Postdoctoral Fellowship, Scandinavian Consortium for Organization Research, Stanford
University
Application deadline: March 1st, 2008
The Scandinavian Consortium for Organization Research (Scancor) at Stanford
University invites applications for a one or two-year postdoctoral fellowship in
organization studies beginning either September, 2008 or January, 2009. The fellowship
is open for high-quality researchers in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden working
in the fields of management, organization studies, sociology, education, political science,
and other social sciences. We especially encourage applications from researchers
working on the following topics: organizational learning and design, user-driven
innovation, forms of open innovation, clean technologies, globalization, and well-being
in society. The Scancor Postdoctoral Fellowship program will award four fellowships –
one fellow from each participating Nordic country.
Each fellow will be affiliated with a disciplinary department or school at Stanford
University and with Scancor. The postdoctoral fellowship provides Nordic scholars with
the opportunity to learn new topics and skills, and work closely with a Stanford faculty
member. While there will be time for the fellows to pursue their current line of
scholarship, the expectation is they will collaborate with Stanford scholars, and pursue
research in tandem with their faculty sponsor.
The fellows will also act as bridges between the Nordic countries and Stanford University
and deepen the skills that are necessary for an international academic career, including
honing their methodological knowledge and ability to write for English language
journals.
The Stanford faculty participating in the postdoctoral fellowship program include: Dan
McFarland, Deborah Meyerson, Roy Pea, and Francisco Ramirez at the School of
Education; Karen Cook, Mark Granovetter, David Grusky, and Doug McAdam in the
Department of Sociology; Steven Barley, Kathy Eisenhardt, and Riitta Katila in the
Department of Management Science and Engineering; William Barnett, Glen Carroll,
Huggy Rao, and Jesper Sorensen at the Graduate School of Business; Dan Jurafsky and
Chris Manning from the Departments of Linguistics and Computer Science.
The annual fellowship stipend is $50,000, plus the standard benefits that postdoctoral
fellows at Stanford University receive. The fellowship program falls under U.S.
Immigration J-1 Exchange Visitor Visa activities.
Applications should be sent to both the Scancor Board Member in the applicant’s
respective country and to the Scancor Director at Stanford University. Please include the
following information in both electronic and paper format:
1.) A cover letter detailing the reasons for the applicant’s interest in coming to
Stanford and suggestions as to faculty members with whom they would be
interested in working.
2.) A curriculum vitae.
3.) A fellowship proposal detailing the research that the fellow would like to
undertake while at Stanford (five page limit).
4.) A writing sample consisting of either a dissertation chapter or a published paper.
5.) Graduate school transcripts (with proof that applicants have completed all the
requirements for the PhD by August, 2008)
6.) Three letters of recommendation.
All material must be received by March 1st, 2008.
Questions about the program should be directed to Associate Director Sari Stenfors
stenfors@stanford.edu or Scancor Board Members in the participating Nordic countries:
Denmark – Susse Georg, sg.ioa@cbs.dk
Finland – Raimo Lovio, raimo.lovio@hse.fi
Norway – Haldor Byrkjeflot, haldor.byrkjeflot@rokkan.uib.no
Sweden – Rolf Wolff, rolf.wolff@handels.gu.se.
Director of Scancor:
Walter W. Powell
Attn.: Annette Eldredge, eldredge@stanford.edu
Scandinavian Consortium for Organization Research
532 CERAS Bldg.
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-3084
The Scancor Postdoctoral Fellowship program is organized by the Scandinavian
Consortium for Organization Research http://www.scancor.org . Scancor was founded
on September 15th, 1988 at Stanford. Scancor encourages and facilitates collaboration
among scholars at Stanford and in Scandinavia and other research centers in Europe.
Scancor promotes an international perspective in research and education and develops
joint research projects. More than 400 scholars have worked at Scancor over the past
two decades.