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Funding for language study, travel, and graduate research related to Jewish studies – Deadline 3/31

Are you interested in Jewish languages, culture, or history? The Stroum Center for Jewish Studies offers annual funding opportunities to support research, language study, study abroad, and conference attendance related to Jewish studies, for both graduate and undergraduate students. Learn more about funding opportunities in Jewish Studies:

Grants for language study & research

 

Jewish Studies opportunity grants offer funding of up to $1,500 for language study, research, study abroad, conference attendance, and other learning opportunities related to Jewish studies, for both undergraduate and graduate students. Opportunity grant info >

 

Applications will be accepted on a rolling basis through the 2021-2022 academic year.

 

Graduate fellowship

 

The Jewish Studies graduate fellowship offers annual grants of $4,000 to advanced UW graduate students in any discipline working on research projects related to Jewish studies. Fellows participate in workshops on public scholarship and Jewish studies topics, and present their work publicly through an in-person research presentation and an article about their research for the Stroum Center website.

 

Applications for 2022-2023 graduate fellowships are due on March 31, 2022Graduate fellowship info >

 

Finish Line dissertation completion fellowship

 

The Finish Line fellowship offers a stipend of $24,000, plus benefits, to a UW Ph.D. candidate in the later stages of completing their dissertation, whose research topic connects to Jewish studies. The stipend is paid out over the three quarters of the academic year.

 

Applications for the 2022-2023 fellowship are due on March 31, 2022Finish Line fellowship info >

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Please contact us at jewishst@uw.edu if you have questions about applications, eligibility, or anything else.

 

The Stroum Center for Jewish Studies is part of the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington. It promotes the study of Jewish histories, cultures, societies, ideas, languages, and religion and integrates insights from these fields into broader scholarly and public conversations. Learn more about the Stroum Center.

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