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  • Jane Austen Society's 2012 International Essay Contest

    Deadline: 15 May 2012

    To foster the study and appreciation of Jane Austen, JASNA conducts an annual student Essay Contest, with support generously provided by the Sonia Raiziss Giop Charitable Foundation.

    Students interested in the life and works of Jane Austen are encouraged to enter. The Essay Contest is open to students world-wide at the high school, college/university, and post-graduate levels of study. Entrants do not need to be members of JASNA. Students must be enrolled full-time or part-time in coursework during one or more semesters/quarters of the contest year. Home-schooled students at the high school level are also eligible. Part-time is defined for the college/university level as a minimum of six credit hours and for the post-graduate level as a minimum of three credit hours.

    2012 Essay Contest

    The 2012 Essay Contest topic aligns with the JASNA Annual General Meeting theme, “Sex, Money and Power in Jane Austen’s Fiction”:

    How do sex, money, and power enable characters in Austen's novels to manipulate each other, and what forms of resistance are there to that manipulation? Consider no more than two of Austen’s novels or other major works and analyze the modes of manipulation, whether successful or unsuccessful.

    Essay Contest Awards

    JASNA awards scholarships to the winners in each of three categories: High School, College/University, and Post-Graduate.

    First Place

    • One year’s membership in JASNA for both the winner and his or her mentor
    • $1000 scholarship
    • Free registration and two nights’ lodging for JASNA’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in New York [Note: Transportation to New York is not provided.]
    • Recognition at the AGM and on the JASNA web site
    • Publication of the essay on JASNA’s web site
    • One of Jane Austen’s novels

    Second Place
    • One year’s membership in JASNA for both the winner and his or her mentor
    • $500 scholarship
    • Free registration and two nights’ lodging for JASNA’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in New York [Note: Transportation to New York is not provided.]
    • Recognition at the AGM and on the JASNA web site
    • Publication of the essay on JASNA’s web site
    • One of Jane Austen’s novels

    Third Place
    • One year’s membership in JASNA for both the winner and his or her mentor
    • $250 scholarship
    • Free registration and two nights’ lodging for JASNA’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in New York [Note: Transportation to New York is not provided.]
    • Recognition at the AGM and on the JASNA web site
    • Publication of the essay on JASNA’s web site
    • One of Jane Austen’s novels

    Essay Submissions

    The judges value original insights and clear, correct writing. Essays should be directed to a well-informed general audience of JASNA members rather than to a strictly academic audience. Essays should be based primarily on the students’ own observations, with adequate support from the Jane Austen work(s) under discussion. Since JASNA members are very familiar with Jane Austen’s works, plot summary is unnecessary.

    Essays written for coursework may be submitted. If research is used as support, students should rely on no more than five sources and should avoid academic terminology unless terms are clearly defined in the body of the essay.

    Reading previous winning essays will give entrants a very good idea of the sort of essay JASNA is seeking. Answers to frequently-asked questions are also available on this site.

    Contest Rules

    • Entries must be submitted with the official Essay Contest entry form. Click on this link to view the form in Microsoft Word and save it to your computer to fill out.
    • The student must complete the above entry form, which includes a stipulation that the essay is the student’s original work and has not been published elsewhere.
    • Entries may include a statement about the student’s mentor; however, a mentor statement is not required.
    • Entries must be e-mailed on or before May 15, 2012.
    • Contest judging is conducted anonymously. Personal information about the student, school, and mentor must appear ONLY on the entry form and not in the essay.

    Essay Format
    • The essay must be written in English.
    • The essay must be 6-8 pages in length, not including the Works Cited page.
    • The title of the essay should appear at the top of page one; further pages should be numbered on the top right; the student’s name must not appear on the essay.
    • The essay must be in MLA format (double-spaced and in 12 point type throughout, with one-inch margins on all sides of each page).
    • The essay must use MLA documentation, including a Works Cited page and parenthetical end notes. Note that source material which is directly quoted as well as that which is paraphrased or summarized must be cited. Note also that quotes from the Jane Austen work under discussion should be cited.

    Entries that do not conform to the above requirements or arrive after the deadline will be disqualified.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: Please review the Essay Contest FAQs. If you still have questions, contact Eric Nye at eric.nye@jasna.org. You must use “JASNA Essay Contest” in your subject line.

    For submissions: Your essay must be submitted via e-mail. Submissions must be sent as attachments to an e-mail message labeled “JASNA Essay Contest Entry.” Send the following attachments as separate documents in Microsoft Word format: (1) the completed entry form and (2) the essay. Send the entry to essay-contest@jasna.org. (Note: this e-mail address is solely for essay contest administration and may not be used for questions or other correspondence with JASNA.)

    Website: http://www.jasna.org/

  • Deadline May 15 | Jane Austen Society's 2012 International Essay Contest

    Deadline: 15 May 2012

    To foster the study and appreciation of Jane Austen, JASNA conducts an annual student Essay Contest, with support generously provided by the Sonia Raiziss Giop Charitable Foundation.

    Students interested in the life and works of Jane Austen are encouraged to enter. The Essay Contest is open to students world-wide at the high school, college/university, and post-graduate levels of study. Entrants do not need to be members of JASNA. Students must be enrolled full-time or part-time in coursework during one or more semesters/quarters of the contest year. Home-schooled students at the high school level are also eligible. Part-time is defined for the college/university level as a minimum of six credit hours and for the post-graduate level as a minimum of three credit hours.

    2012 Essay Contest

    The 2012 Essay Contest topic aligns with the JASNA Annual General Meeting theme, “Sex, Money and Power in Jane Austen’s Fiction”:

    How do sex, money, and power enable characters in Austen's novels to manipulate each other, and what forms of resistance are there to that manipulation? Consider no more than two of Austen’s novels or other major works and analyze the modes of manipulation, whether successful or unsuccessful.

    Essay Contest Awards

    JASNA awards scholarships to the winners in each of three categories: High School, College/University, and Post-Graduate.

    First Place

    • One year’s membership in JASNA for both the winner and his or her mentor
    • $1000 scholarship
    • Free registration and two nights’ lodging for JASNA’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in New York [Note: Transportation to New York is not provided.]
    • Recognition at the AGM and on the JASNA web site
    • Publication of the essay on JASNA’s web site
    • One of Jane Austen’s novels

    Second Place
    • One year’s membership in JASNA for both the winner and his or her mentor
    • $500 scholarship
    • Free registration and two nights’ lodging for JASNA’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in New York [Note: Transportation to New York is not provided.]
    • Recognition at the AGM and on the JASNA web site
    • Publication of the essay on JASNA’s web site
    • One of Jane Austen’s novels

    Third Place
    • One year’s membership in JASNA for both the winner and his or her mentor
    • $250 scholarship
    • Free registration and two nights’ lodging for JASNA’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in New York [Note: Transportation to New York is not provided.]
    • Recognition at the AGM and on the JASNA web site
    • Publication of the essay on JASNA’s web site
    • One of Jane Austen’s novels

    Essay Submissions

    The judges value original insights and clear, correct writing. Essays should be directed to a well-informed general audience of JASNA members rather than to a strictly academic audience. Essays should be based primarily on the students’ own observations, with adequate support from the Jane Austen work(s) under discussion. Since JASNA members are very familiar with Jane Austen’s works, plot summary is unnecessary.

    Essays written for coursework may be submitted. If research is used as support, students should rely on no more than five sources and should avoid academic terminology unless terms are clearly defined in the body of the essay.

    Reading previous winning essays will give entrants a very good idea of the sort of essay JASNA is seeking. Answers to frequently-asked questions are also available on this site.

    Contest Rules

    • Entries must be submitted with the official Essay Contest entry form. Click on this link to view the form in Microsoft Word and save it to your computer to fill out.
    • The student must complete the above entry form, which includes a stipulation that the essay is the student’s original work and has not been published elsewhere.
    • Entries may include a statement about the student’s mentor; however, a mentor statement is not required.
    • Entries must be e-mailed on or before May 15, 2012.
    • Contest judging is conducted anonymously. Personal information about the student, school, and mentor must appear ONLY on the entry form and not in the essay.

    Essay Format
    • The essay must be written in English.
    • The essay must be 6-8 pages in length, not including the Works Cited page.
    • The title of the essay should appear at the top of page one; further pages should be numbered on the top right; the student’s name must not appear on the essay.
    • The essay must be in MLA format (double-spaced and in 12 point type throughout, with one-inch margins on all sides of each page).
    • The essay must use MLA documentation, including a Works Cited page and parenthetical end notes. Note that source material which is directly quoted as well as that which is paraphrased or summarized must be cited. Note also that quotes from the Jane Austen work under discussion should be cited.

    Entries that do not conform to the above requirements or arrive after the deadline will be disqualified.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: Please review the Essay Contest FAQs. If you still have questions, contact Eric Nye at eric.nye@jasna.org. You must use “JASNA Essay Contest” in your subject line.

    For submissions: Your essay must be submitted via e-mail. Submissions must be sent as attachments to an e-mail message labeled “JASNA Essay Contest Entry.” Send the following attachments as separate documents in Microsoft Word format: (1) the completed entry form and (2) the essay. Send the entry to essay-contest@jasna.org. (Note: this e-mail address is solely for essay contest administration and may not be used for questions or other correspondence with JASNA.)

    Website: http://www.jasna.org/

  • The National Essay Contest on Western Sahara (American Task Force on the Western Sahara)

    Deadline: 15 October 2011

    Timeline 2011

    August 1, 2011: Launch of the Essay Contest

    October 15, 2011: Deadline for submissions

    Week of December 5, 2011: Finalists announced

    January 5 – 6, 2012: Final Jury in Washington, DC

    January 6, 2012: Award Ceremony during the Symposium on Morocco and the Morocco-Western Sahara (SMWS) in Washington, DC

    Jury

    The Essay Contest is designed and implemented by the American Task Force on the Western Sahara in partnership with outstanding academic institutions who form the Selection Committee

    The role of the Selection Committee is to determine the topic and format of the contest and to ensure a fair and transparent process of selecting winners.

    Selection Criteria

    Essays will be assessed for their structure, coherence, creativity, level of documentation, and relevance to the topic. We realize that English might be a foreign language to some participants, and so language mistakes will not penalized, as long as the content is comprehensible. Selection process: the Jury will complete their selections of 8 finalists by the week of December 5. Submissions will be blind-reviewed

    Essay finalists will be invited to present their essays to a panel of experts during the Final Jury. The winner(s) will present their work to the participants of SMWS 2012 in Washington, DC.

    Topic

    The issue of the Western Sahara requires more careful examination, and ATFWS is dedicated to promoting more awareness towards the issue. The ATFWS Essay Contest gives you the chance to express your views on the issue of the Moroccan/Western Sahara, whether the Moroccan Autonomy Plan is a viable solution, and what the ramifications of the conflict’s resolution would be. Make sure your essay has a clear and concise thesis statement.

    Here are some guiding questions to address:

    1) Would the resolution of the Western Sahara conflict make a difference in the North Africa and Middle East region?

    2) Discuss the Moroccan Autonomy Plan. How will it help solve the dispute?

    3) In what ways would the conflict matter for the United States, the African Union, the European Union, or NATO?

    In writing this essay, we encourage you to draw on historical fact, documentation, and personal experience and emphasize your own solutions for a fair and lasting resolution of the conflict.

    Who can participate?

    The ATFWS Essay Contest is open to all students, as well as non-students from all countries of the world

    Length: Essays may not be longer than 3500 words. Essays are accepted in .pdf and .doc formats only.

    Abstract Summary: An Abstract Summary of not more than 300 words is required; the jury will use the summary to make a pre-selection.

    How do you submit?

    The submission process for the Essay Contest is internet-based.

    Please fill in a submission form to admin@atfws.org with your essay attached

    Cash Prizes: First Place $500 – Second Place $300 – Third Place $200

    Rules

    - Submissions will be accepted until October 15, 2011.

    - The Essay Contest is open for nationals of all countries of the world, students and non-students alike.

    - Essays may not be longer than 4000 words.

    - Essays can only be in English and submitted online. Essays are submitted to the Essay Contest website of the ATFWS website. Each participant must fill in a submission form with the essay

    - Throughout the essay, quotes and references must be clearly marked and properly cited.

    - All essays must be original. No previously published material will be accepted. Any plagiarism will result in automatic disqualification.

    - Essays are accepted in .doc and .pdf format only.

    - ATFWS reserves the right to publish and/or make available to the public all winning submissions.

    - The decision of the Jury is final and not subject to any appeal.

    - Active and paid staff (between the time of the essay submission and the Final Jury in December 2011) of the 2011 Essay Contest are not eligible to participate.

    - It is preferred that all work be submitted individually, but a pair collaboration will be accepted.

    - One participant may submit only one work per category.

    - All submissions must be made online through the Essay Contest page on the ATFWS website.

    Submissions can be made in English only.

    Please direct any questions you may have about the ATFWS Essay Contest to admin@atfws.org

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: admin@atfws.org

    For submissions: admin@atfws.org

    Website: http://www.atfws.org/

  • The $5000 Lions International Essay Contest for the Visually Impaired (worldwide)

    Deadline: 15 November 2012

    Lions clubs around the world are encouraged to sponsor students in the Lions International Essay Contest. This contest was created to offer an opportunity to visually impaired young people to express their feelings of peace.

    The theme of the 2012-13 Lions International Essay Contest is "Imagine Peace." Students who are visually impaired and who are ages 11, 12 or 13 on November 15, are eligible to participate.

    Work with your fellow Lions, local schools and area families to identify young people who are interested in participating and who could benefit from this program. One grand prize winner will receive an award and US$5,000.

    ESSAY CONTEST GUIDELINES

    Essays are to be no longer than 500 words in length, submitted in English, type-written in black ink and double-spaced. Each essay is to be submitted with a completed entry form, through your local Lions Club.

    The contest is open to students who are considered visually impaired according to their national guidelines and will be 11, 12 or 13 years of age on November 15, 2012. One grand prize winner will receive an award and US$5,000.

    THE CONTEST THEME IS “IMAGINE PEACE.”

    • Only a Lions club can sponsor the contest. The contest may be sponsored in a local school(s) or organized, sponsored youth group(s), or individuals may be sponsored as well. A Lioness club can sponsor the contest through its sponsoring Lions club.

    • Essays must be no longer than 500 words in length, submitted in English, type-written in black ink and double-spaced.

    • Each essay must be submitted with a completed entry form. Essays submitted without completed entry forms will be automatically disqualified.

    • Only one entry per student per year, and each entry must be the work of only one student.

    • Essay entries cannot have already been published.

    • Any essays found to be plagiarized will be automatically disqualified and the student will be prohibited from entering any future Lions competitions.

    DEADLINES

    November 15 Postmark deadline for a club to send one winning essay to the district governor. Note: A participating club should notify its district governor in advance of sending an entry.

    December 1 Postmark deadline for a club not belonging to a district to send one winning entry directly to the Public Relations Department at Lions Clubs International.

    December 1 Postmark deadline for a district to send one winning essay to the multiple district council chairperson is December 1. A district not belonging to a multiple district must send its entries directly to the Public Relations Department at Lions Clubs International (postmarked by
    December 1).

    December 15 Postmark deadline for a multiple district to send one winning essay to the Public Relations Department at Lions Clubs International.

    February 1 International grand prize winner will be notified on or before this date.

    TERMS AND CONDITIONS

    Participants accept all responsibility for late, lost, misdirected or illegible entries. Entries sent with insufficient postage will be disqualified. Entries cannot be acknowledged or returned;
    they become property of Lions Clubs International upon receipt. Essays cannot be published without written permission from Lions Clubs International. However, sponsoring clubs, districts and multiple districts have permission to publish their sponsored essays. In consideration for the opportunity to enter the Lions International Essay Contest, participants agree to allow
    Lions Clubs International to use their names, photographs and essays for promotional and publicity purposes. An international grand-prize winner is not eligible to receive subsequent prizes in future Lions International Essay Contests. By entering, participants agree to be bound by these rules and the decisions of the judges and Lions Clubs International. Lions Clubs International may cancel the contest without notice at any time. The contest is void where prohibited, taxed or restricted by law.

    Download the entry form here.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: pr@lionsclubs.org

    For submissions: essays should be sent to Essay Contest, Public Relations Department, Lions Clubs International, 300 W. 22nd Street, Oak Brook, IL 60523-8842; fax at 630-571-1685; or e-mail to pr@lionsclubs.org (the words “Lions Essay Contest” must appear in the Subject Line of the e-mail)

    Website: http://www.lionsclubs.org

  • The $5,000 Lions International Essay Contest (for visually impaired youth)

    Deadline: 15 November 2011

    Lions clubs around the world are encouraged to sponsor students in the Lions International Essay Contest. This contest was created to offer an opportunity to visually impaired young people to express their feelings of peace. The theme of the 2011-12 Lions International Essay Contest is “Children Know Peace.” Students who are visually impaired and who are ages 11, 12 or 13 on November 15, are eligible to participate.

    Work with your fellow Lions, local schools and area families to identify young people who are interested in participating and who could benefit from this program. One grand prize winner will receive an award and US$5,000.

    Contest Guidelines

    Contest is open to students who are considered visually impaired according to their national guidelines and will be 11, 12 or 13 years of age on November 15, 2011.

    Only a Lions club can sponsor the contest. The contest may be sponsored in a local school(s) or organized, sponsored youth group(s), or individuals may be sponsored as well. A Lioness club can sponsor the contest through its sponsoring Lions club.

    The contest theme is “Children Know Peace.”

    Essays must be no longer than 500 words in length, submitted in English, type-written in black ink and double-spaced.

    Each essay must be submitted with a completed entry form. Essays submitted without completed entry forms will be automatically disqualified.

    Only one entry per student per year, and each entry must be the work of only one student.

    Essay entries cannot have already been published.

    Any essays found to be plagiarized will be automatically disqualified and the student will be prohibited from entering any future Lions competitions.

    One grand prize winner will receive an award and US$5,000. The winner will be notified by February 1.

    The postmark deadline for a club to send one winning essay to the district governor is November 15.

    Note: A participating club should notify its district governor in advance of sending an entry.

    A club not belonging to a district must send its entry directly to the Public Relations Department at Lions

    Clubs International (to be postmarked by December 1).

    The postmark deadline for a district to send one winning essay to the multiple district council chairperson is December 1. A district not belonging to a multiple district must send its entries directly to the Public Relations Department at Lions Clubs International (to be postmarked by December 1).

    The postmark deadline for a multiple district to send one winning essay to the Public Relations

    Department at Lions Clubs International is December 15.

    Multiple districts (and clubs not belonging to districts and districts not belonging to multiple districts) may send their essay entries and forms to: Essay Contest, Public Relations Department, Lions Clubs International, 300 W. 22nd Street, Oak Brook, IL 60523-8842. Entries and forms may also be sent to Lions Clubs International Headquarters by fax at 630-571-1685 or e-mail to pr@lionsclubs.org (the words “Lions Essay Contest” must appear in the Subject Line of the e-mail).

    Participants accept all responsibility for late, lost, misdirected or illegible entries. Entries sent with insufficient postage will be disqualified. Entries cannot be acknowledged or returned; they become property of Lions Clubs International upon receipt. Essays cannot be published without written permission from Lions Clubs International. However, sponsoring clubs, districts and multiple districts have permission to publish their sponsored essays.

    In consideration for the opportunity to enter the Lions International Essay Contest, participants agree to allow Lions Clubs International to use their names, photographs and essays for promotional and publicity purposes. An international grand-prize winner is not eligible to receive subsequent prizes in future Lions International Essay Contests. By entering, participants agree to be bound by these rules and the decisions of the judges and Lions Clubs International.

    Lions Clubs International may cancel the contest without notice at any time. The contest is void where prohibited, taxed or restricted by law.

    Download entry form >>

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: pr@lionsclubs.org

    For submissions: pr@lionsclubs.org

    Website: http://www.lionsclubs.org/

  • Full Rules - WEF 2012 International Energy Essay Contest: Sustainable Energy for All (worldwide)

    Deadline: 15 July 2012

    World Energy Forum is pleased to announce the 2012 International Energy Essay Contest. As a mission-driven movement, World Energy Forum is dedicated both to educate and campaign for long-term energy solutions by encouraging global conversations on pivotal energy issues.

    Since 2012 has been declared by the United Nations General Assembly as "International Year of Sustainable Energy for All" the International Energy Essay Contest calls upon university students from around the world to participate in the movement towards an energy-secure future by presenting their thoughts on how this can be achieved.

    Through this contest, World Energy Forum hopes to provide a platform for students from different backgrounds with an opportunity to share and expand their unique understanding of the worldwide urgency that must be recognized for important changes toward a safe, accessible, and sustainable energy future.

    The winners of the essay contest will receive a number of prizes, including the opportunity to discuss their creative approaches for solving the world's present energy problems at the World Energy Forum's annual high-level energy conference. This year's conference, entitled World Energy Forum 2012: Safe, Accessible, Sustainable - Energy for All, will take place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, October 22-24, 2012.

    ESSAY TOPIC

    All eligible students can participate in the contest by writing a letter in the form of an essay to the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and share their views on the topic: "Sustainable Energy for All - Vision, Reality and Solutions."

    Essays should be written and submitted according to the guidelines below.

    ESSAY GUIDELINES:

    • The essay should be written in English
    • The essay should contain between 1500 and 2000 words (not including bibliography and citations). Please cite your word count at the end of the essay.
    • The essay should be typed and double-spaced.
    • The essay should include a coversheet including: first and last name, telephone number, email address and university name
    • Students must produce their own work, using information from other sources where appropriate.
    • All references should appear as endnotes. Do not use footnotes.
    • Information used for research that is not cited in the essay should be listed in a bibliography page at the end.

    ELIGIBILITY:
    • Participants must be currently enrolled as a student working towards any degree program (eg. B.A., B.S., M.A., M.S., M.B.A., M.Ed., Ph.D.)
    • Participants' applications must receive a recommendation from a current professor in their field of study
    • We encourage students of all backgrounds and ability to participate.

    HOW TO ENTER:

    Submit your essay, either:

    • Online at www.worldenergyforum2012.org in Word or PDF format, or
    • As an email attachment, along with a completed entry form to the following address: essaycontest@worldenergyforum2012.org. The subject line of the email should read: "International Energy Essay Contest 2012"
    • Please save your essay as follows:
    • First & Last Name_ University (eg. John Smith _University of Richmond)
    • All entries must be received by July 15th, 2012.
    • Under no circumstances will late submissions be accepted.

    ESSAY SELECTION:

    All eligible essay submissions received by June 15th, 2012 will be reviewed in-house. 10 finalists will be selected for review by a qualified panel including energy experts from:

    • The United Nations
    • The World Bank
    • Academia
    • Leading energy companies

    Essays will be evaluated according to the following criteria:
    • The student's understanding of the issue
    • The student's analysis and reasoning
    • Quality and use of research
    • Originality and creativity in treatment of the topic
    • Clarity and effectiveness of writing and organization

    Winners will be notified by July 31st, 2012.

    PRIZES:

    • First Place: $5,000 cash prize (Essay will be sent to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon)
    • Second Place: $3,000 cash prize
    • Third Place: $2,000 cash prize

    In addition, the top three contestants will receive:
    • Airfare and accommodation to Dubai, United Arab Emirates
    • Waived registration fee ($800) to attend The World Energy Forum 2012
    • Opportunity to be a speaker in The World Energy Forum 2012 session titled: Students for Sustainable Energy
    • Publication of essay

    The top ten essays will be recognized at The World Energy Forum 2012 and will be published on the website.

    DISCLAIMER:

    By participating, applicants accept and understand the essay guidelines and agree to the decisions made by the judges; and to release, discharge and hold harmless World Energy Forum and its officers and directors from all claims arising from their participation in the contest.

    Download: application form

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For submissions: via the online submissions form here or send the application form and your essay to essaycontest@worldenergyforum2012.org

    Website: http://worldenergyforum2012.org

  • The $10,000 Dream Deferred Essay Contest 2012 for 25 and Below (Middle East/ Arab League)

    Deadline: 27 May 2012

    This annual contest comes from a 1951 Langston Hughes poem: What Happens to a Dream Deferred?. Just as the poem helped propel the civil rights movement in the U.S., today it can inspire your dream deferred for the Middle East. The contest has two parts: one for Middle Eastern youth and one for American youth. Please answer one of the questions below - but first make sure to read the rules & guidelines. Winning essays - selected by a panel of celebrity judges - receive $10,000 in prizes.

    $10,000 IN PRIZES:

    • $2,000 for 1 grand prize winner each in Mideast & U.S.
    • $1,500 for 1 second place winner in each region
    • $500 for 3 runners-up in each region
    • 50 book prizes for additional outstanding essays.

    ESSAY QUESTIONS

    Your Story: How does civil rights abuse in your local community impact you? Share a defining moment where you experienced civil rights restrictions (censorship, discrimination, etc.). How did this incident change you? Will your children's generation still face such repression?

    Freedom: Given the historic changes in the Mideast over the past year, do you feel more or less free? Reflect on changes in the region and in your local community. Explain, with examples, whether you enjoy greater rights today than a year ago. Do you expect to be more free a year from now?

    In the Streets: If you participated in grassroots protests against repression during the past year, why did you join and what did you learn? Describe in vivid detail what you experienced, as well as how your life - and your attitude on individual rights - has changed. What challenges remain now?

    Advocacy: How can individual rights be secured in the Mideast’s new reality? Dictators may have fallen, yet individual rights remain fragile. What can you do to protect the rights of vulnerable members in your local community (women, minorities, etc.). Propose a concrete action plan.

    Dream: What is your “dream deferred”: a vision of your society with civil rights for all? Share your dream of a civil rights movement in your community. If you like, write a mock newspaper article from the future reporting on the effort.

    Film Fest: In 2008, an essay contest winner organized the first-ever Cairo Human Rights Film Festival. When authorities blocked theatres from hosting screening, she held the opening on a Nile River boat. Be inspired and share your vision for a similar festival in your community: What films will you show? How will you overcome obstacles?

    Viral Video: You have been given $1,000 to make a short video (1-4 mins) about individual rights in your society. Share the script, which can expose repression, showcase a campaign or dream of a better future. Bonus: Make the film and provide a YouTube link.

    RULES FOR THE "DREAM DEFERRED ESSAY CONTEST"

    Check out the Guide to Writing a Good Essay, which includes helpful tips for each question.

    Who can enter the contest?

    Entrants must be 25 years old or younger as of the contest deadline: May 27, 2012. Entrants must reside in Arab League member states, Iran, Afghanistan, or the United States. There is no minimum age requirement, and entrants do not need to be students. Prizes are awarded as cash, not scholarships.

    Foreign Students: If you are a foreigner currently studying in the US, you can enter the contest. If you are a Middle Easterner studying in the US, answer one of the questions posed to Middle Easterners. If you are a citizen of the Middle East temporarily living outside the region, you can still enter the contest. If you are an American currently living overseas, you can enter the contest.

    Equal Opportunity: All essays are evaluated without regard for race, religion, gender, or sexual orientation of the author, as well as other classifications protected by applicable international US laws.

    How long should entries be?

    Essays should be at least 600 words, but no longer than 1,500 words. Footnotes, citations, and essay title do not count towards the word limit.

    Can an essay entry remain anonymous?

    If do not want your name made public in the event your essay is selected as a winner, check the "anonymous" box when submitting your essay. Several past winners have chosen this option.

    When will AIC announce the winners?

    Winners will be notified (and announced on our web site) by Summer 2012. Judges evaluate each essay for clarity, creativity, and persuasiveness to determine prize winners.

    What are common mistakes to avoid when writing an essay?

    Do not focus on US government policy and regional geo-politics (the Iraq War debate, the Arab-Israeli-Iranian conflict, Iran's nuclear program, etc.). Essays based on these topics are disqualified. Judges are looking for essays that explore what ordinary citizens can do on the grassroots level to strengthen individual rights within Middle Eastern societies. These civil rights include, but are not limited to, free expression, women's equality, minority rights, religious freedom, economic liberty, and artistic freedom. Check out the Guide to Writing a Good Essay, which includes helpful tips for each question.

    How can a brief essay cover the broad topic of civil rights in the Mideast?

    There are several ways to address this challenge. Past prize winners have discussed the larger problem of civil rights abuses across the Middle East with a range of examples. Others have focused on one particular country (Middle Eastern participants are strongly encouraged to address their own society). Others have focused on a particular kind of civil rights abuse (e.g., press censorship). There is no one "right" answer to any of the essay questions. Check out the Guide to Writing a Good Essay, which includes helpful tips for each question.

    Do essays have to be original and does AIC retain the right to reprint essays?

    Yes and yes. Makes sure any quotations or outside intellectual material have citations. All essay submissions become the property of the contest's sponsor: the American Islamic Congress. At the same time, entrants can republish their essay on their own (e.g., on a blog, for a class paper, etc.) and use ideas for other writing.

    2012 CELEBRITY JUDGES FOR "DREAM DEFERRED ESSAY CONTEST"

    Amber Lyon

    Amber Lyon is a three-time Emmy award-winning journalist and correspondent for CNN, where she helps produce investigative reports and documentaries. She covered the Bahraini nonviolent movement on the ground, and was attacked by Bahraini police. Since then she has become one of the most cited American journalists on the struggle for civil rights in Bahrain.

    Ahmed Benchemsi

    Benchemsi co-founded Morocco's groundbreaking and best-selling weekly magazines TelQuel and Nichane, which made international headlines with taboo-busting cover stories on the salary of Morocco's king, opinion polls, free speech and more. Benchemsi has been recognized for his pioneering journalism with fellowships at the Los Angeles Times and Newsweek. At the same time, he faced on-going legal intimidation and recently left Morocco to serve as a fellow at Stanford University.

    Marietje Schaake

    Marietje Schaake is a Dutch politician who has served as a member of the European Parliament since July 2009. The Wall Street Journal identified her as “The Most Wired Politician in Europe”. She has introduced numerous resolutions and inquiries to support the civil rights movement in the Mideast and North Africa before and after the Arab uprisings.

    Parisa Montazaran

    Parisa Montazaran is the first Muslim to appear on the MTV hit show The Real World. A first-generation Iranian-American, this reality TV star is currently lecturing at universities on diversity, Muslim youth in America, cross-cultural and inter-faith understanding, and female/minority empowerment. Parisa hopes to leverage her freedom in the US to promote change back home in Iran.

    Jane Novak

    Jane Novak is a leading player in the Yemeni struggle for reform, press freedom, and women equality - and she does it all from her New Jersey home. This stay-at-home mother first became interested in Yemen in 2004 when she learned about the imprisonment of journalist Abdulkarim al-Khaiwani. Novak began to publicize his case on her blog and launched a petition calling for al-Khaiwani’s release. The petition soon garnered 1,000 signatures, and Novak was profiled in the New York Times.

    Nasser Weddady

    The son of an ambassador, Weddady grew up throughout the Middle East and witnessed firsthand the toll of civil rights repression. As an adult he became an outspoken human rights activist and had to flee to the US as a refugee in 2000. A few days after September 11, he was mistakenly detained by the FBI. Today, he organizes workshops for Middle Eastern activists and helps lead campaigns to free dissidents. He is the co-editor of "Arab Spring Dreams," a new anthology featuring outstanding writing from this essay contest.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For submissions: submit your essay online here

    Website: http://www.aicongress.org/

  • Deadline May 27 | The $10,000 Dream Deferred Essay Contest 2012 for 25 and Below (Middle East/ Arab League)

    Deadline: 27 May 2012

    This annual contest comes from a 1951 Langston Hughes poem: What Happens to a Dream Deferred?. Just as the poem helped propel the civil rights movement in the U.S., today it can inspire your dream deferred for the Middle East. The contest has two parts: one for Middle Eastern youth and one for American youth. Please answer one of the questions below - but first make sure to read the rules & guidelines. Winning essays - selected by a panel of celebrity judges - receive $10,000 in prizes.

    $10,000 IN PRIZES:

    • $2,000 for 1 grand prize winner each in Mideast & U.S.
    • $1,500 for 1 second place winner in each region
    • $500 for 3 runners-up in each region
    • 50 book prizes for additional outstanding essays.

    ESSAY QUESTIONS

    Your Story: How does civil rights abuse in your local community impact you? Share a defining moment where you experienced civil rights restrictions (censorship, discrimination, etc.). How did this incident change you? Will your children's generation still face such repression?

    Freedom: Given the historic changes in the Mideast over the past year, do you feel more or less free? Reflect on changes in the region and in your local community. Explain, with examples, whether you enjoy greater rights today than a year ago. Do you expect to be more free a year from now?

    In the Streets: If you participated in grassroots protests against repression during the past year, why did you join and what did you learn? Describe in vivid detail what you experienced, as well as how your life - and your attitude on individual rights - has changed. What challenges remain now?

    Advocacy: How can individual rights be secured in the Mideast’s new reality? Dictators may have fallen, yet individual rights remain fragile. What can you do to protect the rights of vulnerable members in your local community (women, minorities, etc.). Propose a concrete action plan.

    Dream: What is your “dream deferred”: a vision of your society with civil rights for all? Share your dream of a civil rights movement in your community. If you like, write a mock newspaper article from the future reporting on the effort.

    Film Fest: In 2008, an essay contest winner organized the first-ever Cairo Human Rights Film Festival. When authorities blocked theatres from hosting screening, she held the opening on a Nile River boat. Be inspired and share your vision for a similar festival in your community: What films will you show? How will you overcome obstacles?

    Viral Video: You have been given $1,000 to make a short video (1-4 mins) about individual rights in your society. Share the script, which can expose repression, showcase a campaign or dream of a better future. Bonus: Make the film and provide a YouTube link.

    RULES FOR THE "DREAM DEFERRED ESSAY CONTEST"

    Check out the Guide to Writing a Good Essay, which includes helpful tips for each question.

    Who can enter the contest?

    Entrants must be 25 years old or younger as of the contest deadline: May 27, 2012. Entrants must reside in Arab League member states, Iran, Afghanistan, or the United States. There is no minimum age requirement, and entrants do not need to be students. Prizes are awarded as cash, not scholarships.

    Foreign Students: If you are a foreigner currently studying in the US, you can enter the contest. If you are a Middle Easterner studying in the US, answer one of the questions posed to Middle Easterners. If you are a citizen of the Middle East temporarily living outside the region, you can still enter the contest. If you are an American currently living overseas, you can enter the contest.

    Equal Opportunity: All essays are evaluated without regard for race, religion, gender, or sexual orientation of the author, as well as other classifications protected by applicable international US laws.

    How long should entries be?

    Essays should be at least 600 words, but no longer than 1,500 words. Footnotes, citations, and essay title do not count towards the word limit.

    Can an essay entry remain anonymous?

    If do not want your name made public in the event your essay is selected as a winner, check the "anonymous" box when submitting your essay. Several past winners have chosen this option.

    When will AIC announce the winners?

    Winners will be notified (and announced on our web site) by Summer 2012. Judges evaluate each essay for clarity, creativity, and persuasiveness to determine prize winners.

    What are common mistakes to avoid when writing an essay?

    Do not focus on US government policy and regional geo-politics (the Iraq War debate, the Arab-Israeli-Iranian conflict, Iran's nuclear program, etc.). Essays based on these topics are disqualified. Judges are looking for essays that explore what ordinary citizens can do on the grassroots level to strengthen individual rights within Middle Eastern societies. These civil rights include, but are not limited to, free expression, women's equality, minority rights, religious freedom, economic liberty, and artistic freedom. Check out the Guide to Writing a Good Essay, which includes helpful tips for each question.

    How can a brief essay cover the broad topic of civil rights in the Mideast?

    There are several ways to address this challenge. Past prize winners have discussed the larger problem of civil rights abuses across the Middle East with a range of examples. Others have focused on one particular country (Middle Eastern participants are strongly encouraged to address their own society). Others have focused on a particular kind of civil rights abuse (e.g., press censorship). There is no one "right" answer to any of the essay questions. Check out the Guide to Writing a Good Essay, which includes helpful tips for each question.

    Do essays have to be original and does AIC retain the right to reprint essays?

    Yes and yes. Makes sure any quotations or outside intellectual material have citations. All essay submissions become the property of the contest's sponsor: the American Islamic Congress. At the same time, entrants can republish their essay on their own (e.g., on a blog, for a class paper, etc.) and use ideas for other writing.

    2012 CELEBRITY JUDGES FOR "DREAM DEFERRED ESSAY CONTEST"

    Amber Lyon

    Amber Lyon is a three-time Emmy award-winning journalist and correspondent for CNN, where she helps produce investigative reports and documentaries. She covered the Bahraini nonviolent movement on the ground, and was attacked by Bahraini police. Since then she has become one of the most cited American journalists on the struggle for civil rights in Bahrain.

    Ahmed Benchemsi

    Benchemsi co-founded Morocco's groundbreaking and best-selling weekly magazines TelQuel and Nichane, which made international headlines with taboo-busting cover stories on the salary of Morocco's king, opinion polls, free speech and more. Benchemsi has been recognized for his pioneering journalism with fellowships at the Los Angeles Times and Newsweek. At the same time, he faced on-going legal intimidation and recently left Morocco to serve as a fellow at Stanford University.

    Marietje Schaake

    Marietje Schaake is a Dutch politician who has served as a member of the European Parliament since July 2009. The Wall Street Journal identified her as “The Most Wired Politician in Europe”. She has introduced numerous resolutions and inquiries to support the civil rights movement in the Mideast and North Africa before and after the Arab uprisings.

    Parisa Montazaran

    Parisa Montazaran is the first Muslim to appear on the MTV hit show The Real World. A first-generation Iranian-American, this reality TV star is currently lecturing at universities on diversity, Muslim youth in America, cross-cultural and inter-faith understanding, and female/minority empowerment. Parisa hopes to leverage her freedom in the US to promote change back home in Iran.

    Jane Novak

    Jane Novak is a leading player in the Yemeni struggle for reform, press freedom, and women equality - and she does it all from her New Jersey home. This stay-at-home mother first became interested in Yemen in 2004 when she learned about the imprisonment of journalist Abdulkarim al-Khaiwani. Novak began to publicize his case on her blog and launched a petition calling for al-Khaiwani’s release. The petition soon garnered 1,000 signatures, and Novak was profiled in the New York Times.

    Nasser Weddady

    The son of an ambassador, Weddady grew up throughout the Middle East and witnessed firsthand the toll of civil rights repression. As an adult he became an outspoken human rights activist and had to flee to the US as a refugee in 2000. A few days after September 11, he was mistakenly detained by the FBI. Today, he organizes workshops for Middle Eastern activists and helps lead campaigns to free dissidents. He is the co-editor of "Arab Spring Dreams," a new anthology featuring outstanding writing from this essay contest.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For submissions: submit your essay online here

    Website: http://www.aicongress.org/

  • 2012 Oakseed Ministries International Essay Contest for Youth (worldwide)

    Deadline: 1 May 2012

    Oakseed Ministries International is proud to announce their seventh annual international essay contest for youth on the topic: Compassion and the Illiterate Child. Students are invited to explore the issues facing child illiteracy and to offer innovative ideas to help these children.

    2012 Contest Topic is "Compassion and the Illiterate Child". The deadline for the essay contest is May 1, 2012. First place, second place, and honorable mention prizes will be awarded for the amounts of $1,000, $500, and $250. The two age categories are 17 & under and 18-22. The winner will be notified in June 2012 and winning essays will be posted on our website. Submissions will be accepted starting December 1, 2011.

    GUIDELINES

    ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS

    To be eligible to submit an essay, students must meet the age requirements as of May 2, 2012. You may submit only ONE essay.

    Age Categories

    • 17 & under: 5,000 characters or less ( 1000 words in length).
    • 18 – 22: 7,500 characters or less ( 1500 words in length).

    ESSAY FORMAT
    • The essay must be an original, unpublished work.
    • Essays may be written in the formal or informal voice, but most importantly, an individual perspective should be present within the essay.
    • Sources are to be cited in the text. Do not use footnotes or endnotes. You do not need to provide a bibliography.

    The essay must be an original, unpublished work.

    Essays may be written in the formal or informal voice, but most importantly, an individual perspective should be present within the essay.

    Sources are to be cited in the text. Do not use footnotes or endnotes. You do not need to provide a bibliography.

    Essays should be typed in 12-point font, double-spaced with 1″ margins. On the lower right corner of your last page enter your word count. Your name must not appear on the essay pages, only on the cover sheet.

    Entries that do not meet these submission guidelines will be automatically disqualified. Entries will not be returned. All entries must be postmarked by May 1, 2012.

    AWARDS AND RECOGNITION

    $1,000 will be awarded to the author of the best essay in each age category. Second place essays will receive a $500 award and Honorable mention will receive a $250 award. The winners will be notified in June 2012 and the winning essays posted on the Internet at http://essay.oakseed.org.

    ESSAY EVALUATION CRITERIA

    Each essay should:

    • Demonstrate a clear understanding of the issues surrounding child illiteracy and its implications on society.
    • Show the author has personally wrestled with the nature and character of compassion.
    • Demonstrate the student’s own serious reflection on the current and future problems of child illiteracy.
    • Be focused and well-reasoned.
    • Use correct spelling and grammar.

    All entries will be judged, according to age category, using the following criteria:
    • Awareness of the problem (1/3 total score): Demonstrate knowledge and depth of understanding about the issue from your research.
    • Quality of analysis (1/3 total score): Develop your own perspective on the issue. This perspective should be reflected in your analysis of and your personal response to the issue.
    • Style and mechanics (1/3 total score): Use proper spelling and grammar. Your response to the topic should be clear and original.

    Essay reviewers from outside Oakseed Ministries will identify the essays that best meet the above criteria. The highest rated essays will go on to a second round of judging by a team of judges who will select the semi-finalists. The prize-winning essays will then be selected by the directors of Oakseed Ministries. All decisions are final.

    FOREIGN LANGUAGE SUBMISSIONS

    Essays may also be submitted in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Korean, Swahili, Japanese, and Chinese. See www.oakseed.org/essay for submission guidelines and information on other languages.

    HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR ESSAY ONLINE

    To submit your essay online, visit http://essay.oakseed.org for more information and the submission form. All submitted essays must be either in a .pdf or .doc format.

    Privacy: Personal Information Form provided by entrants will be used by Oakseed Ministries for contest purposes only and will not be shared or used for solicitation purposes.

    RECEIPT DEADLINE

    Essays must be submitted by 11:59pm EST on May 1, 2012.

    ESSAY CONTEST TOPICS

    Choose one topic and write an essay exploring the specific area, keeping in mind the backdrop of compassion.

    • Survey the problem of illiteracy among poor children. Which countries have the highest children’s illiteracy rates and why? What countries are effectively dealing with this issue and how?
    • What is the most effective way to teach children to read? Compare and contrast the “look and say” method and the “intensive, systematic phonics first” method. Is either effective, or is there a better method for teaching children to read?
    • Many disorders hamper development of reading skills. Discuss the different learning disabilities. What are the causes of these disabilities; biological factors or the learning environment? What methods help each disability most effectively?
    • Illiteracy and crime. Select 2-3 countries or American cities and compare the illiteracy and crime rates. Discuss efforts to promote literacy in high-crime areas and what involvement you could have with them.
    • Illiteracy, culture, and the internet/mass media. How do both cultural norms and modern day technology contribute to the pandemic of illiteracy? What are solutions to this problem?
    • Economic impact of illiteracy for the family, the community, and nations. Is there a relationship between illiteracy and poverty? Is literacy a basic human right of a child? Discuss how children’s literacy should be included in the economic plan of a nation.
    • What are outstanding examples of literacy development among children? Choose three individuals, organizations, or government agencies that have focused on this area. Describe their methods and list the major results. Is there a way for you to exercise compassion by helping one of these?

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For submissions: use the essay contest submission form here

    Website: http://oakseed.org

  • US Embassy Cultural Affairs' "This I Believe" Arabic-Language Essay Contest for Young Egyptians

    Deadline: 30 July 2011

    The US Embassy cultural affairs section is pleased to announce an Arabic language essay contest for young Egyptian people beginning July 8th.

    This I Believe, is an international organization engaging people in writing and sharing essays describing the core values that guide their daily lives. More than 90.000 of these essays, written by people from all walks of life, are archived on this link, heard on public radio, chronicled through books, and featured in weekly podcasts. The project is based on the popular 1950s radio series of the same name hosted by Edward R. Murrow.

    Beyond reflecting on and developing one’s own beliefs, This I Believe encourages “people to begin the . . . difficult task of developing respect for beliefs different from their own.” Example essays include: “I Believe in the Power to Forget”, “I Believe in Laughter”, and “I Believe in Being Cool to the Pizza Delivery Dude”.

    We invite you to write you own "This I Believe" essay in Arabic. We will be holding a contest for the This I Believe essays. We hope you will consider writing your own personal belief statement!

    Overview:

    Are you interested in participating?

    The contest will begin July 8th and end July 30th.

    Write a short essay in Arabic (350-500 words). Reflect on the values and beliefs that drive you in your daily life. We encourage you to avoiding an opinion piece on a public issue and look beyond religion and politics in writing your essays. The essay should tell a story that ties to the forming of you core beliefs and the guiding principles by which you live.

    Submission: Please submit your essay to this address on our webpage thisIbelieve@state.gov

    All contest entries must be in written form and must adhere to the essay-writing guidelines. Please include your date of birth, education and profession.

    Examples: For examples of essays, please see "This I Believe" examples page here.

    Contest Winners: Contest winners will be invited to present their essays at a This I Believe event night at three different places:

    - Diwan Heliopolis on August 7 No age limit

    - Sawy Cultural Wheel on August 8 No age limit

    - Maadi Public Library from 13:00 to 15:00 on August 9 for writers aged 13-18

    The Embassy will contact the winners to notify them with the details of the event.

    Essay Guidelines

    We invite you to contribute to this project by writing and submitting your own statement of personal belief. We understand how challenging this is—it requires such intimacy that no one else can do it for you. To guide you through this process, we offer these suggestions:

    Tell a story: Be specific. Take your belief out of the ether and ground it in the events of your life. Consider moments when belief was formed or tested or changed. Think of your own experience, work, and family, and tell of the things you know that no one else does. Your story need not be heart-warming or gut-wrenching—it can even be funny—but it should be real. Make sure your story ties to the essence of your daily life philosophy and the shaping of your beliefs.

    Be brief: Your statement should be between 350 and 500 words. That’s about three minutes when read aloud at your natural pace.

    Name your belief: If you can’t name it in a sentence or two, your essay might not be about belief. Also, rather than writing a list, consider focusing on one core belief, because three minutes is a very short time.

    Be positive: Please avoid preaching or editorializing. Tell us what you do believe, not what you don’t believe. Make your essay about you; speak in the first person.

    Be personal: Write in words and phrases that are comfortable for you to speak. We recommend you read your essay aloud to yourself several times, and each time edit it and simplify it until you find the words, tone, and story that truly echo your belief and the way you speak.”

    All contest entries must be in written form and must adhere to the following guidelines:

    · Limit your essay to approximately 500 words.

    · Tell a story that illustrates how your personal belief was shaped.

    · Refrain from writing a political/religious opinion piece or an editorial on a current event.

    · Please no hate speech or discriminatory language in your essay.

    · Tell us what you do believe, not what you don’t believe.

    · Read and follow our essay-writing guidelines (link to the Essay Guidelines page).

    · Proofread your essay carefully before submitting it.

    By submitting an essay you affirm that this essay is original to you and that the essay does not violate the rights, copyrights, or privacy of any third party.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: lindsay.anglin@provost.gatech.edu or dana.hartley@carnegie.gatech.edu

    For submissions: click here (submissions to open July 8th)

    Website: http://www.thisibelieve.gatech.edu

  • The Cleantech Innovation Essay Contest (PLN5,000/ $1,400* top prize | worldwide)

    The Cleantech Innovation Essay Contest (PLN5,000/ $1,400* top prize | worldwide)

    Deadline: 22 August 2012

    (Note: The prize is PLN5,000 or roughly $1,400 based on PLN1: $0.28 conversion rate. The contest is open to any person of any nationality who is under the age of 35 by the start of the contest.)

    Imagine this: you are a young woman who just gave birth. The nurse comes in and asks you, “Would you like to plant a tree in honor of your newborn son?”

    You say yes and a new tree is planted. Your son receives a bracelet. So does the tree, which grows along with him. Now multiply that by 10 maternity wards in 10 cities in 10 countries.

    It’s a simple model that could result in a very large largest afforestation program and potential carbon sink. That’s a cleantech innovation: replicable, scalable, marketable, sustainable. Write an essay about a cleantech innovation and be eligible to win a prize: 5000 PLN or an iPad!

    HERE ARE A FEW OTHER CLEANTECH INNOVATIONS:

    - Wrocław city hall finances trams that recover their kinetic energy while braking
    - A utility installs turbines to turn the slow-moving Vistula River into electricity
    - A new law mandates public buildings be renovated from energy savings

    The idea doesn’t have to be original or not-yet-invented, so long as it can be applied in an original or novel way. Write your essay. Keep it simple, and easy to understand. It can be technical, but don’t use jargon that couldn’t be understood by a 15 year old. Add a photo or two or a drawing or a sketch or a conceptual design or a pro-forma on the business model.

    EVALUATION BASIS

    - Criteria 1: Simplicity and beauty of the idea: does it inspire the imagination? (up to 5 POINTS)

    - Criteria 2: The environmental benefit: does it promote sustainability principles? (up to 5 POINTS)

    - Criteria 3: The economics: how well does it do financially? Does it need a subsidy? (up to 5 POINTS)

    - Criteria 4: Originality: does this idea appear in a google search? Is it a novel idea? (up to 5 POINTS)

    - Criteria 5: Scalability: can this idea be applied anywhere? Is it location specific? (up to 5 POINTS)

    LANGUAGE

    The essay can be in Polish or English but the executive summary must be written in English.

    STRUCTURE

    The essay has no mandatory structure but may contain the following:

    - executive summary (up to 250 words)
    - description of idea
    - environmental benefit
    - business model
    - originality of idea
    - scalability of idea

    FORMAT

    The first page should contain:

    - Essay title:
    - First name(s):
    - Surname(s):
    - Age(s):
    - Nationality(ies):
    - Academic focus or profession:
    - Email:
    - Telephone:
    - Signature:

    The first page should be signed by the author(s) and the following text should appear on the first page:

    “This text is my own original work (or our own original work) and has not been published elsewhere. In submitting this text, I certify that I am (we are) 35 years or younger at the commencement of the contest. I hereby give Cleantech Poland permission to reprint in whole or in part any portion of the submission and allow the publisher to retain my personal data in accordance with applicable Polish laws on privacy and protection. I hereby agree to give the copyright to this work to Cleantech Poland Sp z o.o. with their registered office at ul. Pustelnicka 48/22, 04-138 in the district court in Warsaw under NIP 1132817017 and REGON 142596385, and agree to hold harmless the publisher for any typographical errors or errors of omission.”

    Second page should contain:

    - Executive summary
    - Remaining pages:
    - Page number (top right of header)
    - Title of essay on each page (bottom right of footer)

    SELECTION COMMITTEE

    The contest will be evaluated by six professionals active in cleantech markets:

    - Jolanta Chodkowska, Chairman of the Board, PR2 (Public Relations)
    - Robert Dwiliński, President, Ammono (Technology)
    - Peter Hogren, CEO, Greenfield Wind (Developer)
    - Agnieszka Król, CEO, Esperotia (Developer)
    - Christian Schnell, Partner, DMS Law Firm, (Lawyer)
    - Agata Stafiej-Bartosik, Sustainability Manager, PwC (Consulting)

    ELIGIBILITY

    The contest is open to any person of any nationality who is under the age of 35 by the start of the contest, excluding immediately family and employees of the contest sponsors and selection committee.

    TARGET

    The contest is aimed at young innovators – graduating scholars, engineers or scientists, or recently graduated scholars, engineers and scientists, as well as economists, policy-makers, and business professionals.

    HOW DO I SUBMIT?

    - Format: an essay in English or Polish with optional supporting photos, figures, drawings

    - Requirements: Please see the section FORMAT for details of the essays formal requirements. Besides these, you must demonstrate that the idea is achievable, not fantasy or science fiction

    - Length: no more than 8 pp or 2,000 words

    - Topic: can be on any subject such as agriculture, information technology, biology, energy, infrastructure, economics, public policy, marketing or advertising – but it must have a cleantech angle

    - Submission Deadline: email must be time stamped before August 22nd, 2012 at 22:00

    - Submission Mode: An electronic WORD document emailed as an attachment to contest at cleantechpoland dot com

    - Subject line: Cleantech essay contest submission

    - Winner Announced: September 15, 2012

    PRIZES

    - First prize: 5000 PLN
    - Second prize: iPad (cash value: 2500 PLN)
    - Third prize: a subscription to Cleantech Poland (cash value: 1750 PLN)

    Other prizes announced as donated by sponsors of contest. It is the responsibility of the winner(s) to declare the receipt of goods as a taxable item.

    WINNERS

    The winner and runners-up will be announced at the fall Cleantech business mixer. The first place essay will be printed in the Q1 2013 edition of Cleantech magazine. Summaries or abstracts of the best essays will appear also in the printed magazine.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For queries/ submissions: contest@cleantechpoland.com

    Website: http://www.cleantechpoland.com

  • Foreign Affairs - APSIA Student Essay Contest 2012 (worldwide)

    Deadline: 1 August 2012

    (Note: students enrolled in institutions outside the United States should also include in their submission the full address and phone number of the academic department in which they are currently enrolled.)

    STUDENT ESSAY CONTEST 2012

    Foreign Affairs publishes articles by today's leaders and thinkers that tackle the most pressing issues in international relations. We want to give tomorrow's leaders the opportunity to demonstrate innovative thinking on the issues that shape their world. In the third annual Foreign Affairs Essay Contest, one undergraduate's essay will be chosen by the readers to be published on the Foreign Affairs Web site. The winner will also receive a prize of $500, and five honorable mentions will receive a free year-long subscription to Foreign Affairs.

    Entries must be submitted by August 1, 2012.

    ESSAY TOPIC

    How much did U.S. foreign policy change after the last election and how much will it change after this one?

    WRITING GUIDELINES

    Submissions should be between 1,200 and 1,500 words. All quotations or uncommon facts should be appropriately cited. Entries must be original, unpublished work written by contestants themselves.

    ELIGIBILITY

    Open to all undergraduate students of accredited colleges and universities graduating no earlier than May 2012.

    SUBMISSIONS

    Only one essay is allowed per participant. Please send entries to FAEssay@cfr.org. For your essay to be considered, it must be both pasted in the body of the e-mail and attached as a Word document. Your entry should include your name, phone number, e-mail address, institution of enrollment, and a scanned copy of your student identification or other proof of enrollment.
    Students enrolled in institutions outside the United States should also include in their submission the full address and phone number of the academic department in which they are currently enrolled.

    Every person who submits an essay to FAEssay@cfr.org will be entered in the contest. All entries must be received by 11:59 PM on August 1, 2012, and entries must be completed in full to be eligible. Submissions shorter than 1,200 words or longer than 1,500 words will be automatically disqualified.

    Submissions sent by mail will not be accepted.

    No purchase necessary to enter.

    SELECTION OF WINNER

    Entries will be evaluated and chosen by the Foreign Affairs editorial staff using the same evaluation methods and quality control standards required of authors. Decisions of the editorial team are final. The editorial staff will choose the top three entries and publish them on ForeignAffairs.com, whereupon readers will be able to vote for their favorite essay. The entry with the most votes will be named the winner of the 2012 Foreign Affairs Essay Contest.

    COPYRIGHT

    Only essays submitted for the contest that are chosen as finalists by the editorial staff become the property of Foreign Affairs and may appear on www.foreignaffairs.com. By submitting his/her work to FAEssay@cfr.org, the contestant permanently transfers to Foreign Affairs and the Council on Foreign Relations all rights, title, and interests therein, whether or not copyrightable or legally protectable or established as forms of property and whether or not fulfilled or put into practice, together with all rights under copyright and the exclusive rights to print, publish, distribute, and sell the contestant's essay in all editions and formats in any form or medium throughout the world, which contains, but is not limited to, all formats of print, electronic, digital, optical, magnetic, or laser-based media, alone or in combination with other contributions, in whole or in part, in any language, throughout the world, together with the right to make such changes as Foreign Affairs deems appropriate. Foreign Affairs assumes no responsibility for lost, late, delayed, damaged, incomplete, illegible, unintelligible, inaccurate, or misdirected entries.

    NOTIFICATION OF A WINNER

    All decisions made by Foreign Affairs are final and binding. Foreign Affairs will not be held liable for late, lost, or misdirected notifications. If Foreign Affairs is unable to contact the prospective winner and a prospective honorable mention within ten (10) business days of the first attempt, or if it is found that the prospective winner or a prospective honorable mention has failed to comply with the official rules, that individual's prize will be forfeited. Prizes left unclaimed ninety (90) days after notification will be forfeited, and Foreign Affairs shall not be held responsible for contacting a prospective winner or prospective honorable mention who did not supply an address or provided an incorrect one. Any prospective winner or prospective honorable mention who fails to notify Foreign Affairs with any complaint or problem within ninety (90) days after prize notification, forfeits the right to do so.

    The prospective winner and prospective honorable mentions may be required to sign (or the chosen contestant's legal guardian or parent if such a contestant is not of legal age in his/her state/country of residence) a publicity release within thirty (30) days of notification, which will allow Foreign Affairs to use their names, biographical information and/or pictures for the purpose of advertising, trade, or promotion without further compensation or consideration in any and all media throughout the world, unless prohibited by law. If required by Foreign Affairs, the prospective winner and prospective honorable mentions must sign (or the chosen contestant's legal guardian or parent if such a contestant is not of legal age in his/her state/country of residence) and return a release of liability, declaration of eligibility within thirty (30) days of receipt. If a chosen contestant is not of legal age in the state of residence, the prize will be awarded in the name of a parent of legal guardian.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries/ submissions: FAEssay@cfr.org

    Website: http://www.foreignaffairs.com

  • DUJS International Science Essay Competition for High School Students ($150 prize | worldwide)

    Deadline: 30 September 2012

    All high school students and international equivalents are invited to participate in the first annual International Science Essay Competition sponsored by the Dartmouth Undergraduate Journal of Science. Students may submit an essay about the recent effects and future promises of science in our society. Write about particular discoveries, events, or persons from science in current events or present a more general account of the changes and developments

    The author of the winning essay will receive a $150 monetary award and have their winning essay published in the Fall 2012 print issue of Journal. In addition, three runner-ups will be selected. The winning and runner-up essays will be featured on the Journal website at http://dujs.dartmouth.edu/. The winner and the runner-ups will receive a certificate and a print copy of the Fall 2012 issue of the Journal.

    Students must submit their essays and entry forms electronically on or before the contest deadline of September 30th, 2012. Please send any and all questions to dujs@dartmouth.edu with the subject line “DUJS ISEC QUESTION.”

    ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS

    All high school students and international equivalents are invited to submit an essay about the recent effects and future promises of science in our society.

    Write about particular discoveries, events, or persons from science in current events or present a more general account of the changes and developments.

    Each essay must be accompanied by a statement of acknowledged validity by a teacher in the field of the sciences, technology, engineering or mathematics.

    Students must submit their essays and entry forms electronically on or before the contest deadline of September 30th, 2012.

    Students who have family members affiliated with the Journal, or serving as contest judges are not eligible to participate.

    AWARDS

    The author of the winning essay will receive a $150 monetary award in addition to having their winning essay published in the Fall 2012 print issue of Journal. In addition, three runner-ups will be selected. The winning and runner-up essayswill be featured on the Journal website at http://dujs.dartmouth.edu/. The winner and the runner-ups will receive a certificate and a print copy of the Fall 2012 issue of the Journal.

    CONTEST REGULATIONS

    All essays must comply with the following contest rules before submission:

    • No literary form other than an essay will be accepted.

    • Each essay must reflect the contestant's own research, writing and original thinking.

    • Each contestant may submit only one (1) essay.

    • Each contestant must complete, scan, and attach a student entry form

    • Teachers must verify and sign the verification of authenticity on the student entry form.

    • The essay is limited to 1500 – 2000 words, 12-point font, doublespaced, Times New Roman, numbered pages with one-inch margins. The title page and works cited sections are not included in the word count.

    • Each essay must include a title page, not counted towards the 1500-2000 word limit, with the following information:

    • Essay title
    • Author's name
    • Author’s grade
    • Author’s email
    • Name of school
    • School address
    • School telephone number
    • Total number of pages of essay (excluding references and title)
    • Name of supervising teacher
    • Email of supervising teacher

    • The title of the essay and the page number MUST appear on header of every page of essay text.

    • References should be included and clearly identified.

    • Any references and citations used must follow the Science Guidelines, which can be found at http://www.sciencemag.org/site/feature/contribinfo/prep/res/refs.xhtml

    • If you have chemical structures in your article, please take note of the American Chemical Society (ACS)’s specifications of the diagrams.

    • Name submission in the following format: ISEC_LastName_Topic.docx (Example: ISEC_Johnson_ScienceandSociety.docx)

    • The essay must be sent via e-mail to dujs@dartmouth.edu with the subject line “DUJS ISEC SUBMISSION.”

    • The Student Entry Form should be scanned and saved as a .pdf, .jpeg, or .png file. It must be attached to the email in conjunction with the essay.

    • Entries must be received on or before September 30th, 2012.

    • The authors retain all rights to their original work, with the exception that they grant the Journal the exclusive right to publish their work in print and online. Articles may not be reproduced elsewhere without the permission of the Journal.

    • The Journal will not consider work that has been previously published or is under review for publication by another publication. In addition, work submitted to the Journal for consideration may not be concurrently submitted to another publication.

    JUDGING

    The Journal editorial staff will judge the essays using five criteria, including comprehension, organization, conclusions, creativity, and writing. All winners and their sponsoring teachers will be notified by email on or before October 31st, 2012.

    Download: submission form

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For queries: send any and all questions to dujs@dartmouth.edu with the subject line
    “DUJS ISEC QUESTION”

    For submissions: send entries to dujs@dartmouth.edu with the subject line “DUJS ISEC SUBMISSION"

    Website: http://dujs.dartmouth.edu/

  • African American Freedom Sisters Student Essay Contest

    Deadline: 5 July 2011

    The City of Jackson is inviting students to enter the Ford Motor Company Fund’s “Who is Your Favorite Freedom Sister and Why?” Essay Contest. Students in grades four (4) through eight (8) may participate. The contest is currently underway and ends July 5, 2011. 250-500 word essay entries must reflect one (1) of twenty (20) Freedom’s Sisters currently on display at the Smith Robertson Museum and Cultural Center. These extraordinary women include:

    • Ella J. Baker
    • Barbara Jordan
    • Constance Baker Motley
    • Mary McLeod Bethune
    • Shirley Chisholm
    • Rosa Parks
    • Mary Church
    • Terrell Sonia Sanchez
    • Septima Poinsette Clark
    • Coretta Scott King
    • Kathleen Cleaver
    • Betty Shabazz
    • Myrlie Evers-Williams
    • Harriet Tubman
    • Fannie Lou Hamer
    • C. Delores Tucker
    • Ida B. Wells
    • Charlayne Hunter-Gault
    • Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
    • Dorothy Height
    The essay must also reflect the student’s thoughts regarding what they are doing to continue their favorite Freedom Sister’s legacy. Participants are required to include a separate cover sheet with the following information: name, school, grade level, mailing address, and telephone number.

    Prizes:

    1st place: $ 5,000.00 U. S. Savings Bond

    2nd place : $ 2,500.00 U. S. Savings Bond

    3rd place : $ 1,000.00 U. S. Savings Bond

    1st, 2nd & 3rd runners-up: one (1) $500.00 U. S. Savings Bond each

    Essay Should Be Mailed To:

    Ford Motor Company
    ATTN: Freedom’s Sisters Essay Contest-Jackson
    1 American Road – 211 WHQ
    Dearborn, MI 48126

    Winners will be notified by July 25, 2011.

    The Freedom’s Sisters exhibition was created by the Cincinnati Museum Center and organized for travel by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. The national tour is made possible by Ford Motor Company Fund. The multimedia, interactive exhibition is designed to attract individuals of all ages and backgrounds, and is organized around the themes: “Dare to Dream”, “Inspire Lives”, “Serve the Public”, and “Look to the Future.”

    For more information, contact the Smith Robertson Museum and Cultural Center at 601-960-1457.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: call 601-960-1457

    For submissions: Ford Motor Company, ATTN: Freedom’s Sisters Essay Contest-Jackson, 1 American Road – 211 WHQ, Dearborn, MI 48126

    Website: http://www.city.jackson.ms.us/visitors/museums/smithrobertson

  • Peter Drucker Challenge Essay Contest 2012 (worldwide)

    Deadline: 30 June 2012

    (Note: The contest is open to students, junior managers, and entrepreneurs from around the world who want to share their views on the changing structure and mindset of the workforce and the impact it will have on institutions and management.)

    The Drucker Challenge Essay contest, organized by Peter Drucker Society Europe and now in its 3rd year, is about to raise awareness among young people of the works and ideas of Peter Drucker and a management philosophy that puts the human being in its centre.

    Essays must have between 1.500 to 3.000 words and attempt to deploy your perspectives and experience that will be significant for an interested but primarily non-research oriented audience. Researchers are invited to participate in our «Call for papers», co-organized by Peter Drucker Society Europe and Management Research Review (Emerald Group Publishing).

    The title theme of this year's Drucker Challenge is «Reinventing Work, Reinventing Organization» - a hot topic that will also be discussed at the 4th Global Drucker Forum in the context of Capitalism 2.0.

    THEME & CONTEXT

    In 1947 General Motors asked its employees to take part in an essay contest with the title theme "Why I Like My Job" An astonishing 174,854 workers at GM answered the call and submitted their essays. Peter Drucker, who just a few years earlier had systematically studied the inner workings at General Motors and had thereby "invented" the discipline of management, was one of the five judges who evaluated the essays and eventually picked the 40 winners.

    Our jobs, i.e. the way we conduct our work and our overall concept of work have changed significantly, even dramatically since 1947. Peter Drucker anticipated and observed these changes - like the rise of the knowledge worker, the emergence of the entrepreneurial society, and the increasing need to "manage oneself" - and described them in detail in books like "Landmarks of Tomorrow" (1959), "The Age of Discontinuity" (1969), "Innovation and Entrepreneurship" (1985), "Management Challenges for the 21st Century" (1999), and "Managing in the Next Society" (2002).

    Once asked about his prescience, Peter Drucker famously replied: It is in this spirit that we ask you: What do YOU see?

    • How will the nature of work and the workforce look like a few years or decades from now?
    • Will we still have the traditional corporations with their hierarchies providing the workplace for millions?
    • How will SME’s be configured?
    • Will all workers ultimately become knowledge workers?
    • In which environment will knowledge workers conduct business? Still at a desk at the office, or rather from home? Will they work for one or for several companies and organizations - in a mixture of jobs and parallel careers?
    • What will drive and motivate knowledge workers of tomorrow? A good pay? Or perhaps passion and purpose?
    • To what extent will the traditional "employee society" evolve into an "entrepreneurial society"?
    • Which will be the impact of these structural changes on companies, corporations and organizations and how can they best adapt?
    • What role will social entrepreneurs and the non-profit sector play in the future? What regulatory power will governments and trade unions ideally have? And how will the education sector and, last but not least, business schools change - and indeed have to change - to address the challenges of tomorrow?

    Please note: You are not supposed to answer each and all of these questions, rather we invite you to draft a picture of how nature and organization of work will look like in the future and how a working life would have to look like so that it could bring value to you and others.

    GUIDELINES

    IMPORTANT DATES

    • June 30, 2012: Deadline for essay submission
    • Sept. 10, 2012: Authors of the winning essays will be notified about the Jury decision
    • Sept. 15, 2012: Winners List published
    • Nov. 15-16, 2012: 4th Global Drucker Forum

    SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
    • File Type: Word for Windows: pdf
    • Words: 1.500 - 3.000
    • Font: “Times New Roman” or “Arial”, size 12, single line spacing
    • Language: English
    • Submission System: Please use the Electronic Submission Page

    Depending on your respective background you can enter the essay contest in one of these two categories:

    • Students
    • Managers & Entrepreneurs

    Co-authorship is permitted.

    Please note the Drucker Challenge essay contest is geared towards a primarily non-research oriented audience (for research-based papers may we refer you to our "Academic Call for Papers". We suggest you write from your own background, experience and perspective, weaving together facts and figures with anecdotal evidence, and personal with general observations - similar to the way Peter Drucker himself used to write.

    If you want, you can also envision and describe a day-in-the-life in the not too distant future to highlight the changes in our perceptions and practice of work that are already at work and beginning to shape the world that's to come.

    JURY

    • Lynda Gratton will serve as Head of Jury in this year's Drucker Challenge. She is Professor of Management Practice at London Business School, founder of the Hot Spots Movement, and was ranked 12th on the Thinkers50 2011 list of the world’s top 50 business thinkers. Her new book "THE SHIFT. The future of work is already here" " is for those who are keen to take charge of the future of their work. Watch the video with Lynda in the Financial Times;
    • Deepa Prahalad Business strategist and consultant; author of “PREDICTABLE MAGIC: Unleash the Power of Design Strategy to Transform Your Business”
    • John Peters CEO, GSE Research Ltd; former Chief Executive at Emerald Group Publishing
    • Richard Brem Peter Drucker Society Europe, Project Manager Peter Drucker Challenge, coordinates the overall award program and facilitates the jury process.

    JUDGING

    There will be 3 rounds of judging. The jury process will be facilitated by Richard Brem, Drucker Challenge Project Manager.

    First Round

    During the First Round, a panel of curators will evaluate and attribute a score to each entrant’s Essay made up of scores based upon the below-listed criteria during the period beginning on July 1, 2012 and ending on August 2, 2012

    Judging criteria:

    A. Style, originality, passion for the theme
    B. Formal structure of the essay
    C. Logical coherence
    D. To what extent does the essay deal with Druckerian themes?
    E. How well does it address the theme of the 2012 contest?

    The thirty (30) Essay submissions that receive the highest overall scores will qualify for the Second Round.

    Second round

    The thirty Essay submissions will be evaluated and attributed a score in early September by a panel of curators based upon the above-listed criteria, each of equal weight. The ten (10) Essay submissions that receive the highest overall scores will qualify for the Final round.

    Final round

    The ten (10) entries that receive the highest overall scores will be selected as the “Finalists.” Further, the Finalist that receives the highest overall score in each category will be selected as the First Prize Winner. In early September, the ten Finalists will be selected and notified by email. If a Finalist does not respond to the notification attempt within 4 days, then an alternate Finalist will be selected from among all eligible entries received based on the judging criteria described herein. Further, First Prize Winners and runners-up warrant that they are able to attend the public announcement on November 15, 2012. If one of them is unable to attend an alternate Finalist may be selected from among all eligible entries received based on the judging criteria described herein.

    You can see a list of winners by mid-September, 2012, visiting www.druckerchallenge.org

    PRIZES

    Prizes are awarded to the two overall winners and the two runners-up in the two categories as well as up to 26 more winning papers. Depending on the quality and number of submissions, additional awards may be bestowed.

    The overall winners in the students and managers/entrepreneurs category will be awarded:

    • Money prize of € 1.000;
    • Publications of essays on druckerchallenge.org and partner media;
    • Free participation in the 4th Global Peter Drucker Forum on Nov. 15 - 16, 2012, including: participation in the Speakers reception on Nov. 14; all sessions and workshops on Nov 15 – 16; Gala Dinner on Nov 15 with awards ceremony; conference materials; lunch and coffee at the conference venue; up to three nights accommodation at the conference hotel; travel costs; an active role in a panel/workshop; Free membership to PDSA/PDSE in 2013

    The runners-up in the students and managers/entrepreneurs category will be awarded:
    • Publications of essays on druckerchallenge.org and partner media;
    • Free participation in the 4th Global Peter Drucker Forum on Nov. 15 - 16, 2012, including: participation in the Speakers reception on Nov. 14; all sessions and workshops on Nov 15 – 16; Gala Dinner on Nov 15 with awards ceremony; conference materials; lunch and coffee at the conference venue; 50% travel cost reimbursement; an active role in a panel/workshop; Free membership to PDSA/PDSE in 2013

    The authors of the winning papers Nr. 4 -10 will be awarded
    • Publications of essays on druckerchallenge.org
    • Free participation in the 4th Global Peter Drucker Forum on Nov. 15- 16, 2012, including: participation in the Speakers reception on Nov. 14; all sessions and workshops on Nov 15 – 16; Gala Dinner on Nov 15 with awards ceremony; conference materials; lunch and coffee at the conference venue; Free membership to PDSA/PDSE in 2013

    The authors of the winning papers Nr. 11 - 30 will be awarded
    • Free participation in the 4th Global Peter Drucker Forum on Nov.15 - 16, 2012, including: all sessions and workshops on Nov 15 – 16; Gala Dinner on Nov 15 with awards ceremony; conference materials; lunch and coffee at the conference venue

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: contact@druckersociety.eu

    For submissions: enter the contest via the electronic submissions page

    Website: http://www.druckerchallenge.org

  • 2012 Voices of Peace Sports Essay Contest for Kenyans

    Deadline: 18 April 2012

    All Kenyans of all walks including and not limited to Primary, High School and University Students are invited to participate in the 1st ever Annual National Peace Essay Contest. The purpose of the contest is to encourage Kenyans to think and write about creative ways to achieve peaceful solutions through sports to the conflicts that exact such misery and loss of life in our Country. The topic of the peace essays this year is “National and World Peace: How Can Sports Make This Dream Become a Reality for Me?”

    Entries for the contest will be accepted between March 14th and April 18, 2012. We will be honouring the top three essays for the following categories of the population:

    1. Three groups of students: primary schools, secondary/high school and colleges/universities

    2. Three groups of citizen: public sector, private sector, the unemployed/retirees

    The Voices of Peace Sports Essay Contest Judges are drawn from across section of 11 Kenyans and one foreigner totalling to 12 in number. Recognition prizes will be awarded in each division: First Prize, Second Prize, and Third Prize.

    Vijana Twaweza in association with Three C Consultancy World of Sports Division among other Peace minded institutions will host a Peace Celebration /recognition ceremony on the May 26, 2012 to present the recognition prizes and hear the award winning essays.

    Partners to the event will be listed in the Recognition Celebration Ceremony Program unless they request otherwise.

    The Vijana Twaweza in association with Three C Consultancy World of Sports Division is pleased to play the coordination role in this year’s Voices of Peace Sports Essay contest.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: If you have questions on how to be a part of this initiative, you may contact peace@threecworld.com.

    Website: http://threecworld.com

  • The Society for the History of Discoveries Prize Essay Contest 2012 (worldwide)

    Deadline: 15 May 2012

    The Society for the History of Discoveries announces its 2012 prize essay contest. Founded in 1960, the purpose of the Society is to stimulate teaching, research and publishing in the history of geographical exploration. We now call for essays on the topics embraced by the Society's name: the history of discoveries. Essays may deal with voyages, travels, biography, history, cartography, techniques and technology, or other aspects of discovery. The primary purpose is to enlighten the reader on some aspect of the exploration of our world.

    ELIGIBILITY: A post-secondary (college or university) student from any part of the world who will not have received a doctoral degree before May 15, 2012 is eligible to enter the contest.

    THE ESSAY: The essay (research paper) shall be original and unpublished, in the English language and of no more than 6,000 words, including footnotes or endnotes. Papers previously submitted for class assignments are encouraged. A reasonable amount of illustrative and tabular material will be welcome. The essay must be typed using a standard font (Times, Palatino, Century), double-spaced and printed on one side of the paper. Do not place the author's name on the pages of text. Include a cover page that lists the name, mailing address and e-mail address of the student, the college or university, and the student's current status, i.e., sophomore, junior, 1st year MA, etc.

    SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS: Essays must be postmarked on or before May 15, 2012.

    The award-winning essay will be evaluated by a panel of judges from the Society for the History of Discoveries. The panel's decision will be announced after June 1, 2012.

    JUDGING CRITERIA: Primary consideration will be given to the essay's originality and its contribution to new knowledge and insights. Other considerations will be the author's demonstration of the relevance of the subject, the cogency of the presentation and the documentation, and the stylistic quality of the essay. In the case of a tie, two awards may be given at the discretion of the judges. If no submission is judged to be either appropriate or sufficiently meritorious, the Society reserves the right to make no award.

    NOTE: Submissions will be disqualified if: a) their subject is not relevant to the history of discoveries as outlined above or to the general history of geographic exploration; b) adequate and appropriate citations (foot/endnotes) are not included c) the author is not currently enrolled as an undergraduate or enrolled in or accepted to a graduate program at the time of submission.

    THE AWARD. The winner will receive a prize of $600. The winner will be invited to make an oral presentation about the paper at the annual meeting of the Society for the History of Discoveries. The 2012 meeting will be held at the Huntington Library/Pasadena, California, from September 27-30. Additionally, the winner will be invited to submit the essay for publication in the Society's journal, Terrae Incognitae.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: Contact Professor Urness - E-Mail: curness@msn.com Tel: (612) 788-6570 Fax: (612) 626-9353. Professor Urness and Dr. Ragnow are the prize committee co-chairs. You also may reach Dr. Ragnow at editor@sochistdisc.org or 612/624-6895.

    For submissions: By e-mail, send to: Professor Carol Urness, curness@msn.com. By post, send to: Dr. Marguerite Ragnow, SHD Prize Essay Contest, James Ford Bell Library, University of Minnesota, 309 19th Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, U.S.A. E-mail submissions are preferred.

    Website: http://www.sochistdisc.org

  • Deadline Extended: €1,000 CTA - NEPAD Essay Competition (North Africa)

    Deadline: 25 September 2011 (from 15 August 2011) for North Africa only

    ESSAY COMPETITION: Looking at ICTs and agriculture in Africa through the eyes of women and the youth. Enter the competition to win EUR 1000 and join NEPAD’s 10th Anniversary!

    The New Partnership for Africa‟s Development (NEPAD) Agency and the Technical Centre
    for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation ACP-EU (CTA) have joined forces in celebrating
    NEPAD‟s 10th Anniversary. It is within this context of reflecting over the advancement of the African development agenda, that the two institutions are jointly organising an essay competition under the theme; “Looking at ICTs and entrepreneurship in agriculture and rural development through the eyes of women and the youth”. This contest also falls in the framework of CTA activities on Youth, Women and ICTs. In line with these objectives, CTA and the NEPAD Agency are searching for enthusiastic African young people (writers, journalists and other youth), who want to demonstrate their abilities by examining these issues.

    The Awards recognize excellence across a number of categories centred on the attraction, retention and progression of youth, women‟s and African talents to further the African development agenda.

    1. Who can participate

    The competition is open to young people, men and women between 18 and 35 years of
    African nationality. Students, journalists and young entrepreneurs (from the civil society or private sector), men or women, are particularly encouraged to participate. Entries will be submitted in English or French.

    A. 1st category: Women and ICT in agriculture

    This category is open to both young men and women. Candidate must write a story, in the format of an essay, on an African woman working in the agricultural sector, who has used ICTs in her professional businesses (for example: use of mobile phones for the marketing of horticultural products, use of mobile applications for the access to/or the dissemination of strategic information, innovative use of computer for the traceability of livestock, mixed use of internet and radio for extension, etc.).

    The text submitted must provide clear information on:

    - The profile of the woman whose story is told (background, studies if any, expertise in agriculture and if applicable in ICTs, etc.);
    - The kind of business she is involved in;
    - Description of the use of ICT implemented: what ICT tool(s) have been used; for what purpose; how it has/they have been used; costs incurred; service provider of the tool(s) (if applicable); difficulties met; results achieved; how far has/have the tool(s) used contributed to increased yields or revenues of the business or stakeholders targeted (if it‟s the case)? How far have the tooI(s) used contributed to an increase of access to strategic? Lessons learned; etc.
    - Analysis by the entrant of the use of the tool(s) by the woman whose story is told: how far is it/are they appropriate to the problem(s) being addressed; are there alternate tools that can be used to better address the problem faced or to reach the aim targeted, limits of the use of the tool(s); how far is this use replicable, etc;
    - References or documents (web links, articles, publications, etc.) illustrating the work of the woman or supporting the arguments developed by the entrant in his/her essay.

    B. 2nd category: Youth and ICT in agriculture

    This category is open to both young men and women. Candidate must write a story, in the format of an essay, on a young African professional working in the agricultural sector, a man or a woman, who has used ICTs in his/her professional businesses (for example: use of mobile phones for the marketing of horticultural products, use of mobile applications for the access to or the dissemination of strategic information, innovative use of computer for the traceability of livestock, mixed use of internet and radio for extension, etc.).

    The text submitted must provide clear information on:

    - The profile of the youth whose story is told (background, studies if any, expertise in agriculture and if applicable in ICTs, etc.);
    - The kind of business he/she is involved in (it can activities in civil society organizations or in private businesses);
    - Description of the ICT use implemented: what ICT tool(s) have been used; for what purpose; how it has/they have been used; costs incurred; service provider of the tool(s) (if applicable); difficulties met; results achieved; how far has/have the tool(s) used contributed to increased yields or revenues of the business or stakeholders targeted (if it‟s the case)? How far have the tooI(s) used contributed to an increase of access to strategic? Lessons learned by the youth; etc.
    - Analysis by the entrant of the use of the tool(s) by the youth: how far is it/are they appropriate to the problem(s) being addressed; are there alternate tools to better address the problem faced or reach the aim targeted, limits of the use of the tool(s) by the young entrepreneur; how far is this use replicable, etc;
    - References or documents (web links, articles, publications, etc.) illustrating the work of the young person or supporting the arguments developed by the entrant in his/her essay.

    In this category, the person whose activities are presented must also be a young person, a man or a woman.

    For both categories, the length of the essay submitted must be comprised between 1,200 and 1,500 words (without the references or bibliography). Applicants must submit their entry in French or English.

    What do we mean by ICTs? UNESCO defines ICTs as the ”new or advanced technologies that enhance the dissemination or creation of information and communication”. In the same line of thought, ICTs include, within the framework of this contest, all “new” information and communication technologies (Internet, mobile phones, computers, Global Positioning Systems (GPS), etc.), associated or not with “traditional” communication technologies (such as radio, television, written press, video, etc.). Entries submitted should not deal exclusively with the use of traditional information technologies (traditional radio, video, etc.).

    2. Selection process

    An international panel of judges, made up of experts in ICT and in agriculture will be set up to review entries and select winners. Pre-selected candidates may be interviewed remotely prior to the final selection.

    3. Prizes

    For each African Region (Central Africa, East Africa, North Africa, Southern Africa, West Africa) the best essay of each category will receive a prize of EUR 1000.

    The winners will be informed by mid-September 2011. They will be invited to attend the NEPAD‟s 10th Anniversary award ceremony in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to receive their prizes.

    Apart from winning entries, other best essays will also be promoted by the organizers, through various online and off-line channels, and also during the meeting organized by the NEPAD Agency in October 2011.

    4. Deadlines

    - Applications should be sent to CTA by email (see addresses in section 7 below)
    - Winners will receive their prize in October 2011 during a NEPAD Agency event.

    5. Selection criteria

    The main selection criteria for the written essays are:

    - Originality of the use;
    - Relevance of the usage to development challenges;
    - Personal vision of the entrant in his/her arguments;
    - Potential for replicability of the experience or solutions;
    - Quality of language (engaging writing style, good spelling and grammar, etc.);
    - Presence of bibliography and/or other relevant references;
    - Respect of the prescribed format (number of words: between 1,200 and 1,500 words (without the references or bibliography);
    - Respect of the requirements of the category in which the essay is submitted.

    6. Documents to be submitted

    All applications should include the following documents:

    - The essay in Word format; a cover page will be included and on this page, the category for which the essay is submitted must be clearly indicated;
    - A short biographical note (to introduce the applicant), including his/her full contact details (email address, telephone number(s), postal address, town, country, etc.) - no more than 1 page;
    - A scanned photocopy of the applicant‟s identification card (a card on which the date of birth is mentioned).

    Only one entry will be submitted per category; the same entry cannot be submitted for both categories.

    7. Contact details

    - To submit entries:

    All applications should be sent simultaneously to the following two addresses:
    essay-contest2011@cta.int and ictprogramme@gmail.com. While sending the applications, the subject of the e-mail should be “Entry for the essay competition”.

    - General information on the competition

    Email : essay-contest2011@cta.int ;
    Tel : +31 (0)317 467 102 (CTA – Netherlands)

    8. Other rules for participation

    a) A essay which received an award during another competition cannot be submitted;
    b) The NEPAD Agency and the CTA reserve the right to disqualify any entry if it does not meet the contest criteria and present regulations;
    c) By entering, participants warrant that their entry materials are original and do not infringe on any third party's rights;
    d) Entry to the contest constitutes an agreement to allow the NEPAD Agency and CTA to make, if necessary, articles, name, occupation and state of residence of applicants, public. In addition it constitutes an agreement to allow CTA and the NEPAD Agency to use submitted texts in its publications and in the framework of promotional activities. Applicants will retain ownership and all other rights to future use of their texts;
    e) The NEPAD Agency and CTA will not return submitted articles to their authors;
    f) CTA and the NEPAD Agency„s staff and their immediate family members are excluded from the contest.
    g) All local taxes and fees on prizes are the sole responsibility of the winner;
    h) If, for any reason, the competition is not completed as planned, the NEPAD Agency and CTA reserves the right at its sole discretion to cancel, terminate, modify or suspend it;
    i) The decisions made by the panel of judges, the NEPAD Agency and CTA are final and beyond dispute;
    j) All participants in this contest implicitly accept the rules presented in this document.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: essay-contest2011@cta.int

    For submissions: essay-contest2011@cta.int and ictprogramme@gmail.com

    Website: http://www.nepad.org

  • €1,000 CTA - NEPAD Essay Competition (Africa-wide)

    Deadline: 15 August 2011

    ESSAY COMPETITION: Looking at ICTs and agriculture in Africa through the eyes of women and the youth. Enter the competition to win EUR 1000 and join NEPAD’s 10th Anniversary!

    The New Partnership for Africa‟s Development (NEPAD) Agency and the Technical Centre
    for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation ACP-EU (CTA) have joined forces in celebrating
    NEPAD‟s 10th Anniversary. It is within this context of reflecting over the advancement of the African development agenda, that the two institutions are jointly organising an essay competition under the theme; “Looking at ICTs and entrepreneurship in agriculture and rural development through the eyes of women and the youth”. This contest also falls in the framework of CTA activities on Youth, Women and ICTs. In line with these objectives, CTA and the NEPAD Agency are searching for enthusiastic African young people (writers, journalists and other youth), who want to demonstrate their abilities by examining these issues.

    The Awards recognize excellence across a number of categories centred on the attraction, retention and progression of youth, women‟s and African talents to further the African development agenda.

    1. Who can participate

    The competition is open to young people, men and women between 18 and 35 years of
    African nationality. Students, journalists and young entrepreneurs (from the civil society or private sector), men or women, are particularly encouraged to participate. Entries will be submitted in English or French.

    A. 1st category: Women and ICT in agriculture

    This category is open to both young men and women. Candidate must write a story, in the format of an essay, on an African woman working in the agricultural sector, who has used ICTs in her professional businesses (for example: use of mobile phones for the marketing of horticultural products, use of mobile applications for the access to/or the dissemination of strategic information, innovative use of computer for the traceability of livestock, mixed use of internet and radio for extension, etc.).

    The text submitted must provide clear information on:

    - The profile of the woman whose story is told (background, studies if any, expertise in agriculture and if applicable in ICTs, etc.);
    - The kind of business she is involved in;
    - Description of the use of ICT implemented: what ICT tool(s) have been used; for what purpose; how it has/they have been used; costs incurred; service provider of the tool(s) (if applicable); difficulties met; results achieved; how far has/have the tool(s) used contributed to increased yields or revenues of the business or stakeholders targeted (if it‟s the case)? How far have the tooI(s) used contributed to an increase of access to strategic? Lessons learned; etc.
    - Analysis by the entrant of the use of the tool(s) by the woman whose story is told: how far is it/are they appropriate to the problem(s) being addressed; are there alternate tools that can be used to better address the problem faced or to reach the aim targeted, limits of the use of the tool(s); how far is this use replicable, etc;
    - References or documents (web links, articles, publications, etc.) illustrating the work of the woman or supporting the arguments developed by the entrant in his/her essay.

    B. 2nd category: Youth and ICT in agriculture

    This category is open to both young men and women. Candidate must write a story, in the format of an essay, on a young African professional working in the agricultural sector, a man or a woman, who has used ICTs in his/her professional businesses (for example: use of mobile phones for the marketing of horticultural products, use of mobile applications for the access to or the dissemination of strategic information, innovative use of computer for the traceability of livestock, mixed use of internet and radio for extension, etc.).

    The text submitted must provide clear information on:

    - The profile of the youth whose story is told (background, studies if any, expertise in agriculture and if applicable in ICTs, etc.);
    - The kind of business he/she is involved in (it can activities in civil society organizations or in private businesses);
    - Description of the ICT use implemented: what ICT tool(s) have been used; for what purpose; how it has/they have been used; costs incurred; service provider of the tool(s) (if applicable); difficulties met; results achieved; how far has/have the tool(s) used contributed to increased yields or revenues of the business or stakeholders targeted (if it‟s the case)? How far have the tooI(s) used contributed to an increase of access to strategic? Lessons learned by the youth; etc.
    - Analysis by the entrant of the use of the tool(s) by the youth: how far is it/are they appropriate to the problem(s) being addressed; are there alternate tools to better address the problem faced or reach the aim targeted, limits of the use of the tool(s) by the young entrepreneur; how far is this use replicable, etc;
    - References or documents (web links, articles, publications, etc.) illustrating the work of the young person or supporting the arguments developed by the entrant in his/her essay.

    In this category, the person whose activities are presented must also be a young person, a man or a woman.

    For both categories, the length of the essay submitted must be comprised between 1,200 and 1,500 words (without the references or bibliography). Applicants must submit their entry in French or English.

    What do we mean by ICTs? UNESCO defines ICTs as the ”new or advanced technologies that enhance the dissemination or creation of information and communication”. In the same line of thought, ICTs include, within the framework of this contest, all “new” information and communication technologies (Internet, mobile phones, computers, Global Positioning Systems (GPS), etc.), associated or not with “traditional” communication technologies (such as radio, television, written press, video, etc.). Entries submitted should not deal exclusively with the use of traditional information technologies (traditional radio, video, etc.).

    2. Selection process

    An international panel of judges, made up of experts in ICT and in agriculture will be set up to review entries and select winners. Pre-selected candidates may be interviewed remotely prior to the final selection.

    3. Prizes

    For each African Region (Central Africa, East Africa, North Africa, Southern Africa, West Africa) the best essay of each category will receive a prize of EUR 1000.

    The winners will be informed by mid-September 2011. They will be invited to attend the NEPAD‟s 10th Anniversary award ceremony in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to receive their prizes.

    Apart from winning entries, other best essays will also be promoted by the organizers, through various online and off-line channels, and also during the meeting organized by the NEPAD Agency in October 2011.

    4. Deadlines

    - Applications should be sent to CTA by email (see addresses in section 7 below) by 15 August 2011
    - The winners will be announced mid September 2011
    - Winners will receive their prize in October 2011 during a NEPAD Agency event.

    5. Selection criteria

    The main selection criteria for the written essays are:

    - Originality of the use;
    - Relevance of the usage to development challenges;
    - Personal vision of the entrant in his/her arguments;
    - Potential for replicability of the experience or solutions;
    - Quality of language (engaging writing style, good spelling and grammar, etc.);
    - Presence of bibliography and/or other relevant references;
    - Respect of the prescribed format (number of words: between 1,200 and 1,500 words (without the references or bibliography);
    - Respect of the requirements of the category in which the essay is submitted.

    6. Documents to be submitted

    All applications should include the following documents:

    - The essay in Word format; a cover page will be included and on this page, the category for which the essay is submitted must be clearly indicated;
    - A short biographical note (to introduce the applicant), including his/her full contact details (email address, telephone number(s), postal address, town, country, etc.) - no more than 1 page;
    - A scanned photocopy of the applicant‟s identification card (a card on which the date of birth is mentioned).

    Only one entry will be submitted per category; the same entry cannot be submitted for both categories.

    7. Contact details

    - To submit entries:

    All applications should be sent simultaneously to the following two addresses:
    essay-contest2011@cta.int and ictprogramme@gmail.com. While sending the applications, the subject of the e-mail should be “Entry for the essay competition”.

    - General information on the competition

    Email : essay-contest2011@cta.int ;
    Tel : +31 (0)317 467 102 (CTA – Netherlands)

    8. Other rules for participation

    a) A essay which received an award during another competition cannot be submitted;
    b) The NEPAD Agency and the CTA reserve the right to disqualify any entry if it does not meet the contest criteria and present regulations;
    c) By entering, participants warrant that their entry materials are original and do not infringe on any third party's rights;
    d) Entry to the contest constitutes an agreement to allow the NEPAD Agency and CTA to make, if necessary, articles, name, occupation and state of residence of applicants, public. In addition it constitutes an agreement to allow CTA and the NEPAD Agency to use submitted texts in its publications and in the framework of promotional activities. Applicants will retain ownership and all other rights to future use of their texts;
    e) The NEPAD Agency and CTA will not return submitted articles to their authors;
    f) CTA and the NEPAD Agency„s staff and their immediate family members are excluded from the contest.
    g) All local taxes and fees on prizes are the sole responsibility of the winner;
    h) If, for any reason, the competition is not completed as planned, the NEPAD Agency and CTA reserves the right at its sole discretion to cancel, terminate, modify or suspend it;
    i) The decisions made by the panel of judges, the NEPAD Agency and CTA are final and beyond dispute;
    j) All participants in this contest implicitly accept the rules presented in this document.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: essay-contest2011@cta.int

    For submissions: essay-contest2011@cta.int and ictprogramme@gmail.com

    Website: http://www.nepad.org

  • Indiafrica: A Shared Future Essay Writing Contest (Africa-wide)

    Deadline: 31 July 2012

    Contest Theme: How can India and Africa compete, collaborate and co-create the future on Environmental issues?

    The contests will be open in the following languages: • English • French • Portuguese • Spanish • Arabic • Hindi • Swahili

    CONTEST CATEGORIES

    1. Eastern Africa*

    Open to citizens of United Republic of Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia, Mozambique, Madagascar, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Comoros, Mauritius, Seychelles, Réunion, and Mayotte only

    2. Western Africa*

    Open to citizens of Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Cote d’Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Saint Helena, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo only.

    3. Central Africa*

    Open to citizens of Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, São Tomé and Príncipe only.

    4. Northern Africa*

    Open to citizens of Algeria, Egypt, Libyan Arab jamahiriya, Morocco, South Sudan, Sudan, Tunisia and Western Sahara only

    5. Southern Africa*

    Open to citizens of Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa and Swaziland only.

    6. India*

    Open to Indian citizens and Non resident Indians only

    AWARDS

    Cash Prize of US$ 1000 for three winners from each of the regions*

    1. Eastern Africa
    2. Western Africa
    3. Central Africa
    4. Northern Africa
    5. Southern Africa
    6. India

    RULES OF PARTICIPATION

    ELIGIBILITY

    • The participant must ensure he/she registers and submits for the correct category i.e. East Africa segment, South Africa segment etc of the Essay Writing Contest.

    • Submission in an incorrect category will lead to disqualification.

    • The participant must be an enrolled student in any school/college/institute and be over 18 and under 28 years of age as on 31 December 2011. Proof of the same will have to be submitted at the time of submission. Eg: student ID card, institutional proof etc.

    • Participation is open to individuals only.

    TECHNICAL CRITERIA

    • The Submissions can be sent in English, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic, Hindi, Swahili.

    • The essay should be in 3000 words or less.

    • The essay should include a title and word count.

    • Submitted entries that have been awarded at other competitions will not be considered eligible for entry and will face immediate disqualification.

    • More detailed biographical information may later be requested from the shortlisted candidates.

    • Submitted entries should be unpublished, original work of the participant.

    SUBMISSION

    • The entry should be submitted electronically to essay@indiafrica.in latest by 31 July 2012, 1200 hrs GMT.

    • They can also be mailed at Ideaworks Design & Strategy Pvt Ltd 609, Block-C, 6th Floor, Nirvana Courtyard, South City-2, Sector-50, Gurgaon, Harayana, Pin-122018, India

    • The submission should contain the candidate’s

    ~ Full Name
    ~ e-mail address
    ~ Contact no
    ~ City, Country and Region
    ~ Date of birth (date-month-year)
    ~ Institution / Organization
    ~ Student Proof of identity

    For queries please mail us at contact@indiafrica.in

    RIGHTS AND REPRODUCTION

    • All submissions to the INDIAFRICA : A Shared Future contest series will be, for exhibition or publication purposes, the property of the Organizers. The Organizing Committee retains the right to publish the business plan ideas and information associated with them and the participants in all communication exercises related to INDIAFRICA : A Shared Future.

    • The Organizers or any employee or agent of the Organizers will NOT be liable for:

    (a) any costs incurred or loss or liability suffered by the participants in relation to the program

    (b) any lost expectation of profits by participant

    (c) any failure by participant to understand their rights in relation to Intellectual Property, or the rights of The Organizers in relation to Intellectual Property

    (d) any other benefit applicants may expect to gain by participating in the program.

    • The Organizers may change the Terms and Conditions of participation at any time without specific notice. The amended Terms and Conditions of Entry will be effective immediately upon being posted on the Website. Important changes to the Terms and Conditions will be highlighted on www.indiafrica.in for your convenience; however, you acknowledge that it is your sole responsibility to regularly visit www.indiafrica.in to read any changes to the Terms and Conditions of Entry. Disputes, if any, are subject to the jurisdiction in the courts of Delhi only.

    IMPORTANT DATES

    • Registration opens on 20 August, 2011

    • Submission closes on 31 July 2012, 1200 hrs GMT

    DECLARATION OF RESULTS

    • Winners in each of the categories will be announced on 30 September 2012.

    SELECTION CRITERIA

    • The essay will be judged on the relevance and the quality of perspective presented within
    the context of the contest theme.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: contact@indiafrica.in

    For submissions: register here and submit your essay to essay@indiafrica.in

    Website: http://www.indiafrica.in

  1. Job Opening: Journalism Advisor for Internews Mozambique
  2. Call for Entries: The 2011 Tabbie International Publication Awards (Magazine Publishers Association of South Africa)
  3. The R115,000 Citadel Words on Money Journalism Award (South Africa)
  4. Job Opening: Senior Journalist for tvplus South Africa
  5. Job Opening: Junior News Reporter for The Mercury (Independent Newspapers, South Africa)