that encourages the study of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) family psychology and LGBT family therapy. Researchers from all fields of the behavioral and social sciences are encouraged to apply.

Award Type

  • Research Funding Graduate
  • Research Funding Master's or Professional

Focus Area

  • Social Sciences

Year in School

  • Research Funding Graduate
  • Research Funding Master's or Professional

Location

  • Domestic

Citizenship

  • U.S. Citizen

Running Start Congressional Fellowship

Running Start Fellows intern for a female Member of Congress Monday through Thursday and each Friday are trained by political experts in Running Start’s office and then mentored by high level political mentors. Fellows live together in a house on Capitol Hill, free of charge, and are provided with a $2,500 living stipend for the semester. Running Start is looking for Fellowship candidates from across the political spectrum who are deeply motivated college aged women. Applicants must be college seniors, juniors or have graduated from college within a year of the Fellowship start date. 

Award Type

  • Internships

Focus Area

  • Government
  • Public Policy
  • Foreign Affairs

Year in School

  • Internships

Location

  • Domestic
  • International

Citizenship

  • U.S. Citizen

Schwarzman Scholars

The Schwarzman Scholars experience is anchored in a rigorous and innovative Master’s of Global Affairs degree program at Tsinghua University in Beijing, one of the country's leading universities. Drawing on the best traditions of Tsinghua and top academic institutions around the world, the curriculum bridges the academic and professional worlds to educate students about leadership and about China's expanding role in the world.

The program also provides Scholars with unparalleled learning opportunities with leaders from China and the world through high-level interactions at lectures, an internship program, a mentors network, and intensive deep-dive travel seminars.

Award Type

  • Internships
  • Tuition Support Master's and Professional

Focus Area

  • Government
  • Public Policy
  • Foreign Affairs

Year in School

  • Internships
  • Tuition Support Master's and Professional

Location

  • International

Siemens Foundation - PATH 2019 Summer Fellowship

PATH is a global organization that works to accelerate health equity by bringing together public institutions, businesses, social enterprises, and investors to solve the world’s most pressing health challenges. PATH develops and scales solutions—including vaccines, drugs, devices, diagnostics, and innovative approaches to strengthening health systems worldwide. 

PATH, in partnership with the Siemens Foundation, is seeking a cohort of six students to join the competitive Siemens Foundation-PATH Fellowship Program. The program engages science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) students in innovative, hands-on assignments that serve society by accelerating high-impact, low-cost solutions to some of the world’s most pressing health needs.

Based in PATH’s Seattle, Washington office, fellows are provided a meaningful research and/or laboratory experience and exposed to career opportunities in global health. Students will be supported by mentors in both organizations.

 

Award Type

  • Internships
  • Summer

Focus Area

  • Science
  • Technology
  • Engineering
  • Math
  • Service and Development Projects

Location

  • Domestic
  • International

deadline

February 15 2019

Soros Equality Fellowship

The U.S. Programs’ Equality team seeks applicants for its Soros Equality Fellowship, which aims to support emerging mid-career professionals who will become long-term innovative leaders influencing the racial justice field. This calls for a diverse array of projects across different fields of study influencing racial justice in the United States. The fellowship award provides individuals with a grant of $100,000 to support production of an innovative racial justice project over the course of 18 months. Applicants may be based outside of the U.S., but projects must pertain to racial justice issues relevant to the United States. 

The U.S. Programs’ Equality team seeks a diverse cohort of applicants, including but not limited to activists, artists, journalists, and organizers, to produce a project with meaningful impact. This approach recognizes the power of individuals to use a variety of tools, from traditional advocacy to the arts, to impact change and uplift the mission and values of an open society.

Award Type

  • Research Funding Recent Alum

Focus Area

  • Arts
  • Architecture
  • Music
  • Government
  • Public Policy
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Journalism
  • Social Sciences

Year in School

  • Research Funding Recent Alum

Location

  • Domestic
  • International

Soros Justice Fellowships

Open Society FoundationsThe Soros Justice Fellowships fund outstanding individuals to undertake projects that advance reform, spur debate, and catalyze change on a range of issues facing the US criminal justice system. The fellowships are part of a larger effort within the Open Society Foundations to reduce the destructive impact of current criminal justice policies on the lives of individuals, families, and communities in the United States by challenging the overreliance on incarceration and extreme punishment, and ensuring a fair and accountable system of justice.

Award Type

  • Research Funding Master's or Professional
  • Research Funding Recent Alum
  • Research Funding Undergraduate

Focus Area

  • Government
  • Public Policy
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Journalism
  • Service and Development Projects

Location

  • Domestic

Citizenship

  • Non-Citizen
  • Permanent Resident
  • U.S. Citizen

Stanford Global Health Media Fellowship

Stanford Global Health Media Fellows are chosen from a national pool of medical students committed to a career in global health. The Fellow learns how reporting on global health issues can impact health and human rights efforts, foundation and government health assistance, and individual health choices.

This opportunity provides medical students with 12 months of practical training in the fundamentals of journalism, communications, and global health reporting on a variety of media platforms, including print, online, broadcast, social and digital media. One fellow, selected from a national pool of candidates, participates in three rotations over the course of the fellowship year. The Fellow spends the fall quarter (mid-August through December) as an MA student in journalism with Stanford's Graduate Program in Journalism. In the winter, the Fellow interns at a broadcast news outlet; and in the spring, the Fellow completes a capstone project in the field.

Focus Area

  • Journalism
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Engineering
  • Math

Location

  • Domestic
  • International

Summer Public Health Scholars Program

The Summer Public Health Scholars Program (SPHSP) is designed for undergraduate students and its goal is to increase interest in and knowledge of public health and biomedical science careers. The program is designed for undergraduates entering their junior or senior year and recent baccalaureate degree students who are undecided about their career goals. This is a rigorous program which includes Public Health coursework at Columbia University; hands-on field experience and immersion in a diverse, economically disadvantaged urban environment; seminars and lectures with public health leaders; and mentoring by faculty members, ensuring students' exposure to the breadth and importance of public health as a career option.

Award Type

  • Summer

Focus Area

  • Science
  • Technology
  • Engineering
  • Math
  • Unspecified

Year in School

  • Summer

Location

  • Domestic

Citizenship

  • Permanent Resident
  • U.S. Citizen

The Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) Program

Critical Language Scholarship

The Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) Program is a fully funded overseas summer language and cultural immersion program for American students. CLS provides study opportunities to a diverse range of students at every level of language learning. Students who are US citizens and at least 18 years old are eligible to apply.

Award Type

  • Study Abroad and Language Study
  • Summer

Focus Area

  • Unspecified

Year in School

  • Study Abroad and Language Study
  • Summer

Location

  • International

Citizenship

  • U.S. Citizen