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NYU STERN CLIMATE ECONOMICS JOURNALISM FELLOWS

Application Deadline: April 20, 2025

LOCATION: USA

The NYU Stern Climate Economics Journalism Fellowship will bring a group of journalists to NYU Stern’s Greenwich Village campus to learn from globally recognized experts in the emerging field of climate economics. Participants will discuss the fundamental factors and latest trends in climate economics and finance.

The next cohort of the Fellowship will meet in New York City on September 18 and 19, 2025.

ELIGIBILITY:

Applications are open to and welcome from all journalists (both reporters and editors, and including freelancers) interested in covering the interface between climate and the economy. While aspects of the course have a focus on U.S. policies and institutions, we also welcome applications from journalists based outside the United States.

NYU Stern will select the final group of Fellows based on the documents submitted by applicants including the letter of motivation.

Applications for the Fellowship are open, and will close on April 20, 2025. Fellowship recipients will be contacted by late May 2025. To apply, please submit a CV, cover letter, and examples of your work here.

The sessions cover the fundamental economics and latest trends in climate economics. Prior training in economics is not required. Topics include:

How Climate Change is Roiling the Housing and Insurance Markets

Climate Risks to Financial Stability

How Climate Change is Altering Corporate Decision Making

The Economics of Climate Regulation + Carbon Markets

Biodiversity Loss as an Emerging Economic Risk

The Fast-Changing Economics of Renewable Energy and Electric Vehicles

Emerging Regulatory and Legislative Trends in Climate Finance and Economics

Within these topics, we will consider urgent questions such as: Why are home insurance markets breaking down across the U.S.? What’s a carbon border adjustment mechanism and how might it affect global trade? How do cap-and-trade systems work? How do you calculate the Social Cost of Carbon, and why does it matter? What are the problems with carbon offsets, and how might they be solved? What are the economic and financial market effects of nature and biodiversity loss? How do the economics of renewable energy markets work?

Dan Fagin will lead a discussion of the challenges of reporting on the interactions between climate change and the economy.

There will be social events to allow for plenty of opportunities to get to know the other fellows and faculty in an informal setting.

BENEFIT:

The Fellowship is fully funded by NYU Stern, and there is no corporate or advocacy-group sponsorship:

All the costs of operating the program including all meals will be borne by NYU Stern. In addition, Fellows admitted to the program who reside outside the New York Metro Area will receive a $2,000 stipend to cover travel and accommodation costs; those residing inside the New York Metro Area will receive a  $1,000 stipend. Depending on your residency status, the Fellowship payment may be subject to tax withholding. Please see here for details.

APPLY

GOLDSMITHS UNIVERSITY OF LONDON MIGRANT FUTURES DOCTORAL STUDENTSHIPS

Application Deadline: 17:00 on Friday, 25 April, 2025

LOCATION: United Kingdom

The Graduate School is pleased to announce the call for two fully-funded Migrant Futures Doctoral Studentships that are part of a major grant awarded to Goldsmiths by Oak Foundation to establish a new Migrant Futures Institute (hereafter MFI) at Goldsmiths. Migrant Futures Doctoral Studentships are central to the MFI’s vision to advance innovative research and training in the field of migration studies and foreground migrant intellectual lives and creative endeavours.

ELIGIBILITY:

One of the two awards for entry 2025-26 will be open to eligible home applicants who identify as migrants or refugees and from racialised ethnic minority backgrounds in any field of research and practice for which supervision is available at Goldsmiths, University of London.   To be clear, applicants considered for this award need not be working on a migration related topic, but they should be able to describe how their work will enhance their own economic, creative and intellectual lives and that of others.   

The second of these two awards will be open to all eligible home or international applicants – irrespective of background and experience – whose proposed PhD is focused on a topic related to migration, broadly conceived, including in relation to processes of race and racialisation.  Proposals must be informed by the co-production of knowledge with people and groups from migrant and refugee backgrounds, and demonstrate potential for social and cultural impact. 

Migrant Futures Doctoral Studentship holders will, upon award, be designated as Fellows of the Migrant Futures Institute and will be expected to contribute to developing and enhancing the research culture of the institute through their research, creative practice and participation in MFI activities and events.  Successful applicants from racialised backgrounds will also be invited to participate in the activities of Generation Delta Goldsmiths.

Applicants must be new or continuing doctoral students who will not have completed more than 1 year of full-time or 2 years of part-time registration by the start of the 2025-26 academic year.

Migrant Futures Doctoral Studentships are open to home and international applicants: at least one award will be made to a home applicant with migrant or refugee experiences and from a racialised ethnic minority background.

Applications will be made through the Goldsmiths Graduate School via Gecko form.

To access the recording of the applicant information webinar held on Monday, 3 March 2025, please follow this link.

Please also refer to: Migrant Futures Doctoral Studentships – Guidance for Applicants

BENEFIT:

Two doctoral studentships for entry in 2025-26.  These are fully-funded studentship that may be held on a full-time (FT) or part-time (PT) basis, pro-rata, over three years (FT) and six years (PT) and are at an equivalent rate to fully-funded UKRI studentships. They cover tuition fees and an annual stipend at the yearly UKRI rate (the full-time UKRI rate for 2025/26 is £22,780), together with a small annual research training and support fund.