Fellowship Competition for Advanced Holocaust Studies 2019

Publish Date: Aug 24, 2016

Deadline: Dec 31, 2018

FELLOWSHIPS

The Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies awards fellowships on a competitive basis to support significant research and writing about the Holocaust.  We welcome proposals from scholars in all academic disciplines, including but not limited to: anthropology, archeology, art history, geography, film studies, German studies, history, Jewish studies, law, literature, material culture, philosophy, political science, psychology, religion, comparative genocide studies, and others.

ABOUT THE FELLOWSHIPS

The Mandel Center awards fellowships-in-residence to candidates working on their dissertations (ABD), postdoctoral researchers within five years of receiving their Ph.D., and scholars more than five years beyond the receipt of their Ph.D. as well as senior scholars. Awards are granted on a competitive basis. Because a principal focus of the program is to ensure the development of a new generation of Holocaust scholars, we especially encourage scholars early in their careers to apply.  Applicants must be affiliated with an academic and/or research institution when applying for a fellowship. We will also consider immediate post-docs and faculty between appointments.  Proposals from applicants conducting research outside the discipline of history or on Mandel Center strategic priorities are especially encouraged, including literature and the Holocaust; America and the Holocaust,  projects utilizing the ITS collection; Jewish and especially Sephardic experiences of persecution; the Holocaust as it occurred in the Soviet Union, and the Holocaust as it occurred in North Africa.   

The specific fellowship and the length of the award are at the Mandel Center’s discretion.  Individual awards generally range up to eight consecutive months of residency; a minimum of three consecutive months is required. No exceptions are allowed. Fellowships of five months or longer have proven most effective.

Stipends range up to $3,700 per month for the purpose of defraying local housing and other miscellaneous living expenses and are subject to US tax law.  Residents of the Washington, DC, metropolitan area receive a reduced stipend of $1,850 per month. Awards include a stipend to offset the cost of direct travel to and from Washington, DC.  Residents of the Washington, DC, metropolitan area do not receive a travel stipend. The funds provided through this award may be subject to US federal and/or state tax. Please be advised the Mandel Center cannot provide individual tax advice.

The Mandel Center is able to provide visa assistance to fellows and their dependents, if necessary. Fellows are responsible for securing their own housing accommodations and health insurance. We do not provide support allowances for accompanying family members.

Fellowship winners will have access to flexible work space stations, computer, telephone, facsimile machine, and photocopier.  We encourage cost-sharing by home institutions or other relevant organizations to extend the residency of the applicant at the Mandel Center or to make possible additional research at other institutions in the Unites States and abroad.

2017–18 Fellowships may start as early as August 1, 2017, and must be completed no later than December 31, 2018. 

THE APPLICATION PROCESS

All applications must be submitted in English via an online application process. All applications must consist of the following:

  • An online application form (Find it in the "Further official information" link below this article).
  • A project proposal, in PDF format, not to exceed five single-spaced pages
  • A curriculum vitae summary, in PDF format, not to exceed four single-spaced pages
  • Two signed letters of recommendation that speak to the significance of the proposed project and the applicant’s ability to carry it out. Members of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council’s Academic Committee may not write letters of recommendation. Only two letters will be considered. Any additional letters will not be included in the applicant’s file. All application materials, including letters of recommendation for the 2017–18 competition should be received on November 15, 2016, and come directly from the references, not from the applicant. Directions on how to submit letters of recommendation will be e-mailed to the references only after the applicant "submits" their application. Please note the deadline for all materials.
  • Applicants who have received a fellowship award from the Mandel Center in previous cycles may not re-apply unless seven years have passed since the end date of their previous residency.

Successful project proposals should highlight the resources available at the Museum that scholars will need to access in order to support their research. An addendum listing these resources may be attached in addition to the five-page project proposal. Important resources may also be referenced in the body of the project proposal.

Decisions for the 2017–18 Fellowship Competition will be announced in late April, 2017.

Apply Now

CONTACT

Please direct inquiries to:

Jo-Ellyn Decker, Program Manager
Visiting Scholar Programs

Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW

Washington, DC 20024-2126

Tel: 202.314.7829

Fax: 202.479.9726

vscholars@ushmm.org

THE AWARDS
The specific fellowship and length of award are at the Mandel Center’s discretion.

The Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies 2017-2018 fellowships are made possible by generous donors:

  • Ben and Zelda Cohen Foundation
  • Fred and Maria Devinki Memorial Fellowship Fund
  • Gene and Neddie Mae Elkus Foundation
  • Yetta and Jacob Gelman Endowment
  • Alexander Grass Foundation
  • Phyllis Greenberg Heideman and Richard D. Heideman
  • Miles Lerman Center for the Study of Jewish Resistance
  • William S. and Ina Levine Foundation
  • William J. Lowenberg Memorial Fellowship Fund on America, the Holocaust, and the Jews
  • Matthew Family Charitable Trust
  • Margit Meissner Fund for the Study of the Holocaust in Czech Lands
  • Norman Raab Foundation
  • Judith B. and Burton P. Resnick Foundation
  • Pearl Resnick Fellowship Foundation
  • Robert Savitt Visiting Scholars Fund
  • Joyce and Arthur Schechter Endowment Fund
  • J. B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Charitable Trust
  • The Sosland Family
  • Initiative on Ukrainian-Jewish Shared History and the Holocaust in Ukraine
  • Diane and Howard Wohl
  • This list may not include all potential named fellowships and is subject to modification.

ADDITIONAL OPPORTUNITIES

Applicants to the Mandel Center’s annual fellowship competition may also be interested in the Conference on Material Claims Against Germany’s Saul Kagan Fellowships. Kagan Fellows present their work to Mandel Center staff and fellows at the Museum on a biennial basis.

Please note these are separate fellowship programs. You may not hold a Mandel Center fellowship concurrently with other funded fellowships.

For more information click "Further official information" below.


This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

https://www.ushmm.org/research/competitive-academic-programs/fellowship-competition

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Disciplines

Any

Holocaust

Study Levels

Research

Opportunity Types

Awards

Fellowships

Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

United States

Event Types

Contest