Visiting Scholars Program

The Center for the Study of Human Rights welcomes scholars wishing to engage in research in the area of human rights. The Visiting Scholars Program is designed to link the visiting scholars with the Columbia community by providing connections to faculty members and encouraging participation in conferences and seminars. Applicants are expected to demonstrate a strong intellectual link to the Center as well as a clearly defined program of research and/or study while in residence. Applicants should hold a PhD, be ABD, or have professional experience in addition to an MA or comparable degree.

Program Overview

While in residence, Visiting Scholars are expected to:

Visiting scholars are encouraged to audit courses, especially the Human Rights Colloquium, a bi-monthly graduate seminar designed for dissertations in progress.

Upon completion of the residency, Scholars are expected to provide the Center with copies of any publications that result from their time at Columbia.

Visiting Scholars can be affiliated with the Center for up to one year. This affiliation includes the Scholar:

The Center is unable to provide financial support to Visiting Scholars; all applicants must therefore secure external funding for their time at Columbia. Columbia's International Students and Scholars Office (ISSO) can support visa processing for international scholars; if a scholar is issued a J-1 visa supported by ISSO, she or he must reimburse CSHR a $250 fee charged by ISSO. CSHR does not directly charge Visiting Scholars any fees.

Admission to the Program

Those eligible to be appointed as visiting scholars are faculty, researchers, and graduate students at other universities who wish to pursue academic research, coursework, and/or writing projects while in residence at Columbia University.

In selecting applicants for Visiting Scholar status, the Center for the Study of Human Rights considers the applicant’s qualifications, the strength of her or his past, current, and proposed research projects, the thematic connections to the work of the Center, and the ability of Columbia's faculty and library resources to meet the applicant's research needs. A working knowledge of spoken and written English is necessary. Applicants must also have the written commitment of a Columbia University faculty member that she or he will serve as an advisor during the time of the residency.

Program Application

Applications are considered on a rolling basis.

Those wishing to apply should send, preferably by email:

Applications should also include hard copies on letterhead of:

Hard copy materials may be submitted to:

Center for the Study of Human Rights
Columbia University
91 Claremont Ave, 7th Floor
MC 3365, IAB 1108
New York, NY 10027