Application Instructions
Although English is preferred, applications may be submitted in other languages. Fellowship work may also be carried out in languages other than English. In the case of applications not written in English, the applicant is responsible for providing a high quality translation of all materials in English. Applicants should beware that translation errors or misinterpretations may render the application far less competitive than it would be otherwise.
Applicants should submit the following in one envelope:
1. An Application Form
2. A 10-page double-spaced proposal describing the proposed research project and work experience (where applicable). See proposal writing instructions below.
3. A CV or Résumé
4. All university transcripts
5. You should also ask three referees to submit letters of recommendation, sealed and with the referee’s signature across the seal. You are responsible for the safe and timely arrival of these recommendations.
6. Language Evaluation Form
Proposals should be thorough and written in non-technical prose. For further suggestions on proposal writing, visit our website (www.ssrc.org) and look for The Art of Writing Proposals, a short guide by Adam Przeworski and Frank Salomon.
I. Research Project
Your proposal should contain the following information. Each section should begin on a separate page with a clear heading (e.g., “Problem”).
(NOTE: Joint fellowship proposals must clearly identify each applicant’s role in training and research.)
1. Problem. Specify the central problem your project addresses.
What are the crucial research questions, puzzles, or hypotheses?
2. Methodology. Describe the data sources and/or evidence to
be drawn on to address your central problem. Where do you intend to look
for this data/evidence? What are the methods and research operations you
will undertake to collect, analyze, or interpret that data/evidence. As
the Art of Writing Proposals says: “Do not just tell what you mean to achieve,
tell how you will spend your time while doing it…a methodology is not just
a list of research tasks but an argument as to why these tasks add up to
the best attack on the problem…Be as specific as you possibly can about
the activities you plan to undertake to collect information, and about
the techniques you will use to analyze it,”
3. Context. Set your research question in the context of existing
work or research in the topic area (if any). “Help your reader understand
where the problem intersects the main…debates in your field and show how
this inquiry puts established ideas to the test or offers new ones.”
4. Impact. Specify how the proposed research will contribute
to knowledge, understanding, policies or practices in the field of conflict
and peace.
Examples of research areas include:
Please describe your proposed program of work experience or academic
mentoring by answering the following questions:
1. Explain where you plan to undertake the work experience/academic
residence.
2. Explain why experience at this particular organization or university
is necessary for your proposed research and how it will contribute to your
intellectual and professional development. Make clear why the new skills,
insights and knowledge that you expect to gain would not otherwise be available
without the fellowship.
3. Describe what activities this program will involve. Propose a tentative
institution rather than proposing no host at all.
III. Bibliography
Please include a bibliography not to exceed 2 pages single-spaced. You may include materials cited directly in the main body of your proposal, as well as general references relevant to your project and the bodies of knowledge that your project addresses.
Deadline
Program on Global Security & Cooperation
Social Science Research Council
810 Seventh Avenue, 31st Floor
New York, NY 10019
USA
Telephone 212 377 2700
Fax 212 377 2727
gsc@ssrc.org