New York University School of Law is currently accepting applications for the following fellowships:
Emile Noël Fellowship Program, Global Fellows Program and Visiting Doctoral Researcher Program.
The principal objective of the Emile Noël Fellowship program is scholarship and the advancement of research on the themes prioritized by the Jean Monnet Center for International and Regional Economic Law & Justice, which include the following overarching areas: European Integration, general issues of International (principally WTO), and Regional Economic Law and Justice and Comparative Constitutional Law. The expectation is that the residency of our Fellows at NYU School of Law will result in at least one paper that will be of sufficient quality to be published as a Jean Monnet Working Paper. During the period of residence, we encourage our Fellows to participate fully in the life of the Law School and of NYU in general, not to mention the endless possibilities that New York City has to offer. The Fellows will be expected to play an active role in the activities of the Center, particularly the Emile Noël Fellows Forum, which is the vehicle through which work is presented and discussed, and encapsulates the idea of the Program – the University as a community of scholars. The Forum takes place on a regular basis throughout the fall and spring semesters.
The Jean Monnet Center at NYU School of Law currently offers fellowship opportunities for scholars in the following categories:
1. Global & Senior Global Emile Noël Research Fellows
Global Emile Noël Research Fellows are post-doctoral or tenured academics with a demonstrable background of legal scholarship. More senior academics (for example, faculty members tenured for ten years or more) at the discretion of the selection committee may be designated as Senior Global Emile Noël Research Fellows.
2. Global Emile Noël Fellows from Practice and Government
Global Emile Noël Fellowships are also open to government officials, judges, officials from international organizations and lawyers in private practice who wish to take a semester or academic year away from their posts to engage in serious scholarship.
3. Post-Doctoral Global Emile Noël Fellows
Post-Doctoral Global Emile Noël Fellows are post-doctoral scholars who have attained their doctoral degrees within the past four years and who have not yet secured a tenure-track academic appointment at an institution. Post-Doctoral Global Emile Noël Fellows meeting these eligibility requirements may be considered for a limited number of merit-based post-doctoral stipends of US$30,000 for the academic year (or US$15,000 per academic semester), subject to applicable tax(es).
For more information and to apply:
http://jeanmonnetprogram.org/fellows/emile-noel-fellowship-overview/