UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA - AFRICAN STUDIES CENTER
Fellowships: University of Notre Dame, Religion, Conflict, and Peace Building, 11/02

Fellowships: University of Notre Dame, Religion, Conflict, and Peace Building, 11/02



The announcement for 2003-04 Rockefeller Visiting Fellowships in Religion, Conflict and Peacebuilding at the Kroc Institute is below. Please note that this year, we are particularly encouraging applications focusing on Africa, although proposals focusing on any region are welcome. If you have colleagues who might be interested in these fellowships, feel free to forward this email. The deadline for applications is November 15, 2002.

Hal Culbertson (M.A. '96) Associate Director, Kroc Institute

2003-04 Rockefeller Foundation Visiting Fellowships in Religion, Conflict and Peacebuilding Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies University of Notre Dame

Program Website <http://www.nd.edu/~krocinst/visiting_fellows/index.html With support from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Kroc Institute invites applications for Visiting Fellowships in its Program in Religion, Conflict and Peacebuilding (PRCP). The PRCP explores the complex role of religion in contemporary conflicts, ranging from the legitimation or sacralization of violence, to participation in conflict mediation and reconciliation, to the advocacy and practice of nonviolent resistance as a religious imperative. The program understands religious traditions as evolving, internally diverse sets of beliefs, narratives, practices and laws. It explores the phenomenon of "lived religion" by examining how religious traditions move from sacred scripture or traditional norm to the practical principles which guide specific decisions and actions taken in the context of violent conflict. Research focuses on three dimensions of this process: the relationship between religious ethics, human rights, and attitudes of tolerance and intolerance toward the other; religious roles in conflict resolution, including conflict within and between religious traditions; and the contributions of religious actors to postconflict reconciliation, justice and peacebuilding.

Rockefeller Visiting Fellowships are open to senior and junior scholars in the humanities and social sciences, as well as religious leaders and peacebuilding practitioners, of any nationality. The PRCP seeks to include research by scholars and practitioners with expertise in Hindu, Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist, Sikh, or Christian traditions and movements. Visiting Fellows will be expected to conduct research in one of the Program's three focal areas. For the class of 2003-04, scholars and practitioners who propose research on PRCP themes in the African context are particularly encouraged to apply, although projects focusing on any region are welcome. While at the Kroc Institute, all Rockefeller Visiting Fellows will be expected to produce an article suitable for publication in the Institute's Occasional Paper series, with prospects for subsequent publication in a scholarly journal, religious periodical, or other appropriate publication. Visiting Fellows will also interact with faculty, graduate and undergraduate students, and other Visiting Fellows through presenting public lectures, participating in conferences and panel discussions, leading classes as a guest lecturer, and meeting with individual scholars and students.

The fellowships will ordinarily be for one year. Stipends begin at $30,000 per year. Visiting Fellows will also be provided with an apartment in the Hesburgh Center's residential quarters, an office in the Hesburgh Center for International Studies, a computer, an email account, access to the internet, and photocopying, faxing and communication facilities. Visiting Fellows will also receive full privileges at the Hesburgh Library. To be considered for a Visiting Fellowship, prospective candidates should submit:

- complete CV or resume, including a list of publications - research proposal of no more than 7 doublespaced pages which includes a project summary of no more than 1 page, a project description, a description of the research methodology to be employed, and a timetable for completion of the project - three letters of reference

The CV and research proposal may be submitted by regular mail or as an email attachment in a standard word processing format. Letters of reference should be sent directly to the Institute by the person providing the reference, and may be sent by regular mail or email. All application materials or inquiries about the program should be directed to: Hal Culbertson, Associate Director Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies 100 Hesburgh Center for International Studies P.O. Box 639 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556

telephone: (574) 6318832 fax: (574) 6316973 email: culbertson.1@nd.edu

The deadline for submitting applications for the 2003-04 academic year is November 15, 2002.

************************************ Hal Culbertson, Associate Director Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies University of Notre Dame P.O. Box 639 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556

(219) 631-8832 (phone) (219) 631-6973 (fax) Culbertson.1@nd.edu (email)

Visit the Kroc Institute website at http://www.nd.edu/~krocinst



Editor: Ali B. Ali-Dinar
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