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OpportunityEDUCATION
African Critical Inquiry Programme Announces 2025 Ivan Karp Doctoral Research AwardThe African Critical Inquiry Programme has named Maja Jakarasi as recipient of the 2025 Ivan Karp Doctoral Research Award. Jakarasi, a Zimbabwean student in the Anthropology Department, is working on his PhD at the University of the Western Cape. Support from ACIP’s Ivan Karp Award will allow Jakarasi to pursue significant research for his dissertation. He will do ethnographic research in Rushinga District, Zimbabwe and across the border in Mozambique as well as archival work in Harare, Zimbabwe for his project, Spiritual Transformation, Healing, and Mental Illness in Contemporary Zimbabwe. Founded in 2012, the African Critical Inquiry Programme (ACIP) is a partnership between the Centre for Humanities Research at University of the Western Cape in Cape Town and the Laney Graduate School of Emory University in Atlanta. Supported by donations to the Ivan Karp and Corinne Kratz Fund, the ACIP fosters thinking and working across public cultural institutions, across disciplines and fields, and across generations. It seeks to advance inquiry and debate about the roles and practice of public culture, public cultural institutions, and public scholarship in shaping identities and society in Africa through an annual ACIP Workshop and through the Ivan Karp Doctoral Research Awards, which support African doctoral students in the humanities and humanistic social sciences enrolled at South African universities. About Maja Jakarasi’s project: Jakarasi’s research project, Spiritual Transformation, Healing, and Mental Illness in Contemporary Zimbabwe, will address how healing practices have transformed from the Second Chimurenga to the political and socio-economic challenges that Zimbabwe is facing today. (The Second Chimurenga (1964-79) was Zimbabwe’s War of Independence.) Jakarasi’s research will explore the transformations of practices, meanings, and rituals that are apprehended as traditional against the backdrop of the current socioeconomic crises bedeviling Zimbabwe, crises that are traced back to the 1990s when the Zimbabwean government adopted the market-oriented Economic Structural Adjustment Programme (ESAP). ESAP liberalised, deregulated, and privatised the economy, which resulted in rapid and adverse sociocultural changes and inequalities. Through ethnographic work, Jakarasi will investigate traditional healing practices among the Shona people in Rushinga district, Mashonaland Central Province in Eastern Zimbabwe. What has been the significance of traditional healing practices to people on the ground and to society at large? How has this changed over the four decades since Zimbabwean independence in 1980? Which forms of spiritual transformation have been relevant to healing practices in Zimbabwe? Historical and archival research will expand the ethnographic work in order to capture the trajectories of change in traditional healing from the time of the second Chimurenga to the 21st century. Jakarasi will draw insights on the forms and importance of spiritual transformations and healing practices by synthesizing theoretical frameworks related to indigenous knowledge systems (IKS), explanatory models of illness, and comparative work on spiritual transformation and healing. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Information about the 2026 Ivan Karp Doctoral Research Awards for African students enrolled in South African Ph.D. programmes will be available in November 2025. The application deadline is 1 May 2026. For further information, see http://www.gs.emory.edu/about/special/acip.html and https://www.facebook.com/ivan.karp.corinne.kratz.fund. Contact Email ckratz@emory.edu URL https://gs.emory.edu/about/special/acip.htmlBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunityEDUCATION
African Critical Inquiry Programme Announces 2025 Ivan Karp Doctoral Research AwardThe African Critical Inquiry Programme has named Maja Jakarasi as recipient of the 2025 Ivan Karp Doctoral Research Award. Jakarasi, a Zimbabwean student in the Anthropology Department, is working on his PhD at the University of the Western Cape. Support from ACIP’s Ivan Karp Award will allow Jakarasi to pursue significant research for his dissertation. He will do ethnographic research in Rushinga District, Zimbabwe and across the border in Mozambique as well as archival work in Harare, Zimbabwe for his project, Spiritual Transformation, Healing, and Mental Illness in Contemporary Zimbabwe. Founded in 2012, the African Critical Inquiry Programme (ACIP) is a partnership between the Centre for Humanities Research at University of the Western Cape in Cape Town and the Laney Graduate School of Emory University in Atlanta. Supported by donations to the Ivan Karp and Corinne Kratz Fund, the ACIP fosters thinking and working across public cultural institutions, across disciplines and fields, and across generations. It seeks to advance inquiry and debate about the roles and practice of public culture, public cultural institutions, and public scholarship in shaping identities and society in Africa through an annual ACIP Workshop and through the Ivan Karp Doctoral Research Awards, which support African doctoral students in the humanities and humanistic social sciences enrolled at South African universities. About Maja Jakarasi’s project: Jakarasi’s research project, Spiritual Transformation, Healing, and Mental Illness in Contemporary Zimbabwe, will address how healing practices have transformed from the Second Chimurenga to the political and socio-economic challenges that Zimbabwe is facing today. (The Second Chimurenga (1964-79) was Zimbabwe’s War of Independence.) Jakarasi’s research will explore the transformations of practices, meanings, and rituals that are apprehended as traditional against the backdrop of the current socioeconomic crises bedeviling Zimbabwe, crises that are traced back to the 1990s when the Zimbabwean government adopted the market-oriented Economic Structural Adjustment Programme (ESAP). ESAP liberalised, deregulated, and privatised the economy, which resulted in rapid and adverse sociocultural changes and inequalities. Through ethnographic work, Jakarasi will investigate traditional healing practices among the Shona people in Rushinga district, Mashonaland Central Province in Eastern Zimbabwe. What has been the significance of traditional healing practices to people on the ground and to society at large? How has this changed over the four decades since Zimbabwean independence in 1980? Which forms of spiritual transformation have been relevant to healing practices in Zimbabwe? Historical and archival research will expand the ethnographic work in order to capture the trajectories of change in traditional healing from the time of the second Chimurenga to the 21st century. Jakarasi will draw insights on the forms and importance of spiritual transformations and healing practices by synthesizing theoretical frameworks related to indigenous knowledge systems (IKS), explanatory models of illness, and comparative work on spiritual transformation and healing. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Information about the 2026 Ivan Karp Doctoral Research Awards for African students enrolled in South African Ph.D. programmes will be available in November 2025. The application deadline is 1 May 2026. For further information, see http://www.gs.emory.edu/about/special/acip.html and https://www.facebook.com/ivan.karp.corinne.kratz.fund. Contact Email ckratz@emory.edu URL https://gs.emory.edu/about/special/acip.html Read moreBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunityHEALTH AND NUTRITION+1
CFP (Extended deadline): Decolonizing Archaeological Epistemologies - Leiden, the NetherlandsThe opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum has been hailed as a major museological achievement, a cutting-edge and high-tech advancement with the potential to shift global discourses on the repatriation of Pharaonic antiquities. And yet, little emphasis has been placed on how such discourses entrench existing museological norms, situating categories of “antiquity”, “artifact”, “treasure”, and “discovery” through extractive, colonial frameworks. Decolonizing Archaeological Epistemologies is a conference critically examining archaeological histories and practices, proposing instead more expansive, democratic, and liberatory approaches to the past and material culture, challenging extant museological, academic, economic, and legal systems governing the ways that material culture is collected, studied, and traded. With implications spanning beyond Egyptology to archaeology, museology, and historical disciplines more broadly, this conference proposes a counter-colonial approach that rethinks the status of the historical object in the public eye. Sessions include: Beyond “treasure”; challenging artifactual ontologies and epistemologies Counter-colonial museum exhibition strategies Resisting archaeological extractivism; new approaches to field-based research Community-based archaeology in theory and practice Beyond the “thing itself”; digital and ephemeral approaches to archaeological collections Who gets the past? New discourses in restitution, return, and repair Keynote: Dr. Monica Hanna (Arab Academy for Science Technology and Maritime Transport) Scholars engaging with these themes at a graduate, post-graduate, or professional level are invited to apply. Scholars working in the Global South are particularly encouraged to apply. Small travel stipends are available on a limited basis to offset travel costs. Interested participants are requested to submit a 250 word abstract and contact information via the form below by August 15, 2025: https://forms.office.com/e/BTewqkNM9UBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunityHEALTH AND NUTRITION+1
CFP (Extended deadline): Decolonizing Archaeological Epistemologies - Leiden, the NetherlandsThe opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum has been hailed as a major museological achievement, a cutting-edge and high-tech advancement with the potential to shift global discourses on the repatriation of Pharaonic antiquities. And yet, little emphasis has been placed on how such discourses entrench existing museological norms, situating categories of “antiquity”, “artifact”, “treasure”, and “discovery” through extractive, colonial frameworks. Decolonizing Archaeological Epistemologies is a conference critically examining archaeological histories and practices, proposing instead more expansive, democratic, and liberatory approaches to the past and material culture, challenging extant museological, academic, economic, and legal systems governing the ways that material culture is collected, studied, and traded. With implications spanning beyond Egyptology to archaeology, museology, and historical disciplines more broadly, this conference proposes a counter-colonial approach that rethinks the status of the historical object in the public eye. Sessions include: Beyond “treasure”; challenging artifactual ontologies and epistemologies Counter-colonial museum exhibition strategies Resisting archaeological extractivism; new approaches to field-based research Community-based archaeology in theory and practice Beyond the “thing itself”; digital and ephemeral approaches to archaeological collections Who gets the past? New discourses in restitution, return, and repair Keynote: Dr. Monica Hanna (Arab Academy for Science Technology and Maritime Transport) Scholars engaging with these themes at a graduate, post-graduate, or professional level are invited to apply. Scholars working in the Global South are particularly encouraged to apply. Small travel stipends are available on a limited basis to offset travel costs. Interested participants are requested to submit a 250 word abstract and contact information via the form below by August 15, 2025: https://forms.office.com/e/BTewqkNM9U Read moreBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunityEDUCATION
Announcement: Open Call for Fellows for the COIL Faculty Fellows Program-Africa (Cohort 3)!Are you ready to connect your classroom with the world? MSU’s Center for Global Learning and Innovation, Alliance for African Partnership (AAP), and African Studies Center (ASC) invite faculty from any discipline to apply for the Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) Faculty Fellows Program-Africa (Cohort 3)! 🌍 What is COIL?An innovative teaching method that brings together faculty and students from different countries for shared, virtual, intercultural learning experiences. ✨ Tracks Available:✅ Track 1: Bilateral COIL — 1 MSU + 1 African faculty | US$1,500/team✅ Track 2: Trilateral COIL — 1 MSU + 1 African + 1 HBCU faculty | US$3,000/team 📚 Requirements: No prior COIL experience needed! Must have an existing course in 2026 to integrate COIL. Spring, Summer, or Fall 2026 options. 🎓 Benefits: Stipend per faculty member 5-week COIL training (Oct 6–Nov 7, 2025) Join a vibrant fellows’ community of practice Present your project idea at the COIL Symposium 📅 Deadlines:🔗 Individual Interest Form: Aug 10, 2025 —https://msu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_8pQV8tBI70klX9k🔗 Team Application Form: Sept 7, 2025 — https://msu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5dxi1097iTi5gd8 💡 Bring your students a global experience, grow your network, and help shape the future of intercultural learning in Africa! 👉 Questions? Reach out to Marilyn Amey (amey@msu.edu) Apply now — let’s COIL Africa together! 🌐✨ #COIL #GlobalLearning #AAP #MSU #FacultyOpportunity #InternationalEducationBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major -
OpportunityEDUCATION
Announcement: Open Call for Fellows for the COIL Faculty Fellows Program-Africa (Cohort 3)!Are you ready to connect your classroom with the world? MSU’s Center for Global Learning and Innovation, Alliance for African Partnership (AAP), and African Studies Center (ASC) invite faculty from any discipline to apply for the Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) Faculty Fellows Program-Africa (Cohort 3)! 🌍 What is COIL?An innovative teaching method that brings together faculty and students from different countries for shared, virtual, intercultural learning experiences. ✨ Tracks Available:✅ Track 1: Bilateral COIL — 1 MSU + 1 African faculty | US$1,500/team✅ Track 2: Trilateral COIL — 1 MSU + 1 African + 1 HBCU faculty | US$3,000/team 📚 Requirements: No prior COIL experience needed! Must have an existing course in 2026 to integrate COIL. Spring, Summer, or Fall 2026 options. 🎓 Benefits: Stipend per faculty member 5-week COIL training (Oct 6–Nov 7, 2025) Join a vibrant fellows’ community of practice Present your project idea at the COIL Symposium 📅 Deadlines:🔗 Individual Interest Form: Aug 10, 2025 —https://msu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_8pQV8tBI70klX9k🔗 Team Application Form: Sept 7, 2025 — https://msu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5dxi1097iTi5gd8 💡 Bring your students a global experience, grow your network, and help shape the future of intercultural learning in Africa! 👉 Questions? Reach out to Marilyn Amey (amey@msu.edu) Apply now — let’s COIL Africa together! 🌐✨ #COIL #GlobalLearning #AAP #MSU #FacultyOpportunity #InternationalEducation Read moreBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-Major -
OpportunityOTHER
Call for Applications Now Open for the Inaugural Cohort of the African Women in Data Science FellowsAfrican Women in Agricultural Research and Development (AWARD) is pleased to announce the launch of the inaugural African Women in Data Science Fellowship. This timely initiative responds to the growing demand for data-driven leadership to tackle the pressing challenges of food insecurity and climate change across Africa. We invite ambitious African women with foundational experience in data-related work and a strong motivation to deepen their skills and apply data science for transformative impact in agrifood systems and climate resilience. The Fellowship aims to enhance the leadership and technical capabilities of African women professionals utilizing data science to foster inclusive, evidence-based innovation in agrifood systems and climate resilience. Building on AWARD’s proven track record in cultivating African women leaders in agricultural research and development, the program adapts our Fellowship model to meet the demands of an evolving data and technology landscape. The program targets African women from Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Malawi with demonstrated experience in data-related roles and a commitment to applying data for development. Fellows will be drawn from diverse sectors, including government, academia, research, civil society, development agencies, and the private sector. A Transformative Learning Experience Inspired by the AWARD Fellowship model, the African Women in Data Science Fellowship offers a rigorous 12-month career-accelerating journey for African women working at the intersection of data science, agriculture, and climate resilience. As a Fellow, you will engage in the following core activities: Participate in a 7-day, face-to-face women’s leadership course designed to strengthen your confidence, influence, and capacity to lead data-driven solutions (November 2025). Join a 2-week immersive in-person data science training course covering Python programming, machine learning, data wrangling, visualization, and statistical analysis (February 2026). Complete a 2-month virtual course focused on the application of data science tools to real-world challenges in agrifood systems and climate resilience (April – May 2026). Design and implement a data-driven capstone project addressing a practical issue in agriculture or climate. You will receive modest seed funding and technical guidance for project execution (February – September 2026). Undertake a competitive short-term institutional placement (1–3 months), known as Advanced Science Training (AST), within your home country. This placement provides an opportunity to apply your skills in a real-world setting and further deepen your technical expertise (May – September 2026). Receive ongoing guidance from senior data science professionals through structured mentoring relationships, including orientation, check-ins, and goal setting (March – November 2026). Participate in knowledge-sharing sessions, storytelling activities, and professional engagement opportunities through AWARD’s network (Throughout the fellowship). By the end of the Fellowship, participants will be better equipped to lead data-driven initiatives, advocate for inclusive innovation, and serve as visible role models in Africa’s growing data science and development ecosystem. Application Deadline: July 31, 2025, at 11:59 PM East Africa Time (GMT+3). applications will NOT be accepted after this deadline. Applicants should carefully read the application guidelines for more information on eligibility criteria and the application process.Apply: https://form.jotform.com/251594644696977By: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunityOTHER
Call for Applications Now Open for the Inaugural Cohort of the African Women in Data Science FellowsAfrican Women in Agricultural Research and Development (AWARD) is pleased to announce the launch of the inaugural African Women in Data Science Fellowship. This timely initiative responds to the growing demand for data-driven leadership to tackle the pressing challenges of food insecurity and climate change across Africa. We invite ambitious African women with foundational experience in data-related work and a strong motivation to deepen their skills and apply data science for transformative impact in agrifood systems and climate resilience. The Fellowship aims to enhance the leadership and technical capabilities of African women professionals utilizing data science to foster inclusive, evidence-based innovation in agrifood systems and climate resilience. Building on AWARD’s proven track record in cultivating African women leaders in agricultural research and development, the program adapts our Fellowship model to meet the demands of an evolving data and technology landscape. The program targets African women from Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Malawi with demonstrated experience in data-related roles and a commitment to applying data for development. Fellows will be drawn from diverse sectors, including government, academia, research, civil society, development agencies, and the private sector. A Transformative Learning Experience Inspired by the AWARD Fellowship model, the African Women in Data Science Fellowship offers a rigorous 12-month career-accelerating journey for African women working at the intersection of data science, agriculture, and climate resilience. As a Fellow, you will engage in the following core activities: Participate in a 7-day, face-to-face women’s leadership course designed to strengthen your confidence, influence, and capacity to lead data-driven solutions (November 2025). Join a 2-week immersive in-person data science training course covering Python programming, machine learning, data wrangling, visualization, and statistical analysis (February 2026). Complete a 2-month virtual course focused on the application of data science tools to real-world challenges in agrifood systems and climate resilience (April – May 2026). Design and implement a data-driven capstone project addressing a practical issue in agriculture or climate. You will receive modest seed funding and technical guidance for project execution (February – September 2026). Undertake a competitive short-term institutional placement (1–3 months), known as Advanced Science Training (AST), within your home country. This placement provides an opportunity to apply your skills in a real-world setting and further deepen your technical expertise (May – September 2026). Receive ongoing guidance from senior data science professionals through structured mentoring relationships, including orientation, check-ins, and goal setting (March – November 2026). Participate in knowledge-sharing sessions, storytelling activities, and professional engagement opportunities through AWARD’s network (Throughout the fellowship). By the end of the Fellowship, participants will be better equipped to lead data-driven initiatives, advocate for inclusive innovation, and serve as visible role models in Africa’s growing data science and development ecosystem. Application Deadline: July 31, 2025, at 11:59 PM East Africa Time (GMT+3). applications will NOT be accepted after this deadline. Applicants should carefully read the application guidelines for more information on eligibility criteria and the application process.Apply: https://form.jotform.com/251594644696977 Read moreBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunityAGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS+2
Nutrition Impact at Scale Incubation Program 2025 (Kenya)Deadline: Jul 30, 2025 Donor: Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition Grant Type: Training Grant Size: $1000 to $10,000 Countries/Regions: Kenya Area: Financial Management, Agriculture Food & Nutrition, Food Safety, Nutrition, Businesses, Companies and Enterprises, Entrepreneurship Submissions are now open for the Nutrition Impact at Scale Incubation Program that is a powerful crash course on entrepreneurship – as well as adapting a nutrition lens the business. For more information, visit https://gain.nakurubox.co.ke/incubation/ Premium Link: https://grants.fundsforngospremium.com/opportunity/op/nutrition-impact-at-scale-incubation-program-2025-kenyaBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunityAGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS+2
Nutrition Impact at Scale Incubation Program 2025 (Kenya)Deadline: Jul 30, 2025 Donor: Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition Grant Type: Training Grant Size: $1000 to $10,000 Countries/Regions: Kenya Area: Financial Management, Agriculture Food & Nutrition, Food Safety, Nutrition, Businesses, Companies and Enterprises, Entrepreneurship Submissions are now open for the Nutrition Impact at Scale Incubation Program that is a powerful crash course on entrepreneurship – as well as adapting a nutrition lens the business. For more information, visit https://gain.nakurubox.co.ke/incubation/ Premium Link: https://grants.fundsforngospremium.com/opportunity/op/nutrition-impact-at-scale-incubation-program-2025-kenya Read moreBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunitySCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION
Call for Proposals: Advanced Innovation GrantsDeadline: Sep 30, 2025 Donor: International Orthodontics Foundation Grant Type: Grant Grant Size: $10,000 to $100,000 Countries/Regions: All Countries Area: Innovation, Research, Science, Technology The Advanced Innovation Grants (AIG) supports projects beyond early stages, enabling larger-scale applications and multicenter research. For more information, visit https://researchgrants.iofglobal.org/v3/advanced/innovation Premium Link: https://grants.fundsforngospremium.com/opportunity/op/call-for-proposals-advanced-innovation-grantsBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunitySCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AN...
Call for Proposals: Advanced Innovation GrantsDeadline: Sep 30, 2025 Donor: International Orthodontics Foundation Grant Type: Grant Grant Size: $10,000 to $100,000 Countries/Regions: All Countries Area: Innovation, Research, Science, Technology The Advanced Innovation Grants (AIG) supports projects beyond early stages, enabling larger-scale applications and multicenter research. For more information, visit https://researchgrants.iofglobal.org/v3/advanced/innovation Premium Link: https://grants.fundsforngospremium.com/opportunity/op/call-for-proposals-advanced-innovation-grants Read moreBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunitySCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION
Request for Proposals: Emerging Innovation GrantsDeadline: Oct 31, 2025 Donor: International Orthodontics Foundation Grant Type: Grant Grant Size: $10,000 to $100,000 Countries/Regions: All Countries Area: Individuals, Researchers, Innovation, Research The Emerging Innovation Grants (EIG) provide seed funding for novel ideas and pioneering research at various stages of development, with the goal of fostering groundbreaking advancements in orthodontics. For more information, visit https://researchgrants.iofglobal.org/v3/emerging/innovation Premium Link: https://grants.fundsforngospremium.com/opportunity/op/request-for-proposals-emerging-innovation-grantsBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available -
OpportunitySCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AN...
Request for Proposals: Emerging Innovation GrantsDeadline: Oct 31, 2025 Donor: International Orthodontics Foundation Grant Type: Grant Grant Size: $10,000 to $100,000 Countries/Regions: All Countries Area: Individuals, Researchers, Innovation, Research The Emerging Innovation Grants (EIG) provide seed funding for novel ideas and pioneering research at various stages of development, with the goal of fostering groundbreaking advancements in orthodontics. For more information, visit https://researchgrants.iofglobal.org/v3/emerging/innovation Premium Link: https://grants.fundsforngospremium.com/opportunity/op/request-for-proposals-emerging-innovation-grants Read moreBy: Baboki Gaolaolwe-MajorNo Preview Available