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OpportunityTWAS-CSIR Postgraduate Fellowship ProgrammeThe Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) of India and UNESCO-TWAS have established a number of fellowships for foreign scholars from developing countries, who wish to pursue research toward a PhD in emerging areas of science and technology, for which facilities are available in CSIR laboratories and institutes. Deadline 06 May 2026 Partner Organizations Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, India Eligible nationalities Developing countries in the South Host countries India Level PhD Minimum degree held MSc Duration Up to 4 years Field 01-Agricultural Sciences 02-Structural, Cell and Molecular Biology 03-Biological Systems and Organisms 04-Medical and Health Sciences incl. Neurosciences 05-Chemical Sciences 06-Engineering Sciences 07-Astronomy, Space and Earth Sciences 08-Mathematical Sciences 09-Physics Age limit 35 Sandwich option YES Applications can only be submitted via online portal once the call is open. Please use the “apply now” button at the bottom of this page to start your application once the call is open. Opening date of this fellowship: 6 March 2026 Closing date of this fellowship: 6 May 2026 Applicants are encouraged to apply for the preliminary acceptance letter as early as possible, even before the opening date of the call. Keeping in mind that only Acceptance letters dated the same year as the year of application are eligible. Programme Details TWAS-CSIR Postgraduate Fellowships are tenable in CSIR research laboratories and institutes in India for a maximum period of four years. Applicants may be registered for a PhD degree in their home country, or may enrol in a PhD course at any University in India. Eligible CSIR institutions: Information on CSIR laboratories and institutes can be obtained by following the links here: https://www.csir.res.in/about-us/csir-network-map. Alternatively, a list of eligible institutes is available at the bottom of this page as a Word document. SANDWICH Fellowships (for those registered for a PhD in their home country): The Fellowship may be granted for a minimum period of 6 months and a maximum period to be decided by the host institute, but no greater than 3 years. FULL-TIME Fellowships (for those not registered for a PhD): The Fellowship may be granted for up to a maximum duration of 4 years. CSIR will provide a monthly stipend to cover for living costs, food and health insurance. The monthly stipend will not be convertible into foreign currency. In addition, Fellowship awardees are entitled to subsidized accommodation. The language of instruction for foreign scholars in CSIR laboratories/institutes is English. Eligibility Applicants for these fellowships must meet the following criteria: Be a maximum age of 35 years on 31 December of the application year. Be nationals of a developing country (other than India). Must not hold any visa for temporary or permanent residency in India or any developed country. Hold a Master's degree in science and technology. Be regularly employed in their home country and hold a research assignment there. SANDWICH Fellowships: Be registered PhD students in their home country and provide the "Registration and No Objection Certificate" from the HOME university. FULL-TIME Fellowships: Be willing to register at a university in India within the first year, if agreed to by CSIR. Be accepted at a CSIR laboratory/institution and provide an official acceptance letter from the host institution (see sample Acceptance Letter that can be downloaded below or included in the Application Form). NB: Requests for acceptance must be directed to the chosen CSIR host institution(s); provide evidence of proficiency in English, if medium of education was not English; provide evidence that s/he will return to her/his home country on completion of the fellowship; not take up other assignments during the period of her/his fellowship; be financially responsible for any accompanying family members. Submitting your application If already registered for a PhD in their home country, applicants should ensure that the Vice-Chancellor or Registrar of the HOME university signs a copy of the "Registration and No Objection Certificate" (see sample included in the Application Form), a copy of which should be sent to both CSIR and TWAS. Applicants should submit the acceptance letter from a CSIR institution when applying or by the deadline at the latest. Without preliminary acceptance, the application will not be considered for selection. Applications for the TWAS-CSIR Postgraduate Fellowship Programme can ONLY be submitted to TWAS via the online portal. A tutorial on how to use the online application form is available below for download. Please be advised that applicants may apply for only one programme per calendar year in the TWAS and OWSD portfolio. Applicants will not be eligible to visit another institution in that year under the TWAS Visiting Professor programmes. One exception: The head of an institution who invites an external scholar to share his/her expertise under the TWAS Visiting Professor programmes may still apply for another programme. Results of the fellowship selection should be available in at the end of 2026 or early 2027 and selected candidates will be able to start their fellowship NO earlier than 2027. Contact Details • TWAS Fellowships OfficeICTP Campus, Strada Costiera 1134151 Trieste, ItalyPhone: +39 040 2240-3314Fax: +39 040 2240-689E-mail: fellowships@twas.org • Dr (Mrs) Mamta SharmaPrincipal ScientistInternational S&T Affairs Directorate (ISTAD)Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR)Anusandhan Bhavan, 2, Rafi Marg, New Delhi 110 001Tel: +91-11-23470218 or 8987482814E-mail: mamtasharma@csir.res.inWeb: www.csir.res.in Contact email: fellowships@twas.org Application doc(s): online_forms_applicants_tutorial.pdf1.34 MB sample_preliminary_acceptance_letter.pdf62.54 KB updated-list-of-csir-eligible-centres_2023.docx27.66 KB APPLY NOWBy: Aaron DornerWednesday, Mar 25, 2026WATER, ENERGY, AND THE ENVIRONMENT+1
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OpportunityAgroServ's Transnational/Virtual Access Programme – Application procedureWebsite Link: agroserv Transnational/Virtual AccessBenefits of AgroServ's access Free AccessUtilize services offered by AgroServ partners at no cost. Travel SupportReceive reimbursement for travel and accommodation expenses. On-site SupportAssistance during project execution at partner facilities. Knowledge TransferAccess necessary expertise to complete your experimental work. Overview AgroServ enables researchers from academia and industry and all practitioners who are interested in doing research in agroecology to access installations and services across Europe, with a Catalogue of services provided by the 11 Research Infrastructures within AgroServ. Our focus is on supporting research in sustainable and resilient agriculture, emphasizing the 'one health' approach.By: Aaron DornerTuesday, Mar 24, 2026AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS+2
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OpportunityARUA Early Career Research FellowshipsEarly-Career Research Fellowships - ARUA. ^This link contains full description of fellowship and the application form.By: Aaron DornerTuesday, Mar 24, 2026AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS+2
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ArticleAfrican Futures Scholar Alfdaniels Mabingo“I can't wait to go back and be kind of a new scholar, new researcher, new academic leader, and new responsible citizen of this world.” ✨Meet Dr. Alfdaniels Mabingo, Lecturer of Performing Arts and Film at Makerere University in Uganda. His research for this fellowship explores dance education, pedagogy, and leadership particularly focusing on empowering youth through the arts in Uganda. He describes the program as a transformative experience in his early research career, calling it a true rite of passage that marked a significant milestone in his academic and professional growth.Through collaboration, mentorship, and knowledge exchange, the program has supported Dr. Alfdaniels Mabingo in further developing his leadership capacity and expanding his research experience. It has offered him a valuable space to continue refining his scholarly voice while building meaningful connections across disciplines and borders. 🌍By: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorTuesday, Mar 24, 2026CULTURE AND SOCIETY+1
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ArticleAfrican Futures Scholar Seynabou Sene“This collaborative environment has greatly enhanced my work.” 🌱Meet Dr. Seynabou Sene, PhD in Plant and Microbial Biotechnology at Cheikh Anta Diop University of Dakar, Senegal.She reflects on her journey: “I will return home with a broader scientific perspective, strengthened analytical skills, and enhanced leadership experience.” ✨The program supported Seynabou in expanding her research outlook, refining critical skills, and preparing her to lead impactful scientific initiatives within her academic and research community.By: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorWednesday, Mar 18, 2026EDUCATION+1
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ArticleAfrican Futures Scholar Assilah Agigi Mocke“The program’s benefit is immeasurable, it’s something you have to experience.” 🌟Meet Dr. Assilah Agigi Mocke, Senior Lecturer in Supply Chain Management at the University of Pretoria, South Africa.She reflects on her journey: “It has deepened my resolve as a lecturer, as an academic in the field. I now have a vision for my future, what I want to bring back to the African continent, and how I can create real impact.” ✨Through the program, Assilah was able to broaden her academic connections, engage with diverse perspectives, and gain the tools and inspiration to translate her research into meaningful impact across Africa.By: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorThursday, Mar 12, 2026EDUCATION
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ArticleAdvancing Equitable Global Partnerships in Nutrition and HIV ResearchSummary of the Award The Alliance for African Partnership (AAP) award was a catalytic institutional investment that transformed the trajectory of my global health research program. Nested within the International AIDS Society–funded CIPHER study, the AAP award (RN100284; $100,000) supported a focused investigation of micronutrient deficiency—specifically vitamin D and long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs)—as modifiable determinants of functional outcomes among school-aged Ugandan children with and without perinatal HIV exposure or infection. This strategic expansion sharpened our hypotheses, deepened cross-continental partnerships, and laid the empirical foundation for a sustained, externally funded program spanning child development and aging with chronic HIV. Advancing Global Health and Nutrition Science The award enabled systematic measurement of nutritional biomarkers in the full cohort rather than a limited subsample. This strengthened statistical power and allowed us to determine whether micronutrient deficits compounded baseline impairments and influenced trajectories of cognitive, socioemotional, and quality-of-life outcomes over 12 months. Importantly, AAP funds supported comprehensive assessment of physiologic stress and detailed abstraction of antiretroviral therapy exposure histories—critical for disentangling nutritional, immunologic, and psychosocial influences on child development in HIV-affected settings. Our findings demonstrated that variation in vitamin D status and fatty acid profiles were biologically meaningful contributors to growth, executive function, and socioemotional adjustment. Nutrition emerged not as a background covariate but as a mechanistic driver of morbidity risk. In sub-Saharan Africa—where perinatal HIV exposure remains common and nutritional vulnerability persists—identifying modifiable micronutrient pathways has direct implications for scalable intervention strategies that complement antiretroviral therapy. The scientific impact extended beyond childhood. Signals observed in the AAP-supported analyses informed refined hypotheses regarding the vitamin D metabolome as a determinant of cognitive development and decline across the life course. This work directly supported successful NIH funding, including an R21 in adolescents (R21HD088169), extended longitudinal follow-up in children (R01NS122510), and a recent R01 in older adults (R01AG087191) with and without chronic HIV infection. Across these awards and supplements, more than $8.0 million in extramural support has been secured, all building on the mechanistic insights strengthened by the AAP investment. Together, these projects examine nutrition, immune dysregulation, microbiome variation, and neurocognitive outcomes within a unified framework of functional survival. Partnership and Collaboration Dynamics The AAP award was intentionally structured to deepen equitable partnership between Michigan State University and the Uganda Society for Health Scientists (USHS). By co-leading the nutrition-focused expansion with Ugandan collaborators, including Dr. Sarah Zalwango and Dr. Philippa Musoke, we ensured that research questions were locally relevant, operationally feasible, and mutually beneficial. The award supported dedicated in-country research personnel and reinforced long-standing cohort infrastructure, strengthening data quality and local capacity. This infrastructure proved especially critical during the turbulent global research policy environment of 2025. Because of the systems and trust built through AAP-supported collaboration, our team was positioned to absorb external shocks while maintaining continuity of data collection and scientific productivity. The partnership model fostered bidirectional learning and reinforced a sustainable framework for global research engagement. Within MSU, the award deepened collaboration across Nutrition, Epidemiology, Psychiatry, Neuropsychology, and Biostatistics. Engagement with colleagues such as Dr. Jenifer Fenton and multidisciplinary collaborators created synergy that directly contributed to subsequent NIH R21 and R01 successes. The integration of nutritional epidemiology with neuropsychology, immunology, and global mental health allowed us to move beyond siloed inquiry toward a biopsychosocial model of risk and resilience. Support for student training was another critical dimension of impact. AAP-supported data generated dissertation research for two PhD students focused on fatty acids, vitamin D, and neurodevelopment, and supported a postdoctoral fellow whose ongoing work extends our African partnership into microbiome and metabolomic investigation. These investments align with MSU’s land-grant mission and AAP’s commitment to sustainable, capacity-enhancing collaboration. Follow-Up Work and Field Advancement The momentum generated by the AAP award continues to shape our research trajectory. In children, the R01NS122510 study is developing and validating a composite risk index to identify adolescents at high risk for neurocognitive impairment, integrating nutritional, immunologic, and virologic predictors. In older adults, the R01AG087191 project examines vitamin D bioavailability, gut microbiota composition, and dementia risk among individuals aging with chronic HIV infection. Together, these studies represent a life-course continuum directly traceable to the original AAP-supported mechanistic inquiry. We are also translating these findings into intervention strategies. For children, we are designing biopsychosocial supportive care models that incorporate nutritional optimization alongside psychosocial stress mitigation. For adults, we are investigating modifiable determinants of premature cognitive aging—including micronutrient status and gut dysbiosis—with the goal of preventive intervention. Emerging data on variation in the vitamin D metabolome position our team to address critical gaps in understanding how vitamin D functions within mechanistic nutrition trials, further strengthening our competitive edge. In sum, the AAP award was more than seed funding; it was a strategic inflection point for my research program. It strengthened transcontinental collaboration, refined mechanistic hypotheses, expanded training pipelines, and positioned our team for sustained NIH funding success. By providing early support that led to our appreciation of consequential variations in vitamin D metabolome, this project has positioned us to continue advancing health globally and domestically with the United States. Specifically, clinical guidelines (Endocrine Society Clinical Practice guidelines and the United States Health and Preventive Task force) on vitamin D has recently been updated and the excitingly, these updates and emphasized knowledge gaps directly align with the innovative insight on vitamin D metabolome we observed as part of the AAP supported projects. There is no doubt that the scientific, collaborative, and translational ripple effects of this investment continue to shape our contribution to global health and nutrition science as we increasingly move towards interventions informed by them.By: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorTuesday, Mar 17, 2026HEALTH AND NUTRITION+1
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