| SVU |
CZECHOSLOVAK SOCIETY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES |
International Policy Fellowships
The Central
European University Center for Policy Studies (CPS) is calling for proposals for its year
2003 International Policy Fellowships (IPF) program, which is affiliated with the CPS and
the Open Society Institute-Budapest. Broadly speaking, an open society is characterized by
a reliance on the rule of law, the existence of a democratically elected government, a
diverse and vigorous civil society, and respect for minorities and minority opinions.
Launched in late 1999, the CPS works with a broadening circle of policy analysts and
institutions to promote the development of policy center networks throughout Central and
Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, and Mongolia, as well as countries in South and
Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa. The Center undertakes policy research
and advocacy that furthers the open society mission and disseminates quality analyses in
accessible formats.
The CPS International Policy Fellowships are intended to support the analytical policy
research of open society leaders and to provide these Fellows with professional policy
training. The program aims to improve the quality of analysis in countries where the Soros
foundations work by ensuring that these leaders are able to conduct research in their home
region while maintaining local affiliations and a high degree of mobility and intellectual
freedom. Fellows participate in four training seminars in Budapest over the course of the
fellowship year conducted by professors of public policy from around the world and gain
vital skills including how to write professional policy documents, identify appropriate
policy instruments, and effectively advocate policies-skills that are underdeveloped in
countries where the Soros foundations work. Good policy analysis is characterized by
elements including a reliance on well-researched data; comprehensive,
non-ideological assessment of relevant factors and options; explicitly stated
criteria for assessing options; consideration of the interests and groups affected;
and the clear presentation of feasible recommendations for action as well as how
these recommendations should be communicated and implemented.
Outstanding Fellows from Eastern Europe may be nominated to participate in additional
training and research opportunities including a three-month International Junior Public
Policy Scholar Fellowship in Washington, D.C. in affiliation with the Woodrow Wilson
Center's East European Studies program. The Woodrow Wilson International Center for
Scholars, the United States' official memorial to President Wilson, was established by
congressional legislation in 1968. Meant to reflect and continue Woodrow Wilson's
commitment to a deeper understanding of issues crucial to global peace and stability, the
Center serves as an international, interdisciplinary, non-partisan scholarly institute
which fosters scholarship in the humanities and social sciences and encourages dialogue
between the academic and policy communities. East European Studies, housed at the Woodrow
Wilson Center, provides a non-partisan forum for bringing historical and contemporary
understanding of the former communist states of Eastern Europe and the Baltics to the
nation's capital and throughout the country.
For more details on the Wilson Center and its East European Studies program, please see
further details at the end of this announcement and visit the Center's website at www.wilsoncenter.org.
All initial queries must be entered online via the internet directly into the IPF
application database found at http://www.osi.hu/ipf.
Those who have no possibility to access the internet (including from public libraries,
internet centers, or national Soros foundations) should send an e-mail to fellows@osi.hu
or call the IPF offices at (36 1) 327-3863 to discuss the best alternate application
solution.
All applications must be submitted online at http://www.osi.hu/ipf
by August 1, 2002.
Finalists will be interviewed by telephone at the expense of IPF. Successful applicants
will be notified in November or December 2002 and no later than January 15, 2003.
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