Institute and Centre Fellowships
Our institutes and centres offer a number of research fellowships in their specialist subject areas.
Stipendiary and non-stipendiary fellowships are available for researchers of all career levels. Browse fellowships below and find out more on our institute and centre websites.
Browse fellowships
IALS welcomes researchers in any area of legal scholarship who can profit from the strengths of its holdings in United Kingdom and foreign law: its particular research interests lie in legal education and the profession; company and partnership law; financial services regulation; economic crime; comparative law; law reform; and the law of children.
The main Fellowships available are:
- Visiting Fellowships (by application each year; see the Institute's website for details on how to apply). Tenure: between three and 12 months. Non-stipendiary.
- Inns of Court Fellowship (one Fellowship awarded per annum. Nominations must be made by the Chief Justice of the jurisdiction). Tenure: normally three months. Non-stipendiary, but accommodation will be provided.
- Visiting Fellowship in Law Librarianship (by application each year; see the Institute's website for details on how to apply). Tenure: between three and 12 months. Non-stipendiary.
- Associate Research Fellowships (by appointment of the Institute's Advisory Council). Conferred on persons participating in Institute research activities and/or assisting with MPhil/PhD research supervision, thereby enabling them to benefit from library and other facilities equivalent to those enjoyed by other members of staff.
With its internationally renowned library, the ICS provides outstanding research facilities for scholars working in the fields of Ancient Greek and Latin languages and literature, Ancient History, Mycenaean Studies, Classical Archaeology and Ancient Philosophy. Specialist archive rooms are dedicated to research in the Ancient Theatre, in Epigraphy and Papyrology, and for the Ancient Commentators on Aristotle Project. Offices for research fellows are located within the area of the library. A computing room is well supplied with electronic information resources in Classics and related fields.
The main Fellowships available are:
- Early Career Research Associate: non-stipendiary, up to three years.
- Visiting Fellowship: non-stipendiary, between three months and 12 months.
- T.B.L Webster Fellowship: awarded to scholars from universities outside the UK, minimum six weeks, allowance towards cost of travel and accommodation.
- A. D. Trendall Fellowship: appointed every other year, awarded to scholars from universities outside the UK, minimum six weeks, allowance towards cost of travel and accommodation.
- Dorothy Tarrant Fellowship: awarded to scholars from universities outside the UK, minimum six weeks, allowance towards cost of travel and accommodation.
The Institute of Commonwealth Studies is the only postgraduate academic institution in the United Kingdom devoted to the study of the Commonwealth. Its purpose is to promote inter-disciplinary and inter-regional research on the Commonwealth and its member nations in the fields of history, politics, economics and other social sciences, and in subjects like development, environment, health, migration, class, race, and literature.
The Institute of Commonwealth Studies offers a number of Fellowships each year. These Fellowships include the following:
- Visiting Research Fellowship: non-stipendiary, 3 months to 1 year.
- Senior Research Fellowship: non-stipendiary, up to 3 years.
- Associate Fellowship: UK-based researchers
The activities of the Institute of English Studies attract those interested in the English language and its literatures (including other national and international literatures in English), in the History of the Book, and in cognate fields of study. Its approach is interdisciplinary, and it co-ordinates a substantial amount of research activity through the Centre for Manuscript and Print Studies which it hosts on behalf of a cross-sectoral group of seven universities and libraries including the British Library and the St Bride Printing Library. It has a strong presence in the writing of national histories of the book in Britain and Ireland and a strong presence in mediaeval English Palaeography. It hosts a variety of Research Seminar series annually, and about twenty conferences, as well as an ambitious publishing programme.
IES offers the following fellowships:
- Early Career Research Fellowship: researchers who are within five years of the award of their doctorate, non-stipendiary, up to a year.
- Research Fellowship: non-stipendiary, six months to three years.
The IHR is a working and meeting place for historians from all over the world and houses two major research centres – the Victoria County History and the Centre for Metropolitan History.
The Institute administers the following fellowships which aim to help postgraduate, postdoctoral and other research.
- IHR Doctoral Fellowships in History: 6 month fellowship open to candidates registered for a PhD at the University of London
- Economic History Society Fellowships: One-year postdoctoral fellowships in economic and/or social history.
- Past and Present Fellowships: Stipendiary awards for post-doctoral researchers, available for two years.
- Pearsall Fellowship in Modern Naval History: One-year post-doctoral fellowship in naval and maritime history.
- Doctoral Fellowship in Black British History: An award to help students in the final stage of their graduate studies to complete their doctoral project.
- Senior Fellowship: non-stipendiary, up to three years.
- Associate Fellowship: fellowships intended to enable wider collaboration on issues relevant to the study of history and its importance in society.
The Institute of Languages, Cultures and Societies offers opportunities for visiting scholars, with or without funding, to conduct research into any field relevant to the work of the Institute.
1. Non-Stipendiary Visiting Fellowships and Scholarships
Visiting Fellowships and Visiting Scholarships are available annually on a non-stipendiary basis, tenable at the Institute or within one of the ILCS's research centres:
- Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women's Writing
- Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory
- Ingeborg Bachmann Centre for Austrian Literature & Culture
- Research Centre for German & Austrian Exile Studies
- Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies
2. Funded Fellowships and Scholarships in Germanic Studie (Sylvia Naish)
3. Funded Fellowship in German Studies (Bithell)
4. Funded Fellowships in German-Speaking Exile Studies (Martin Miller and Hannah Norbert-Miller)
5. CLACS Early Career Fellowship in Latin American and Caribbean Studies
The Institute welcomes applications from philosophers who wish to visit London, and can offer its own office space and other facilities. Fellows are encouraged to take an active part in the life of the Programme, and in the many other philosophical activities in London. The Aristotelian Society holds its fortnightly meetings in Senate House, and the Royal Institute of Philosophy holds weekly meetings in nearby Gordon Square. Prospective fellows may apply for a visit of up to one year. Fellows may work in any area of philosophy.
- Collaborative Visiting Fellowship: open to applicants from non-UK institutions, stipend towards travel and accommodation for up to two months.
- Non-stipendiary Fellowship 3-6 months, applications open all year round.
The Warburg Institute exists principally to further the interdisciplinary study of the classical tradition, that is of those elements of European thought, literature, art and institutions which derive from the ancient world. The classical tradition is conceived as the theme which unifies the history of Western civilisation. The emphasis is less on ‘classical’ values in art and literature (in fact, all the strands that link medieval and modern civilisation with its origins in the ancient cultures of the Near East and the Mediterranean are represented in the Library), than on the element of continuity: the tenacity of symbols and images in European art and architecture, the persistence of motifs and forms in Western languages and literatures, the gradual transition, in Western thought, from magical beliefs to religion, science and philosophy, and the survival and transformation of ancient patterns in social customs and political institutions.
The Institute offers the following Fellowships:
- Frances A Yates Long Term Fellowships: post-doctoral Fellowships to support research on projects on any aspect of cultural, intellectual or art history. The awards provide financial support towards living and subsistence costs in London for nine to twelve months.
- Ouseley Short-Term Research Fellowship: 3 months stipendiary fellowship to support research on Arabic, Persian, Hindustani and other Oriental languages in this country.
- Associate Fellowship: Academic researchers who are not affiliated to a university or similar centre of Higher Education, up to three years.
- Visiting Fellowship
- Senior Research Fellowship
The DHRH runs two fellowship schemes: ongoing non-stipendiary visiting research fellowships and a funded, annual Practitioner in Residence scheme.
- Visiting research fellowships, usually for a period of between 3 and 12 months, are open to scholars and practitioners in digital humanities and related fields in the UK and abroad.
- The Practitioner in Residence scheme provides an opportunity for a practitioner interested in collaborating with researchers and technical specialists working at the intersection of digital technology and humanistic inquiry.
Each year, applications are invited for Visiting Fellowships in Human Rights, hosted by the Human Rights Consortium at the School of Advanced Study, University of London.
Visiting Fellowships in Human Rights are granted for a period ranging from one to four months. Fellows are expected to help develop the activities of the Human Rights Consortium at the School by presenting at a conference or seminar or contributing to a publication, and to pursue their own research. Office space, access to computing and printing facilities and a library card are provided.
Fellows are usually junior or senior researchers, though applications from those with relevant experience in Human Rights will be considered. Doctoral students are not normally eligible to apply for Visiting Fellowships.