Scholarship Information
The Antipode Graduate Student Scholarship 2010-2011
Supporting a new generation of radical geographers...
Graduate students in radical geography are invited to apply for this year-long award of US$2,500 (or equivalent in £ stirling at time of prize) and a complimentary three year subscription to Antipode. These funds are intended to provide resources to:
- attend an international conference;
- cover additional research expenses.
The successful applicant will be a current doctoral student working in any field of radical geographical scholarship. Applications are especially encouraged from the developing world and/or from those traditionally marginalised in the academy.
The competition runs every year and is announced in issues five and one of Antipode. The closing date for the 2010-11 scholarship applications is 31 March 2010.
You can apply online at http://www.antipode-online.net/scholarship-form.asp or request an application by post from Andrew Kent, School of Environment and Development, Arthur Lewis Building, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK. A decision will be made by the Antipode editorial board in April and all applicants will be notified of the result in May.
Winners
The Editorial Board would like to stress that the quality of applications is always extremely high, and deciding on a final winner is a very difficult task.
2009-2010
- Sara Koopman (Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, Canada) sarakoopman@gmail.com
- 'Making Space for Peace: International Accompaniment as Alter-geopolitics'
2008-2009
- Emilie Cameron (Queen's University, Canada) 4esc@queensu.ca
- 'Summer Stories: (Re)Ordering the Canadian Arctic'
2007-2008
- Mythri Prasad Aleyamma (Centre for Development Studies Prasanth Nagar, Kerala, India) mythri@cds.ac.in
- 'Mobility, Migrancy and Globalisation. City-Spaces in Kerala'
- Bruce Erickson (York University, Toronto) bge@yorku.ca
- 'Canoe Nation: Canoes and the Shifting Production of Space Through White Canadian Masculinities'
2006-07
- Anne-Marie Debanne (York University, Toronto)
- 'The Dry Plight of Freedom: Commodifying Water in the Western Cape, South Africa.'
2005-06
- Anne Bonds, University of Washington, USA and Marion Traub-Werner, University of Minnesota, USA
2004-05
- Reecia Orzeck, Syracuse University, USA
2003-04
- Veronica Crossa, Ohio State University, USA and Thomas Ponniah, Clark University, USA
2002-03
- Katherine McKittrick, York University, Canada
2001-02
- Anibel Ferus-Comelo, Queen Mary, University of London, UK
2000-01
- Mary Roche, Department of Geography, University of Southern California, USA


