Albert Gallatin Fellowship Program--University of Geneva, Switzerland The fellowship is named in honor of Albert Gallatin, a native of Geneva, who came to the United States in 1780. He was an American Minister to France and Britain, a founder of New York University, and one of the earliest students of American ethnography. The fellowship provides up to nine months of study, from October-June academic year, at the Graduate Institute for International Studies, University of Geneva, Switzerland. The Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva, Switzerland has been a leading center for the study of international relations. It provides doctoral instruction in international law and politics, international economics, international institutions and international development. The Institute maintains close working relations with many international governmental and non-governmental agencies and scholarly bodies in Geneva which deal with a wide variety of international problems, thus providing unique opportunities for doctoral research. Candidates are urged to consult the Institute's catalogue to see how it lectures and seminars and the organizations with which it maintains working relations can best meet the needs of their research programs. It can be obtained by contacting: Secretariat, IUHEI, P.O. Box 36, 1211 Geneva 21, Switzerland. Eligibility: Applicants must be U.S. citizens who are actively engaged in dissertation research for the Ph.D. within the field of International Relations. Stipend: A stipend of $11,250 and round trip travel from New York to Geneva. Deadline: March 1st annually. Contact: Albert Gallatin Fellowship Program International Studies Office Minor Hall 208 University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA 22903 Tel. (804) 982-3010 Fax. (804) 982-3011 NYU GSAS Added 10/13//97 (CAS) (212) 998-8060 gigsGSAS@nyu.edu [gallatin]