Call for Applications: Sidney Mintz Student Fellowship for Field Research, Summer 2025

We are pleased to announce the seventh annual Sidney Mintz Student Fellowships for Field Research. Professor Mintz inaugurated the fund in the fall of 2015, by re-assigning funds from the Annual Mintz Lecture (which was endowed in his honor at his retirement, and ran for 21 years, until 2014). The fund supports fellowships annually, at an amount of approximately
$3,000 each, primarily for preliminary summer research or other exploratory phases of graduate projects. The fellows will be chosen from proposals submitted by March 21st 2025, and judged shortly thereafter. Deadline: April 2, 2025

Themes
Professor Mintz’s request was that the fund should prioritize graduate student research that applies his own methods and expands research on themes whose study he has enriched across his entire career. Proposals should be for field research and archival studies on primary sources, with close attention to the language and terminologies used by people. Proposals may include preliminary field and archival research to strengthen the design of quantitative as well as qualitative studies.

Fellowships encourage, but are not limited to, research on:
-the engagement between anthropology and history
-the Caribbean and its diaspora, including in USA and locally, in Baltimore.
-inequality and race
-food and food history
-the place of language in social and cultural understanding.

Since Professor Mintz worked on both large-scale historical dynamics (Sweetness and Power, 1985) and the local and personal experience of people (Worker in the Cane, 1960), the fund can support both macro-international and micro-local level research.

Eligibility
Priority is given to the field research disciplines, including Professor Mintz’s home department of Anthropology, and his field of endeavor in History. Also eligible are graduate students from the other Humanities and Social Sciences within the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, and those in environmental sciences in the Whiting School of Engineering who plan to use field and archival methods in their research. Eligibility includes those training at both the doctoral and the master’s level. Preference is given to students at early stages of the preparation of their proposals for their master’s theses and doctoral projects. Applicants should prepare their proposals in discussion with their advisers.

Timetable
-April 2nd, 2025: submission of applications to the Fellowship chair Professor Scott MacLochlainn ([email protected]) and to the Administrator of the Department of Anthropology, Khaleel Gheba ([email protected]), to be distributed to a panel of JHU faculty. Questions about the Fellowship or submission guidelines can be directed to either Prof. MacLochlainn or Mr. Gheba.
-Second Week of April, 2025: Announcement of results.
-Mid-May through August, 2025: Research to be conducted.
-September 1st, 2025: Report due (details outlined in award letter).

Application Guidelines
Includes the following, in one pdf file, sent by e-mail, single-spaced.
-Abstract [1 Paragraph]. One paragraph describing:
-The topic of proposed research
-The phase of the applicant’s Ph.D. or Master’s career, discipline of study, research topic, and faculty supervisor
-The location, the method, the dates and total budget for proposed field research.
-Narrative on overall research plans [1 Page]: One page defining the place of the proposed research in the overall graduate training plan and its place in relation to preparation already undertaken, of whatever kind.
-Outline of proposed project for Mintz Fellowship [1 Page]: one page on site(s), research aims, and method.
-Budget and budget justification [1 Page].
-CV for the applicant.

Letter from the applicant’s advisor, submitted separately by the advisor [email to Prof. Scott MacLochlainn at [email protected]].