Fulbright/APSA Congressional Fellowship Program, 2007-2008
The Office of Academic Exchange Programs of the United States Department of State is pleased to announce grant opportunities for three or four foreign senior scholars and professionals under the Fulbright/American Political Science Association (APSA) Congressional Fellowship Program. For the first time in the seven-year history of foreign scholar involvement, Ukrainian scholars are invited with scholars from sixteen other countries to apply for participation in the fellowship program. Eligible countries include Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Greece, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Korea, Lebanon, Mexico, Morocco, Pakistan, Slovenia, South Africa, Turkey, Ukraine, and Vietnam.
The Fulbright/APSA Fellowship is a twelve-month non-degree grant program designed to give foreign scholars and professionals the opportunity to study the workings of Congress. It will include full-time internship in a Congressional office, seminars and various professional enrichment activities. The Fulbright/APSA Fellowship is not designed to be a research program.
Applicants must meet the following requirements to be eligible:
- be citizens or permanent residents of Ukraine;
- must have a graduate degree or the equivalent in professional training or experience;
- be academics or professionals with a scholarly interest in the U.S. Congress and the policymaking process;
- be drawn from the following fields: political science; comparative political systems; legislative/parliamentary studies; communications/journalism; public policy administration; sociology; law;
- must be fluent in English;
- must demonstrate commitment to make contribution to the understanding of the political process by the general public.
Application deadline: 5:00 PM on Friday, March 16, 2007. All applications should be delivered to the program office:
Fulbright Program Office
4 Hrushevskoho St., Suite 305
Kyiv 01001 Ukraine
tel. +38 044 279-1850, 279-2324, 278-8185
fax: +38 044 230-2060
e-mail: mstachiw@fulbright.com.ua
More information about the Fulbright APSA Congressional Fellowship Program:
A. Description of grant
The Fulbright/APSA Fellowship is a twelve-month grant designed to give foreign scholars and professionals the opportunity to study the workings of Congress as a Congressional fellow and staff person working full time in a Congressional office for approximately six months of the grant. Other periods of the grant are devoted to seminars and enrichment activities. The average class is a diverse group of mid-career U.S. political science professors and journalists, U.S. government domestic and foreign affairs policy specialists, health policy physicians and health-care professionals, and five or six international fellows in addition to the Fulbright/APSA Fellows. The Fulbright/APSA Fellowship is not designed to be a research program. Grantees will have an opportunity to do some research in the initial two months and in the final month of the grant, but not during the Fellowship period at the U.S. Congress.
Applicants may be academics, journalists, or public policy professionals with a scholarly interest in the U.S. Congress and the policymaking process and committed to making a significant contribution to the understanding of the political process by the general public.
The Fellowship will begin in August 2007 when the Fellows arrive in the U.S. and are affiliated with an academic mentor at a local university in the Washington D.C. metropolitan area.
All the international APSA Fellows are offered the opportunity, along with the Fulbright/APSA Fellows, to participate in a foreign affairs seminar for two hours, two evenings a week at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) from September through October.
In mid-November, the Fellows begin a full-time, three-week orientation program designed for all 40 to 45 APSA Congressional Fellows where they engage in daily seminars with legislators, congressional staffers, journalists, lobbyists, political scientists, and policy specialists.
During this orientation, the Fellows also interview for positions within the Congressional offices and committees of their choice. Fellows are responsible for negotiating the nature of the responsibilities of their Congressional assignment prior to accepting an office position. This is an important aspect of the Fellowship experience as it encourages Fellows to reflect critically upon their goals and objectives and provides them with the opportunity to become acquainted with many members of Congress and their staffs, thereby exposing Fellows to the different dynamics, personalities, and styles of the Congress.
Fellows will spend approximately six months working full-time, five days a week with a Congressional staff in an office of the U.S. Congress. Fellows should expect to work the same hours as other Congressional staff members and adhere to the office's procedures and guidelines. In their assignments, the Fellows typically assist with drafting legislation, arranging Congressional hearings, writing speeches and floor statements, briefing members before deliberations and debates, and other Congressional office projects. The Fellows also have the option of switching from the House to the Senate, or vice versa, to begin a second office assignment in late April.
Other enrichment activities and opportunities offered to the Fellows during their grant include twice-monthly seminar series at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, a one-week orientation to Congress as host to ten Canadian Parliamentary interns, a one-week visit to Ottawa, Canada on a comparative study visit of parliamentary governments, a day visit to the Annapolis, Maryland State House to compare state and federal governments, and a trip to the home district or state of the Congress person for whom they are working.
APSA Congressional Fellowship Program: Background
The APSA Congressional Fellowship Program was created in 1953 to bring academics and political journalists to Washington to work as legislative aides in the U.S. Congress. The Fellowship is designed as an early-to-mid career program dedicated to expanding knowledge and awareness of Congress by selecting participants whose ongoing careers can capitalize on translating a pivotal personal experience to a broader public. Over the years, the Fellowship Program has had substantial experience sponsoring many international participants funded through the German Marshall Fund, the Asia Foundation, the Ford Foundation, and the Harkness Foundation.
Now in its sixth decade, the Fellowship Program has achieved a reputation for excellence among those concerned with the quality of government and the ways in which democracies function. It has served as a model for fellowship programs in all three branches of government and has been adapted for use in parliamentary settings abroad. Over 2,000 individuals have participated in the program since its inception.
B. Eligibility Criteria
- Applicants must be a citizen or have permanent residence status of their home country. The applicant must not also be an American citizen (a dual national), an alien resident/green cardholder, or someone desiring residence in the United States.
- Applicants must understand and speak English at a near-native level of fluency, which would allow them to fully participate in the Congressional office.
- Applicants who are academics must be affiliated with an educational institution in their home country and currently engaged in teaching or significant research.
- Applicants who are public policy professionals or journalists must have a scholarly interest in the U.S. Congress and the policymaking process and be committed to making a significant contribution to the understanding of the political process by the general public.
- Applicants may be drawn from the following academic or professional fields: political science including comparative political systems and legislative/parliamentary studies, communications/journalism, public policy administration, sociology, or law.
- Applicants must have a graduate degree or the equivalent in professional training or experience.
- Applicants must be in good health.
- Applicants must secure a leave of absence from their institution/employer.
C. Stipends and Benefits
The Fellows will be granted a stipend of $38,000 (USD), round-trip international airfare, and the Department of State's Accident and Sickness Program for Exchanges' (ASPE) health insurance. No dependent allowances will be available for this program. In addition, ECA/A/E will cover the costs of the enrichment activities and program administration.
D. Application Process
Interested applicants must complete the specific Fulbright/APSA Scholar application form and submit it along with a project statement, three letters of reference, and a curriculum vita to the Fulbright Commission. The Fulbright Commission and Public Affairs Section of the U.S. Embassy will conduct interviews for the final slate of candidates.
E. Timetable
Friday, March 16, 2007 — Applications must be submitted with all supporting materials to the Fulbright Office in Kyiv by 5:00 PM on Friday March 16, 2007
April 2 — 4, 2007 — Interview of semifinalists
April 16, 2007 — Ukrainian finalists' names due in the Washington, D.C. Office of Academic Exchanges, U. S. State Department, for review and selection.
May 31, 2007 — Finalists notified of selection
F. Application
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