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Scholarship: Applications For 2021 British Council Fellowship for  Researchers Open

The British Council, in partnership with the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH) at the University of Edinburgh, has developed a bespoke fellowship opportunity for early-career researchers from Africa who are living and working on the continent.

The successful candidate will undertake a 7-month research fellowship based with IASH at the University of Edinburgh, starting in April 2021.

They will receive a stipend of £1,300 per month, a £1,000 travel grant and assistance with the UK visa application process and costs.

Fellowship Summary

  • Host Country: United Kingdom (UK)
  • Category: Fellowship
  • Eligible Countries: African Countries
  • Reward: Full Scholarship with Stipends
  • Deadline: January 10, 2021
  • Scholarship Alerts: To receive Scholarship Alerts on WhatsApp, Click HERE

Fellowship Details

During their fellowship, they will work closely with British Council experts in the UK and Africa to refine and shape the direction of their research and its outputs. There will be further opportunities to share, disseminate and apply the findings of the research in collaboration with the British Council in Africa once the fellowship is completed.

Fellowship Requirements

This fellowship is open to early-career researchers who are citizens of any African country AND resident on the continent. The other standard eligibility criteria for IASH Postdoctoral Fellowship programmes apply. In addition, applicants must have:

  • a research and/or professional background that relates to the core areas of British Council programming and strategic engagement: Culture and Creative Industries, Education, Inclusive Communities, and International Cultural Relations more broadly
  • an interest in and understanding of digital technologies and platforms and in debates around digital access and inclusivity
  • experience of engaging non-academic audiences and stakeholders in research (e.g. through engagement with policymakers, practitioners, artists or broad public audiences)
  • commitment to professional development and a clear understanding of how the fellowship will support this
  • a clear commitment to knowledge sharing and the development of best practice beyond the timeframe of the fellowship itself, based on the networks, insights and learnings developed through their research.
  • Click This Always: Lund University Global Scholarship Opens For Applications

Study objectives

  • The fellowship will focus on decolonising digital in the context of cultural and creative production and consumption in Africa and consumption of content originating from Africa in the UK and elsewhere in the world.
  • The fellow will be part of the lively international and interdisciplinary scholarly community at IASH and benefit from the opportunities this affords for intellectual exchange and peer support.
  • The collaboration with the British Council extends these opportunities by enabling access to the professional expertise of the British Council staff and stakeholders involved, bringing valuable insight into the perspectives of cultural relations practitioners and policymakers in the UK and Africa and across the British Council’s global network.
  • The research fellow will be expected to work with British Council experts and external stakeholders to inform and shape best practice in digital cultural relations between the UK and Africa, and to promote through their research and engagement enhanced awareness and cultural fluency in relation to themes such as decolonisation, inclusivity and digital innovation.
  • The fellow will engage closely with the British Council’s New Narratives programme. This is a major initiative launching in April 2021 to foster deeper and more meaningful engagements between young people across the countries of Africa and the UK.
  • The programme provides an excellent pathway to help guide and shape the fellow’s engagement with key audiences and stakeholders in the UK and Africa and to relate the research to wider initiatives that aim to promote more forward-looking approaches in the UK’s social, cultural and economic interactions with Africa.
  • As part of the application, process candidates will be expected to propose how they would develop the research theme in line with both the British Council strategic interests and their own academic expertise. The final focus of the research will be further refined once the successful candidate has been selected and as the fellowship gets underway.

Outputs and Deadlines

  • the fellowship will be undertaken from April to October 2021
  • the fellow will be expected and encouraged to work on academic research outputs (e.g. journal articles, conference papers) drawing on the supportive research environment and networking opportunities of IASH
  • in addition, a range of deliverables will be agreed with the British Council that will be targeted at British Council audiences and stakeholders (both internal and external)
  • these will include staff talks and workshops and a short and accessible paper for an informed but non-expert audience
  • we are particularly interested in working with the fellow to develop ideas for creative outputs relating to the fellowship (e.g. films, video-games, artistic performance, apps, interactive web-based outputs)
  • we welcome innovative and participatory approaches to engage broad public audiences in the research, in the UK and across the African continent and beyond
  • a detailed plan for the production and dissemination of research outputs will be agreed between the British Council, IASH and the research fellow once the fellowship is underway.

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