26 Nov 2016

Scottish government in crisis over Trump victory

Steve James

Formally congratulating Donald Trump on his election to the office of US President, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon conceded that his victory was “not the outcome I hoped for.”
“Many in America and across the world will also feel a real sense of anxiety,” she continued before appealing, absurdly, for the far-right billionaire to “be a president for everyone in modern, multicultural America.”
Sturgeon, making clear her own reliance on identity politics, praised Hillary Clinton’s defeated right-wing militarist campaign as “a major step forward for women in America and across the world.” According to Sturgeon, the corrupt corporate warmonger “is owed a deep debt of gratitude.”
Sturgeon’s remarks contrasted with British Prime Minister Theresa May’s gushing offer to “look forward to working with president-elect Donald Trump, building on these ties to ensure the security and prosperity of our nations in the years ahead.”
The difference in tone is more than packaging. Trump’s election threatens to sharply deepen the fault lines in a ruling class in Britain that is divided over the unknown duration and uncertain destination of Brexit, over the fate of the European Union (EU), and even the survival of the UK itself.
Trump favours Brexit. The first British politician to meet him was Nigel Farage, currently reinstated as leader of the UK Independence Party, and the man who Trump has now suggested should be UK Ambassador to the United States! Since her elevation to 10 Downing Street, May has repeatedly made clear that, despite the chaos and disarray surrounding all aspects of the Brexit process, she and much of the Conservative Party she leads are determined to press on with it. This includes the growing possibility of a “hard” Brexit, in which no agreement is reached at all on future British access to the European Single Market.
Sturgeon, on the other hand, and most of the Scottish National Party (SNP) she leads, along with a section of the British Labour Party, all the Liberal Democrats and sections of the Tories, consider Brexit an unmitigated disaster to be prevented at all costs. From the standpoint of attracting investment, exporting to the EU, and advancing the interests of the vast financial sector most dependent on Europe, EU membership is considered obligatory.
Sturgeon et al had anticipated a Clinton victory and were considering how best to utilise a Democrat-led administration’s opposition to Brexit to add weight and leverage to their case for a reversal of the June 23 EU referendum vote, in which a majority in Scotland voted to remain in the EU. The SNP has also been mooted as supportive of a “progressive alliance” of pro-EU parties seeking to overturn the result.
Trump’s election victory, therefore, pitches the SNP into a considerable crisis. A turn by the US to “America first” nationalism undermines every post-World War II institution underwritten by American power, foremost of which is the EU itself. Across the EU, the outcome has been greeted with alarm that both NATO and the hundred-year-long US engagement in European political affairs might come to an end.
Moreover, SNP leaders, supporting both NATO and the EU, have been unusually outspoken against a Trump presidency. For years now, Trump and the former SNP leader, Alex Salmond, now the party’s foreign affairs spokesman, have been conducting a public feud over the view from an Aberdeenshire golf course.
Salmond was initially happy to grovel to the billionaire tycoon, and glad to trample over local environmental concerns in pursuit of a lucrative development in Menie in Salmond’s own constituency. The relationship turned sour, however, when Trump went to court to prevent a £230 million wind farm project being built some miles off the coast of his development, arguing the windmills would spoil his wealthy guests’ view of the North Sea.
Speaking bitterly of Trump, Salmond recently informed a local radio station, “I’ve met him, I’ve spoken to him, and ... I absolutely tell you from what I know of this man’s character he is not fit to be President of the United States of America.” Salmond went on, “There are many sociopaths about, but they shouldn’t be in the Oval Office, they shouldn’t be president of the United States.”
Trump was recently stripped of his role as a GlobalScot business adviser and of his honorary degree from Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen because of his anti-Muslim rants.
The SNP’s stance against Trump was echoed by the Scottish Labour Party’s Kezia Dugdale, who not only supported Clinton but twice crossed the Atlantic to work for a Clinton victory. Dugdale, a right-wing Blairite, warned of “a dark day for those of us who believe in compassion, tolerance and equality.” Even the Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson complained that Trump’s election was not the one she wanted. Davidson has previously turned to Shakespeare, describing Trump on Twitter as a “clay-brained guts, a knotty-pated fool.”
Under these conditions, although the SNP is preparing legislation for a second independence referendum, the party’s overriding aspiration is for Scotland to remain in the EU by reversing the Brexit decision.
Last week, the UK Supreme Court ruled that both the Scottish and Welsh governments could take part in the legal case currently before the Supreme Court over Article 50, which initiates the process to leave the EU. The case is a legal challenge by the government to the High Court decision that triggering Article 50 will require parliamentary approval and cannot be done on the basis of the Royal Prerogative powers enjoyed by the prime minister. The Scottish government has argued, in line with the High Court ruling, that Article 50 would “lead to a fundamental alteration of the constitutional arrangements of the United Kingdom.”
After the High Court decision, Mike Russell, the Scottish government’s minister for Brexit, urged May to drop the appeal they have launched against it. “Parliament has the right to determine the triggering of Article 50,” Russell said.
Proposing the Welsh case, Labour’s Mick Antoniw, counsel general for Wales, explained that issues of “profound importance not only in relation to the concept of parliamentary sovereignty, but also in relation to the wider constitutional arrangements of the United Kingdom and the legal framework for devolution” were at stake.
Nevertheless, the Brexit debacle has also exposed divisions in the supposedly monolithic SNP. Over the last month, it emerged that former SNP government minister Alex Neil and a significant number of SNP voters had opted for Britain to leave the EU. According to Neil, “The EU is no longer the progressive force it used to be, especially in relation to its pursuit of a policy of severe austerity, which is doing so much damage to the people living in the poorest countries in Europe, like Portugal and Greece.”
Neil has formed a cross-party group in the Scottish Parliament with the Labour Party’s Neil Findlay. The pair issued a statement seeking to put a left gloss on Brexit, claiming, regardless of the trajectory of the British government, that there were now opportunities “to make our country much fairer, where social justice reigns supreme and where we end the dominance of and adherence to the market solutions.”
The extraordinary disintegration and disorientation expressed at all levels of official politics is a remarkable confirmation of the correctness of the stance taken by the Socialist Equality Party in calling for an active boycott of the June 23 referendum and in support of the struggle for the United Socialist States of Europe.

Growing concerns in Europe over Trump agenda

Nick Beams

The “America first” economic agenda announced by President-elect Donald Trump and its implications for the stability of the global economy have sparked concerns in European ruling circles over the prospect of trade conflicts and financial turbulence. These fears are reflected in the Financial Stability Review issued by the European Central Bank earlier this week, in advance of a crucial meeting of the bank’s governing council on December 8.
The meeting will review the ECB’s program of quantitative easing, under which it purchases €80 billion worth of bonds each month in an effort to keep interest rates at historic lows and maintain financial stability. While the program officially ends next March, the ECB had been expected to extend it and keep up the flow of ultra-cheap money.
But its planning has been thrown awry by the spike in bond yields in the US following the election of Trump. Billions of dollars have moved out of government debt into the share markets on the prospect that Trump’s program, based on economic nationalism and large tax breaks, through both privatised infrastructure projects and direct cuts in corporate tax rates, will provide a major boost for profits.
The ECB now faces the prospect that its efforts to hold down interest rates in the euro region will collide with a movement in the opposite direction in the US.
But more is involved than concerns over the immediate movements in the money markets. While the ECB does not directly name Trump, the fears of the European financial elites about the implications of his election victory and what it signifies about the turn by the American ruling class more broadly are reflected throughout its report.
An ECB press release stated that “risks to euro area financial stability related to possible global asset corrections [a reference to the spike in bond yields produced by the outflow from the government debt market and the fall in bond prices] have intensified.”
The report continued: “The financial stability implications for the euro area stemming from changes in US economic policies are highly uncertain at this point. The euro area may be directly impacted via trade channels and by possible spill over effects from the higher interest and inflation rate expectations in the US.”
It added that “vulnerabilities” were significant for euro area banks, with profitability prospects remaining low across the region because of a “subdued economic growth environment.”
The non-bank financial sector could also be adversely affected, with many investment funds, which have “grown rapidly in recent years”—largely on the back of the ultra-cheap money policies pursued by the ECB—now exposed to “liquidity mismatches.” In other words, funds that have gambled on the maintenance of a low-interest rate regime could find themselves scrambling for cash as US interest rates begin to rise.
The ECB report noted that global bond valuations declined by the equivalent of €1 trillion in the week after the US presidential election. While the immediate outlook was uncertain, “more volatility is likely and the potential for an abrupt reversal remains significant amid heightened political uncertainty around the globe and underlying emerging market vulnerabilities.”
Emerging markets are in the firing line because rises in US interest rates and the dollar—now at its highest level in 13 years—increase the value of their dollar-denominated loans and the debt burden they impose.
The shift in US economic policy, exemplified in the Trump agenda of economic nationalism, is also compounding the problems faced by the ECB in seeking to contain the mounting crisis of the Italian banking system. Italian banks have on their books some €360 billion of bad debt, of which €200 billion is classified as non-performing loans.
The scale of the financial breakdown is indicated by the share values of two major banks in the Veneto region, one of the more prosperous areas of the country, reported by the Financial Times this week. In the case of one of the banks, the share price had fallen from €40.75 in 2014 to 10 cents today. In the other, the share price crashed from €62.50 to 10 cents.
The country’s banking system could suffer further destabilisation if Prime Minister Matteo Renzi loses a constitutional referendum on December 4. The “no” vote is being championed by right-wing populist parties that will have been strengthened by the Trump victory in the US. There are fears that if the “no” vote prevails and Renzi resigns, as he has threatened, this will lead to a political crisis, sparking financial instability.
But the Italian crisis is only one manifestation of a very large financial ice-berg. As the ECB report noted, “[T]he main structural challenges for bank profitability continue to be related to the large stock of non-performing loans in a number of countries,” coupled with “overcapacity in some euro area banking sectors.”
This is a legacy of the decision taken by the European financial elites following the 2008 financial crisis not to carry out a purge of the banking system and instead seek to contain the problems through central bank intervention, in the hope that higher economic growth would enable the financial system to gradually recover. That growth has not occurred and the financial malaise has been compounded.
Concerns over where the economic turn by the US under a Trump presidency could lead are not confined to financial markets, but extend to the area of trade. While Trump’s opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership was well known before the election, his decision to place its scrapping front and centre in his brief video announcement last Monday sent a broader message: a new era in world trade relations, based on the aggressive pursuit by the US of its interests, has arrived.
The driving force of this agenda and the support it is receiving in US ruling circles are rooted in economic processes. This year, world trade growth will be barely 3 percent, less than half the level it reached in the years leading up to the 2008 global financial crisis, continuing a downward trend that began in 2011. The struggle for global markets and profits is becoming more intense.
In a press conference on the Financial Stability Review, ECB Vice-President Vitor Constâncio voiced his concerns over trade, declaring, “We are in a new phase of weaker world trade. If, on top of that, there would be a wave of protectionist measures, world trade and world growth would suffer.”
As history, especially of the 1930s, has demonstrated, such economic turmoil prepares the conditions for war. While the full extent of the Trump agenda has yet to be revealed, the backing he has received from the American financial and political establishment signifies that his aggressive “America first” agenda is the expression of a far-reaching reorientation by the US ruling class.

25 Nov 2016

JFUNU Scholarships for PhD Students from Developing Countries 2017/2018

Application Deadline: 28th April 2017 | 
Offered annually? Yes
About Scholarship: The Japan Foundation for United Nations University (JFUNU) Scholarship is available for outstanding applicants from developing countries who can demonstrate a need for financial assistance, and they will be considered as candidates for the award of the scholarship.
The programme addresses pressing global issues of sustainability, climate change, development, peace-building, and human rights through an innovative interdisciplinary approach that integrates the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities. The programme is intended for recent graduates, professionals, and practitioners, offering the unique opportunity to study at a global university within the framework of the United Nations. It provides students with the knowledge and skills to make important contributions towards solving global issues, whether through employment by UN agencies, other international organizations, governments, civil society, or the private sector.
Type: PhD Scholarship
Selection Criteria and Eligibility
  1. Applicants must be from developing countries who can demonstrate a need for financial assistance.
  2. Applicants who are currently living in Japan under a working visa are NOT eligible for the scholarship.
  3. Applicants who want to pursue a second PhD degree at UNU-IAS are not eligible for the scholarship.
Scholarship benefits: The JFUNU scholarship covers the full tuition fees, and provides a monthly allowance of 150,000 JPY for living expenses for a maximum of 24 months. Travel costs to and from Japan, visa handling fees, and health/accident insurance costs must be covered by the student.
Duration of sponsorship: For the maximum of 24 months
Eligible Countries: Citizens of developing countries  listed in the latest OECD DAC list
To be taken at (country): United Nations University ISP Japan
How to Apply: Apply Online
Visit the Scholarship Webpage for Details
Sponsors: The Japan Foundation
Important Notes: Please note that the JFUNU scholarship is highly competitive and offered to a very small number of students who are granted admission to UNU-ISP. Thus, applicants are strongly encouraged to apply for other funding opportunities from the government of their own country, private foundations, or international funding agencies.

Full-fee Development Africa Scholarships at Loughborough University 2017/2018 – UK

Application Deadline: 30th April 2017
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible African Countries: All African Countries
To be taken at (country): Loughborough University UK
Accepted Subject Areas: Masters Taught Courses offered at Loughborough University
About Scholarship: Towards the end of each year, Loughborough University, UK announce its full-fee scholarships for international full-time taught postgraduate students who are currently domiciled (permanently living) in Africa. The Loughborough University Graduate School Development Trust Africa Scholarships covers 100% of the course fees for your chosen postgraduate taught course for one year (replacing any Departmental or Loughborough University scholarships or bursaries you may already have been awarded).Loughborough University UK
Selection Criteria: For 2017 entry the scholarship application procedure is an open competition. Students may only apply for the scholarship after an offer for a place has been made. Students who are in possession of an offer (conditional or unconditional) of a place on a postgraduate taught course can apply for the scholarship using the application form which will be provided from the link below.
Who is qualified to apply? The selection panel will use the following eligibility criteria when assessing applications:
  • Currently domiciled (permanently living) in Africa
  • Evidence of exceptional academic achievement (normally a 1st Class Honours Degree)
  • Commitment to return to their home country on completion of postgraduate programme
  • Evidence of the ability and commitment to making a significant contribution to their home country on their return
  • Full understanding of the costs involved in coming to study and live in the UK
  • Evidence of strong motivation and initiative to secure funds to cover the remainder of the costs involved
How Many Scholarships are available? The University will award a limited number of scholarships
What are the benefits? The scholarship will cover 100% of the course fees. Students will be expected to fund their travel and maintenance costs through other sources.
How long will sponsorship last? Financial award will last for the full duration of the postgraduate taught degree programme
How to Apply: 
Visit Scholarship Webpage for details
Sponsors
The scholarships are being funded through a combination of generous external funding and Loughborough University funds UK.
Important Notes:
  • Note that scholarship applications will not be considered unless the applicant is holding an offer or a place at the time of submission (this offer may be conditional or unconditional).
  • Do not submit your scholarship application until you have received your offer letter.
  • Applications will be initially shortlisted and the final decision on the awards will be made by a selection panel of senior staff of the University.
  • All those applying will be notified of the outcome of their application by email by the end of May at the latest.

This Online Course Will Change what you think about Economics of Money and Banking

Enrolment: 05 December (+ take on-demand)
Timeline: 13 weeks of study, 5 hours/week
Skill Level: Beginner
Certificate offered? Yes
Course of Study: Economics & Finance| 
Course Platform: Coursera
Created by: Columbia University
Cost: Free
About the Course
The last three or four decades have seen a remarkable evolution in the institutions that comprise the modern monetary system. The financial crisis of 2007-2009 is a wakeup call that we need a similar evolution in the analytical apparatus and theories that we use to understand that system.
Modern money cannot be understood separately from modern finance, nor can modern monetary theory be constructed separately from modern financial theory. That’s the reason this course places dealers, in both capital markets and money markets, at the very center of the picture, as profit-seeking suppliers of market liquidity to the new system of market-based credit.
Eligibility requirement
This course was designed originally for upper level undergraduate economics majors at Barnard and Columbia, in New York City.
But the course works for a much broader group as well: people who work in banks or finance but have no background in economics or finance (IT folk, lawyers), graduate students in economics and also other social sciences (history, international political economy, anthropology), and adult learners who sense the importance of the subject and want to find out how to think more deeply about it.
Because the instructor teach in New York, which is the center of world dollar money markets, the course is focused on those markets, but it works well even for learners from around the globe.
How to Enrol

Got Passion for Fashion? Take this Online Course on Innovation in Fashion Industry

Enrolment: Ongoing (Take on demand)
Timeline:  2 weeks @ 2 hours per week
Skill Level: Beginner
Course of Study: Fashion | Course Platform: FutureLearn
Created by: University of Leeds
Certificate offered? Yes
Cost: Free
About the Course
The course introduces a case study showing how Marks & Spencer has been a key innovator in fashion, introducing new fabrics that make our lives easier and more comfortable. You will see how M&S continues to drive innovation to bring consumers new and better products. You will also consider your own clothing and its innovation story, producing and sharing with other learners your research and findings on how a favourite item of clothing is the result of innovative developments in the industry.
Eligibility requirement
No previous knowledge or experience of business or innovation is required, just an interest in innovation and/or fashion.
How to Enrol
Important Notes: This course is part of a collection from the University of Leeds which have been specifically designed for those studying at school or college. All of the courses will help to enrich and extend your knowledge in a specific topic and develop your transferable skills. These courses will help you with making decisions about which subject to study at university and will give you examples and evidence when developing your university application.

DRD/DAAD Masters & PhD Full Scholarships for Africa (Study in South Africa & Germany) 2017/2018

Application Deadlines:
  • the MA in Development Studies (next deadline 15 July 2017, online application will be available from mid April 2017 only!)
  • the Master in Public Administration (next deadline 15 July 2017, online application will be available from mid April 2017 only!)
  • the MA in Development Management (Bochum Programme, next deadline 31 December 2017)
  • the different PhD options at the centre (PhD UWC) (next deadline 15 July 2017, online application will be available from mid April 2017 only!)
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Sub-Saharan Africa
To be taken at (country): School of Government, University of the Western Cape, South Africa and Ruhr-University of Bochum, Germany
Eligible Field of Study: Scholarships are available for full-time students of
  • MA in Development Studies
  • Master in Public Administration
  • PhD options at the CDR
About Scholarship: In order to adequately prepare the next generation of leaders through research-oriented training it is not sufficient to have the possibility to award scholarships to promising candidates from all over Sub-Saharan Africa, but it is also necessary to maintain a strong research focus on the work of the centre and to cooperate closely with other leading universities in the region.
Type: Masters & PhD
Selection Criteria and Eligibility: Requirements for application and application procedure
  • Applicants should be from Sub-Sahara Africa
  • Applicants should have an outstanding academic record – at least 70% of your last degree
  • Applicants should apply within 6 years of having completed their previous degree
  • The study must have been completed at an internationally recognized university
  • The previous degree (Baccalaureus or Master) should have been an academic discipline which is related to Development Studies or Public Administration
  • South African students are required to have an honours degree in order to be admitted to a Masters degree course. Other students need the equivalent of a 4 year undergraduate degree
  • Applicants must provide evidence of proficiency in English, both written and spoken. This can be TOEFL test or a similar standard test or a letter from an academic institution
  • Work and/or voluntary experience in your field of interest would be a recommendation
  • Women are encouraged to apply
  • Applicants must be able to study fulltime at the UWC for the required period.
  • South African students are encouraged to apply
Number of Scholarships: not specified
Value of Scholarship: Scholarships include monthly allowances of 650 Euro plus travel allowances for Master candidates and 900 Euro plus travel allowances for PhD candidates. More information about requirements for application and application procedure is provided in link below.
Duration of Scholarship: for period of the programme
How to Apply: You will have to fill in an electronic application form As the e-form can only be submitted once, please make sure that your application is complete before submitting it!
Essay
MA applicants will have to write a one page paper about 1 of the following 4 topics:
  1. François Bourguignon, a former Chief Economist of the World Bank referred to the “poverty growth inequality triangle”: Discuss this comment, critically evaluating the role of inequality in the current study of development in Africa.
  2. Write critically on perceptions about governance in Sub Saharan Africa.
  3. It has been claimed that climate change could potentially interrupt progress toward a world without hunger. Consider the evidence for this claim and discuss how climate change might impact on food security.
  4. Discuss the relationship between social movements and civil society in a specific SSA country of your choice.
Visit scholarship webpage for details
Sponsors: DAAD

University of Nottingham Commonwealth Shared Scholarship 2017/2018 for Masters Students

Application Deadline: 10th March 2017.
Eligible Countries: Commonwealth countries
To be taken at (country): UK
Eligible Fields of Study: 
  • Advanced Nursing MSc
  • Assisted Reproduction Technology MMedSci
  • Cancer Immunology and Biotechnology MSc
  • Clinical Microbiology MSc
  • Microbiology and Immunology MSc
  • Molecular Genetics and Diagnostics MSc
  • Molecular Medical Microbiology MSc
  • Oncology MSc
  • Public Health MPH
  • Public Health (International Health) MPH
CSSS-group2-2
Type: Masters
Eligibility: An interested candidate can apply for this scholarship if they:
  • are a Commonwealth citizen, refugee or British protected person permanently resident in a developing Commonwealth country (please see the CSC’s webpage in link below for a list of eligible countries) AND;
  • are classed as an overseas student for fee purposes AND;
  • have not studied or worked for one (academic) year or more in a developed country AND;
  • are unable, either yourself or through your family, to pay to study in the UK AND;
  • are not currently studying at a University of Nottingham campus or are not a University of Nottingham graduate AND;
  • by August 2017, hold a first degree of either first or upper second class (2:1) classification, or lower second class (2:2) classification plus a relevant postgraduate qualification (usually a masters degree) AND;
  • hold an offer to start a full-time masters degree programme at Nottingham in September 2017 in the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences on one of the following courses above
Selection Criteria:
  • You must hold an offer to study at The University of Nottingham in September 2017 to apply for this scholarship so you should apply for your chosen course in the first instance (click the links above to apply).
  • Application for admission to study at Nottingham must be received at least six weeks before the scholarship closing date to allow time for our Admissions office to process the application and confirm your offer, before you can apply for the scholarship.
Number of Awardees: 6
Value of Scholarship: Fully-funded scholarships for students from developing Commonwealth countries:
  • 100% of tuition fees;
  • return airfare to the UK;
  • a maintenance award and additional allowances
Duration of Scholarship: Duration of program
How to Apply: 
  • Any application for admission to study submitted later than six weeks before the scholarship closing date is not guaranteed to be processed in time.
  • There is no separate IELTS requirement for this scholarship. Applicants must meet the requirements of their course. Further information on The University of Nottingham’s English requirements is available here
  • You must make your scholarship application using the CSC’s Electronic Application System (EAS).
Award Provider:  University of Nottingham, UK Department for International Development (DFID) and the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission UK (CSC)

Carrington Youth Fellowship Initiative (CYFI) 2017 for Young Nigerian Entrepreneurs

Application Deadline: 31st December, 2016
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Nigeria
To be taken at (country): Interviews follow at the US Consulate, Lagos, Nigeria
About the Award: The CYFI fellowship is built around year-long social innovation projects that are designed by fellows and supported by the U.S. Consulate and private partners. Following successful completion of their projects, fellows remain involved with CYFI and the U.S. Consulate through the CYFI Alumni Program.
Former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria, Walter Carrington, was a champion of civil liberties, democracy and closer ties between the U.S. and Nigeria. CYFI invites applications from fellows who are committed to putting the ideals of Walter Carrington into practice. The CYFI Board of Directors will select fellows who demonstrate the exceptional passion, skill, experience, strategic thinking and vision necessary to implement their own innovative and impactful projects.
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Type: Entrepreneurship
Eligibility: 
  • Passion
    You are committed to making a significant contribution to your community and country
  • Skill & Experience
    You have a unique set of skills and experiences that you can use to make an impact
  • Strategic Thinking
    You are excited about the opportunity to launch an innovative CYFI project.
    You know how to design a project that is based on sound research, uses resources creatively, builds or improves on existing systems, and leverages partnerships with complimentary organizations
  • Vision
    You know the area of social change in which you would like to work, and you can articulate the positive change that you would like to make
Selection: Applicants selected for an interview will be notified by the CYFI Board. Interviews will be held at the U.S. Consulate General in Lagos.
Value of Program: 
  • Implement concrete, youth-oriented solutions to issues that concern you
  • Access U.S. Government resources and contacts
  • Catch the attention of American and Nigerian leaders in the public and private sectors
  • Work alongside talented and motivated peers with diverse backgrounds, but similar visions
  • Participate in CYFI Alumni Program
How to Apply: Application opens 10th December. You can only fill the application form after this date.
  • In addition to providing biographical information, applicants will be asked to complete a hypothetical scenario.  All fields are required.
  • You may save the application and return to it at a later time.  Please note however that incomplete applications will not be considered.
  • To start the application, proceed to fill the form (to be available soon).
Award Provider: An Initiative of the U.S. Consulate General, Lagos.

Apply: MERCK KGaA Accelerator Program Germany Spring 2017

Application Deadline: 19th December, 2016
Eligible Countries: Africa, Europe, North America, South America, Asia, Australia/NZ, Middle East, Antarctica and the Caribbean.
To be taken at (country): Germany
Type: Entrepreneurship
Eligibility: Startup in the field of Digital Healthcare
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Scholarship: Here are the key benefits:
1. Financial support up to €50,000 for your team.
2. Accommodation & office space in the center of Darmstadt, Germany.
3. Access to a global network with 50,000+ industry leaders and investors.
4. Deep-dive mentoring sessions to bring your startup to the next level.
5. Travel & conference opportunities to enrich your international experience as well as the possibility to expand your network through our Silicon Valley extension program.
Duration of Program: March 6, 2017 – May 24, 2017. Announcement of selected startups to pitch will be made on February 15, 2017
How to Apply: Apply here
Award Provider: MERCK KGaA  Germany

Peace Revolution MENA Salam Fellowship 2017 for Entrepreneurs in MENA Countries

Application Timeline:
Fellowship Date: 27th – 31st March 2017

Application Deadline: 30th November 2016 (last date to apply online)

Eligibility Deadline:20th December 2016 (last date to complete at least 21 days of the online Self-Development Program)
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: MENA Countries: Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Sudan, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates and Yemen.
To be taken at (country): Tunisia
Eligible Field of Study:
About the Award: Peace Revolution’s MENA Salam Fellowship will bring together 30 young entrepreneurs from the MENA region on a 5-day inner peace journey in Tunisia while living in an inspiring calm nature.
Are you a young entrepreneur striving to create a better world through your impact?Join the 4th MENA Salam Fellowship where you will learn how to turn your failures into successes and how to eliminate the excess baggage in your life. We can then move forward together and work towards empowering ourselves, our circles, our region and all around the world. Let’s start the change!
This is your opportunity to join Peace Revolution, so that you can start connecting to your inner true self and create the potential for social transformation around you! Assemble with the creative powers of youth! Join us in Tunisia, 27-31 March 2017
Offered Since: 2012
Type: Fellowship
Eligibility: To be eligible, applicants should:
  • be national of the following MENA countries: Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Sudan, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates and Yemen.
  • be 20-32 years old at the time of submitting the application in order to receive the airfare support. Applicants above 32 years of age will be considered but have to pay their airfare to attend.
  • have completed at least 21 days of the online self-development program that need to be completed by 20th December, 2016.
  • have good proficiency in written and spoken English language.
  • be a young entrepreneur leading an enterprise with social impact.
  • be optimistic, be open-minded, show leadership potential, and have a genuine interest in peace building.
  • be able to pay a commitment fee of 300 USD before the arrival to the retreat site (by Bank transfer or Western Union).
Selection Criteria: After completing 14 days of the online self-development program, the Peace Revolution selection committee will make a Skype interview appointment based on your performance, fund availability as well as participant combination in the fellowship. You would still need to finish 21 days of the online self-development program in order to be qualified for the fellowship. There is no need to write a request for an interview if you have already submitted your application. If you are qualified, we will contact you.
Number of Awardees: 30
Value of Fellowship: The MENA Salam Fellowship covers:
  • Sponsorship of airfare (up to 700 USD depending on the residing country)
  • Local Transportation
  • Food & Accommodation
  • Meditation Sessions and Lectures
  • Yoga Classes
  • Interactive Workshops
The MENA Salam Fellowship DOES NOT Cover:
  • Transportation within participant’s country
  • Visa costs
  • Personal expenses
  • Participation fee of $300
Duration of Fellowship : The training starts with 21 Days online self-development program on our interactive platform providing the basic theory and practice; as an introduction to develop inner peace.
The fellowship offers 5 days intensive training program which includes workshops and session on:
  • Stress management
  • Cultivating optimism, compassion & empathy
  • Team & Time management
  • Personal Relations and Habits
  • Communication & effective listening
  • Creative Thinking and problem solving
How to Apply: Click link below to apply
Award Provider: Peace Revolution