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The call for applications is now open. Please click on 'Apply Here' on the left.
The Princeton School on Science and Global Security invites applications from next-generation scientists and engineers interested in technical and policy perspectives on understanding, reducing, and ending the threats created by nuclear weapons and emerging technologies.
The School includes talks by leading disarmament scientists and global security policy experts. It provides skills and insights for participants for their research, encourages investigation of new ideas for a safer, more peaceful, and just world, and fosters a broader research community. Organized by the Princeton Program on Science and Global Security (SGS), the School is being held together with ICTP for the first time.
All participants must give a technical talk on issues related to nuclear weapons or emerging technologies in the context of global security and disarmament. Applicants should be graduate students, post-doctoral researchers, or junior faculty in natural or applied sciences, engineering, or mathematics. Applicants of every gender, race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, disability status, and socioeconomic status are encouraged. SGS will notify successful applicants by May 2026.
Topics
Speakers Frank von Hippel, Princeton, USA Stewart Prager, Princeton, USA Igor Moric, Princeton, USA David Wright, MIT, USA Sébastien Philippe, University of Wisconsin, USA Sharon Weiner, American University, USA Moritz Kütt, Hamburg University, Germany
Research Abstracts: In the application form, applicants must submit a 200-word abstract of their proposed presentation. Please use ICTP templates available for download below under ‘Abstract Template’.
Grants: Cost of travel, visa, accommodation, and meals are covered by the organizers for participants. There is no registration fee.
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Joint ICTP-SGS Princeton School on Science and Global Security | (smr 4311)
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