Förderprogramme
- Joint Applications Scheme for Early Career Research Fellowships 2023Okt 10Montag, 10. Oktober 2022 08:56
Trinity Hall
Applications are invited for a Research Fellowship in the following Arts subjects - Ancient History and Classical Archaeology; Archaeology; Asian and Middle Eastern Studies (AMES); Geography (Arts side); History; History of Art; History of Science; Social Anthropology - which will normally be tenable for three years from 1 October 2023. The Fellowship is open to graduates of any gender, of any university, with no age limit, but will normally be awarded to candidates who have recently completed their PhD or are close to completion. These Fellowships are initial (normally) post-doctoral positions appropriate to the start of an academic career.
The prime duty of a Research Fellow is to engage in research; Research Fellows are also welcome to undertake supervision teaching, if they wish, within a limit of six hours per week. Research Fellows are not expected to undertake any additional administrative duties, but as trustees should attend meetings of the College's Governing Body.
The pensionable stipend of post-PhD Research Fellows is currently £23,499 (pre-PhD £20,851), cost of living increase pending.
Trinity Hall operates a Joint Application Scheme for Early Career Research Fellowships with a number of other Cambridge colleges, and applications will be considered by all participating colleges offering Fellowships in the relevant subjects. Candidates are advised that competition is likely to be intense with many hundreds of applications received each year.
Candidates are warned that they are responsible for checking their eligibility to take up the post under UK immigration rules.
Full information regarding the Fellowships on offer, further particulars and registration details are available at the Joint Application Scheme website:
https://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/about/master-and-fellowship/early-career-research-fellowships/
Isaac Newton/College Junior Research Fellowship 2022
Robinson College invites applications for election to an Isaac Newton/College Junior Research Fellowship, which is generously funded by the Isaac Newton Trust, starting on 1st October 2023, lasting for three years, until 30 September 2026. The Fellowship is open to graduates working in Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic (ASNC), Architecture, Classical Literature and Linguistics, English, MMLL and Music. The holder of the Isaac Newton/College Junior Research Fellowship is expected to pursue full-time research based in Cambridge.
The Fellowship is open to graduates of any university; there is no age limit, but the Fellowship is designed to support those who are at an early stage in their academic careers, and it will normally be awarded to a candidate who has recently completed a PhD degree (or equivalent) or is close to completing.
The stipend of a Research Fellow is at point 30 on the academic single spine (£24,948) with a 10 per cent reduction for an appointee who has yet to complete a PhD. The post is pensionable within USS. Research Fellows are entitled to heavily subsidised accommodation in College, subject to availability.
A Research Fellow becomes a member of the Governing Body of Robinson College and will be expected to contribute to the life of the College's academic community.
Churchill College, Fitzwilliam College, Murray Edwards College, Robinson College, St Edmund's College and Trinity Hall operate a Joint Application Scheme for Early Career Research Fellowships.
Applications will be considered by all Colleges offering Fellowships in the relevant subject. A total of eight Fellowships are offered but candidates are advised that competition is likely to be intense; last year almost 1000 applications were received.
Full information regarding the Fellowships on offer, further particulars and registration details will be available at the Joint Application Scheme website from 7 October 2022:
https://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/about/master-and-fellowship/early-career-research-fellowships/
All applications to be submitted online by Monday 7 November 2022.
- 2 x Research Fellowships in Arts, Humanities and Social SciencesAug 19Freitag, 19. August 2022 19:17
University of Cambridge - Gonville & Caius College
Gonville & Caius College intends to elect two Research Fellows in Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences in 2023. Candidates should be graduate students or post-doctoral researchers who will either be in their final year of doctoral research or not more advanced than one year since the first submission of their PhD. Research Fellowships are awarded to individuals with an exceptionally strong academic record who have produced innovative doctoral research in any branch of the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences.
The Fellowships will be tenable for four years from 1 October 2023. Research Fellows have the full entitlement of Fellows; they are expected to spend the tenure of their Fellowship in Cambridge and to contribute to the life of the College. Permission may be granted for periods of research away from Cambridge.
A Research Fellowship at Caius is compatible with a simultaneous appointment to a salaried post-doctoral position in a Cambridge Department or Faculty. Such a person appointed to a Research Fellowship would be entitled to all the benefits of a Research Fellow other than stipend. If the post-doctoral position comes to an end before the end of the four-year Fellowship, the College's usual stipend will apply for the remainder of the time.
The current stipend offered is either (a) £24,608, rising by three annual increments to £27,392 if living in College accommodation as a single person, which is free, or in College couples' or family accommodation, if available, which is subsidised, or (b) £27,624 rising by 3 annual increments to £30,379 if not living in College accommodation. All stipends are subject to annual cost of living review each October. Other benefits include 10 free meals per week and certain research expenses may be reimbursed. There are also opportunities for College teaching (up to six hours per week), which attracts extra payment.
Candidates must submit written work for assessment at the same time as their application. Apart from quotations, the work must be in English. If a complete PhD and/or published work is submitted, the applicant should indicate which parts are the most important; a maximum of 30,000 words will be assessed.
Applications open on Thursday 1 September 2022 and must be completed by Friday 30 September 2022. Shortlisting will take place on Monday 9 January 2023. Those selected will be invited for interview on Friday 13 January 2023, so candidates should ensure that they will be available for interview on that day, if required. Offers will be made shortly after the interviews and must be accepted by 4.00 pm on Wednesday 18 January 2023 at the latest.
The College is an equal opportunities employer and actively supports equality, diversity, and inclusion, and encourages applications from all sections of society. Elections to Research Fellowships are made purely on the basis of intellectual and academic attainment and promise.
TO APPLY
Please go to: https://rfc.cai.cam.ac.uk/.
Closing Date: Friday 30th September 2022 at 23:59 - Getty Villa: The Classical World in Context: AnatoliaAug 18Donnerstag, 18. August 2022 16:02
The Getty Villa Scholars program will examine relations between the Greek cities of western Asia Minor and Anatolian civilizations from the 2nd millennium to the Roman Imperial period. In the Late Bronze Age, diplomatic ties linked the Hittite and Luwian kingdoms with the Mycenaeans at Miletos. During the 7th and 6th centuries BCE, the eastern Greeks were at the forefront of revolutionary advances in the arts, monumental architecture, poetry, philosophy, history, and the natural sciences. This "Ionian Enlightenment," however, culminated within a dynamic cultural and political setting alongside Phrygia, Lydia, Caria, and Lycia, which had already emerged as regional powers over the previous two centuries. Subject to Persian rule after 547 BCE, Greek and Anatolian communities redefined their own identities until the conquest of Alexander the Great and the advent of Roman rule once again transformed the cultural landscapes of the entire region.
The 2023–2024 Getty Villa Scholars Program launches a two-year initiative on the interconnectivities that conditioned relations between East Greeks and their Anatolian neighbors, and the consequent impact on the wider Mediterranean. Priority will be given to research projects that explore multidisciplinary approaches to art and material culture, texts, and other sources.
Application deadline is November 1, 2022.
HOW TO APPLY:
The complete theme statements are available online at
www.getty.edu/research/scholars/years/future.
Detailed instructions, eligibility requirements, and application forms
are available online at www.getty.edu/foundation/apply.
Residential grants and fellowships are available for scholars at all stages
in their careers:
❖ Getty scholar grants for established scholars or writers who have
attained distinction in their fields
❖ Getty postdoctoral fellowships
at the Getty Villa
HOW TO APPLY:
The complete theme statements are available online at
www.getty.edu/research/scholars/years/future.
Detailed instructions, eligibility requirements, and application forms
are available online at www.getty.edu/foundation/apply.
Residential grants and fellowships are available for scholars at all stages
in their careers:
❖ Getty scholar grants for established scholars or writers who have
attained distinction in their fields
❖ Getty postdoctoral fellowships
ADDRESS INQUIRIES TO:
Attn: (Type of Grant)
The Getty Foundation
Phone: 310 440.7374
E-mail: Diese E-Mail-Adresse ist vor Spambots geschützt! Zur Anzeige muss JavaScript eingeschaltet sein!
https://www.getty.edu/research/scholars/years/future.html
https://www.getty.edu/research/scholars/years/pdf/poster_villa23_24.pdf