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On Wednesday, October 9, 2013 11:14 PM, Adam Worrall <[email protected]> wrote:
 
Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society has posted an open 
call for fellowship applications for 2014-2015. Applications are due by 
December 8, 2013. More details below and at 
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships/opencall20142015.



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Rebecca Tabasky <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Oct 3, 2013 at 1:11 PM
Subject: [Air-L] Berkman Center Accepting Fellowship Applications for the 
2014-2015 Academic Year
To: [email protected]


Hello!

The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University has opened our 
yearly call for fellowship applications. This opportunity is for colleagues who 
wish to spend the 2014-2015 academic year in residence in Cambridge, MA as part 
of Berkman's community of pioneers, and who seek to deeply engage in the 
collaborative, cross-disciplinary, and cross-sectoral exploration of some of 
the Internet's most interesting, challenging, and compelling issues.

We invite applications from individuals from around the globe working on a 
broad range of opportunities and challenges related to Internet and society, 
which may overlap with ongoing work at Berkman or will expose us to new 
opportunities and approaches. We encourage applications from a diverse group of 
scholars, practitioners, innovators, artists, and others committed to 
understanding and advancing the public interest.

The application deadline is Sunday December 8, 2013 at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time, 
and applications will be **submitted online through our Application Tracker 
tool at: https://cyber.law.harvard.edu/apply/jobs/11?apptracker_id=3 
<https://cyber.law.harvard.edu/apply/jobs/11?apptracker_id=3>

More information about this call for applications may be found below and at 
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships/opencall20142015 
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships/opencall20142015>.

More information about the Berkman Center Fellowship Program may be found at 
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships 
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships>.

A Fellowship Program FAQ may be found at 
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships/faq 
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships/faq>.

Through this annual open call, we seek to advance our collective work and give 
it new direction, and to deepen and broaden our networked community across 
backgrounds, disciplines, cultures, and nations.  We welcome you to read more 
about the program below, to share this announcement with your networks, and to 
apply! 
With excitement,
Becca

---
**
Open Call for Fellowship Applications, Academic Year 2014-2015* 
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships/opencall20142015>*

*About Berkman's Fellowship Program*

"The Berkman Center's mission is to explore and understand cyberspace; to study 
its development, dynamics, norms, and standards; and to assess the need or lack 
thereof for laws and sanctions.

We are a research center, premised on the observation that what we seek to 
learn is not already recorded. Our method is to build out into cyberspace, 
record data as we go, self-study, and share. Our mode is entrepreneurial 
nonprofit."

Inspired by our mission statement, the Berkman Center's fellowship program 
provides the opportunity for some of the world's most innovative thinkers and 
changemakers to hone and share ideas, find camaraderie, and spawn new 
initiatives. The program aims to encourage and support fellows in an inviting 
and rigorous intellectual environment, with community activities designed to 
foster inquiry and to identify and expose the common threads across fellows' 
individual activities.

Fellows actively participate in exchanges through a weekly fellows hour, 
fellows-run working groups, and a wide-range of Berkman Center events and 
interactions. While engaging in both substance and process, much of what makes 
the fellowship program rewarding is created each year by the fellows themselves 
to address their own interests and priorities. These entrepreneurial, 
collaborative ventures -- ranging from goal-oriented to experimental, from 
rigorous to humorous -- are what ensure the dynamism of the fellows, the 
fellowship program, and the Berkman community.

Additionally, with Berkman faculty, students, staff, and other affiliates, 
fellows help to develop and advance their own work and Berkman Center projects, 
and they learn and teach through courses, skill sharing, hacking and 
development sessions, cultural productions, and other diverse gatherings.

Fellows are essential to the Berkman Center as nodes of intelligence, insight, 
energy, and knowledge-sharing. From their diverse backgrounds and wide-ranging 
physical and virtual travels, Berkman Center fellows bring fresh ideas, skills, 
passion, and connections to the Center and its community, and from their time 
spent in Cambridge help build and extend new perspectives and initiatives out 
into the world.*

About Berkman Fellowships*

An appointment that defies one-size-fits-all description, each Berkman 
fellowship carries a unique set of opportunities, responsibilities and 
expectations. All fellows engage issues related to the fairly limitless expanse 
of Internet & society issues, and are committed to the intellectual life of the 
Center and fellowship program activities. Some fellows work as researchers 
directly on Berkman Center projects. Other fellowships consist of independent 
work, such as the research and writing of a manuscript or series of papers, the 
vision and planning of an action-oriented meeting, or the development and 
implementation of an initiative or a study on issues related to the Berkman 
Center's areas of inquiry.

Fellowship terms typically run the course of the academic year, roughly from 
the beginning of September through the end of May. In some instances, fellows 
are re-appointed for consecutive fellowship terms.

While we embrace our many virtual connections, spending time together in person 
remains essential. In order to maximize their engagement with the community, 
during their fellowship terms fellows are expected to routinely spend time in 
and conduct much of their work from Cambridge, in most cases requiring 
residency. Tuesdays hold particular importance as it is the day the fellows 
community meets for a weekly fellows hour, in addition to it being the day 
Berkman hosts our public luncheon series; as such, we ask that fellows commit 
to spending as many Tuesdays at the Center as is possible.*

Qualifications*

We do not have a defined set of requirements for the fellows we select through 
our open call; we welcome applications from a wildly diverse pool of 
individuals.

Fellows come from across the disciplinary spectrum, different life paths, and 
are at all stages of career development. Some fellows are academics, whether 
students, post-docs or professors. Others come from outside academia, and 
include lawyers, philosophers, activists, technologists, entrepreneurs, 
journalists and other types of practitioners.

The commonality among all Berkman fellows is an interest in the intersections 
of the Internet and related emergent technologies, social change, and policy 
and regulatory developments, and a commitment to spending their fellowship 
exploring those dynamics in concert with others.

To learn more about the work and interests of our current community of fellows, 
you can read their bios <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/fellows> and find 
links to their outstanding work, check out their blogs 
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/planet/current/>, and find them on twitter 
<https://twitter.com/berkmancenter/current-people-projects>.*

Commitment to Diversity*

The work and well-being of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society are 
strengthened profoundly by the diversity of our network and our differences in 
background, culture, experience, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, 
and much more. We actively seek and welcome applications from people of color, 
women, the LGBTQIA community, and persons with disabilities, as well as 
applications from researchers and practitioners from across the spectrum of 
disciplines and methods. The roots of this deep commitment are many and, 
appropriately, diverse. We are not nearly far enough along in this regard, and 
we may never be. It is a constant process in which there remains much to learn. 
We welcome your inquiries, comments and ideas on how we may continue to 
improve.*

Stipends, Benefits, and Access to University Resources
*/
Stipends/: Fellowships awarded through the open call for applications are 
rarely stipended. Some fellows receive partial stipends --the award of such a 
stipend is based on the nature of the responsibilities the applicant would 
assume while a fellow, and their relation, relevance, and application to 
Berkman's funded projects. Most fellows receive no direct funding or stipend 
through the Berkman Center, but rather have obtained funding through other 
means, such as an outside grant or award, a home institution, or other forms of 
scholarship./

Benefits/: Fringe benefits do not routinely accompany Berkman fellowships. 
Fellows must make their own housing, insurance, childcare, and transportation 
arrangements./

Office Space/: Most Berkman fellows work out of the greater-Boston area and 
spend a significant amount of time at the Berkman Center. There are many desks 
and workspaces available for flexible use at the Berkman Center, though few 
fellows are given their own permanent desk or office. We endeavor to provide 
comfortable and productive spaces for fellows to work, even if it is not the 
same space each day. Fellows are welcome to host small meetings and gatherings 
at the Center and on the Harvard campus./

Access to University Resources/: Fellows are allowed physical access into 
Langdell Library (the Harvard Law School Library), and fellows are able to 
acquire a Special Borrower Card 
<http://hcl.harvard.edu/info/admittance/#special_borrower> for privileges with 
the Harvard College Libraries.  At present, we do not routinely provide remote 
access to the University's e-resources, however access is available within the 
libraries.  Fellows do not have the ability to purchase University health 
insurance or get Harvard housing. Berkman fellows often audit classes at 
Harvard University, however must individually ask for permission directly from 
the professor of the desired class.*

Additional Information about the Berkman Center*

The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University is a research 
program founded to explore cyberspace, share in its study, and help pioneer its 
development. Founded in 1997, through a generous gift from Jack N. and Lillian 
R. Berkman, the Center is home to an ever-growing community of faculty, 
fellows, staff, and affiliates working on projects that span the broad range of 
intersections between cyberspace, technology, and society.

*Frequently Asked Questions*

More information about fellows selection and the application process can be 
found on our Fellows Program FAQ 
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/getinvolved/fellowships/faq>.*

Required Application Materials*

1.) A current resume or CV.
2.) A personal statement which should a) frame your motivation for applying for 
a Berkman Center fellowship and b) outline the work you propose to conduct 
during a fellowship. This statement should be roughly 1,000 -- 1,500 words or 
should be a multi-media equivalent.
3.) A copy of a recent publication or an example of relevant work.  For a 
written document, for instance, it should be on the order of a paper or chapter 
- not an entire book or dissertation - and should be in English.
4.) Two letters of recommendation, sent directly from the reference.

In addition to the above materials, we will ask applicants to share some 
additional information in a form as part of the application.

1.) Disciplinary background: Up to three disciplines in which you have been 
trained and/or have worked.
2.) Tags: Five tags that describe or represent the themes, issues, or ideas you 
know about and on which you propose to conduct work during a fellowship at 
Berkman; and five tags that represent work, themes, issues, or ideas that you 
do not currently know much about, but would like to explore and learn more 
about during a fellowship year.  Each tag should be one- to three- words or 
terms.
3.) Berkman projects of interest.  *

To Apply for a 2014-2015 Academic Year Fellowship Through Our Open Call*

Applications will be submitted online through our Application Tracker tool at: 
https://cyber.law.harvard.edu/apply/jobs/11?apptracker_id=3 
<https://cyber.law.harvard.edu/apply/jobs/11?apptracker_id=3>

Applications will be accepted on a rolling basis through Sunday, December 8, 
2013 at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time.

Instructions for creating an account and submitting an application through the 
Application Tracker may be found here <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/node/8572>.

Note related to recommendation letters: Recommendation letters will be captured 
through the Application Tracker, and will require applicants to submit the 
names and contact information for references in advance of the application 
deadline.  References will receive a link at which they can upload their 
letters.  We recommend that applicants create their profiles and submit 
reference information in the Application Tracker as soon as they know they are 
going to apply and have identified their references - this step will not 
require other fellowship application materials to be submitted.

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