Tag Archives: international fellowship

MSIF MCDONALD FELLOWSHIPS

Application Opens: 1 July 2025, Deadline: 1 December 2025

LOCATION: United Kingdom

MSIF’s McDonald Fellowships fund 2-year research placements for early career researchers from low- and middle-income countries. The McDonald Fellowship enables early-career multiple sclerosis researchers from low- and middle-income countries to work in a research institution outside of their own country. During the visit, participants either gain expertise or carry out parts of joint research projects.

ELIGIBILITY:

All candidates must:

Be educated to post graduate level (at least MSc, preferably PhD/MD) in an area relevant to multiple sclerosis.

Be citizens of a low- or middle-income country (all countries with a low, lower middle or upper middle income as defined by the World Bank)

Focus their research in an area relevant to multiple sclerosis.

Candidates must also be in one of the following situations:

Working or studying in a low- or middle-income country (all countries with a low, lower-middle, or upper-middle income as defined by the World Bank) at the time of application.

Working or studying in another country on a project that started within the six months prior to application.

Studying in another country on a Du Pré grant project supported MSIF.

Those who previously have held a Du Pré grant are eligible to subsequently apply for a McDonald Fellowship, but not the other way round.

Candidates are expected to return to their own countries at the end of the study period where they will contribute to advancing care and research in MS.

The McDonald fellowship may also be used to partially fund a PhD programme, where the candidate has already been accepted for the PhD programme in a recognised institute (within the six months prior to application) but who doesn’t have enough funding to cover the total cost.

If successful, candidates and Host supervisors will be required to read and sign the Terms and Conditions of the award.

The McDonald Fellowship should start within 12 months of being awarded the funding.

For more information, please contact our research team using the contact us form, selecting “Research grants and awards”.

BENEFIT:

The fellowship payment is a two-year grant, consisting of 55,000 EUR per year, paid to the host institution and then used to pay the fellow.  

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BOW SEAT TRUE BLUE FELLOWSHIP

Application Deadline: September 1st at 11:59 PM EDT

LOCATION: USA

The True Blue Fellowship (formerly the Fellowship Grant Program) aims to connect and empower youth around the world to leverage the creative arts to enact change in local communities to safeguard the ocean, waterways, and the climate. If you want to make a difference in your community, you are invited to participate in the True Blue Fellowship! The Fellowship is an initiative originally created and led by the Future Blue Youth Council (FBYC), a diverse group of Bow Seat alumni working together to empower their peers to advocate for a healthy, sustainable, and equitable future. 

ELIGIBILITY:

Youth ages 13-24 (at the start of the Fellowship period in January)

Young people worldwide (applications must be in English)

Individuals or classes, groups, clubs, or organizations

New or emerging projects that are less than two years old (clubs or organizations that are more than two years old may apply so long as the proposed project is less than two years old)

Make sure to follow Bow Seat and the Future Blue Youth Council on Instagram, and sign up for our e-newsletters to stay in the know about Fellowship updates, new mentorship resources, and more! Enter your email address below to be added to our mailing list.

Projects may be of any duration, as long as they meet the Fellowship goals:

Utilize the creative arts as the primary method for awareness and/or action.

Co-create with and engage others in your local community

Have a tangible impact on your local community and environment

BENEFIT:

The True Blue Fellowship provides mentorship, capacity building, and funding of up to $2,500 for at least 10 youth-led projects that address ocean, waterways, and/or climate change issues in their local communities through a creative arts lens.

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