About the Wilson China Fellowship

 

The application period for our third round of fellows is now open from April 1st to June 15th, 2023.

 

Please apply on our website here:

https://www.wilsoncenter.org/china-fellowship-application-guidelines

 

 

 

 

 

The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars' Kissinger Institute on China and the United States and the Asia Program operates the Wilson China Fellowship in support of policy-oriented academics with specialization in political, social, economic, security, or historical issues related to China. The aim of this fellowship is to produce new and original pieces of research that improve understanding of the role that China is playing in the Indo-Pacific, its relations with its neighbors and the United States, and its impact on peace and security issues. Additionally, the Fellowship seeks to build bridges between traditional academia and the policy world, and to support a new generation of American scholarship on China.

“The Wilson Center is committed to bringing cutting-edge academic analysis to key foreign policy issues, and no issue is more important than understanding the geopolitical implications of China’s rise,” said Abraham Denmark, Vice President of Programs. "The Wilson China Fellowship will be a critical source of China analysis in Washington, and will promote China expertise among the rising generation of young American scholars."

The Wilson China Fellowship will bring together young American scholars whose research will inform American policy throughout the region. - Robert Daly, Director of the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States

Robert Daly, Director of the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States, said, "Neither China’s domestic development, nor U.S.-China relations, can be usefully evaluated outside the Indo-Pacific context. The Wilson China Fellowship will bring together young American scholars whose research will inform American policy throughout the region."

Please join us in exploring the cutting edge research produced by the Wilson China Fellows. 

This fellowship is made possible with the generous support of Carnegie Corporation of New York.