INSTITUTE FOR HUMANE STUDIES: Hayek Fund for Graduate Scholar of All Nationalities

INSTITUTE FOR HUMANE STUDIES: Hayek Fund for Graduate Scholar of All Nationalities
The Hayek Fund for Scholars provides awards to graduate students and untenured faculty members for career-advancing activities.The award is open to graduate students of all Nationalities (irrespective of University He/She is Studying) who intend to pursue academic careers and untenured faculty members whose academic work contributes to the understanding of the principles, practices, and institutions necessary to a free society or to the understanding of the classical liberal or libertarian tradition

Eligible career-advancing activities include:

Presentations at academic or professional conferences
Travel to academic job interviews on a campus or at professional/academic conferences
Travel to archives or libraries for research
Participation in career-development or enhancing seminars
Distribution of a published article to colleagues in your field
Submission of unpublished manuscripts to journals or book publishers
Value:

$750

Application Requirements:


A one to two-page cover letter explaining how the activity will advance your career and advance an understanding of the principles of the classical liberal/libertarian tradition
An abstract or copy of the paper, if you intend to present at a conference
An itemized list of expected expenses
A curriculum vitae or resume
How to Apply:

Application should be submitted ONLINE and completed application includes the following items:

A completed online application form
Your CV or resume
A summary of your presentation, such as an abstract or copy of the paper you intend to present at a conference, a description of arranged interviews, or a description of your planned research (e.g., a dissertation proposal)
A brief essay of not more than 500 words describing how your proposed activity will advance your career
A brief essay of not more than 500 words describing how your proposed activity advances our understanding of the principles, practices and institutions necessary for a free society or our understanding of the classical liberal or libertarian tradition

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