23 Aug 2017

US air strike slaughters over 40 civilians in Syria

Jordan Shilton

An air strike launched by the United States on the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa in northeastern Syria Monday claimed the lives of 42 civilians, 19 of whom were children. It is the bloodiest incident thus far in a ramped-up series of strikes over the past eight days that have killed at least 167 civilians, including 59 children.
The air assault on the Syrian city is the latest stage in a three-month siege waged by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), predominantly made up of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) militias, which are being supported by significant numbers of US ground troops. The offensive to force ISIS from its main stronghold has already driven thousands of civilians from their homes, killed hundreds more, and left at least 25,000 stranded with little food and water in Raqqa.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the bombing came a day after numerous civilian casualties were reported Sunday during air attacks. While the SDF claims to have 60 percent of the city under its control, observers speaking to the Financial Times noted that ISIS fighters continue to operate and launch attacks in many parts of the city claimed by the SDF.
The indiscriminate and ruthless assault on the city by the US-led coalition is in line with the vicious assault conducted by Washington and its Iraqi-backed forces earlier this year to recapture the northern Iraqi city of Mosul.
In the course of nine months of military operations, an estimated 40,000 civilians lost their lives and an additional one million Iraqis were driven from their homes. These war crimes have been made possible by President Donald Trump’s decision to ease restrictions on engaging in combat, giving military commanders on the ground the power to decide when to launch air strikes and other attacks.
According to AirWars, a London-based monitoring group which collates data on civilian casualties resulting from US-led coalition air strikes, more civilians have died in the seven months since Trump took office than in the close to two-and-a-half years during which Barack Obama oversaw the conflict in the Middle East.
This slaughter is only an indication of what is being prepared for the escalation of the war in Afghanistan announced by Trump Monday night.
While the nominal target of the US-led onslaught on Raqqa is ISIS, the Sunni extremist organization whose very existence is bound up with the disastrous consequences of US-led wars of aggression in Iraq, Libya and Syria, Washington’s real goal is to strengthen its geostrategic position in the region.
The use of overwhelming force regardless of the impact on innocent civilians flows from US imperialism’s determination to capture ISIS’s rapidly shrinking territory before troops loyal to Bashar al-Assad, backed by Russian air power and Iranian forces, drive the Islamists from eastern Syria and establish more direct supply lines from Teheran to Damascus.
To prevent this, Washington has combined the offensive against Raqqa with the establishment of a military base at al-Tanf in southeastern Syria on the borders with Iraq and Jordan, where American and British Special Forces are training Sunni militias to capture territory in eastern Syria. The US also hopes to utilize this proxy force when a suitable opportunity presents itself to bring about regime change in Damascus.
Moreover, Washington wants to consolidate its unchallenged domination over the energy-rich Middle East by preparing for war with Iran, which Trump has repeatedly denounced as an enemy and sponsor of “terrorism.”
News of the massacre in Raqqa came as Defense Secretary James “Mad Dog” Mattis, who earned his nickname for his role in leading the devastating assault on the Iraqi city of Fallujah, visited the region to discuss US imperialist policy with the Iraqi government.
Mattis met with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in Baghdad on Tuesday and boasted that US and Iraqi forces were defeating ISIS. Mattis made no mention of the widespread reports of human rights abuses and vicious reprisals against the civilian population by Iraqi forces in areas retaken from ISIS, which have included summary executions and torture. Instead, he praised the advance of Iraqi forces towards the ISIS-held town of Tal Afar.
Similar atrocities are to be expected in Raqqa. Reports are already emerging of the SDF refusing to allow civilians fleeing the city to leave refugee camps set up in areas under their control, prompting condemnations from aid agencies.
Although US imperialism bears chief responsibility for the bloody civil war in Syria and the destabilization of the entire region, the war danger is being exacerbated by the efforts of regional powers to pursue their own interests in Syria.
On Monday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan indicated that discussions had taken place between Ankara and Teheran about a joint military operation to target bases of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in northern Iraq. Turkish news outlets reported that Iranian troops would launch an offensive in the Qandil Mountains backed up by Turkish air power, a suggestion swiftly rebuffed by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards (IRGC). However, the IRGC statement did not rule out launching military interventions into northern Iraq in the future.
Frictions between Turkey and the US, a key NATO ally, have risen over recent months, especially following the Trump administration’s decision to rely on the Kurdish-dominated SDF to lead the Raqqa offensive. Erdogan, whose relations with Germany and other European NATO powers have become ever more strained, has floated the possibility of purchasing a missile defense system from Russia in a move that would be a major slap in the face to NATO.
Returning from a visit to Jordan, Erdogan vowed Monday that Turkey was also ready to launch military operations into northern Syria if the Kurdish Democratic Unity Party (PYD), the political wing of the Kurdish militants fighting for control of Raqqa, expanded their influence over the region. He noted that the issue had been discussed with Iran’s chief of the General Staff during a visit to Ankara last week.
The Syrian conflict remains a major flashpoint that could rapidly escalate into a regional and even global war. The conflict, which has claimed upwards of half a million lives, was deliberately stoked in 2011 by Washington with the aim of bringing about regime change in Damascus.
Russia, which intervened in the US-instigated civil war in 2015 to prop up its chief ally in the Middle East, has stepped up attacks on ISIS positions in eastern Syria to aid the progress of pro-government soldiers. On Friday, Russian aircraft reportedly killed some 200 ISIS fighters seeking to reach Deir ez-Zor, a city currently being targeted by Assad’s forces for capture.
Government-aligned fighters have been attacked by US air strikes on several occasions, with Washington alleging that they intruded into a unilaterally declared “deconfliction zone” set up around its al-Tanf base.
Any of these incidents, with nuclear-armed powers operating on the basis of conflicting interests in close proximity to each other, could provide the spark that sets the highly volatile Middle East ablaze with catastrophic consequences for the region’s long-suffering population.

22 Aug 2017

Journal of Comparative Social Work – Femicide and Culture 2017

Application Timeline: 
  • Deadline: 15th September 2017
  • Feedback to authors by 2nd October 2017
  • Full article submitted by 31st January 2018
To Be Taken At (Country): Norway
About the Award: The Journal of Comparative Social Work hereby invites manuscripts on femicide that explore in diverse ways the cultural aspects and contexts of Femicide as a leading global cause of premature death for women.
Femicide refers to the killing of women, though the definition has varied across time from the 1970s’ strong feminist-inspired definition as “killing women because they are women” until today`s more frequent “any killing of a woman”, and should be differentiated from Homicide and Intimate Partner Violence (IPV), which do not focus specifically on women, although often related. All manuscripts must deal with the culture and killing of women committed by close relatives or partners. We accept manuscripts on femicide victims, survivors, children left behind or perpetrators, as long as they are related to femicide and
culture. The parties involved may be associated with the dominant population, or with minority groups or sub-cultures, including both citizens and immigrant groups.
Papers could address, but are not limited to, the following topics:
  • Numbers and statistics, cultural practices, prevention policy,
  • How such killings are constructed and categorized
  • How institutions and groups deal with it, barriers, obstructions or institutional dilemmas.
Type: Call for Papers
Eligibility: 
  • The Journal invites quantitative and qualitative studies from Europe and beyond, including alternative perspectives on culture ranging from classic descriptions of cultural characteristics to constructionist or interpretative approaches.
  • Focus will be on cultural practices, systems or structures, and how they are perceived and constructed, that maintain, propagate or even extend such killings. These often obstruct proper investigation and prosecution, and allow for incorrect classifications such as manslaughter or unintentional homicide, since in different ways, some cultures allow a tolerance of violence against women in implicit or explicit ways.
  • The Journal is also interested in how some cultures deal with this phenomenon to help prevent it and encourage more practical-oriented contributions on policy-oriented work related to culture and femicide, and welcome submissions from researchers, social workers, voluntary workers, the police and others engaged in this field in diverse ways.
  • The journal accepts both ordinary research manuscripts and essays that are open to a variety of voices from classic texts to more artful representations (poems, drawings, etc.) of experiences, observations
    and reflections.
Number of Awards: Not specified

How to Apply: Interested candidates should submit the following by email marked “femicide” to guest editors Ryen, Kaouta and Nudelman:
  • Abstracts by email to guest editors by 15th September 2017
  • Feedback to authors by 2nd October 2017
  • Full article submitted by 31st January 2018
Articles should meet the standard of original scholarly research and commentary. They will be anonymized and reviewed through a double-blind process of peer review. For more information about the journal and instructions for authors, see: http://www.jcsw.no/?page=about
Award Providers: University of Stavanger

University of Lausanne (UNIL) Masters Scholarship for International Students 2018/2019 – Switzerland

Application Deadline: 1st November 2017.
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: International
To be taken at (country): Switzerland
Eligible Fields of Study: Candidates must choose a Master’s programme from among those offered by the UNIL, EXCEPT:
  • Master from the School of Medicine
  • Master of education
  • Master of Law from the Universities of Zurich and Lausanne
  • Master of criminal Law, magistracy specialism
  • All MASs (PhD programmes)
For the Master of Law, only two specialisms,”international and comparative law” and “legal theory” are open to applications for Masters scholarships.
About the Award:  The University of Lausanne (UNIL) Masters scholarships are scholarships for excellence awarded exclusively to students who have graduated from a foreign university and whose academic results are of a very high level. The amount of the grant is CHF 1,600.- per month from 15 September to 15 July, for a duration not exceeding the regulation minimum period of the programme (according to the programme, one-and-a-half years or two years subject to deduction for paid placements or exempt semesters, if any). Abandonment of the programme results in suspension of the grant.
Type: Masters Grants
Eligibility: 
  • The candidate must be the holder of a degree from a foreign university.
  • The qualification held by the candidate must be deemed equivalent to the UNIL Bachelor’s degree.
Selection Criteria: The grants are intended more particularly for students who distinguished themselves in their university studies and who have difficulty meeting their financial needs for the duration of the Master’s. It is however necessary that the candidates have sufficient financial means to live on themselves during the complementary studies that may be required prior to enroll on the Master’s degree.
Number of Awardees: around 10
Value of Scholarship: CHF 1,600.- per month from 15 September to 15 July.
Duration of Scholarship: one-and-a-half years or two years (subject to deduction for paid placements or exempt semesters, if any). Abandonment of the programme results in suspension of the grant.
How to Apply: Candidates must send their completed application (refer to the document, “list of documents to attach to your application”), unbound, by post only to the following address:
Université de Lausanne
Service des affaires sociales et de la mobilité étudiante (SASME)
Bâtiment Unicentre
CH – 1015 Lausanne
Switzerland
  • The application form must be completed on a computer and duly signed by the candidate.
  • The application for the Masters scholarship also serves as an application for admission to your chosen masters (and therefore an application to register at UNIL).
  • You must not make an application for admission to the masters degree via the Admissions Department (SII).
  • The SASME forwards shortlisted applications to the selection committee which will award grants to students meeting all criteria according to the available budget.
Award Provider: University of Lausanne, Switzerland

Québec Government Doctoral Research Scholarships for Foreign Students 2018/2019

Application Deadline: 1st November, 2017
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: International
To be taken at: Any Québec University in Canada
Fields of Research: The scholarships are aimed at foreign students who had been preselected by a Québec university and who wish to carry out their doctoral studies in the natural sciences, mathematics and engineering fields. To be eligible, applicants must specialize in the following areas:
  •  Aerospace
  •  Information and communication technologies
  •  Health technologies
  •  Genomics
  •  Nanotechnologies
About the Award: The Doctoral Research Scholarships Program for Foreign Students (DE) of the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Nature et les technologies (FRQNT) aims to stimulate international student’s interest in beginning or pursuing doctoral studies in Québec and provide financial support to leading international Ph.D. candidates in the natural sciences, mathematics and engineering fields.
Type: Doctoral
Eligibility: Candidates must:
  • Meet all eligibility criteria by the competition deadline on November 1st, 2017.
  • Have been preselected by a Québec university by September 22nd, 2017.
  • Not have obtained a Merit Scholarship for Foreign Students from the Ministère de l’Education et de l’Enseignement supérieur du Québec (MEES) or from one of the Fonds de recherche du Québec.
  • Not be a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident of Canada.
  • Not have submitted an application for permanent residence under Canadian immigration laws.
In addition to the aforementioned criteria, applicants should note the following restrictions and administrative prerequisites:
Study program restrictions:
  •  The scholarship cannot be used for qualifying studies.
Selection Criteria: 
  • Only students who have been preselected by a Québec university may apply to the competition.
  • Universities may support two competition applications per year.
  • Candidate’s preselection is the sole responsibility of the university. Information on preselection deadlines is available In the Toolbox (See in Program webpage Link below).
Value of Scholarship: The maximum annual value of the doctoral research scholarship for international students is 21 000 $. Within the eligibility period of twelve semesters or 48 months, a scholarship holder may receive a maximum of twelve installments for a total of 84 000 $. Each payment of up to 7 000 $ covers a period of four months or one semester. The 11th and 12th installments are conditional on the initial deposit of the thesis before the end of the 12th financed semester.
Duration of Award: 12 to 48 months.

How to apply: Apply
It is important to go through the Application instructions in the Scholarship Webpage (See link below) before applying.

Ken Saro Wiwa Foundation Ken Junior Award for Innovation 2017 for Nigerian Startups

Application Deadline: 25th August 2017
Eligible Countries: Nigeria
To Be Taken At (Country): Nigeria
About the Award: The Ken Junior Award recognises and seeks to overcome the barriers to economic development and innovation in Port Harcourt, namely access to electricity, internet connection, mentoring and networking. We believe these are more valuable than any cash prize.
Type: Entrepreneurship
Eligibility: Winners will be picked based on the following criteria:
  • An innovative solution to an identified social, economic or environmental problem that has a technological element
  • A sustainable and scalable businesses model
  • A team with passion, experience and complementary skills
Number of Awards: 4
Value of Award: Each of the awardees will win six months:
  • Self-contained office space at the Ken Saro-Wiwa Centre
  • High-speed internet connection
  • Constant electricity
  • Access event space for holding workshops and trainings
  • Business support and trainings
  • Peer Learning
  • Mentorship from industry experts
How to Apply: To apply for this program, follow the link https://goo.gl/v3JUid download a copy of the application, fill in the necessary information, and send a copy to kenjraward@gmail.com with “APPLICATION TO THE KEN JR. AWARD” as subject of the mail.
Award Providers: Ken Saro Wiwa Foundation

Union Bank Startup Connect for Nigerian Startups 2017

Application Deadline: 1st September, 2017.
Eligible Countries: Nigeria
To Be Taken At (Country): Nigeria
About the Award: Startup Connect is an opportunity for Nigerian companies creating the next generation technology solutions for the African market to partner with Union Bank to aid their rapid growth.
The programme is a first of its kind business acceleration programme dedicated to matching technology-enabled startups from all over Nigeria with the Union Bank brand for mutually beneficial collaboration.
Through Startup Connect, creative talents and smart businesses can access the bank’s 350 sales/service centres & over 3.7 million customers across Nigeria to scale their solutions.
Type: Entrepreneurship
Eligibility: If your team is working on an innovative, technology-driven idea to address critical social and business challenges in Nigeria, be sure to apply.
Number of Awards: Not specified
Duration of Program: The programme will be delivered through a three-staged approach which includes:
  1. Select: Shortlisted startups will be invited to a pitch event
  2. Develop/Accelerate: Over a 13 week period, selected startups will work with CcHUB and the bank’s staff, apply design thinking to create a usable proof-of-concept prototype that serves a chosen segment of the bank’s customers or clients.
  3. Deploy/Invest: At the end of the 13 week period, the results will be presented to the appropriate business units of the bank for deployment. Both parties will decide to either share revenue or explore equity investment.
How to Apply: 
Award Providers: Union Bank.

Embracing Our Differences Art Contest 2018.

Application Deadline: 9th January 2018
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: All
To be taken at (country): Sarasota’s Island Park in Southwest Florida, USA.
About the Award: Art is a powerful tool to evoke social change. Without uttering a single word, artists can enlighten, educate and affect change around the world. Become a part of this exciting change through your visual art or creative writing submission to the annual Embracing Our Differences juried competition.
Only digital copies of your original art work will be accepted. Teachers may complete and sign submission forms on behalf of their students and, at their option, substitute their personal or school contact information for that of their students. Judging will take place in mid-February 2017 and those selected for inclusion in the exhibit will be notified by email by mid-March. Due to the volume of submissions, only artists with entries selected for display will be notified individually. All winning entries will be posted on the Embracing Our Differences website by late March.
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Type: Contest
Eligibility: Artists, professionals, amateurs, students – everyone can participate. National and international submissions are encouraged.
All submissions must be an original concept and execution and not a copy or reproduction of the work of another. Final selections for inclusion in the exhibit will be made by a three-judge panel of professional artists, curators and art professionals based on artistic excellence and originality in reflection of our theme “enriching lives through diversity.” Judges will also consider:
  • How effective the art will read when enlarged to billboard size (16 feet (4.9 m) wide by 12.5 feet (3.8 m) high) and displayed outdoors.
  • Is the theme clear and easily understood?
  • Does the art explore the theme in an unusual or previously unexplored manner?
  • Will the art and its message prompt discussion?
Selection Criteria: 45 submissions will be selected for inclusion in the exhibit. The judges mayselect an additional three entries for “honorable mention.”  Final selections will be chosen based on artistic excellence and originality in the reflection of our theme “enriching lives through diversity.” This may include, by way of suggestion only, any one or more of the following: appearance; racial differences; physical or mental impairment; language, religious or cultural differences; environmental stewardship; social economic status; sexual orientation or identity; positive attitude; inclusiveness; acceptance; taunting, bullying and confrontation; human rights and equality; understanding and kindness; empowerment or any other topic which you believe furthers our theme of “enriching lives through diversity.” Do not feel limited by these suggestions. We strongly encourage new and fresh interpretations of our theme.

Value of Contest: A total of $3,000 (US) will be presented in the form of three separate awards – $1,000 each for “Best-in-Show Adult;” “Best-in-Show Student” and the “People’s Choice.” Both “Best-in-Show” awards will be granted by a three-judge panel of art professionals. The “People’s Choice” award will be determined by visitors to the exhibit.
How to Apply: It is important to go through the FAQ Section before applying.
Award Provider: Embracing Our Differences Exhibition Group
Important Notes: You will receive full credit for your artistic creation. You also retain the rights to your work. However, by your submission, you irrevocably grant to Embracing Our Differences and its assigns a non-exclusive, royalty free, perpetual license to use, publish, translate and display your work and personal information, including your name and city/state/country of residence, for display, catalogs, posters, advertising, educational and merchandising/promotional materials.

World Bank Youth Summit (YS) Technology and Innovation for Impact Contest 2017

Application Deadline: 29th September 2017
Eligible Countries: All
To Be Taken At (Country):  World Bank Group Headquarters, Washington DC, USA
About the Award: Rapid technological changes have created both challenges and opportunities around the world, we must take advantage of the inherent transformative potential of technology to make the world more prosperous and inclusive for all.
  1. If you could take advantage of today’s technology and solve any problem or need, what would it be?
  2. Would it support the WBG twin goals of ending poverty and boosting shared prosperity?
Participants should propose an innovative and action-oriented idea on how to provide a solution to a developmental challenge adapted to the realities of the 21st century. The proposed solution can be aimed at business (private sector) or policy (public sector) and should relate to at least one of the subthemes of the Youth Summit 2017:
  • Transforming the Economic Landscape
  • Leveraging Information & Communication Technologies (ICTs)
  • Igniting Youth Entrepreneurship
Contribute to building the inclusive tech-world of tomorrow by sharing your idea!
Type: Contest
Eligibility: To share your idea and enter the Youth Summit 2017 Competition, you shall:
1. Make sure that you/your team meet the Eligibility Requirements:
  • The Competition is open to individuals or teams of 2-4 people, aged 18 to 35 inclusive as of 11.59 pm EST on September 29, 2017.
  • Teams and individuals are limited to one submission each.
  • The Competition is open to nationals of ALL countries of the world.
  • Active staff of the World Bank Group (at the time of the submission up until the closing of the Youth Summit 2017), including Consultants and Interns, are not eligible to participate in the Competition.
2. Prepare a proposal that outlines your idea, as per the following Submission Rules:
  • Proposals must be created by and owned by the Participants.
  • Proposals must be submitted in English.
  • Proposals shall provide an innovative and action-oriented business-level or policy-level idea aimed at solving a problem/need that will support at least one of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and one of the World Bank’s Twin goals of (1) Reducing poverty and (2) Boosting Shared Prosperity.
  • Proposals must comply with at least one of the following criteria:
    • The problem/need to be solved must have been caused by a technological transformation, and/or;
    • The idea/solution must use a technological component (such as ICTs) to solve the developmental problem/need.
  • The problem/need and the proposed solution outlined in the Proposals must relate to at least one of the subthemes of the Youth Summit 2017 and should apply to a least one client country of the World Bank Group.
  • Proposals must (a) provide a short 2-5 sentences summary of the idea, (b) describe which Sustainable Development Goal it will support and which YS Subtheme it relates to, (c) describe the specific problem/need that the proposed solution seeks to address, and (d) describe the solution proposed to address this specific problem/need (e.g. a product, service, program, policy, course, initiative etc.).
  • Proposals will be judged based on the following Judging Criteria: (1) Clarity, scope and relevance of the problem and of the proposed solution; (2) Innovation and originality; (3) Feasibility of implementation and whether it is sustainable in time; (4) Potential for impact. Please refer to the Competition Rules and Regulations for further information about the Judging Criteria.
  • Proposals must be between 1,000-2,500 words in length, all-inclusive – i.e. including all bodies of text, titles, headings, tables, textboxes, footnotes, endnotes, references, appendices etc. – and must not exceed 4 pages in total.
  • The following information must be provided at the top of the first page of the Proposal: (a) the names of the Participant(s) submitting the Proposal – for teams, all team members’ names shall be listed; (b) the final word count (all-inclusive).
Number of Awards: Not specified
Value of Award: 
  • Winners will receive in-kind prizes. Details will be announced at a later stage.
  • The World Bank Group is neither accountable nor responsible for any of the prizes awarded. Winners are responsible for all applicable taxes and fees associated with prize receipt and/or use. No transfer or
    substitution of a prize is permitted.
  • In addition to the prizes, the YSOC will make efforts to feature and promote Finalists’ and Winners’ ideas on the Youth Summit event page and social media platforms, and to provide exposure to Winners at high profile events, including, for example, webinars, workshops, and other events of the World Bank’s development partners globally.
How to Apply: To Participate Click Here
Award Providers: World Bank Group

IDB Islamic Finance Talent Development Program (MIRAS) for Young Executives 2017

Application Deadline: 31st August 2017
To be taken at (country): Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
About the Award: The Islamic Finance Talent Development Program (MIRAS) is a talent development program with the sole objective of building a pool of highly talented young Islamic Finance executives who are capable of leading the Islamic Finance Industry in the future.
The program is for 2 years and it provides the participants with on-the-job experience and exposure to the different aspects of Islamic Finance, upon which they are to build a career in Islamic finance. The program was designed to provide Islamic Finance experience through various methods of engagements which include:
  • Two On-the-Job rotational assignments, One Year Each.
  • Study for Master in Islamic Finance and Leadership Development, with IE Business School
  • Coaching and mentoring
  • Assessment and feedback
Type: Internships/Jobs
Eligibility: To be eligible, applicant must meet the following basic criteria:
  • Genuine proven passion for Islamic finance and development
  • MBA or equivalent in related field.
  • Minimium two years experience in finance, banking, and/or investment sector.
  • Not more than 33 years old.
  • Bilingual: Fluent in English and Arabic or French.
  • National and / or citizen of IDB Group member countries.
  • Excellent IT skills.
  • Strong leadership potential.
Number of Awards: Not specified
Award Sponsors: Islamic Development Bank (IDB)

Islamic Development Bank (IDB) Prize for Women’s Contribution to Development 2018

Application Deadline: 30th November, 2017
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Member countries of Islamic Development Bank (IDB)
To be taken at (country): Prizes will be awarded during the 42nd Board of IDB Governors Meeting scheduled to take place in 1439H ( 2018G)
About the Award: The Prize aims to recognise, encourage, inspire and reward women’s participation in the socio-economic development process. The Prize is awarded during the Annual Meeting of the IDB Board of Governors.
Theme: The Theme for the 1439H/2018 Prize is “WOMEN’S CONTRIBUTION TO PROMOTING PEACE AND STABILITY”
Offered Since: 2006
Type: Contest
Eligibility: The general criteria applied in selecting and assessing nominations for the Prize for both individuals and organizations include the following
  • Impact: Individuals and organizations nominated should exhibit projects that have contributed to the improvement of the socio-economic status and well being of society.
  • Creativity: Individuals and organizations nominated should have projects/activities that are outstanding, innovative and unique
  • Outreach: Individuals and organizations nominated should have mechanisms for expanding their projects/activities to surrounding areas to ensure their services are offered to as many beneficiaries as possible.
  • Sustainability: Individuals and organizations nominated should have projects/activities that are sustainable
Selection Criteria: The Prize is administered by the IDB through the Capacity Development Department in consultation with the IDB Women’s Advisory Panel and in collaboration with its academic advisor, Effat University.  The processing of the Prize involves the following steps:
  • The IDB in consultation with the IDB Women’s Advisory Panel determine the yearly theme for the Prize.
  • The IDB refines the theme and topics, establishes the specific criteria of selection and develops the nomination forms.
  • The IDB publicizes the Prize and receives nominations.
  • An independent screening committee is established by the academic advisor to short list nominations.
  • An independent Selection Committee is established by the IDB to select winners of the Prize from the short listed candidates.
  • The winners are announced during the Annual Meeting of the IDB Board of Governors.
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Contest: The Prize consists of two cash awards;
a) U.S. $ 50,000 for a woman or a group of women
b) U.S. $ 100,000 for an organization
How to Apply: To apply, visit contest webpage (link below)
Award Provider: Islamic Development Bank

African Humanities Fellowship Program for African Researchers 2017/2018

Application Deadline: 2nd November, 2017
Offered annually? Yes
Eligible Countries:
  • Dissertation-completion fellowships in Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda
  • Postdoctoral Research and Writing in Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda, and South Africa
To be taken at (country): African Universities
Eligible Field of Study: Proposed projects must be in the humanities, defined by the study of history, language, and culture, and by qualitative approaches in research. The list of humanities disciplines includes anthropology, archaeology, studies of the fine and performing arts, history, linguistics, literature studies, studies of religion, and philosophy. Projects in social sciences such as economics, sociology, or political science, as well as in law or international relations, are not eligible unless they are clearly humanistic in content and focus.
About Fellowship: In partnership with the Carnegie Corporation of New York, which has generously provided funding, AHP offers African scholars an integrated set of opportunities to develop individual capacities, and to promote formation of scholarly networks. The African Humanities Program supports the Carnegie Corporation’s efforts to develop and retain African academics at universities in Africa.
The African Humanities Program (AHP) seeks to reinvigorate the humanities in Africa through fellowship competitions and related activities in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda.
These will be the last competitions of the ten-year program supported by Carnegie Corporation. Apply now!
Goals of the African Humanities Program are:
  • to encourage and enable the production of new knowledge and new directions for research
  • to strengthen the capacity of early career researchers and faculty at African universities
  • to build the field of humanities by establishing networks for scholarly communication across Africa and with Africanists worldwide.
Type: Fellowship, Postdoctoral
Selection Criteria
  • The intrinsic interest and substantive merit of the work proposed
  • The clarity of the intellectual agenda
  • The feasibility of the work plan
  • The record of achievement of a postdoctoral scholar and the promise of a PhD candidate
  • The contribution the work is likely to make to scholarship on the continent and worldwide
The African Humanities Program seeks to strengthen humanities scholarship in Africa
  • By promoting diversity in terms of gender and historical disadvantage, along with diversity in disciplines, institutions, and regions. Women are especially encouraged to apply.
  • By making research opportunities available to staff at African universities.
Eligibility
  • Applicants must be nationals and residents of a country in sub-Saharan Africa, with a current affiliation at an institution in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, or Uganda.
  • Applicants for Dissertation-Completion Fellowships should be in the final year of writing the dissertation at a university in Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania, or Uganda.
  • Dissertation-Completion Fellowships are not available in South Africa.
  • Applicants for Early Career Postdoctoral Fellowships must be working in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, or Uganda and must have completed the PhD no more than eight years ago.
  • Projects must be in the humanities and must be carried out in sub-Saharan Africa. AHP fellowships may not be used for travel outside the continent.
Number of Scholarships: not specified
Value of Fellowship:
  • Stipends are $10,000 for dissertation-completion Fellows and $17,000 for postdoctoral Fellows, plus an additional $1,000 per Fellow for books and media at both award levels.
  • Fellowship stipends allow recipients an academic year free from teaching and other duties for completion of the PhD dissertation, for revising the dissertation for publication, or for the first major research project after the PhD. Fellows are also eligible for additional benefits such as residential stays for writing, manuscript development workshops, and publication support.
How to Apply: Visit Fellowship webpage to apply
Sponsors: The American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), with financial support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York.

Rhodes University/Mellon Foundation Masters Scholarships in Humanities 2018 – South Africa

Application Deadline: 30th September 2017.
About Award: The focus of Professor Sam Naidu’s project is the fictional crimes and related identities represented in literature of the African, Latin American and South Asian diasporas.  Drawing on current postcolonial theories of migration and diaspora, the intention of this project is to uncover the value of such imaginary constructions of transnational subjectivities and of what is deemed ‘criminal’ in an increasingly globalised world.
Programme Co-Ordinator: Professor Sam Naidu, Department of English Literature, Rhodes University, Grahamstown.
Type: Masters
Eligibility: Masters candidates wishing to embark on research projects which explore fictional representations of the experiences and exigencies of diaspora, and who favour a comparative methodology informed by an intersectional approach to the study of literature are invited.
Students who are considering study towards the Honour’s degree in 2017 at Rhodes University, South Africa are encouraged to apply for the A W Mellon Foundation Honours scholarships in Humanities whether or not they know if they have been accepted for Honour’s study. Awards offered are only valid and can only be claimed if the applicant is accepted by the relevant academic Department.
Value of Award: MA scholarship (for two years); R90 000 per annum.
How to Apply: Applicants need to send a brief research proposal (1000 words) and a CV with academic record to: s.naidu@ru.ac.za
Candidates will be shortlisted for a brief interview and must be available to commence study in February 2018.