Fulbright Visiting Research Chairs

Eligibility: 

Applicants must have received a Ph.D. or equivalent professional/terminal degree by December 31, 2012 or have equivalent professional experience.

Eligible candidates must be Canadian citizens (landed immigrant or permanent resident status is not acceptable) at the time of the application, who have not had significant recent experience in the United States. Further, they cannot be dual citizens of both Canada and the United States, they cannot presently reside in the United States. 

How to Apply: 

Canada-U.S. Fulbright Visiting Research Chairs enable promising and prominent Canadian scholars, as well as experienced professionals to conduct research, develop collaborations, guest lecture and/or teach at select American universities and research centres, normally for one semester, though this may be extended to a full academic year. In addition, successful candidates will have the opportunity to deliver public lectures, give seminar presentations, participate in conferences and otherwise contribute to ongoing research activities at the host institution.

The 2013-14 competition is now CLOSED. The 2014-15 competition will open on May 15, 2013.

External Deadline: 
Friday, November 15, 2013
Award Category: 
Award
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Research

Robert Bertram Doctoral Research Awards

Eligibility: 

To qualify to apply for a Robert Bertram Doctoral Research Award you must be a full-time student registered at a recognized Canadian university in September 2013. You must be entering at least your third year of a doctoral program that includes significant original, autonomous research that leads to the completion of a dissertation or major scholarly publication. You must not have exceeded the allowable number of years already spent in doctoral study, as set out by your university, and you must be pursuing your first PhD. You must not have previously been awarded a Robert Bertram Doctoral Research Award.

How to Apply: 

The Robert Bertram Doctoral Research Awards have been established to promote Canadian-based research on corporate governance and build Canada’s corporate governance research capacity by encouraging the next generation of young scholars.

External Deadline: 
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Award Category: 
Award
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Doctoral

Peer Reviewed Orthopaedic Research Program (PRORP)

How to Apply: 

Various funding opportunities are available through the U.S. Department of Defense's Peer Reviewed Orthopaedic Research Program (PRORP).  Pre-applications are due April 4, 2013 and full applications (if invited) are due July 18, 2013:

  • Clinical Trial Award
  • Clinical Trial Development Award
  • Translational Research Award
  • Idea Development Award


External Deadline: 
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Research

Killam Research Fellowships

Eligibility: 

Note that meeting the eligibility criteria does not guarantee that you will receive a fellowship.

The Canada Council retains the right to interpret the contents of these application guidelines and of the online instructions and form.

 

Eligible applicants
Applications must be submitted by individuals, and not by their institutions (however, applicants must obtain their approval).

Killam Research Fellowships are intended as release time from employment for established scholars who have demonstrated outstanding research ability and who have published the results of their research in substantial publications in their field. Typically, a fellowship recipient is a full professor in a Canadian university with significant teaching and/or administrative responsibilities.

Researchers who are employed in settings such as a hospital or a scientific institute etc.may qualify if they demonstrate outstanding ability and their proposed project meets generally accepted standards of scholarly merit.

Killam Research Fellows are expected to continue contributing to the Canadian research community after they have completed their fellowship project.

To apply, you must be a Canadian citizen or have permanent resident status, as defined by Citizenship and Immigration Canada. You do not need to be living in Canada when you apply.


Ineligible applicants

You are not eligible if you are retired.

You are not eligible if you are not employed by a university or other research institute.

You may not apply if you have already been awarded a fellowship from the Killam Program.

How to Apply: 

The Killam Program offers two components of awards: Killam Research Fellowships and Killam Prizes.

Note that the nomination guidelines and form for the Killam Prizes component is available on the Canada Council’s website at www.canadacouncil.ca/prizes/killam or from Endowments and Prizes.

These awards, which are administered by the Canada Council, provide support  to scholars of exceptional ability who are engaged in research projects of broad  significance and widespread interest. The awards honour the memory and exceptional achievements of Mrs. Dorothy J. Killam’s husband, Izaak Walton Killam.

The Killam Research Fellowships are funded through lifetime and testamentary gifts to the Canada Council from Mrs. Killam. The fellowships are awarded annually, on a competitive basis, to support scholars doing research in any of the following fields:

•humanities

•social sciences

•natural sciences

•health sciences

•engineering

•studies linking any of the disciplines within these fields.

The Canada Council does not wish to specify or exclude any areas of research at this time.

The fellowships provide two years of release time from teaching and administrative duties to individual scholars who wish to pursue independent research. The fellowships are awarded to individuals, but the funds are paid to and administered by universities or research institutes.

There are no hard-copy application forms: you must submit your request through the Canada Council’s online application system, at killam.canadacouncil.ca.

External Deadline: 
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Award Category: 
Award
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Doctoral
Research

Traditional Fulbright Scholar Awards

Eligibility: 

Eligible candidates must be Canadian citizens (landed immigrant or permanent resident status is not acceptable) at the time of the application, who have not had significant recent experience in the United States. Further, they cannot be dual citizens of both Canada and the United States, they cannot presently reside in the United States.

How to Apply: 

Traditional Fulbright Scholar awards for Canadian scholars are open to scholars in all fields (excluding medical training) and are designed to enable emerging and established scholars, post-doctoral researchers and experienced professionals to conduct research, teach, or undertake a combination of both activities for one semester or a full academic year at a university or research centre of their choice in the United States. Applicants must have received a Ph.D. or equivalent professional/terminal degree by December 31, 2012 or have equivalent professional experience.

Fulbright scholarships are awarded for periods ranging from one semester to a full academic year. Ideally, the dates of the award should coincide with the academic year of the host institution. Traditional Fulbright Scholar awards are not available for the summer months only, nor are awards available for attendance at professional conferences or meetings.

Applicants interested in applying for a Fulbright Traditional Scholar award are asked to complete an online application through the Embark system.

The 2013-14 competition is now CLOSED. The 2014-15 competition will open on May 1, 2013.

External Deadline: 
Friday, November 15, 2013
Award Category: 
Award
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Research

IDRC Doctoral Research Awards

Eligibility: 

To be eligible, you must meet the following requirements:  

  • be a citizen or permanent resident of Canada, or a citizen of a developing country
  • be enrolled at a Canadian university at the doctoral level
  • your research proposal must be approved by your thesis supervisor
  • your proposed field research must take place in one or more developing countries and be conducted for a doctoral dissertation
  • you must provide evidence of affiliation with an institution or organization in the developing-country region(s) in which the research will take place
  • you must have completed coursework and passed comprehensive exams before taking up the award.
How to Apply: 

IDRC offers these awards twice a year in April and November to Canadians, permanent residents of Canada, and citizens of developing countries pursuing doctoral studies at a Canadian university. These awards are intended for field research in one or more developing countries.

External Deadline: 
Monday, April 1, 2013
Award Category: 
Award
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Doctoral
Research

Operating Grant : HFSP – Research Grants

Eligibility: 

The research teams must be international. The principal applicant must be from one of the eligible countries. However, other participating scientists and laboratories may be situated anywhere in the world.

 

Program Grants are for independent scientists at all stages of their careers while Young Investigators' Grants are for teams of scientists who are all within 5 years of establishing an independent laboratory and within 10 years of obtaining their PhDs. Both provide 3 years support for 2 – 4 member teams, with not more than one member from any one country, unless critical for the innovative nature of the project. Awards are dependent upon team size and successful teams will receive up to $450,000 per year.

The principal applicant must be located in one of the HFSP member countries but co-investigators may be located in any country.

For more information, please consult the HFSP website.

How to Apply: 

This funding opportunity includes a registration deadline (March 20, 2013) and a full application deadline (March 27, 2013).  Full applications are due in the Office of Research Services two weeks prior to the external deadline.

The goals of the program are to:

  • Support novel, innovative, interdisciplinary basic research focused on the complex mechanisms of living organisms.
  • Bring biologists together with scientists from fields such as physics, mathematics, chemistry, computer science and engineering to focus on problems at the frontier of the life sciences.
  • Bring together teams of scientists from different countries who wish to combine their expertise to approach questions that could not be answered by individual laboratories.

HFSP Young Investigators' Grants:

  • General aims: It is to be expected that outstanding young scientists, in the initial period of their independent careers, are in a particularly good position to formulate innovative and fertile research projects. Typically, Young Investigators will have completed one or two periods of postdoctoral training and be appointed to staff positions that allow them to initiate and direct their own independent lines of research.

    Recognizing the challenge of establishing an independent research group at an early stage of a career, a special consideration will take into account the overall level of interdisciplinarity in Young Investigator applications. Newly appointed investigators will be expected to propose projects with team members having distinct expertise and coming from different areas of the life sciences (if not from outside the life sciences). Projects from more established investigators will preferably involve collaboration with scientists from outside the life sciences, as in the Program Grants. The Review Committee will be instructed to assess this when reviewing applications.

HFSP Program Grants:

  • General aims: Program Grants are meant to allow teams of independent researchers to develop new lines of research through the collaboration. Priority will be given to new, innovative research projects for which preliminary results might not necessarily be available. Applications including independent investigators early in their careers are encouraged.
External Deadline: 
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Research

IDRC Canadian Window on International Development Awards

Eligibility: 

To be eligible, you must meet the following requirements: 

  • be a citizen or permanent resident of Canada, or a citizen of a developing country
  • be enrolled at a Canadian university at the master’s or doctoral level. (At the time of application, you must have completed several, but not necessarily all, courses in the graduate program.)
  • your research proposal must be approved by your thesis supervisor
  • your proposed field research must take place in Canada and in one or more developing countries and be conducted for a master’s or doctoral dissertation
  • you must provide evidence of affiliation with an institution or organization in both the Canadian and developing-country regions in which the research will take place
  • you must have completed course work and passed comprehensive exams before taking up the award.

(You have up to 12 months to start your field research from the date we make the final selection.)

Note that master’s level students are only eligible to apply for the award pertaining to research into the First Nations or Inuit communities and a developing country.

How to Apply: 

IDRC offers these awards annually to Canadians, permanent residents of Canada, and citizens of developing countries pursuing master’s or doctoral studies at a Canadian university. These awards support field research in Canada and one or more developing countries.

External Deadline: 
Monday, April 1, 2013
Award Category: 
Award
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Doctoral
Masters
Research

Call for concept notes: Collaborative research on climate change adaptation in Africa and Asia

Eligibility: 

Each member of a CARIAA consortium must:

1. Be an organization with independent legal status, capable of contracting in its own name, is not an agency or programme of the United Nations system. CGIAR centres may apply as third parties, contracted by a member. An individual cannot be a member;

2. Be able to manage CARIAA funds pursuant to IDRC’s grant agreement terms and conditions;

3. Not be affiliated with a political party;

4. Be committed to publishing research findings in the public domain in accordance with IDRC’s open access policy.

Each consortium must:

5. Be composed of 3 to 5 members with a minimum of 2 members based4 in the eligible countries;

6. Agree to conduct work that will primarily benefit those located in the CARIAA eligible countries and to conduct field work exclusively in these countries;

7. Have the capacity to issue and monitor sub-contracts and procure services as required by their work plan.

How to Apply: 

The Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia (CARIAA) was launched in 2012 and is jointly  funded by Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID). It is managed by IDRC from headquarters in Ottawa and two regional offices, one in Nairobi, Kenya, and one in New Delhi, India, in consultation with DFID’s headquarters in the UK.

CARIAA’s goal is to develop robust evidence to inform how to increase the resilience of the poorest and most vulnerable populations in climate change hot spots2 in Africa and Asia. This goal will require the pursuit of the following objectives using integrative, policy-oriented and Southern-driven research:

Generate knowledge on:

Vulnerability - Develop a better understanding of the conditions leading to the vulnerability of the livelihood systems of poor people to climate change under different socio-economic scenarios and climate warming scenarios;

Adaptation approaches – Learn from adaptation approaches (and their potential co-benefits, including in reducing greenhouse gases) in different regions and contexts using comparative analysis to obtain evidence that informs adaptation measures, decisions and actions in climate change hot spots that contribute to increasing resilience of the poor;

Factors/barriers of success - develop a better understanding of the factors/barriers of success for sustainable adaptation measures.

Promote research uptake:

Policies and practices – Use of robust evidence generated at various scales to shape policies or practices that help vulnerable populations or sectors adapt to climate change. Policy relevance of the research is key;

Strengthen the cadre of researchers in this field:

Adaptation expertise - Further develop highly qualified personnel and establishe informal networks that enhance problem-solving capacity in adaptation to climate change and resilience building.

As an overarching principle, the research will take into consideration the gender and economic dimensions of this analysis.

External Deadline: 
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Research

Mental Health Network

Eligibility: 

Eligibility to Apply to Phase I: expressions of Interest

 Unique to Phase I of the Network development process, Expressions of Interest can come from TWO kinds of participant groups:

  1.     Nascent networks which might form the base of a Phase II Letter of Intent
  2.     Smaller teams which might evolve to become a component of a network by Phase II

All Expressions of Interest (both small teams and larger networks) must include active participation from all stakeholder groups with a direct interest in the mental health needs of 11-25 years olds including: 1) patients/family representatives; 2) policy makers; 3) researchers; 4) service providers; 5) community organizations, and others as appropriate. While leadership can come from any stakeholder group, we encourage co-leadership models.

How to Apply: 

Through research and implementation of transformative intervention approaches, the Network will catalyze fundamental change in youth and adolescent mental health care in Canada. In five years, new approaches, proven in at least one setting, will begin to substantially increase the number of 11 to 25-year olds who are identified as in need of services and who will receive quality, timely and appropriate care. Implementation science will inform this transformation and scale-up in other settings.

Specific objectives for the Network are to:

  1.    Conduct research on the effectiveness of known, and as needed novel interventions in broad settings and populations and demonstrate their impact on patient mental health.
  2.     Develop new methods for implementing evidence-informed practices, policies and programs and demonstrate how these can improve patient outcomes and satisfaction, access to care, and efficiency and value for the health care system.
  3.     Conduct research involving many researchers and centres linked nationally within the Network to generate evidence and innovations that advance practice and policy changes leading to identifiable and measurable improvements in patient health, health care and efficiency and effectiveness of service delivery.
  4.     Ensure these first three objectives are clear, measurable and impactful, the Network will articulate a set of clear, measureable milestones as well as metric-driven challenges to document impact on specific target problems.
External Deadline: 
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Funding Source: 
External
Funding Level: 
Research

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