China-funded surgical center to be built at Mozambique's largest hospital
FILE - he Museum’s 14th Street entrance. [File photo: USHMM]
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide (SCPG) seeks applications for a fellowship to assess risks of mass atrocities in Mozambique.
The Early Warning Fellow will work with the SCPG research director, staff, and collaborators to define priority research questions, plan associated research activities to analyze plausible mass atrocity scenarios, conduct original research, and present results to policy makers and other interested audiences.
Focus Country: Mozambique
Mozambique has ranked 27, 19, 20, and 22 in the last four years of our annual Statistical Risk Assessment for mass killing. The situation in Mozambique is characterized by multiple risks, including a history of mass atrocities, an armed insurgency in Cabo Delgado, and large-scale protests and violent repression following a disputed presidential election. If a country-wide assessment is not feasible or applicable, the Fellow could propose to focus on a few high-risk areas and vulnerable communities.
Background
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum teaches that the Holocaust was preventable and that by heeding warning signs and taking early action, individuals and governments can save lives. The mandate of the SCPG is to alert the national conscience, influence policy makers, and stimulate worldwide action to prevent and work to halt acts of genocide or related crimes against humanity, and advance justice and accountability. The SCPG focuses on threats of large-scale, group-targeted, identity-based persecution potentially rising to the level of genocide and/or related crimes against humanity. We work on select countries where these crimes are ongoing or at serious risk, prioritizing cases that are receiving insufficient policy attention.
In partnership with Dartmouth College, the SCPG created the Early Warning Project to combine state-of-the-art methods to produce risk assessments of the potential for mass atrocities around the world. The first part of the project uses statistical forecasts to assess which countries are most at risk for a new onset of intrastate mass killing. The second part of the project is a series of deep, qualitative early warning assessments on selected countries, conducted by SCPG staff in partnership with country experts.
Definitions
About Our Early Warning Assessments
Fellowship Description and Project Scope:
The Fellowship is intended to provide Early Warning Project audiences with a deep dive into dynamics in a country by describing scenarios that could lead to mass atrocities in the next 1-2 years.
The Early Warning Fellow will work with members of the SCPG Research Team to facilitate and co-lead research, co-organize roundtable discussions, co-draft a public report on risks of mass atrocities and potential preventive actions, and participate in policy outreach on the results of the research. The Fellow should draw on data and analysis from the Early Warning Project to inform and guide their work and use the US State Department Atrocity Risk Assessment Framework, as well as other materials suggested by SCPG staff.
On a case-by-case basis, Fellows might be asked to advise or assist SCPG staff on follow-on projects that would benefit from their input. This would be done by mutual agreement between the staff and the Fellow.
We may also consider partnering with an organization rather than an individual.
Terms of Fellowship:
Qualifications and Selection Criteria:
To apply, please submit the following:
You need to submit all three items for your application to be considered. Submit all materials in this form.
The US Holocaust Memorial Museum is an Equal Opportunity Employer that embraces a diverse and inclusive workplace. Applications from all qualified individuals will be considered without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including sexual orientation and gender identity), national origin, age, disability, genetic information, or any other protected status.
Deadline:
Applications will be accepted on a rolling basis. We expect to review the first batch of applications beginning March 1, 2025.
Please upload all application materials in this form. Please do not email materials.
For further information, we can be contacted at [email protected]
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