Before you begin your application, please be sure that you are eligible to apply. Scroll down for detailed information on what criteria we ask applicants to meet. Applications received from individuals who are not eligible will not be considered.
Eligibility Requirements for Applicants from Poland
Applicants to the Humanity in Action Fellowship must be one of the following:
- currently enrolled students from Poland or at Poland-based universities; or
- recent graduates (for the 2022 Fellowship, we define recent graduates as individuals who graduated 2019, 2020 and 2021).
- Currently enrolled graduate students and PhD students are also eligible to apply.
- If your path has been non-linear, please check in with us to find out about your eligibility.
If you are a Polish citizen studying at a foreign university, you are eligible to apply to the Humanity in Action Fellowship through Poland. If you are a Polish student studying at a university in other Humanity in Action countries, you may also be eligible to apply through the Humanity in Action offices in those countries. Please contact those offices directly to confirm your eligibility.
If you are a non-Polish citizen studying at a university in Poland you are eligible to apply to the Humanity in Action Fellowship through the Polish office if you have been living in Poland for at least two years and speak Polish fluently.
If you are student or recent graduate from and/or based in Bosnia & Herzegovina, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, The Netherlands, the United States or Ukraine, please select this country’s name from this page to view their application information. If you are unsure through which country’s application you should be applying, please contact poland@humanityinaction.org.
More questions? Please reference our FAQs page for more information.
Fellowship & Application Resources
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Application Start Page
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Application Process
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Fellowship Path
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Fellowship FAQs
Become a Fellow
Every year, new Humanity in Action Fellows come together in six cities across Europe and the United States to study how and why people resist intolerance and protect democratic values.