United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Summer Graduate Student Research Fellowships 2018, USA

Publish Date: Nov 13, 2017

Deadline: Jan 01, 2018

Summer Graduate Student Research Fellowships

The Museum’s Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies is pleased to invite applications for Graduate Student Research Fellows, designed for students accepted to or currently enrolled in a master’s degree program or in their first year of a PhD program. Students who have completed more than one year of doctoral work will not be considered.

The Mandel Center welcomes applications from students in all academic disciplines, including history, political science, literature, Jewish studies, psychology, sociology, geography, and others. Students outside the field of History are encouraged to apply.

PROGRAM OBJECTIVE

The Graduate Student Research Fellowships are awarded to support significant research and writing about the Holocaust and to encourage MA-level and first year PhD students to test ideas, share research findings, debate methodological or interruptive processes, and develop frameworks for their projects.
In addition, Graduate Student Research Fellowships acquaint promising students with Holocaust studies by encouraging participation in the broad range of scholarly and publicly available educational programs offered by the Museum during the summer months. Graduate Student Research Fellows will work with assigned staff mentors who will advise students on their research goals. Awards are granted on a competitive basis.

Students are expected to participate in a weekly training seminar led by Museum staff, which introduces them to key subjects, essential tools, useful methods, and approaches as well as career opportunities in Holocaust research. Each assistant will meet with a staff mentor who will advise them on their projects and help guide their research in the Museum collections. Graduate Student Research Fellows are expected to familiarize themselves with relevant topics through assigned readings and to actively engage with Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies staff. The Mandel Center’s activities span both the fifth floor of the Washington Museum and the David and Fela Shapell Collections, Conservation and Research Center in Bowie, Maryland.

RESIDENCY REQUIREMENTS

Graduate Student Research Fellows for the 2018 year are required to be in residence at the Museum for 12 consecutive weeks, arriving on June 4 and departing on August 17, 2018. The Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies will provide a stipend of $3,000/month as well as an allowance to offset the cost of direct, economy-class travel to and from Washington, DC. Local awardees will not receive a travel allowance. The funds provided through this award may be subject to US federal and/or state tax. Please be advised the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies cannot provide individual tax advice.

ELIGIBILITY

Open to those students accepted to or enrolled in an MA program or in their first year in a PhD program at a North American college or university. The Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies is unable to provide visa assistance for non-US citizens.

In addition to English, applicants are encouraged, but not required, to have fluency in one or more of the following languages: German, Russian, Polish, Romanian, Hebrew, Yiddish, French, Dutch, Hungarian, Slovakian, Italian, and/or Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian.

APPLICATION MATERIALS AND GUIDELINES

All materials must be received by January 1, 2018 (12 a.m. EST).  Decisions will be announced in early April 2018. All applications must be submitted in English and must include:

  • An online application form
  • A resume
  • A personal statement of no more than two single-spaced pages in length. The statement should explain the applicant’s interest in the Holocaust and World War II and how the Junior Fellowship might further encourage his or her studies in this area.
  • A project proposal of no more than three single-spaced pages in length. Each proposal should address a research topic developed with a faculty member at the student’s home institution.
    • The project proposal should include:
      • The student’s thesis statement.
      • An outline of their proposed project goals.
      • A list of resources available at the Museum that the student will need to access in order to support their research.
    • One letter of recommendation from a faculty member or dean at the applicant’s institution that speaks to the applicant’s qualifications. The letter must be signed and on institutional letterhead. Letters of recommendation should be sent from the recommender, not the applicant, as attachments to SGRA@ushmm.org.

This opportunity has expired. It was originally available here: 
https://www.ushmm.org/research/competitive-academic-programs/fellows-and-scholars/summer-graduate-program 
but the link is no more active

Similar Opportunities


Disciplines

Genocide Studies

Heritage Studies

History

Languages

Literature

Sociology

Study Levels

Research

Opportunity Types

Fellowships

Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

United States