University of Tsukuba offers Policy Management master program.This Program has
been operating from April 1995 and it is the oldest Partner Program in Japan of
the Joint Japan/World Bank Graduate Scholarship Program, a large scholarship
program funded by the Government of Japan and managed by the World Bank
Institute in Washington. In addition to that sponsorship, which ensures the
award of ten scholarships to successful applicants to this Program, the
University of Tsukuba hold similar arrangements with the Inter-American
Development Bank.
Applicants admitted to the Program in Economic and Public Policy Management are
eligible for scholarships provided by the Joint Japan/World Bank Graduate
Scholarship Program (JJ/WBGSP) of the World Bank and the Japan-IDB Scholarship
Program of the Inter-American Development Bank provided that they meet the
specific requirements of each program as described below.
Fifteen scholarships are provided by the JJ/WBGSP for this purpose. To be
eligible, a candidate must be a national of a World Bank member country that is
currently eligible to borrow from the Bank. In addition, Executive Directors,
their alternates, and staff of the World Bank Group,including consultants, as
well as their close relatives, are excluded from consideration.
Candidates should also be aware that, according to the general selection
criteria of the World Bank, while applicants from allWorld Bank member
countries may apply for a JJ/WBGSP scholarships, the program gives priority to
World Bank member countries currently eligible to borrow,especially low and
middle-income countries.The program also gives priority to: women; applicants
with few other resources and from lower social and economic classes;applicants
who have not had previous opportunities for graduate study outside their home
country; and applicants who do not already hold a graduate degree from an
industrialized country (for further information, see http://www.worldbank.org/wbi).
In addition to these fifteen scholarships, the Japan-IDB Scholarship Program of
the Inter-American Development Bank offers no less than two scholarships to
applicants from countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. Applicants from
this region will be advised on their options at the proper time (see more at
ttp://www.iadb.org/int/eng/japan_scholarship.htm).
The scholarships benefits cover:
economy class travel between the home country and Tsukuba, plus a travel
allowance of US$ 500 for each one-way trip tuition and other Program fees
a monthly stipend for subsistence needs roughly equivalent to that given by
the scholarships program of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports,
Science and Technology of Japan (currently 170,000 yen monthly)
medical insurance costs
These benefits cover only the scholarship recipient and are not extendable to
family members. Other costs not covered by the scholarship:
additional travel during the course of the Program
expenses related to research,supplementary educational materials,or
participation in workshops,seminars, or internships while at the University of
Tsukuba.
The maximum period of funding is two years.
Recipients of JJ/WBGSP scholarships will not be eligible for employment with the
World Bank for a period of three years after the completion of the Program.
Those obtaining a scholarship from the Japan-IDB Scholarship Program of the
Inter-American Development Bank are required to return to their native country
for at least two years upon completion of their degree. As in the case of the
World Bank, Executive Directors, staff and their close relatives are excluded
from consideration.
Friday, December 5, 2008
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