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Funding opportunities for young scientists Print E-mail
Feb 13, 2007 at 01:49 PM

The following is a list of links to funding opportunities for young scientist/students around the world. The sites below are not exclusively devoted to young scientists but the search has been done with particular attention to sites including opportunities for them. The list is partial and it reflects a very dynamic situation (web sites and opportunities normally have deadlines and expiration dates). However, we think it is found important to pinpoint specific sites that do offer such opportunities: since the funding process is cyclical, most institutions announces new programs every few months.

 European and other international sources

  • EC’s Sixth Framework Programme (2002–2006) - http://europa.eu.int/comm/research/fp6/index_en.html
  • EC’s Marie Curie Actions (human resources and mobility) - http://europa.eu.int/comm/research/fp6/mariecurie-actions/indexhtm_en.html
  • Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP) - http://www.hfsp.org/home.php
  •  North Atlantic treay Organization - http://www.nato.int/science/
    NATO offers grants to support collaboration between scientists in countries of the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council and the Mediterranean Dialogue on projects in priority research topics of Defence Against Terrorism, or Countering Other Threats to Security; Partner-country priorities are also taken into account. There are six types of collaborative grant offered, viz:- Collaborative Linkage Grants, Expert Visits, grants to organize Advanced Study Institutes and Advanced Research Workshops, “Science for Peace” grants in support of applied R&D projects in Partner or Mediterranean Dialogue countries, and Reintegration Grants which offer the opportunity to young research scientists from Partner countries to reintegrate into the research communities of their home countries after a period abroad.
  • European Molecular Biology Laboratory - http://www.embo.org/yip/index.html
    The EMBO Young Investigator Programmehas been identifying and supporting outstanding life scientists in Europe since 2000. The programme targets researchers who are within four years of having established their first independent laboratories in an EMBC member state. The aim of the programme is to give these promising young scientists an added advantage in the early years of their independent careers, drawing attention to the quality of their research and enhancing their standing in the scientific community.
  • The Fogarty International Center Directory of International Grants and Fellowships in the Health Sciences - http://www.fic.nih.gov/news/directory.html

Austria

  • Lise Meitner Program - http://www.fwf.ac.at/en/projects/meitner.html
    Fellowships for highly qualified scientists of any discipline who could contribute to the scientific development of an Austrian research institution by working at it and who have not already spent more than 6 months in Austria.
  • Erwin Schrödinger Fellowships - http://www.fwf.ac.at/en/projects/erwin_schroedinger.html
    Young and especially highly qualified scientists of any discipline who have completed their university studies in Austria.

France

  • EC Marie Curie Researchers Mobility Portal - http://europa.eu.int/eracareers/index_en.cfm
  • Blaise Pascal Research Chairs - http://www.chaires-blaise-pascal.org/
    Each chair allows highly qualified, internationally acclaimed, foreign research scientists in all disciplines, accompanied if they wish by other research workers, to continue their work on a scientific project in a higher learning institution or research institution in Paris/Ile-de-France.

Finland

Germany

Italy

Last Updated ( Feb 13, 2007 at 04:30 PM )
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