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The Davis Center offers a limited number of fellowships each year to
scholars whose research falls under its chosen theme. The applicants
must have their doctoral degrees in hand at the time of application, and
typically the selected fellows hold positions at universities.

http://www.princeton.edu/dav/program/fellowship_information/apply_for_a_
fellowship/

During the academic years 2010/11 and 2011/12 the Shelby Cullom Davis
Center for Historical Studies will focus on problems of authority and
legitimation.   We welcome proposals that explore the popular claims of
authority.   How have regimes of power been legitimated, sustained, and
identified with realms of justice, the sacred, or the natural?   How
have cultures of consent and allegiance been created and maintained?
Under what historical conditions have those cultures fractured or
dissolved?   

The field of inquiry includes the study of political culture but it is
by no means limited to modern politics; inquiries into other forms of
religious, domestic, and social authority, broadly defined, are
encouraged across a wide variety of periods and places, from prehistory
to the present and from all parts of the world.   Problems could include
the rise of nationalist and civic cultures; the symbolic construction of
the authority of kings, chieftains, texts, and law; the mobilization of
religious and social movements; the legitimation of empires and regimes
of labor; the naturalization of everyday forms of domestic power; as
well as challenges to authority in the form of delegitimation,
resistance, withdrawal, or revolution.   

The Center will offer a limited number of research fellowships for one
or two semesters, running from September to January and from February to
June.   Early career scholars must have their doctoral degrees in hand
at the time of the application.   Fellows are expected to live in
Princeton in order to take an active part in the intellectual
interchange with other members of the Seminar.   Funds are limited, and
candidates are, therefore, strongly urged to apply to other grant-giving
institutions as well as the Center if they wish to come for a full year.
To apply please link to:  http://jobs.princeton.edu
<http://jobs.princeton.edu/> , requisition # 1000414.    The deadline
for receipt of applications and letters of recommendation for
fellowships for 2011/2012 is December 1, 2010. Please note that we will
not accept faxed applications. Applicants must apply online and submit a
CV, cover letter, research proposal, abstract of proposal, and contact
information for three references. 



Written inquiries and requests should be addressed to: The Manager,
Shelby Cullom Davis Center for Historical Studies, 
Department of History,
129 Dickinson Hall, 
Princeton University,
Princeton, NJ 08544-1017,
U.S.A. 

 

The decisions of the Executive Committee of the Davis Center will be
made in mid-January, and the applicants will be notified in late
February. 

The Davis Center offers a limited number of fellowships each year to
scholars whose research falls under its chosen theme. The applicants
must have their doctoral degrees in hand at the time of application, and
typically the selected fellows hold positions at universities.

Fellowships at the Davis Center may run either for one semester,
September-January or February-June; or for the full academic year from
September-June. The Center's funds are limited and candidates should
therefore apply for funds from their own universities and from other
grant-giving institutions. Princeton faculty members are not eligible
for Davis Center fellowships.

1.	The Center is normally only able to offer support for one
semester, but it hopes that most Fellows will find outside support for a
second semester.
2.	In calculating support for each Fellow, deductions are made for
outside grants and sabbatical leave funds that a Fellow may bring with
him/her. Within the limits of its resources, it is the intent of the
Davis Center to provide a salary that will equal, but not exceed, the
normal salary paid to a Fellow at his or her home university.
3.	Those whose outside support is insufficient to compensate for
the reduction in salary occasioned by taking leave from their home
institution will receive additional funds from the Center to bring their
salaries up to normal.
4.	Support to Visiting Fellows from abroad, whose base salary scale
is below the normal US level, will be adjusted upward to take this into
account.
5.	The Center will pay transportation costs for each Visiting
Fellow without outside travel funds, and his or her spouse or domestic
partner and for their child/children, with the following limitations: It
will pay for the most economical means of transportation for Fellow,
spouse, partner and children from and to his or her home institution.
Travel funds for spouse, partner and children are restricted to persons
accompanying a Visiting Fellow for a substantial period of time, by
which we mean at least two months. These funds are not intended for
dependents taking brief holidays in the United States.
6.	The Center will pay for the shipment of books and papers which
are necessary for the continuation of research, but not for the shipment
of household goods. It should not normally be necessary to bring many
books. The University Library possesses over five million books and
others are quickly available on inter-library loan. Fellows from abroad
are advised not to send research materials by sea, since they are often
months late in arriving. Since Fellowship holders are expected to secure
furnished lodgings during their period of residency, the Center will
provide only up to $150 for shipment of household goods each way.
7.	The Center will allow each Visiting Fellow, without outside
research funds, research expenses of up to $2,000 per semester, or
$4,000 for the year, payable on presentation of a statement of expenses.
This includes expenses for copying, microfilming, typing and travel for
research, and research assistance.
8.	Each Davis Center office is equipped with a Dell Desktop
computer with Microsoft Windows 2000 or Windows Xp, Microsoft Office,
plus a Hewlett Packard printer.

Fellows are given offices in a cluster of offices assigned to the Davis
Center. They also have all the privileges of a member of the History
Department. If a Fellow wishes it, the University Housing Department
will try to arrange for the rental of furnished housing from the
University.

Fellows are required to live in Princeton and expected to take an active
part in the intellectual interchange with other members of the seminar.
The Seminar meets on Friday mornings during the term and is normally
attended by faculty from the History and other departments at Princeton,
members of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, faculty from
nearby universities, graduate students, and sometimes undergraduates.