GRANTS, SCHOLARSHIPS, AND FELLOWSHIPS
Grant Search Results
The Open Society Foundations Arab Regional Office offers support to organizations in the following focus areas: rights and governance, media and information, women's rights, and knowledge and education.
The Audience Engagement Grant supports photographers to take an existing body of work on a social justice or human rights issue and devise an innovative and effective way of using that work as a tool for social change.
Global Faculty Grants Program offers awards for mid-career and senior level faculty from select countries of the former Soviet Union, the Middle East, Afghanistan, Mongolia, and Nepal to visit Western universities.
The Global Supplementary Grant Program offers support to doctoral students from select countries in Southeastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, Mongolia, the Middle East/North Africa, and South Asia.
The Moving Walls exhibition honors the brave and difficult work that photographers undertake globally in their visual documentation of complex social and political issues.
The Open Society Fellowship is designed to support individuals pursuing innovative and unconventional approaches to fundamental open society challenges.
The Open Society Foundations and Durham University are offering outstanding students from Afghanistan, Indonesia, Nepal, and Palestine an opportunity to study in the United Kingdom.
This scholarship provides outstanding students from Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Lebanon, Nepal, Palestine, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan an opportunity to study at the University of Essex (UK).
The Open Society Foundations/University of Nottingham scholarships provides opportunities for independent postgraduate study in the UK for students from Azerbaijan, Indonesia, Egypt, Lebanon, and Syria.
The Open Society Right to Information Fund provides support to civil society groups that are working to promote the full implementation of RTI laws.
The Social Work Fellowship Program for Jordan allows chosen fellows to study at Columbia University in the United States for a two-year graduate program in social work, beginning in July 2013 and concluding in May 2015.
