Online Fellowship Program on Exiting Violence 2021

Publish Date: Jul 25, 2021

Deadline: Sep 15, 2021

Thanks to the generosity of The Fondation Maison des sciences de l'homme (FMSH) in Paris and the Carnegie Corporation of New York, Columbia Global Centers | Amman has co-established a six-month virtual fellowship to support scholars working in the social sciences on themes relating to exiting violence.

While there is a substantial amount of research on the issue of violence as well as on its causes and modalities, very little research has been done on the issue of ‘exiting’ violence. Thus, this virtual fellowship program aims to involve researchers, including young researchers, from the MENA region, and provide them with opportunities to investigate how to exit violence by analyzing the processes involved in exiting violence as part of an ongoing dialogue with policy-makers and practitioners.

Fellows will be part of the International Panel on Exiting Violence (IPEV), which is a multidisciplinary community of researchers and specialists internationally recognized for their work on contemporary forms of violence.

During the six-month virtual fellowship, fellows are expected to produce and publish articles and op-ed pieces on exiting violence in publications in the region, as well as in international online publications (such as The Conversation, the Huffington Post, Slate, etc.), participate in a series of virtual webinars, and contribute by offering recommendations in video or podcast format to international, regional and national institutions, policy-makers, NGO representatives, and practitioners on this issue.

Support mechanisms for Fellows include:

  • Creating collaborations between researchers in the MENA region and their peers in the U.S. and Europe;
  • Enhancing visibility of the issues addressed by IPEV in the media and among policymakers internationally;
  • Disseminating the research work and ideas through media content;
  • Building capacity of researchers through access to two virtual training workshops designed by the Columbia Writing Center and the Journalism School; and,
  • Fostering a network of fellows by linking them to other related Columbia initiatives that support social science researchers.

Eligibility

Eligible candidates are scholars:

  • from the MENA region;
  • in the social sciences who have been researching and publishing on issues of exiting violence, and identifying good practices for exiting contemporary forms of violence and their tragic consequences including exile and forced migration.

Fellows are expected to investigate how to put an end to these issues and to provide solutions to these crises. They will be thinking about the exit of violence at the various levels where it is used (de-radicalization, disengagement, reconciliation, memories of groups and individuals, etc.).

Related themes include:

  • For a Comparative Anthropological, and Contextualized Approach to Radicalization
  • De-radicalization
  • Between Salafism, Sectarianism, and Violence
  • Separatism and Exiting Violence
  • Women and Violence with a Gendered Approach: MENA Region and Diaspora
  • Uses and Misuses of Memory
  • Public Policies Against Violence
  • Reconciliation and Justice
  • Roles of Strong States and Weak States in the Production of Violence in the Arab World
  • Reconstructing the Self

Applicants must submit a dossier that includes the following materials by September 15, 2021:

  •   A curriculum vita that includes academic credentials and professional experience;
  •   A personal statement (two pages) that includes motivation for applying to this program, as well as a description of research work in relation to transitioning from violence;
  •   A proposal describing the research that will be undertaken during the six-month fellowship;
  •   One to two writing samples/publications;
  •   Letter of recommendation from an academic colleague who is familiar with applicant’s previous work; and,
  •   Copies of academic transcripts.

For more information click "LINK TO ORIGINAL" below.

Further Official Information

Link to Original

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Disciplines

Humanities

Social Sciences

Opportunity Types

Fellowships

Eligible Countries

Algeria

Angola

Benin

Botswana

Burkina Faso

Burundi

Cameroon

Cape Verde

Central African Republic

Chad

Comoros

Democratic Republic of the Congo

Djibouti

Egypt

Equatorial Guinea

Eritrea

Ethiopia

Gabon

Gambia

Ghana

Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

Kenya

Lesotho

Liberia

Mali

Mauritania

Mauritius

Morocco

Mozambique

Namibia

Niger

Nigeria

Rwanda

Sao Tome and Principe

Senegal

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

Somalia

South Africa

South Sudan

Sudan

Swaziland

Tanzania

Togo

Tunisia

Uganda

Zambia

Zimbabwe