The WW Women’s Studies Fellowships support the final year of dissertation writing for Ph.D. candidates in the humanities and social sciences whose work addresses topics of women and gender in interdisciplinary and original ways. Since the first Women’s Studies Fellows were named in 1974, over 500 emerging scholars have been funded, many now prominent in their fields.
The Woodrow Wilson Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship in Women’s Studies is a dissertation completion fellowship and previous applicants may not apply. The eligible applicants for the Women’s Studies Fellowships are Ph.D. candidates at institutions in the United States who will complete their dissertations during the fellowship year.
Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowship in Women Studies: The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation's Women's Studies Fellowships support the final year of dissertation writing for PhD candidates in the humanities and social sciences whose work addresses topics of women and gender in interdisciplinary and original ways.
The Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowship in Women's Studies supports students in their final year of the PhD working towards completion of their dissertations. It remains the only national fellowship supporting exclusively students working on women's and gendered issues in the humanities and social sciences and encouraging the next generation of scholars in GSWS.
Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowship in Women’s Studies. Woodson Fellowships: The Carter G. Woodson Institute at the University of Virginia offers predoctoral and postdoctoral residential research fellowships to eligible scholars whose work focuses on Race, Ethnicity, and Society in Africa and the Atlantic World (broadly defined as the African Diaspora).
The Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowship in Women's Studies encourages original and significant research about women that crosses disciplinary, regional, or cultural boundaries, and supports the final year of dissertation writing for Ph.D. candidates in the humanities and social sciences whose work addresses topics of women and gender in interdisciplinary and original ways.Previous Fellows.