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Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation: African Fellow Awards Grant

THE HARRY FRANK GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION

Funding Amount

US $10,000

Deadline

Rolling / Open

Grant Type

foundation

Overview

Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation: African Fellow Awards Grant

Status: ACTIVE
Funder: Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation
Amount: US $10,000
Last Updated: January 15, 2026

Summary

The Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation's African Fellow Awards recognize emerging scholars conducting high-quality research related to violence in Africa. Open to applicants under 40 enrolled in Ph.D. programs, the fellowship offers mentoring, grants for fieldwork, and support for publishing. Projects should address urgent issues like crime, terrorism, and political extremism, aiming to enhance understanding and inform policies to mitigate violence in the region. The awards foster impactful research that contributes to social change.

Overview

African Fellow Awards Every two years, the Foundation selects a cohort of Harry Frank Guggenheim African Fellows. Approximately a dozen emerging scholars are recognized for projects judged to be of high quality and closely relevant to the Foundation’s interest in violence. The Foundation welcomes proposals for the African Fellow Awards from any of the social and natural sciences or allied disciplines that promise to increase understanding of the causes, manifestations, and control of violence and aggression. Highest priority is given to research that can increase understanding and amelioration of urgent problems of violence and aggression in the modern world. The proposed project must relate directly to the African continent. The Foundation is interested in violence related to many subjects, including, but not limited to, the following: War Crime Terrorism Family and intimate-partner relationships Climate instability and natural resource competition Racial, ethnic, and religious conflict Political extremism and nationalism The Foundation supports research that investigates the basic mechanisms in the production of violence, but primacy is given to proposals that make a compelling case for the relevance of potential findings for policies intended to reduce these ills. Likewise, historical research is considered to the extent that it is relevant to a current situation of violence. Examinations of the effects of violence are appropriate for a proposal only if a strong case can be made that these outcomes serve, in turn, as causes of future violence. Funding Fellowships are offered to individual scholars for a period of two years. The African Fellow Awards include an in-person methods workshop on the African continent, fieldwork research grants of $10,000 each, mentoring from senior African and Africanist scholars, sponsorship at an international conference to present research findings, and editorial and publication assistance through a writing workshop geared to support and prepare scholars to write for and submit to international peer-reviewed journals and other outlets for their research.

Eligibility

You can learn more about this opportunity by visiting the funder's website. Applicants for the fellowship may be citizens of any country. They must be aged 40 or younger, currently enrolled in an accredited Ph.D. program at an African higher-education institution, and living on the continent.

Focus Areas & Funding Uses

Fields of Work

science-research

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