Go8 European Fellowships
The Group of Eight offers eight annual fellowships to early career
researchers in Europe to work in Go8 universities for up to six months. Each
Fellowship is worth AUD 20,000.
The Fellowships are open to eligible researchers in Latvia, Estonia,
Lithuania, Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania, Bulgaria
and Croatia.
The Go8 European Fellowship scheme recognises the importance of
international contacts for early career researchers. It is envisaged that
Fellows will continue to collaborate with Australian research partners when
they return to their home institutions.
> You are eligible to apply to be a Fellow if you:
a) have completed a PhD less than five years prior to application for the
Fellowship;
b) are under 40 years of age at the time of application;
c) are a citizen of one of the designated countries listed above;
d) reside in one of the designated countries listed above (it need not be
the same country as your citizenship);
e) have been employed (minimum half-time appointment) for at least six
months prior to application by a university or research organisation (public
or private) in one of the designated countries;
f) have sufficient competency in English to be able to adequately
communicate with researchers in their host university;
g) are eligible to obtain an Australian Visiting Academic Visa (subclass
419) or equivalent Australian visa.
> Application process
Download Go8 European Fellowships brochure for more information
Download the 2011 Application Pack
Applications for 2011 Fellowships close on 22 October 2010.
For information on how to apply for a visiting academic visa please
click here.
Information about Go8 European Fellowship alumni 2007-2010 is available
here.
> For further information:
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Group of Eight
Kerrie Thornton
Director, Communications and International
Ph: +61 2 6239 5488
kerrie.thornton@go8.edu.au
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The Australian National University
Mr Cameron Glenn
Research Development Co-ordinator
Ph: 02 6125 9571
Email:
cameron.glenn@anu.edu.au
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The University of Melbourne
Ms Melinda Heron
Acting Senior Research Grants Officer - International
Melbourne Research Office
Ph: 03 8344 2052
Email:
mheron@unimelb.edu.au
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The University of Adelaide
Dr Don McMaster
Research Grants Officer (International)
Ph: 08 8303 3347
Email:
don.mcmaster@adelaide.edu.au
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Monash University
Mr Dennis Batson
Grants Officer, Strategic Grants
Ph: 03 9905 1193
Email:
dennis.batson@adm.monash.edu.au
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The University of Queensland
Ms Janine Ryan
Administration Officer (Grants)
Ph: 07 3346 6217
Email:
j.ryan3@uq.edu.au
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The University of Sydney
Ms Kate Taylor
Research Administrator (International)
Ph: 02 8627 8137
Email:
kate.taylor@sydney.edu.au
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The University of New South Wales
Mr Daniel Owens
Deputy Director, Grants Management Office
Ph: 02 9385 7230
Email:
d.owens@unsw.edu.au
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The University of Western Australia
Ms Olivia Langensiepen
Administrative Officer (Grants)
Ph: 08 6488 4708
Email:
olivia.langensiepen@uwa.edu.au
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> Profiles of Go8 European Fellows
Dr
Malgorzata Kotula-Balak - Poland
Dr Malgorzata Kotula-Balak (Gosia) says accepting a Group of Eight
European Fellowship was a big decision because Australia is so far from her
home in Krakow, Poland. But she is delighted to have the opportunity of
working with an international team of experts based at the University of
Adelaide and with the very latest technology and equipment for research in
her discipline of reproductive physiology and endocrinology.
Her research centres on the male reproductive system and specifically the
role of a peptide called relaxin in fertility and the ageing process. She
believes that a better understanding of relaxin has great potential benefits
in human medicine.
The University of Adelaide was her first choice of all Group of Eight
institutions because of its reputation for research in male reproductive
physiology. She is working closely with Professor Richard Ivell and Dr
Ravinder Anand with modern techniques, methodology and equipment she would
not have access to at Jagiellonian University in Krakow.
Dr Kotula-Balak says the Go8 Fellowship is a great opportunity for her which
will result in joint publications with her Australian and Polish academic
supervisors by the end of the year and that her time in Adelaide will
certainly lead to a life-long professional and personal connection with
Australia.
Though admitting she misses the historic atmosphere in Krakow, she is
delighted with Adelaide. "I feel very good here," she said. "The staff are
very friendly and helpful so I have never felt alone. I love to walk to work
every morning along the River Torrens. It's a very green city with fresh air."
Asked if she will make use of the Fellowship to see other parts of Australia
she replies that her work is very intense and she won’t have much time to
travel. She is hoping to squeeze in a few days on Kangaroo Island before
heading home to her family in November.
Dr Zoltan Petres - Hungary
Coming from a European city like Budapest with its two million residents and
centuries old history, Zoltan Petres finds life in Canberra a bit quiet for
his liking. But he is delighted about the collaborative opportunities his
Group of Eight European Fellowship at The Australian National University
have made possible.
Dr Petres has been working with ANU and CSIRO experts in his field of
complex systems modelling, a discipline that has huge benefits for a wide
range of industries and particularly for small to medium enterprises (SMEs),
on which the Australian economy is heavily reliant.
His employer in Hungary is the Computer and Automation Research Institute
where, among other projects, he works with European industry giants like
ThyssenKrupp and Knorr-Bremse and designs systems that will prevent trucks
rolling over on icy roads.
In Australia for four months, Dr Petres was working on automatic text
summarization, and has benefited from ANU's 3D virtual room and the CSIRO's
advanced robot technology as well, both of which are not available to him in
Budapest and will assist his own future research efforts.
Though he is looking forward to making his way home to Hungary for a
Christmas involving hot wine and snow rather than beach and sun, he is
confident the Go8 Fellowship will be the start of an ongoing collaborative
research relationship with the ANU and Australia. Already there is potential
for Australian involvement in a multi-lateral EU funded project to improve
the efficiency of SMEs.
Dr Csaba Schneider - Hungary
Dr Csaba Schneider is no stranger to Australia, having completed his PhD at
The Australian National University and postdoc work at The University of
Western Australia in the 1990s.
He is now back and enjoying showing Perth and other parts of Australia to
his partner and young family during his 5 months at UWA as one of the
inaugural Group of Eight European Fellows.
Dr Schneider's research discipline is abstract group theory. He applied for
the Fellowship because of the opportunity to work with Australian
researchers who are recognised as some of the world leaders in this field.
He describes his academic supervisor and main research partner in Australia,
UWA's Professor Cheryl Praeger as an "exceptional mathematician" with whom
he hopes to continue a long- lasting research collaboration in future.
While group theory is classified as basic research, it has important
applications in a range of other fields such as chemistry, geometry and
theoretical physics.
Dr Dominik Rachon - Poland
Monash University is a very long way from his home town of Gdansk but this
endocrinologist from Poland and Group of Eight Fellow says he feels a strong
connection to Australia because its people are so open and friendly.
Dr Dominik Rachon arrived in Melbourne in late 2007 as one of four inaugural
Go8 European Fellows who will spend up to six months working in a Go8
university. At the time he did not know anyone in Australia but in matters
both professional and personal, he says he couldn't be happier. Within weeks
of his arrival he was invited to spend Christmas with the family of a new
colleague and to submit a review concerning postmenopausal hormone therapy
for publication with his supervisor.
Dr Rachon says he particularly appreciates the opportunity to work with one
of Australia's leading researchers in women's health, Professor Helena Teede
at the Monash Institute of Health Services Research, with whom he will
jointly publish an article before he returns to Poland.
The Go8 European Fellowships recognise the importance of international
contacts for early career researchers and aim to help establish those
contacts in Australia for talented young researchers from emerging European
economies.
It may be the women of Australia who will benefit most from Dr Rachon's
research given his particular interest and publication record on topics such
as the risks and benefits of hormone replacement therapy (HRT). His article,
soon to be published in Climacteric - The Journal of the International
Menopause Society, is based on data revealing that while oral HRT medication
seems to increase the risk of blood clots, other methods such as patches
which release oestrogen through the skin into the blood stream, when
tailored to the needs of individual women, do not necessarily increase this
risk. |