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Charles Redd Center for Western Studies

Visiting Fellow Program

The Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at Brigham Young University invites applications for its Visiting Fellow Program in Western Studies each academic year. University faculty of all ranks, independent scholars, freelance authors, and other public intellectuals who are working on a significant article- or book-length study are eligible to apply for this position. The Visiting Scholar may be in residence for two to four months during either the Fall Semester (September–December) or the Winter Semester (January–April). The Center will provide a stipend of $2,500 per month of residency, office space, a networked computer, campus library and activity privileges, and limited photocopying and printing. Upon request, the Center will provide a part-time research assistant.

Application packages should contain the following components:

1) A formal letter describing the applicant's background, research interests and desired dates of stay.
2) A Curriculum Vita.
3) A one-page discussion of the applicant's research project and its significance.
4) The names and contact information for two references.

Electronic applications are encouraged and should be submitted as a single PDF to amy_carlin@byu.edu.

Alternatively, applications can be mailed to

The Charles Redd Center for Western Studies
954 KMBL
Brigham Young University
Provo, UT 84602

Mailed applications must be postmarked by the deadline of March 15.

Incomplete applications will not be considered. Judging decisions will be announced and all applicants notified of the decisions by early May. Award recipients will be required to submit a one-page report of work completed by October 15 of the following year.

Visiting Fellows enjoy the luxury of time away from heavy teaching loads and other responsibilities so that they can focus almost exclusively on their research and writing. Visiting Fellows fully participate in the intellectual life of the Center and the University. During their time at BYU they give a public talk on their research and lead a seminar session with interested faculty and students. They also make themselves available for a small number of guest presentations to BYU classes on their research.