Powered by Blogger.

Labels

Tanzania NGO JOBS Kenya Agriculture Health - Medical Jobs Consultancy FINANCE JOBS MOZAMBIQUE South Africa United Nations - Les Nations Unies Ethiopia Rwanda Administration Zambia Ghana Zimbabwe Malawi Engineering Jobs Angola Education Jobs NIGERIA Uganda Namibia South Sudan Tunisia Botswana Monitoring and Evaluation Sudan Liberia Senegal Sierra Leone EGYPT Lesotho MEDIA - PUBLICATIONS Swaziland Human Resources MADAGASCAR Somalia Algeria Libya Mali ACCOUNTANT Mauritania Project Management Scholarships for Africans Burundi AfDB - African Development Bank Djibouti FREIGHT - AVIATION JOBS Guinea Logistics - Transport Burkina Faso Maroc - Morocco Peace and Security Republic of Congo TOGO Benin Cote d'Ivoire Law - Legal Jobs Research Jobs WHO World Health Organization Cameroun Gambia Seychelles Niger Central African Republic Sales Jobs Volunteers AU African Union ECOWAS Environmental Jobs Equatorial Guinea Eritrea ICT JOBS International Organization for Migration Procurement Jobs Internships USAID Climate Change FAO Food and Agriculture Organization Gabon Mauritius - Maurice TCHAD - CHAD Congo FOOD AND NUTRITION JOBS MINING JOBS Save the Children Cape Verde EAC East African Community TELECOMMUNICATION JOBS Teaching Jobs Comoros Information Technology Software Engineering WFP World Food Programme BANKING JOBS SADC Southern African Development Community United States Embassy World Vision ILO International Labour Organization NEPAD Réunion Sahrawi Arab Republic SaoTome and Principe UNECA Economic Commission for Africa University Jobs Western Sahara

Saturday, January 3, 2015

2015 OPEN SOCIETY FELLOWSHIP

by Unknown  |  at  11:01 AM

The Open Society Fellowship was founded in 2008 to support individuals pursuing innovative and unconventional approaches to fundamental open society challenges. The fellowship funds work that will enrich public understanding of those challenges and stimulate far-reaching and probing conversations within the Open Society Foundations and in the world.
A fellowship project might identify a problem that has not previously been recognized, develop new policy ideas to address familiar problems, or offer a new advocacy strategy. Project themes should cut across at least two areas of interest to the Open Society Foundations. Among these are human rights, government transparency, access to information and to justice, and the promotion of civil society and social inclusion.
Fellows are expected to take full advantage of the foundations' expansive reach and work to bring new people and fresh ideas into the organization's ambit. Successful projects should push the boundaries of current thinking and carry lessons that can be applied to a variety of settings. Fellows may produce a variety of work products, including publications such as books, reports, or blogs; innovative public-education projects; or the launch of new campaigns or organizations. They may also engage in activities such as hosting panel discussions, traveling to conferences, participating in policy debates, and aggressively promoting their ideas in public venues.
To apply, please follow this link

Blog Archive

Proudly Powered by Blogger.