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Rosalynn Carter Journalism Fellowships 2025 in USA


Rosalynn Carter Journalism Fellowships 2025 in USA

The Carter Center has declared that applications are currently accepted for the 2025-2026 Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism. These esteemed fellowships assist journalists focusing on mental health topics, providing them with training, resources, and funding to create comprehensive and meaningful stories.

This year, the fellowship features an international aspect that emphasizes the connection between mental health and climate change. Journalists located in nations identified as highly at risk from climate change (not including the United States) are invited to submit applications for this specialized fellowship.

Benefits of Fellowship 

  • Financial Aid: Every fellow is awarded a $10,000 stipend to finance their reporting initiatives.
  • Training & Mentorship: Comprehensive training in mental health reporting is offered, alongside support from specialists and former fellows.
  • Networking Prospects: Participants become part of a prestigious group of more than 285 alumni, obtaining access to a network of professionals in journalism and mental health.
  • Project Acknowledgment: Previous fellowship initiatives have received distinguished honors, such as nominations for the Pulitzer Prize, Emmy Awards, and the Edward R. Murrow Award.
  • Meaningful Journalism: Fellows engage in essential reporting that heightens awareness, shapes public policy, and diminishes stigma associated with mental health.

Eligibility Requirements

  • Candidates should be professional journalists with at least three years of experience.
  • The U.S. fellowship accepts journalists covering mental health issues in the nation.
  • The global fellowship is for journalists covering mental health and climate change in climate-sensitive countries outside the U.S.
  • Projects can exist in various media formats, such as digital, audio, video, and print.

Available Programs

  • U.S. Mental Health Reporting Fellowship: Available for journalists focusing on mental health topics in the United States.
  • International Climate Change and Mental Health Fellowship: Available to journalists located in climate-sensitive countries beyond the U.S. concentrating on the effects of climate change on mental wellbeing.

How to Apply

Click Here to Apply

Application Submission Due Date 

The final day to submit applications for the Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism is April 2, 2025. The Carter Center will reveal the names of successful applicants on July 10, 2025, through its website and social media platforms.

About Rosalynn Carter

Eleanor Rosalynn Carter was an American humanitarian and activist who held the role of first lady of the United States from 1977 to 1981, as the spouse of President Jimmy Carter. During her many years of public service, she was a prominent supporter of women’s rights and mental health.

Carter was born and grew up in Plains, Georgia, finished as valedictorian of Plains High School, and shortly thereafter went to Georgia Southwestern College, where she completed her degree in 1946. Her initial attraction to her future husband, who was also from Plains, occurred upon viewing a photograph of him in his U.S. Naval Academy uniform, and they tied the knot in 1946. Carter aided her husband in securing the governorship of Georgia in 1970 and chose to direct her efforts toward mental health while serving as that state’s first lady. She advocated for him during his victorious campaign to become president of the United States in the 1976 election, winning against the incumbent Republican president Gerald Ford.

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