• Committees & Councils
  • Council on Research (COR)

Conference Travel Grants

Updated: June 1, 2023

Fiscal Year 2023-24 Applications Are Now Open

Travel Grants support domestic and international travel to conferences in addition to virtual conferences and meetings of recognized scholarly societies for the purpose of presenting results of original research and/or creative activity.

Academic Senate Members   may apply and be awarded up to  one conference travel grant per fiscal year ( July 1 through June 30 ). Applications must be received by May 31 (No exceptions):

  • domestic up to $700 including Canada and Mexico
  • international up to $1500
  • or virtual up to $250 .

Apply for a Conference Travel Grant

Important Information

  • Travel Advisory, Alerts, Entry & Exit Requirements When Planning Travel
  • Other travel resources:  UC Trip Planner web portal ,  travel registration  and  Worldcue  mobile app,  UCLA Travel Services , Connexxus Portal .
  • For travel occurring July 1, 2024 - June 30, 2025, please apply for the 2024-25 conference travel grant cycle. Applications for 2024-25 conference travel will open June 3, 2024.
  • Guide: My Travel Grant History in DMS
  • For additional funding opportunities, please refer to the  ORCA website .
  • Contact:  [email protected]  

3125 Murphy Hall

(310) 825-3851 [email protected]

LA Green Business Logo Badge

© 2024 Regents of the University of California

  • Accessibility
  • Report Misconduct
  • Privacy & Terms of Use

UCLA logo

Travel Grants

ucla travel grants

Travel Grants are awarded on a competitive basis to students who have had an abstract or artist statement accepted for a presentation at a regional or national conference. A maximum of $300 may be awarded per student for domestic travel, and a maximum of $500 may be awarded per student for international travel. The Travel Grant may be used to cover expenses such as hotel costs, airfare or mileage, and registration fees for presenting at in-person or virtual conferences.

This award is a reimbursement award only; you arrange and purchase your registration and travel prior to the conference, and the Travel Grant reimburses you after the conference. Before applying for a Travel Grant, please review the Travel Reimbursement Guidelines . These guidelines explain allowable expenses, receipts you will need, and documentation you will need to provide.

Please note that expenses will only be reimbursed when  original, itemized receipts  are submitted.

HOW TO APPLY

Travel Grant applications are closed for the 2023-2024 academic year. Travel Grant applications for the 2024-2025 academic year will open after July 1.

Please note : Due to university fiscal close protocols, the Undergraduate Research Center is  unable to process Travel Grants submitted between June 1 and June 30.

UNDERGRADUATE CONFERENCES

There are many conference opportunities for undergraduates! View our Conference Guide to find out about presentation opportunities in your field.

ADDITIONAL TRAVEL GRANTS

Students may also apply for the USAC Travel Grant Mini Fund  and the CSW|Streisand Center Travel Grant .

Direct questions to:

Undergraduate Research Center – Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences A334 Murphy Hall Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. (310) 825-2935 [email protected]

UCLA logo

Travel Grants for Conferences

Urc-sciences travel grant description.

The URC-Sciences Travel Grant supports UCLA undergraduates who have had their life science, physical science, or engineering research abstract accepted for an oral or poster presentation at a regional, national, or international conference. The research being presented does not need to have taken place at UCLA, but all applicants must be UCLA undergraduates at the time they conducted the research being presented and at the time of conference attendance. This grant is paid as a reimbursement after conference attendance. Applicants may be approved for up to $300 per academic year (July 1 – June 30). Students should only apply for this grant after their project has been accepted for presentation and after successfully registering for the conference.

Our application is now closed for the remainder of the academic year.  Application will re-open July 1st for travel grants beginning Fall 2024. Applications are due four weeks before the conference start date. Funding is limited; students are encouraged to apply as far in advance as possible.

Approved applicants must submit all itemized receipts being claimed for reimbursement after the end of the conference. All expenses must be paid directly by the student to qualify for reimbursement. Expenses paid by a third party cannot be reimbursed. Eligible expenses include conference registration fees, economy-class airfare, hotel/lodging, ground transportation (including ride-share apps), mileage (distance traveled in personal vehicle only) and parking fees.

TRAVEL GRANT APPLICATION

Our travel grant application is currently closed until July 2024 for conferences beginning Fall 2024.

Please complete the following DocuSign application. The application will require you to attach the following documents:

  • Faculty Research Mentor/Principal Investigator Evaluation Form
  • Accepted abstract/paper with your name in the author line
  • Official confirmation that your abstract/paper has been accepted by the conference for presentation
  • Completed conference registration materials & receipt
  • Unofficial transcript

APPLICATION GUIDELINES

  • Applications must be submitted four weeks prior to the conference start date.
  • Applicants must be UCLA undergraduates at the time they conducted the research being presented and during conference attendance.
  • Applicants are responsible for booking their own travel and payment.
  • This grant is paid as a reimbursement after conference attendance. A maximum of $300 may be awarded per student per fiscal year (July 1 – June 30).
  • If approved, awardees must submit required documents within five business days after the conference end date.

REIMBURSEMENT GUIDELINES

  • The following expenses are eligible for reimbursement: conference registration fees, economy-class airfare, hotel/lodging, ground transportation (including rideshare apps), mileage (distance traveled in a personal vehicle) and parking fees.
  • The following expenses are not eligible for reimbursement: membership fees, gasoline (gas costs are computed into the mileage reimbursement rate), prepaid packaged trips (combined airfare and hotel packages), meals and food purchases, poster printing, and any other expenses not eligible for reimbursement.
  • Student employees will be reimbursed using the same method that they receive payroll. Students not employed by UCLA will be reimbursed via Zelle.
  • Reimbursements will only be processed after the conference end date and after submission of required documents.
  • If costs are shared with additional travelers, travel grant awardees must obtain a separate bill for their own individual expenses.
  • Third-party reimbursements are not permitted – all expenses must be paid by the student directly. Expenses paid by a third-party (anyone other than the awardee) will not be reimbursed.

SUBMISSION OF REQUIRED DOCUMENTS

The following documentation must be submitted within five business days after the conference end date. Instructions on how to submit this documentation will be provided if your application is approved.

  • Photo of registration badge or other proof of conference attendance
  • Date of purchase
  • Traveler’s Name – if debit/credit card is used for payment
  • Description of what was purchased
  • Total cost of purchase
  • Method of Payment
  • A photocopy of the credit/debit cards used for payment or bank statements.

Biology Division of the Council for Undergraduate Research (CUR) Biology Travel Awards:

The Biology Division of the Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR) is offering a limited number of travel grants, up to $250 each, for undergraduate students presenting original research results at a regional or national, discipline-specific meeting during the fiscal year. Award recipients are required to acknowledge CUR for support of their travel in their talk or poster, to complete a short evaluation form about their meeting experience and to submit a PDF file of their poster. Minority students are encouraged to apply.

Eligibility Criteria:

  • Undergraduate student must be a junior or senior and travel must be completed within 3 months of graduation.
  • Student’s mentor must be a CUR member or the student’s home institution must be a CUR institutional member
  • Student’s home institution must provide at least a 50% match to support travel

Application materials:

  • Electronic application form to be completed by nominating faculty mentor. Please click here to access the form.
  • Reimbursement of travel expenses (up to $250) will require copies of receipts and confirmation of student’s attendance/presentation at the meeting.

Selection Criteria: Travel Award recipients will be chosen based on the scholarly merit of their abstract, which should include:

  • A sentence that clearly states the study’s OBJECTIVE (unless included in the title);
  • A brief statement of METHODS (if pertinent);
  • A summary of the RESULTS;
  • A statement of CONCLUSIONS (it is not acceptable to state “the results will be discussed”);
  • A statement of SIGNIFICANCE.

Deadline: Applications must be received by mid January for meetings held between February and June. Applicants will be notified four to six weeks after the deadline. See  additional details .

For further information and the application requirements, please visit the Council for Undergraduate Research (CUR) site

Direct inquiries via email to Evelyn Hiatt, CUR Councilor:  [email protected]

UCLA Graduate Division

  • Recommendations
  • Notifications
  • My Favorites

Favorites, recommendations, and notifications are only available for UCLA Graduate Students at this time.

Access features exclusively for UCLA students and staff.

As a student, you can:

  • Add funding awards to your favorites list
  • Get notified of upcoming deadlines and events
  • Receive personalized recommendations for funding awards

 We're Sorry

You've signed in with a UCLA undergraduate student account.

UCLA Graduate Programs

Students meeting in an on-campus coffee shop

Funding for Entering Students

For applicants and entering students, student financial support funds at UCLA are provided to graduate students in the form of grants, awards, traineeships, teaching assistantships and graduate student researcher appointments. Support based solely on need is also provided, in the form of work-study and loans, through the Financial Aid & Scholarships Office .

A student may receive both a departmental or Division of Graduate Education award in addition to an award based solely on financial need if the need-based criteria are met. However, the amount of a need-based award may change based on any other additional awards.

Doctoral Student Travel Grants for Conferences, Professional Development and Off-Campus Research (DTG):  This program is to encourage eligible doctoral students to present their work and to network at conferences in their field, to support travel associated with off-campus research and to enable students to take advantage of off-campus professional development opportunities.

Each eligible new doctoral student is provided up to $1,000 total reimbursement that can be used, in whole or in part, at any time through the student’s seventh year in the doctoral program, as long as the student and the activities meet the eligibility requirements.  For more details, please see the relevant section in the Graduate Student Financial Support booklet.

You are strongly urged to apply in all funding categories for which you may qualify.

  • Awards, Scholarships & Grants Merit-based awards provide stipends in varying amounts and may include tuition and nonresident supplemental tuition. Awards are competitive and open to all graduate students.
  • Extramural Awards Merit-based support provided by national, international or private foundations. Many organizations accept applications up to a year before acceptance into a graduate program.
  • Teaching & Research Assistantships Teaching Assistantships provide experience in teaching undergraduates under faculty supervision. Graduate Student Researcher positions provide experience working on faculty-supervised research projects.
  • Financial Aid Funding based on financial need available only to U.S. citizens and permanent residents. Financial aid includes loans and work-study awards.

Center for the Study of Women

Travel Grants

Description.

Funded through donations from friends and supporters of CSW|Streisand Center, travel grants assist UCLA graduate and undergraduate students with travel expenses related to academic or professional conference presentations and field research on women, gender, and sexuality.

CSW|Streisand Center has updated our travel grant structure!

For the Fall cycle (deadline in November), travel that occurs/occurred between July 1, 2023-June 30, 2024 will be considered. For the Winter cycle (deadline in February), travel that occurs/occurred between January 1, 2024 – December 31, 2024 will be considered. If your application is selected, award will be paid via reimbursement based on receipts after travel is completed.

$500 maximum (award amount and number of awards vary).

Winter : Thursday, February 29, 2024

  • Travel for the fall cycle must occur on or between July 1, 2023 and June 30, 2024
  • Travel for the winter cycle must occur on or between January 1, 2024 and December 31, 2024
  • Awardees will be selected on the basis of merit
  • Awardees must be registered UCLA students. Awardees must also be registered during the quarter when travel occurs and when the reimbursement is processed. For summer, students must be enrolled in the preceding spring quarter and subsequent fall or winter quarters. If travel occurs between two cycles (i.e. June 27, 2024 – July 5, 2024), apply for the cycle in which you return.
  • Travel must be for research or a conference pertaining to women, gender, and sexuality
  • For conference travel, awardee must provide evidence that the paper was delivered at a conference
  • CSW|Streisand Center reimburses the awardee only after receiving original receipts for eligible travel expenses. Only electronic receipts will be accepted.
  • Awardee(s) will be honored at the CSW|Streisand Center Awards Celebration at UCLA on Thursday, May 16, 2024. Attendance is highly encouraged.

Special Notes

  • Students who are qualified under the CA Dream Act of 2011 are eligible to apply. Find detailed information on the Dream Act at www.financialaid.ucla.edu .
  • Students receiving financial aid are advised to consult with the Financial Aid Office about the potential effect of this award on their financial aid package.

The application requires the following documents:

  • Proposal describing research project or conference paper (maximum 2 single-spaced pages, including works cited)
  • Curriculum Vitae/Resume
  • Unofficial UCLA Transcripts (with most recent coursework)
  • One Letter of Recommendation from a faculty member familiar with the research for which you are applying

Letter of Recommendation

The letter of recommendation should be uploaded via Submittable. Applicants will list the reference’s email address in the form and an email will be sent ( once the application is submitted ) via Submittable to the recommender with instructions on uploading.

If the recommender encounters difficulties uploading letters to Submittable, they may send it directly to [email protected] with the name of the student and award for which they are applying.

Only complete applications will be considered. CSW|Streisand Center must receive all required documents, including letter of recommendation, no later than 11:59 PM (PST) by the above deadlines.

For questions regarding CSW|Streisand Center awards, fellowships, and grants, please contact Management Services Officer Rosa Chung [email protected] .

Past Recipients

  • Lauren Baczewski, Human Development and Psychology
  • Sonya Brooks, PhD student, Health and Well-Being of Black girls
  • Joana Chavez, Chicana/o and Central American studies
  • Abbie Cohen, Urban Schooling Division
  • Trinity Gabato, Asian American Studies
  • Nohely Guzman, Geography
  • Brenda Selena Lara, Chicana/o and Central American Studies
  • Rebekka Michaelsen, History
  • Pallavi Rudraraju, Asian American studies
  • Supraja Saravanakumar, Community Health Sciences
  • Laura Smith, World Arts and Cultures/Dance
  • Jordan Thomas,  Clinical Psychology
  • Yun-Pu Yang, Theater and Performance Studies

Read about the 2022-2023 CSW|Streisand Center Award Recipients on our blog .

  • Jeanette Charles, History,  History of Resistance, Revolution, and African Traditional Religions in Contemporary Venezuela
  • Nicola Chavez Courtright, Anthropology, My Catwalk is the Streets: LGBTQ Political Emotions Under Salvadoran Populism
  • Jessica Fremland, Gender Studies,  Aesthetic Relationalities: Visual, Kinesthetic, and Sonic Resistance in the Remembrance of the Dakota War of 1862
  • Alana de Hinojosa, Chicana/o and Central American Studies,  Unruly Terrains of Struggle: Women-lead Barrio Activism during the Chamizal Land Dispute
  • Kourtney Kawano, Education,  Situating the Place of Kanaka ʻŌiwi Feminist Epistemology through Critical Feminist Literature
  • Kira Maszewski, African American Studies, Black Women, Ultra-Processed Foods, and Heart Disease in the Los Angeles Area: A Longitudinal Cohort Study
  • Slaveya Minkova, Cinema and Media Studies,  Queer Gesture and Postsocialist Aesthetics in Levan Akin’s “And Then We Danced”

Spring 2022

  • Charlotte Abel, Sociology, Reproductive Futurism During COVID-19
  • Dani Heffernan, Anthropology,  Changing Voices, Challenging Listeners: Trans Women Speakers’ Ideologies of Voice Modification and Perception
  • Oraison Larmon, Information Studies, Trans Figural Records in Kiyan Willams’ Reflections
  • Sara Schiff, Clinical Psychology, Peer Independent and Interactive Associations with Conduct Problems in Girls
  • Gabriela Valencia, Education, The title of my conference paper is Miss Behave: Latina Sexual Citiznehsip in K-16 Educational Ecosystems
  • Anna Watts, Playwriting, A List of Happenings at 1016 14th St. (Not Necessarily in Chronological Order)

Learn more about the 2021-2022 award recipients on our blog .

  • Zheyu Liang, Theater, Film and Television, Mother Love
  • Bethany Murray, Social Welfare, A Case Study of Black-led Organizing in Minneapolis
  • Indira Somani, Theater, Film and Television, Advance Film
  • Cecilia Su’a, Asian American Studies, Return to Home: Studying Samoan Immigration and How Perceptions of the Homeland and the US are Affected

Learn more about the 2020-2021 award recipients on  our blog .

  • Blog Post: Mammogram Screening Among Arab American Women
  • Jennifer Cárcamo, History, Eternos Indocumentados: Central American Refugees in the United States
  • Blog Post: Sexual Harassment and Occupational Segregation: The Impact of Sexual Harassment on Women in the Trades
  • Blog Post: The Spirit of Revolution: One African American Woman’s Contribution to Abolitionism and Proto-Black Feminism in 1830s Boston, Massachusetts
  • Jacqueline Davis, World Arts and Cultures/Dance,  All the Stars in the Sea
  • Zizi Li, Film, TV, and Digital Media, Controversies around Naomi ‘Sexy Cyborg’ Wu 机械妖姬: Transnational Feminist Encounters and its Digital Updates

Spring 2020

  • Esther Claudio, Spanish and Portuguese, Antonio Altarriba’s El ala rota and Ana Penyas’s Estamos todas bien: A Gender Approach to Historical Memory
  • Zama Dube, Theater, Film and Television, Liberatory Black Feminist Aesthetics: Envisioning a Decolonial Visual  Representation of “Blackwomanhood”
  • Madison Felman-Panagotacos, Spanish and Portuguese, Latin American Transnational Feminisms in Times of #Me Too: Mobilizing Resistance throughout the Americas
  • Mariam Rahmani, Comparative Literature, Gender in Translation: Posing the Question of the Queer via Contemporary Iran
  • Tyrrell Shaffner, Theater, Film, and Television, The Dropout
  • Heidi S. West, Health Policy and Management, Are wives of migrants in rural Bangladesh really “Left Behind”? A nuanced analysis of how spousal migration affects women’s healthcare utilization and mental, social, and general health
  • Blog Post: ArtEquity and Indigenous Conversations
  • Blog Post: Domestic Workers: The Original Gig Workers
  • Blog Post: (Re)mapping Filipino Settler Claims to Place in Guåhan
  • Amr Shahat, Archaeology, Archaeologies of diversity and interaction in Ancient Egypt  ( CSW Awards 2019 )
  • Blog Post: Speculative-Speculative Fiction: Jamie Berrout’s Impossible Trans Literatures

Spring 2019

  • Myra Jon Aquino, Theater, Film, and Television, Gender, Resistance, and Revolution in World War II Philippines  ( CSW Awards 2019 )
  • Elizabeth Dayton, Gender Studies,  Nothing About Us Without Us: How Sex Workers are Shaping Their Own Narratives  ( CSW Awards 2019 )
  • Blog Post: Rethinking Iron Supplementation During Pregnancy
  • Kersti Francis, English, Reassembling Romance: Genre and Genre in Partonope of Blois  ( CSW Awards 2019 )
  • Blog Post: Dermatologists Are Deeply Into Skin but Dermatology Is Not Just Skin Deep
  • Nada Ali Ramadan, Sociology, Gendered Transitions: the Case of Syrians’ Forced Migration to Egypt  ( CSW Awards 2019 )
  • Christine Vega, GSEIS, Mothers of Color in Academia: Fierce Mothering Challenging Spatial Exclusion Through a Chicana Feminist Praxis  ( CSW Awards 2019 )
  • Blog Post: Portraying Migrant Lives in Film
  • Blog Post: Why Disability Studies for Archives?
  • Adva Gadoth, Epidemiology,  Local risk factors of urogenital schistosomiasis amongst pregnant women in Kisantu Health Zone, Democratic Republic of the Congo  ( CSW Awards 2018 )
  • Blog Post: Resisting the Violence of Ideology
  • Blog Post: Women’s Portrayals of Friendship in Renaissance Italy
  • Blog Post: Reshaping the form and phenomenon of the pregnant body via prenatal dance fitness

Spring 2018

  • Blog Post:  George Eliot’s Fraught Feminism
  • Blog Post: Innocence as a Vehicle for Female-Led Satire
  • Blog Post:  What’s in a Name?: An Examination of Historians’ Reluctance to Use the Word Slavery in the Context of California Indian Genocide
  • Blog Post:  What’s identity got to do with schooling? Infinite Intersectionality within Quality Education
  • Blog Post: An excerpt from Mahsa Mohebali’s Negarān nabāsh (Don’t Worry), translated by Mariam Rahmani
  • Veronika Rozhenkova, Education,  Targeting Girls’ Education and Empowerment in Uganda ( CSW Awards 2018 )
  • Blog Post:  More than a Feminine Face: Gendered Perceptions of Women in Male-Dominated Academic Fields
  • Melissa Whitley, Gender Studies,  “My House…it’s Like a Tornado:” Black Women Mobilizing Against Subprime Foreclosure in Baltimore ( CSW Awards 2018 )
  • Wendi Yamashita, Gender Studies,  #VigilantLove: Grassroots Mobilizations of Japanese American World War II Memories ( CSW Awards 2018 )
  • Blog Post: Harsneren: Language of the Armenian Bride
  • Domale Keys, Education & Information Studies,   Ogoni Women of Nigeria in the US: Migrating a Movement
  • Blog Post: Being Kawaii in Japan
  • Blog Post: From Wilderness to Raw Material: How the Dispossession of Native Land Enables the Prison Industrial Complex
  • Blog Post: To Sir, With Love: Bhupen Khakhar at the Tate, London
  • Blog Post: Research, Mesearch: Educating Urban Black and Brown Girls
  • Blog Post: The Silenced Voice of the Modern Girl
  • Blog Post: Trauma and Community Resilience Among Cambodian and Cambodian American Women in the US

Spring 2017

  • Megan Baker ,  American Indian Studies,  Promised Zone: Choctaw Economic Development & Political Ascendency in Oklahoma  ( CSW Awards 2017 )
  • Blog Post: Decoding the Narrative on Women in Computing: A Case for Interdisciplinary Inquiry
  • Blog Post: Lucid Noon, Sunset Blush: Femme Supremacy and the Politics of Wandering
  • Blog post: Imagining Utopias: Towards Latinx Feminist Thought
  • Blog post: The Role of Women in the Lives of High Achieving Black and Latino Men
  • Monique Magdaleno, Political Science,  Internship at the National Women’s Law Center  ( CSW Awards 2017 )
  • Tiffany Naiman, Musicology,  Selling Sex From Over the Hill: Madonna and the Vulnerability of Female Aging in Popular Music  ( CSW Awards 2017 )
  • Diana Porras, Urban Schooling,  Latina Mothers of English Learners as Policymakers? Barriers and Opportunities toward Critical Participation in LCAP  ( CSW Awards 2017 )
  • Blog Post: Beyond “Culture”: Feminist Activism in India since 2012
  • Nury Chavez ,  Gender Studies,  Sexual Harassment in Public Places: An Analysis of Latina’s Experience and Perspectives  ( CSW Awards 2016 )
  • Blog Post: Finding the Romance of Everyday Locales through Fan-Tourists’ Gaze
  • Blog Post: Music and India’s Hijra Community
  • Blog Post: Spheres of Debate
  • Preeti Sharma ,  Gender Studies,  Affective and Intimate Labor in LA’s South Asian Threading Salons  ( CSW Awards 2016 )
  • Blog Post: Murder in Alexandria: The Gender, Sexual and Class Politics of Criminality in Egypt, 1914 – 1921
  • Blog Post: Hello Kitty Love/Hate: On Asian Cuteness, Disability, and Affect
  • Blog Post: Spiritual Utopias: Researching Early Women’s Convents
  • Melissa Whitley ,  Gender Studies,  The Loan Forgiveness of Widows of Color: Anti-Black Financial Violence during the Subprime Foreclosure Crisis  ( CSW Awards 2016 )

Spring 2016

  • Roanna Cheung ,  History,  Flower Market: Representations of Working Women in Early Twentieth Century South China ( CSW Awards 2016 )
  • Lina Chun ,  Gender Studies,  Asian American Critique and Feminist Interventions: Re-reading the Psychosomatic Register and Hauntings in the Afterlife of the Cambodian Genocide  ( CSW Awards 2016 )
  • Blog Post: Sex offenders are among the most harshly punished criminals in the state, but how often does the punishment fit the crime?
  • Melissa Melpignano ,  World Arts and culture/Dance,  Representation of femininity and women in Israeli society through the work of Israeli female choreographers  ( CSW Awards 2016 )
  • Esha Momeni ,  Gender Studies,  Iranian Shi’i Collective Mourning Rituals: Negotiating Power at the Intersection of Shi’ism, Nationalism, and Popular  ( CSW Awards 2016 )
  • Catherine Nguyen ,  Comparative Literature,  Migrating, Finding, Locating Little Saigons: Feminine Displacement and Memories in Baloup’s Little Saigon  ( CSW Awards 2016 )
  • Blog Post: He Said, She Said: Abortion Denunciations and Male Power in Turn-of-the-Century Rio de Janeiro
  • Amanda Bailey, Anthropology,  Trauma Stories and Transformations: Situating Turning-Point Narratives by Female Tribal College Students
  • Sevi Bayraktar, World Arts and Cultures,  Hip Hop with Darbuka: New Artistic Genres in Gentrified Istanbul
  • Anne Fehrenbacher, Community Health Sciences/Public Health,  Determinants of consistent condom use among sex workers in India
  • Kimberly Mack, English,  Dissertation research about black blueswomen
  • Jennifer Monti, Spanish and Portuguese,  “Sab, la mujer, y la esclavitud: cinco preguntas (y respuestas) para refuter el genero abolicionista”
  • Alessandra Williams, World Arts and Cultures,  Choreographing Decolonized Labor: The Social Movements of REALITY, Ananya Dance Theatre, and HIRE Minnesota in the Settler Colonial U.S.

Spring 2015

  • Ariana Bell, Psychology,  Healthy Implications of Intersectional Approaches to Race, Sexual Identity, and Gender Identity and Expression
  • Brianna Goodale, Psychology,  Stifling silence: How failure to confront increases stereotype threat among women in STEM
  • Kathleen Lehman, High Education and Organizational Change,  Understanding the Role of Faculty in the Computer Science Gender Gap
  • Chantiri Resendiz, Chicano/a Studies,  Coming Out of the Shadows: Queering Activist Performances, Finding Disruptions, and Letting the Wild Tongues Speak in the Immigrant Rights Movement
  • Rosaleen Rhee, Musicology,  Fatalistic Audiovisual Representation of AIDS in the Korean Popular Music Video “Loving Memory”
  • Adelle Sanna, Italian,  Mythic Revisionism in Sirene (Sirens) by Laura Pugno
  • David Schieber, Sociology,  Money, Morals, and Condom Use: The Politics of Health in the Adult Film Industry
  • Preeti Sharma, Gender Studies,  The Thread Between Them: Race, Gender, and Intimacy in Los Angeles’ South Asian Threading Salons
  • Gitanjali Singh, Gender Studies,  Desire, Sexuality and Bodies: Mothers and Daughters in Stockton, California
  • Monica Streifer, Italian,  Historical Revisionism on the Modern Italian Stage: Anna Banti’s Corte Savella (1960)
  • Sharon Tran, English,  The Senecan Lair: Art, Multitude, and the Oriental Captive Girl
  • Anndretta Wilson, Theater and Performance Studies,  Refusing to Serve: The Gospel Music Performance of Marion Williams
  • Adriane Wynn, Health Policy Management/Public Health,  A study to assess the acceptability and feasibility of screening and treatment of curable sexually transmitted infections during antenatal care at Princess Marina Hospital
  • Britt Ahlstrom, Psychology,  The Influence of Socioeconomic Status on Women’s Eating Behavior and Health
  • Amanda Apgar, Gender Studies,  The Colonial Logics of Gendered and Racialized Subject Production in Israel and Palestine
  • Julia Callander, English,  Contagation, Circulation, and Closet in Arthur Mervyn
  • Lina Chhun, Gender Studies,  Towards a Critical Paradigm of Silence, Trauma, and the Body: Feminism and Affective Archives of Violence
  • Nanar Khamo, French/Francophone Studies,  C’est moi, moi seul: The Narrator’s Desire to Become Both Mother and Writer in Le Sari vert
  • Savannah Kilner, Gender Studies,  Femmephobia, Transmisogyny, and the Fictions of Queer Arrival
  • Mzilikazi Kone, Political Science,  Sex Worker Organizing in San Jose, Costa Rica
  • Ryan Koons, Ethnomusicology,  Through the Lens of a Baroque Opera: Gender/Sexuality Then and Now
  • Patricia Morena, Psychology,  Positive Affect Prospectively Predicts Decrease in Inflammatory Marker in Breast Cancer Survivors
  • Catherine Nguyen, Comparative Literature,  The Forgotten and the Disappeared: Missing the Vietnamese Immigrant in Contemporary Vietnamese Francophone Literature

Spring 2014

  • Carolyn Abrams, Urban Planning,  A Forgotten Dimension: The Significance of Power Dynamics in Assessing Female Employment and Empowerment in Urban Bangladesh
  • Vincent Allen, Psychology,  Examining the relationship between substance use and sexual risk behavior among low socioeconomic status Black men who have sex with men
  • Skye Allmang, Social Welfare,  Regulating the “Domestication” of Public Spaces in Mexico City: Lessons for Los Angeles
  • Rebecca DiBennardo, Sociology,  Understanding Racial and Ethnic Differences in Contraceptive Use Patterns in The Contemporary United States
  • Ana Luna, Urban Planning,  A Forgotten Dimension: The Significance of Power Dynamics in Assessing Female Employment and Empowerment in Urban Bangladesh
  • Cassia Roth, History,  Murdering Mothers: Infanticide, Reproduction, and the Law in Rio de Janeiro
  • Vincent Allen, Jr., Psychology,  Depression and identity-related stigma among Black bisexual men living with HIV
  • Hsin-Chieh Chang, Community Health Sciences,  The Triple Vulnerabilities of Age, Gender, and Class: Vietnamese Marriage Migrants Negotiating Social Recognition in Homeland and at Destinations of Immigration
  • Megan Lorraine Debin, Art History,  Bloody Body Doubles: Performance Against Violence in the Borderlands
  • Jessica Martinez, Gender Studies,  “Together We Thrives”: Discourses of Nationalism and Grief in the Wake of the Tucson Shooting
  • Michael Nicholson, English,  A Singular Experiment: The Creature as Feminist Scientist in Frankenstein
  • Cassia Roth, History,  Reproduction and the Limits of Democracy in Republican Brazil  and  Embodied Citizenship: Women’s Reproductive Practices and State Formation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1889-1930
  • Benissa Salem, Nursing,  At a Crossroads: Reentry Challenges and Healthcare Needs Among Homeless Female Ex-Offenders
  • Elena Shih, Sociology,  Governing Trafficking in Persons: Localizing Anti-Trafficking Policy in China and Thailand and The New Sex Trafficking: Moral Economies of Rescue

Spring 2013

  • Naazneen Diwan, Gender Studies,  Rewriting the Self: Muslim Women’s Expressions of State Violence, Healing and Justice in Gujarat, India
  • Christina Larson, Psychology,  Do Hormonal Contraceptives Alter Women’s Mate Choice and Relationship Functioning? Hypothesized Mechanism of Action
  • Jacob Lau, Gender Studies,  Sistership as Survival: Looking after Sylvia, Marsha, Queens and Exile
  • Xi Song, Sociology,  Educational Mobility in Multiple Generations: A Two-Sex Approach
  • Claribel Valdovinos, Latin American Studies,  Did You See What She is Wearing?: Fashion, Factories, and Femicide
  • Ellen Rae Cachola, Information Studies,  Building a Secretariat from the Ground Up: The Case of the International Women’s Network Against Militarism
  • Ann Fehrenbacher, Community Health Sciences,  First, do no harm: Designing a model of trauma-informed care for survivors of human trafficking
  • Nicole Goude, World Arts & Cultures,  Jennie Ross Cobb, Cherokee Photographer
  • Jeffrey Roy, Ethnomusicology,  Invisible Goddesses: Identity Performance in Hijra Music and Dance
  • Nefertiti Takla, History,  Gender Violence and the Development of Modern Egyptian Patriarchy, 1882 – 1939
  • Ravneet Tiwana, Education Studies,  How Does Social Science Research Become Part of a Researcher’s Spiritual Journey?
  • Alessandra Williams, World Arts & Cultures/Dance,  African Young Women’s Personal Narratives of Land Restitution in South Africa

Spring 2012

  • Kyoko Aoki, Information Studies,  Inside/Outside Arts-in-Corrections: Using Oral History to Contextualize Community Collections in Institutional Archives
  • Devin Flaherty, Anthropology,  Imagining the Family, Imagining the Self: What Genetic Disclosure Can Tell Us about Identity, Closeness, and Kinship
  • Tara McKay, Sociology,  Assessing the emergence of same-sex sexualities as a global health priority: Social processes and new directions for research
  • Caitlin Patler, Sociology,  Undocumented, Unafraid and Unapologetic: Undocumented Youth, Civil Disobedience, and Redefining Belonging
  • Adrienne Posner, Comparative Literature,  The Temporality of Melancholia: Queer Thought in Our ‘Post-9/11 World’
  • Nicole Robinson, Italian,  Preliminary dissertation research at the Centro Studi Joyce Lussu in Porto San Giorgio, Italy and at the commemorative conference in honor of the 100th anniversary of Joyce Lussu’s birth
  • Courtney Ryan, Theater & Performance Studies,  Ecofeminism and Eco-Management in Personal Landscapes and A Pack of Forests
  • Tristan Inagaki, Psychology,  An fMRI Investigation of the Provision of Social Support
  • Christie Nittrouer, Theater & Performance Studies,  Den Internationella Kvinnodagen (International Women’s Day Stand-up)
  • Rana Sharif, Women’s Studies,  Women in Conflict Zones: Memory and Violence-Militarized, Heroic Lives, and the Everyday
  • Maya Smukler, Film, Television & Digital Media,  Liberating Hollywood: Female Directors in the 1970s
  • Maya Stiller, Asian Languages and Cultures,  The Contestation of Sacred Space- About the Religious and Political Significance of a Female Mountain Deity in Korea

Spring 2011

  • Roanna Cheung, History,  Embodying Modernity: Female Nude Advertisements in a Cartoon Pictorial of Early Twentieth Century South China
  • Melissa Millora, Education,  Niche Institutions and the Public Good
  • Luis Murillo, Anthropology,  Partial Perspectives in Astronomy: Gender, ethnicity, nationality, and meshworks in building digital images of the universe
  • Leila Pazargadi, Comparative Literature,  The Mohajer’s Memoir: Investigating the Serialization of Iranian American Memoirs
  • Vivian Wong, Information Studies,  Documenting “home” in the diaspora: Memory, records, and identities in the archival imaginary
  • Negin Ghavami, Psychology,  Examining the consequences of simultaneously belonging to multiple devalued groups, for example, being a black lesbian
  • Evangeline Heiliger, Women’s Studies,  Who’s Buying It? Ethical Consumerism and Shopping Cart Activism in a Throwaway World
  • Allison Johnson, English,  The human body in Civil War literature; the poetry of Sarah M.B. Piatt
  • Heather Shpiro, Education,  The development and implementation of HIV/AIDS education, particularly in regards to sexuality and gender roles, in secondary schools of rural Malawi
  • Zeb Tortorici, History,  Women at the Margins of the Unnatural: Abortion and Infanticide in Late New Spain
  • Meher Varma, Anthropology,  Indian Women’s Fashion in Postcolonial Era
  • Fuson Wang, English,  “Fear ye a mortal’s arm?”: Eleanor Anne Porden and The Institutionalization of the Scientific Epic

Spring 2010

  • Hanna Garth, Anthropology,  Household Food Acquisition and Consumption in Santiago de Cuba
  • Christina Richieri Griffin, English,  Alice Meynell’s Maternal Poetics: Writing the Rhythms of the Womb
  • Robbin Jeffries, Sociology,  “Ordering the Disordered: Determinants of Medical Decision-Making in Cases of Disorders of Sex Development”
  • Jacob Lau, Women’s Studies,  Editing and publishing Dr. Michael Dillon’s Memoir with a written introduction
  • Marisa Pineau, Sociology,  Breast Milk Banking Then and Now
  • Gilda Rodriguez, Political Science,  From Misogyny to Murder: Everyday Sexism and Femicide in Cross-Cultural Context
  • Sara Stronovsky, World Arts & Cultures,  Batuko Dances of Cape Verde: Women’s Tradition of Resistance at the Cultural and Geographic Crossroads
  • Patricia Torres, Urban Planning , Intersectional Analysis of violence: Strategies to Decrease Violence and Increase Empowerment in the Lives and Communities of Women of Color
  • Constanze Weise, History,  Women as Religious Officeholders and Leaders in Cult Associations in the Ebira and Igala Kingdoms
  • Stephanie Amerian, History,  Dorothy Shaver papers
  • Alexandra Apolloni, Musicology,  Performing the Beehive: Dusty Springfield, Amy Winehouse, and the politics of Racialized Voices AND In the Beginning, There Was Rhythm: Embodiment, Divinity, and Punk Spirituality in the Music of the Slits
  • Young (Kate) Choi Hee, Sociology,  Parental absence during childhood and intergenerational coresidence later in life: Differential impact of parent’s gender in the context of Mexican migration
  • Lorelle L. Espinosa, Higher Education and Organizational Change,  The Identity and Self of Women in STEM Fields
  • Elizabeth Goodhue, English,  Talking with the Dead: Sarah Fielding’s ‘History of Anna Boleyn’ and ‘The Lives of Cleopatra and Octavia’
  • Bongoh Kye, Sociology,  Intergenerational Transmission of Women’s Educational Attainments in Korea – An Application of Multi-state Projection Models to Social Mobility
  • Erica Love, Art,  Re-assessment of spirituality and the sublime in modern art: an interview with Dr. Jane Dillenberger, author of The Religious Art of Andy Warhol
  • Jennifer Moorman, Film, Television & Digital Media,  The Royalle Treatment: Female Pornographers in the 21st Century

Spring 2009

  • Bradley Thomas Benton, History,  “Montezuan’s Nieces: Sixteenth-Century Indigenous Noble Women from Tetzcoco, New Spain”
  • Vivian Davis, English,  Archival Research to be Conducted for an Article and Dissertation Chapter on Charlotte Lennox, eighteenth-century novelist, playwrite, and critic
  • Malik Gaines, Theater & Performance Studies,  Efua Sutherland’s African Personality: Ghanaian Drama and International Liberation
  • Erin von Hofe, Comparative Literature,  Battles, Rodas, and the Street: Competition, transformation, and Gender in Bgirling/Bboying and Capoeira
  • Andrea F. Jones, English,  The Trials of Margery Kempe: Women and the Law in Late-Midieval England
  • Thun Luengsuraswat, Asian American Studies,  Sean Dorsey’s performance: “Uncovered: The Diary Project”
  • Mirasol Riojas, Cinema and Media Studies,  Latinas in Feature FilmProduction – Texas filmmaker, Josey Faz
  • Elena Shih, Sociology,  Humanitarian Work: The Moral Economy of Women’s Work in the Transnational Anit-Trafficking Movement
  • Sabah Firoz Uddin, Women’s Studies
  • Laura Foster, Women’s Studies,  Patent Law Borders at the Crossings of Indigenous Self-Determination and Biotechnology Research in South Africa
  • Hannah Garth, Anthropology,  Gender Play: Notes on a Manny Pacquiao Fight
  • Elizabeth Raisanen, English,  Intersecting Discourses of the Pregnant Body in Anna Letitia Barbauld’s “To a Little Invisible Being who is Expected Soon to Become Visible”
  • Wu Ingrid Tsang, Art/Interdisciplinary Studio,  Researching the life of Qui Jin (a Chinese revolutionary, poet, and founder of the first women’s newspaper) at her former residence-turned-museum in Shaoxing
  • Sara Wolf, World Arts and Cultures,  Renegade Gender: Theorizing the Female Body in Extreme Motion
  • Kristin Yarris, Anthropology,  The Pain of Thinking Too Much: Dolor de Cerebro and Social Hardship Among Rural Nicaraguan Women

Spring 2008

  • Anna Corwin, Anthropology,  The Body in the Abbey: Socialization into Embodied Communication among Catholic Nuns in the US and France.
  • Wendy DeSouza, History,  Mysticism and Homosexuality in Early Twentieth-Century French Orientalism
  • Jennifer Flores Sternad, Art History,  Etcetera: the International Errorist in Panel on the Body and Militant Art Practice  and  Activist Artist Collectives in South America
  • Esther Friedman, Sociology,  Education of Children and Differential Mortality of Parents: Do Parents Benefit from Their Children’s Attainments?
  • Jennifer Guzman, Anthropology,  Communication in Health Encounters: Mapuche Grandmothers’, Mothers’, and Children’s Interactions with Pediatricians
  • Katie Oliviero, Women’s Studies,  Some Boundaries of Activist Body-Politics: Corporeal Determinism and Conservative Performance
  • Robert Summers, Art History,  Archival research of Vaginal Davis’s ‘zines and videos
  • Hope Marie Childers, Art History,  South Asian Art History: The Visual Culture of Opium in British India
  • Lida Jennings, GSEIS and Educational Leadership Program,  Young Women and College Choice: The Impact of Recruitment Strategies and Applicant Perception as Factors in Enrollment Trends at Women’s Colleges
  • Suzanne Lye, Classics,  The Goddess Styx and the Mapping of World Order in Hesiod’s Theogony
  • Candace Moore, Critical Studies in Film, TV, and Digital Media,  Queer female representation in television (1950s-present)/early queer organizations, publications, and media criticism
  • Sarah Simons, Public Policy,  Girl’s eduction in rural Pakistan
  • Melissa Sodeman, English,  “Charlotte Smith, Wandering and the Novel”

Spring 2007

  • Rosemary Candelario, World Arts and Cultures,  The Missing Dance: Contemporary Devadasis and HIV
  • Julie Kazdan, History,  Historical Examination of late nineteenth century Italian women’s movents
  • Karen Lindo, French/Francophone Studies,  Slashing ‘la logigue et la raison’ in Maryse Conde’s Celanire cou-coupe
  • Kimberly Robertson, Women’s Studies,  “Nits Make Lice”: American India Breastfeeding, Genocide, and Transnational Processes
  • Nadia Sanko, Spanish and Portuguese,  New Portrayals of the Afro-Caribbean Woman; the Performativity of Eroticsm, Geder, and Race in Circum-Caribbean Literature and Film of the 1900’s
  • Zeb J. Tortorici, History,  Contra Natura: Sin, Crime, and “Unnatural” Sexuality in Colonial Mexico, 1600-1800
  • Amy Adrion, Film and TV,  Serving 7th Grade
  • Esther Baker, World Arts and Cultures,  “Tekre/Change”: Raising Awareness about HIV/AIDS through Performance
  • Xochitl Flores-Marcial, History,  The Zapotec Women of Colonial Oaxaca: A Social and Cultural History
  • Natalie Joy, History,  “That injured class of our fellow beings”: Women, Abolition and Opposition to Indian Removal, 1828-1838
  • Sharmila Lodhia, Women’s Studies,  Re-Imagining the Boundaries of Violence in a Transnational Age: The Challenge of Feminist Legal Advocacy
  • Dana Murillo, History,  The Role of Women in the Colonial Silver Mining District of Zacatecas, Mexico
  • Stephanie Van der Wel, Musicology,  Country Music’s Representation of Working Class and Rural Femininity
  • Kimberly White, English,  Insularity, Christianity, and Paternalism in the Writings of Phillis Wheatley

Spring 2006

  • Rene Almeling, Sociology,  Medical Markets in Genetic Material: Comparing Egg and Sperm Donation
  • Emily Carman, Film and TV,  Female Film stars and Their Labor (as Actors/Stars) in the American film Industry of the 1930s
  • Gloria Gonzalez, Sociology,  Health, Body Image and Adolescent Girls
  • Ilana Johnson, Anthropology,  Gender and Urbanism in Prehistory
  • Jill Mitchell, Medical Anthropology,  Construction of Meaning in the Experience of Breast Cancer
  • Julie Nack Ngue, French/Francophone Studies,  Illness and disability in Francophone African and Caribbean women’s writing – “‘Outing’ Colonial Discourses of Disability and Normalization in Francophone Immigrant Narratives”
  • Stephen On, Political Science,  Women in Multiculturalism and Human Rights; Human Trafficking
  • Leila Pazargadi, Comparative Literature,  Iranian Women’s Issues – “Violating the Veil: Usurping the Veil from the Sacred Space in Iran and France”
  • Nora Zepeda, Spanish and Portuguese,  Representations of the Woman’s Body in Spain’s Golden Age Literature
  • Jiayun Zhuang, Theater,  “Miss China”: the Hypervisible Body on the Global Stage
  • Azza Basarudin, Women’s Studies,  Organic Feminism within Islamic Thought  and  Memories of Islam: (Re)Imagining Muslim and (Re)Defining Faith
  • Yelena Furman Slavik Languages & Literatures,  Textual Bodies: the Prose of Valeriia Narbikova
  • Carolyn Kendrick, Spanish and Portuguese,  The Return of the Warrior Women
  • Marisol Perez, Spanish and Portuguese,  Another Way to See: A Chicana Perspective on Rosario Castellanos
  • Sabah Uddin, Women’s Studies,  Organic Feminism within Islamic Thought
  • Sarah Welchans, Social Welfare,  Correlates of Weapon Use in Domestic Violence Incidents Reported to Law Enforcement among Heterosexuals Couples

Spring 2005

  • Epifania Amoo-Adare, Education,  Asante Women’s Sense of Place in an Urbanizing World
  • Ning An, Epidemiology,  Ethnic and Gender Differences in Cigarette Smoking Prevalence among Six Major Asian American Sub-populations in California
  • Begum Basdas, Geography,  Not yet: Lesbian Mobilities and Activism in Istambul
  • Brandi C. Brimmer. History,  Poor Black Women in North Carolina during the Late Nineteenth Century
  • Amy M. Denissen, Sociology,  The Micro-politics of Sexual and Gender Harassment
  • Nicole Jenine Horejsi, English,  Exoticizing the English and Domesticating the Foreign
  • Dorothy Kim, English,  Reading Women: Literacy, Exoticism & Textual Communities in 13th Century Britain
  • Crishan Lin, History,  Through Passing
  • Sarudzayi M. Matambanadzo, Women’s Studies,  Engendering Sex: Birth Certificates, Biology & the Body in Anglo American Law
  • Anne Meredith Stiles, English,  Harley Granville Barker’s Effeminate Heterosexuals
  • Mellissa Heatherly Wither, Public Health,  Pregnancy and Childbirth in East Bali
  • Epifania Amoo-Adare, Education,  Critical Spatial Literacy ….Asante female household transformation…
  • Deirdre Cooper Owens, History,  19th Cnt African American women’s roles within family units and…
  • Erin von Hofe, Comparative Literature,  Women of Capoeira: Where are we in the Roda?
  • Amina Humphrey, Education,  Reading Race, Reading Gender: Picture Books About Hair and Skin
  • Sonja Myung Kim, East Asian Languages and Cultures,  Contested Bodies of New Women: Her “Improved” Clothing in 1920s Korea
  • Tomomi Kurokawa, Education,  The Politics of Gender among Japanese High School Teachers… and Women Teachers’ Resistance…
  • Elisa Mandell, Art History,  The Birth of Angels: Role of Spanish Queens in Establishing the Foundation of …
  • France Nguyen, Social Welfare,  HIV/AIDS in Viet Name: Exploratory Research in HIV Vaccines and Commercial Sex Workers
  • Dennis Tyler, English,  An Uneasy Alliance: Examining Multi-Ethnic Female Unions and Black-Jewish Tension in Alice Walker’s Meridian
  • Maria Estela Zarate, Education,  Live-in Maid Wanted: Takes Initiative, Speaks English, Hard-working

Spring 2004

  • Xochitl Marina Flores, History,  The Zapotect Communities of Colonial Oaxaca: Women, Family & Children
  • Dorothy Kyung Hi Kim, East Asian Languages and Cultures,  Women’s Devotional Networks in Thirteenth-Century Britain
  • Dana Velasco Murillo, History,  Race, Class & Gender in Colonial Zacatecas, Mexico
  • Emily Musil, History,  Legacy of Female Political Activist, Minerva Bernardino
  • Jennifer Lynne Musto, Women’s Studies,  Cartographies and Hierarchies of Flesh: Monocultural Sexualities & Ecologies of Sex Work Space
  • Katy Maribel Pinto, Sociology,  Patriarchy or Egalitarianism: Mexican American Parents & Their Children
  • Manushag Powell, English,  Parrots & Periodicals: Women and the Domestic Exotic in Eliza Haywood’s Parrot and its Forerunners
  • Whitney Vincent Strub, History,  American Feminist Responses to Pornography, 1968-1980
  • Huey Bin Teng, History,  Family, Migration and Gender in Fujian, China
  • Sabah Uddin, Women’s Studies,  The Woman Question: The Ghandian Perspective
  • Rene Almeling, Sociology,  A Comparative Study of Egg Donation and Sperm Donation
  • Shirin Ershadi, Women’s Studies,  Globalization, Justice and the Trafficking of Women and Children
  • Karen Grumberg, Comparative Literature,  Jewish Women and the Wild Place in Allegra Goodman’s Novel
  • Margaret Kuo, History ,  Litigious Husbands and Runaway Wives
  • Carol Medlocott, Geography,  Gender, the Civilizing Impulse and the American Roadside Landscape
  • Tanya Merchant, Ethnomusicology,  Reclaiming Oriental Identity: Images of Women in Uzbek Ethno Pop
  • Tu-Uyen Nguyen, Community Health,  Specific Strategies for Cultural Tailoring of Breast and Cervical Cancer programs
  • Carolina O’Meara, Musicology,  ’Shouting Out Loud’: The Breakdown of Rock’s Masculinities
  • Marisol Perez, Spanish and Portuguese,  Past and Present Struggles: Yreina Cervántez’s Chicana Feminist Geneology
  • Elizabeth Vanderven, History,  In the Name of the Mother: the Development of Women’s Education

Spring 2003

  • Angelica Afanafor, Art History,  Grave Matters: The Representation of Women in Funerary Offerings in Pre-Columbian West México
  • Esther Marian Baker, World Arts and Cultures,  Performing Rural Exodus and Immigration: A Collaborative Choreography Project in Dakar, Senegal
  • Kate Bartel, Musicology,  Portal of the Skies: Music as Devotional Act in Early Modern Europe
  • Brandi Brimmer, History,  African American Households and the State
  • Gabriela Fried, Sociology,  From Mothers to Children: Pedagogies of Horror, A Case Study of the Intergenerational Transmission of Traumatic Memories of Disappearance during the Uruguayan Dictatorship and Transition (1973-2000)
  • Alison Harvey, English,  Letter, Manuscripts & Working papers of Emily Lawless and the cousin novelists of Edith Somerville and Martin Ross (pseudo. of Violet Martin)
  • Shana Lutker, Art,  Freud and Me: Identity and Feminism after Sigmund and Anna Freud
  • Lisa Tran, History,  Concubinage as Adultery: The Public Debate and the Legal Rationale
  • Anna Aizer, Economics,  Home Alone: Maternal Employment, Childcare and Adolescent Behavior
  • Epifania Amoo-Adare, Education and Information Studies,  Critical Spatio-temporal Literacy and the Politics of Urban Space
  • Amanda Botticello, Film & TV,  Depression Trajectories in Bereaved Caregivers of Elders with Dementia
  • Haung-Ja Chung, Anthropology,  Commodified of Sexuality and Eroticized Ethnicity: Korean Hostess Club Workers in Japan
  • Elizabeth Guillory, Sociology,  African American Female Faculty and Professional Identity Formation
  • Hillary Haley, Psychology,  Is Racial Discrimination Gender-Blind? A Test of the Subordinate Male Target Hypothesis
  • Sandra Irlen, Education,  Adolescent Girls’ Conversations About Moral Dilemmas Presented in Teen Television Dramas
  • Lisa Kay Kasmer, English,  Catherine Macaulay and the Female Public Intellectual  and  Figuring Eighteenth-Century Female Intellectuals
  • Teresa Lingafelter, Urban Planning,  Gender, Labor and Housing/Community Policy
  • Olivia Mather, Musicology,  Modal Alternation, Subjectivity, and Hildegard’s Sequences
  • Mrisol Ramos-Lum, Information Studies,  Elite and Emancipated Women Representation in Colonial Spanish Puerto Rico During the 19th  Century
  • Elena Shulman, History,  Soviet Maidens in the Socialist Fortress: The Khetagurovite Movement in the Soviet Far East 1937-39
  • Catherine Taylor, Community Health Sciences,  Attitudes About Domestic Violence Intervention: a multi-ethnic, California Study
  • Carol Ann Wald, English,  Ethnographic Studies of Two Robotics Laboratories Headed by Women

Spring 2002

  • Matthew J. Christensen, Comparative Literature,  Spielberg’s Friendly Slave Revolt: Men’s Cross-Cultural Sentimental Bonds and the Promise of Racial Integration in Amistad’s America
  • Cynthia Diane Culver, History,  Gender and Generation on the Pacific Slope Frontier, 1840-1900
  • Magdalena Edwards, Comparative Literature,  Elizabeth Bishop and Clarice Lispector: Postmodern Voyages to and from 20th Century Brazil
  • Cynthia M. Garcia, World Arts & Cultures,  Representations of Latin American Women in ‘Baile Popular’: An Analysis of Local Responses to the MTV Reality Show ‘Road Rules: Latin America’
  • Galadriel Mehera Gerardo, History,  Oscar Lewis and Mexican Machismo
  • Judith R. Katzburg, Health Services,  Access to Preventive Services for Latina Immigrants: The Roles of Citizenship and Acculturation
  • Alison Rice, French/Francophone Studies,  Translating Faith: Abdelkebir Khatibi’s ‘ La Memoire Tatouee’
  • Kristen Schilt, Sociology,  ’I’ll Resist With Every Inch and Every Breath’: Girl Zine-Making as a Form of Resistance
  • Elena Shtrmoberg, Art History,  Afro-Brazillian Gender (Mulatta) Identity in Bahia, Brazil
  • JoAnn Staten, World Arts & Cultures,  Break the Silence: Art and HIV/AIDS in Suriname
  • Laura Talamante, History,  ’Among the Victims of Tyranny is a Wife’: The Republican Family and Divorce in Marseille
  • Danielle Van Dobben, World Arts & Cultures,  Embodying the Exotic: The Performance of ‘The Gypsy’ among American Belly Dancers
  • Acacia Warwick, Art History,  Prefabricated Desire: Surrealism, Mannequins, and the Fashioning of Modernity
  • Theresa Renee White, Education,  Media as Pedagogy and Socializing Agent: Influences of Feminine Aesthetics in American Teen-Oriented Films and Magazines on African American Adolescent Female Social Identity

Spring 2001

  • Rae Agahari, History,  Yong Soon Min’s ;Defining Moments, 1992:; Ambivalence in Representation
  • Emily Arms, Education,  Producing Girls and Boys: Teachers’ Constructions of Gender in Single Gender Classrooms
  • Claire Barnes, Geography,  Internment of Prostitutes During World War I
  • Kate Bartel, Musicology,  ‘As good as an ABBA song’: ‘Dancing Queen,’ Subjectivity, and the Virtual Body
  • Annelie Chapman, Slavik Languages & Literatures,  Gender Expression in Slavic Advertising Discourse
  • Xiaoping Cong, History,  Using Schools to Reconstruct the Rural Community: The Social Program of Village Teachers’ School, 1927-1937
  • Karina Eileraas, Women’s Studies,  Postcolonial subjectivity and the ethics/problematics of nationalist ‘community,’ especially as discussed in the works of Assia Djebar and Jacques Derrida in the context of Algeria revolutionary nationalism
  • Azadeh Farahman, Film & TV,  Festival Films, National Cinemas and International Markets  and  From Rape to Reverence: An Unprecedented Female Type in Bahram Beiza’i’s ‘ Killing Rabids’
  • Lisa Kay Kasmer, English,  The ‘Publicity’ of the Private Sphere within Jane Porter’s ‘The Scottish Chiefs’
  • Catherine Lee, Sociology,  Race-ing and (En)gendering the Nation: Chinese and Japanese Women’s Immigration and the Control of Sexuality, 1870-1920
  • Andrea Mansker, History,  Celibacy and the Superior Being: Secondary Education for Girls in 19 th Century France
  • Andrea Reyes, Spanish and Portuguese,  The Essays and Journalistic Work of Rosario Castellanos
  • Christine Sellin, Art History,  The Republic of Housemaids: Images of Servants in Seventeenth Century Netherlandish Art
  • Catherina A. Taylor, Community Health Sciences,  The Nature of Newspaper Coverage of Homicide
  • Loli Tsan, Roman Linguistics & Literature,  Fragmentation and the Writing of the Medieval Body
  • Jennifer Uhlmann, History,  Gender, Ideology and the Law in the International labor Defense Movement, 1925-1947
  • Jacqueline Warwick, Musicology,  ‘Look Here, Girls, and Take This Advice’: Feminism and Mainstream 60’s Pop
  • Tami Williams, Film & TV,  The Life and Films of Germaine Dulac
  • Beth Allen, Art History,  After the ‘Male Gaze’: Cindy Sherman, Madonna, and Feminism in the 1990s
  • Epifania Amoo-Adare, Education,  Understanding Education’s Role in the Politics of Space: Developing Critical Spatial Literacy as Women
  • John P. Bowles, Art History,  Research on African-American, Feminist and Conceptual Art
  • E. Tsekani Browne, History,  ‘Defending the Manhood of Race’: The Early Anti-Lynching Activism of Ida Wells and the National Politics of Gender, 1880-1920
  • Xiaoping Cong, History,  Localizing the Global, Nationalizing the Local: The Role of Teachers’ Schools in Modernizing China, 1897-1949
  • Maria DePrano, Art History,  Italian Renaissance Medals from a Gender Perspective
  • Lloys Frates, History,  Memory of Place, the Place of Memory: Race, Gender and Space in Late Colonial Lourenco Marques
  • Susie Han, Asian American Studies,  Hanbok: A Symbol of Korean American Identity and Culture
  • Kristen Hatch, Film and Television,  ‘Playing Grown-Up’: Girls Impersonating Adults, from Vaudville to Hollywood
  • Lisa Kramer, English,  Women Writing History in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century
  • Bayard Lyons, Anthropology,  The Cultural Construction of Male Adolescence in Turkey
  • Chloe Michaelopoulous, Latin American Studies,  Las Mujeres de Rap: Music as an Ideological Tool in Contesting Ideas of Race and Gender
  • Jessica Millward, History,  ‘I Never Did Have Any Slaves to Grow’: Slave Women and Gynecological Resistance in the Antebellum South
  • Valentina Pagliai, Anthropology,  Like Romeo and Juliet Upside Down: Empowering Gendered Voices in Tuscan Community Theater
  • Anite Revilla, Education,  Latina/o Critical Race Theory (LatCrit) in the Field of Education: A LatCrit Approach to Understanding Feminist Latina Student Activism
  • Anne Sheehan, English,  Oliver Wendell Holmes and Antebellum Medical and Literary Authority
  • Marc Siegel, Film and Television,  The Gossip of Images in Lesbian Videos
  • Cynthia Miki Strathmann, Anthropology,  Agency and the Reconstitution of Power: Sports Fans, Viewing Pleasures, and the Athlete as ‘Cultural Woman’
  • Julie Townsend, Comparative Literature,  Women’s Artistic Identity: Travel, Exile, and History in de Staël and Hermans
  • Jacqueline Warwick, Musicology,  Fleshing Out Bilitis: Constructions of Girlhood in Debussy’s Song Cycle

ucla travel grants

UCLA Center for the Study of Women|Barbra Streisand Center, 1500 Public Affairs Building, BOX 957222, Los Angeles, CA 90095-7222

The CSW|Streisand Center at UCLA acknowledges our presence on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territory of the Gabrielino/Tongva peoples.

Related Sites

  • College of Letters & Science
  • Social Sciences Division
  • College Magazine
  • College Feedback
  • LA Social Science
  • UCLA Blue Print

Campus Resources

  • Maps, Directions, Parking
  • Academic Calendar
  • University of California
  • Terms of Use

Social Sciences Division Departments

  • Aerospace Studies
  • African American Studies
  • American Indian Studies
  • Anthropology
  • Archaeology
  • Asian American Studies
  • César E. Chávez Department of Chicana & Chicano Studies
  • Communication
  • Conservation
  • Gender Studies
  • Military Science
  • Naval Science
  • Political Science

The UCLA Linguistics Department’s normal business hours are M-F 8am-12pm, 1-4pm. Office schedule and availability may change based on UCLA protocol ( www.covid-19.ucla.edu). Masks are optional but strongly recommended indoors. All UCLA affiliates and visitors must self-screen for symptoms before coming to campus.

UCLA

The Department of Linguistics

Graduate student travel funding.

Updated as of 3/4/24

Conference Travel Application  (pdf)

TIMELINE OF DEPARTMENT TRAVEL APPLICATION

ucla travel grants

Full details of the application process and timeline found below under “Application Process”

Basis of Our Policy

The Department has budgeted funds to subsidize graduate student travel to major conferences for giving talks and presenting posters. This is money that, in principle, the Department wants to spend, since giving conference talks is part of professional training and might help you in a job search. Therefore, the Department strongly encourages you to submit abstracts to major conferences in your field, as soon as your research program has developed to the appropriate point.

Funding Levels

The number of trips taken per year is at the student’s discretion. However, please be aware of the funding limits (by grad year) below. These are the maximum possible total funding amounts per student (maximum funding not guaranteed):

  • Year 2 Maximum: $1000
  • Years 3-5 Maximum: $1500
  • Years 6+ Maximum: $800

Reimbursable Expenses 

The following items are considered allowable expenses for reimbursement:

1. Conference Registration

2. Membership Dues (if required for registration)  

3. Airfare (Economy/Coach class only)

4. Domestic Lodging*: University max $275/night

5. Domestic Meals*: University max $79/day (no alcohol)

6. Transportation

* Foreign Meals and Lodging per diem maximums are set per location/country and can be found here .

If you need handouts for your conference presentation, the Department can assist you in making copies using the Campbell Hall copier, at the Department’s expense. Students may also utilize the Department’s poster printer to print conference posters at no cost. Contact our Front Office Student Workers in our Main Office, 3125 Campbell Hall, for assistance.

Application Process

Prior to submitting your abstract for the conference ,  you must speak with your advisor (or the relevant faculty) about the conference you are considering and provide them with a copy of the abstract you are planning to submit . Please give the faculty sufficient time to read and consider the abstract. Complete Part One of the application form (above), which requires a signature from your advisor or a faculty in the relevant research area. This signature confirms that they have read and approved the abstract, and are willing to do the usual advisory task of providing input and polishing the paper.

Again, this must be done  before  you submit your abstract. Applications submitted after you have sent in the abstract or without the advisor/faculty signature will  not  be approved. Once your abstract has been accepted for presentation and prior to travel, complete Part Two of the funding application form (above), which requires reimbursement information. Attach the conference invitation and submit the form to the  Graduate Student Affairs Officer (SAO) .  

Conference and research travel falls under the scope of the  UCLA Graduate Division Doctoral Student Travel Grants,  through which every UCLA PhD student is allotted $1,000 throughout your career. We ask that you please apply for these grants  before  using Department funds for travel. Your conference travel will be considered once you have used your allotted $1,000 or if the university denies your application for whatever reason.  

Reimbursement Procedure

Once you have returned from the conference, submit your receipts and documents to the Graduate SAO.  Receipts MUST be submitted within  two weeks  of the conclusion of your trip.  

Caution:  If you submit your receipts more than two weeks after the conclusion of your trip, it may be impossible for the Department to reimburse your travel.

If receipts do not clearly state the amount paid and method of payment ( i.e. the last four digits of your credit card), then a credit card/bank statement listing the charge is also required . Such statements should be redacted of all personally identifiable information with the exception of the account holder’s name, statement date, and the charge(s) in question.  

Submit the relevant documents below:

  • Conference program which includes your name and presentation details.  
  • Conference registration fee receipt.  
  • Lodging receipts : The maximum that UCLA will reimburse for domestic lodging is $275/night. Must be itemized with amount and method of payment indicated. Lodging expenses that include personal expenses (i.e., room service and entertainment) will not be reimbursed.   
  • Meal receipts : The maximum that UCLA will reimburse for domestic meals is $79/day. Receipts must be itemized with amount and method of payment indicated. Alcohol is not reimbursable.  
  • Foreign Meals and Lodging : Foreign per diem maximums are set per location and can be found here . Receipts must follow the same requirements as domestic lodging and meals (see #3-4).  
  • Transportation receipts : Receipts must be itemized with amount and method of payment indicated.  
  • Arline tickets : Receipts must include your name, flight itinerary, airfare amount, method of payment/billing information, and class of travel ( economy class only ).  
  • For paper airline tickets, submit the ORIGINAL airline passenger receipt (last page in your paper ticket stub).  
  • For electronic airline tickets, submit either the email e-ticket receipt or the e-ticket receipt printed from the airline website.  
  • UCLA charges a mandatory carbon mitigation fee on all airfare paid by or reimbursed by the University. The fees are $9 for domestic and $25 for international. This fee will be included as part of your grant (the Department cannot cover this fee in addition to the grant) and is reimbursed directly to the University.  

Please note that UCLA will not reimburse travel packages (i.e., package deals of airfare and hotel, airfare and car, etc.). You must purchase these expenses separately to be reimbursed.

Policies   

  • Graduate Division policy requires that travel reimbursement be made during the same fiscal year (July 1 – June 30) the trip occurred.  
  • The Department will not approve retroactive travel funding requests.  
  • The Department will prioritize requests from students who have already used their $1,000 as part of the  UCLA Graduate Division Doctoral Student Travel Grants  program.  
  • Conference travel funding will not be approved for students who have missed major Department deadlines for progress in the program.  
  • Conference travel support for the sixth year students will be as follows: (i) sixth years who are receiving a TAship/fellowship will receive travel support as per the normal policy; (ii) other registered/enrolled sixth years will be funded at 50% of the limits above. Students beyond sixth year in the program will not receive travel support.  
  • We strongly encourage you to purchase the lowest fares possible. Only economy class is reimbursable. This will allow us to fund more travel reimbursement requests.  
  • Students must be registered in the degree program during the quarter the travel takes place. For summer, students must be enrolled in the preceding spring quarter.  
  • It is to be understood that conference travel funding is not guaranteed. If there is overwhelming demand for travel money, or any other financial emergency, there may have to be funding cutbacks. However, the policy is definitive as a statement of the Department’s goals for student conference travel.  
  • In general, queries about conference travel policy should be directed to the Director of Graduate Studies, with CC to the Graduate SAO. Procedural queries should be directed to the Graduate SAO.  

A note on California State Law AB 1887

On Wednesday, September 13, 2023, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 447 , ending the ban on state-funded travel to states with anti-LGBTQ+ legislation. In place of the ban, SB 447 establishes the “Building and Reinforcing Inclusive, Diverse, Gender-Supportive Equity Project” (BRIDGE Project) to promote social equity, civil rights, and antidiscrimination through marketing and advertising campaigns.

The restrictions put in place by Assembly Bill 1887 (2016) have been eliminated. As of September 13, 2023, state funds can be used to travel to all states. If travel to the previously banned states occurred prior to September 13, 2023, state funds generally should not be used (for a list of states, contact the department). University of California Business and Finance Bulletin G-28: Policy and Regulations Governing Travel has been revised and no longer includes the AB 1887 restrictions.

  • Department Overview
  • Job Opportunties
  • Graduate Students
  • Ph.D. Recipients
  • Faculty Office Hours
  • TA Office Hours
  • In Memoriam
  • What is Linguistics?
  • Prospective Students
  • Majors and Minor
  • Opportunities
  • American Sign Language
  • Bruin Linguists Society
  • Student Resources
  • The Graduate Program
  • For Prospective Students
  • For Current Students
  • Course Schedule
  • Undergraduate Courses
  • Current Proseminars
  • Archive of past proseminars
  • Summer Courses
  • Course Technology Requirements
  • Overview of Research
  • UCLA Working Papers
  • Psycholinguistics Laboratory
  • Digital and other research resources
  • Visiting Scholar Requirements
  • Room Reservation Request
  • Key Loan Request
  • General Information for Students
  • For Department Members

UCLA Department of Psychology

Conference Travel Funding

We are pleased to offer eligible graduate students funding to help defray the expense of presenting research at conferences during the 2023-2024 period— July 1, 2023 to June 23, 2024.  Please be advised that departmental funding for conference travel is limited each year and funds will be available on a first come first served basis.

Please note that students can only receive Psychology Department Conference Travel funding after they have used all of the $1,000 allocation from the Doctoral Student Travel Grants for Conferences, Professional Development and Off-Campus Research Program (DTG) from the Division of Graduate Education. To check your remaining travel grant funds, e-mail Fellowships and Financial Services at [email protected] .

The Psychology Department Conference Travel funding, which comes from non-state funds, may be used to reimburse travel to states listed in AB 1887 prior to September 13, 2023. Students who are unable to use Doctoral Student Travel Grants funding due to AB 1887 may apply for Psychology Department Conference Travel funding. As of September 13, 2023, graduate students may request travel reimbursements from Doctoral Student Travel Grants for travel to AB 1887 states.

List of Psychology-Related Conferences that may be of interest.  

ELIGIBILITY:

  • Student must be the first author of the research to be presented. In the case of the Society for Multivariate Experimental Psychology exceptions will be considered, since only faculty members are permitted to present at these meetings. Only attending a conference does not make a student eligible for reimbursement. 
  • Eligible expenses are limited to airfare, bus, train, personal vehicle mileage, lodging, poster printing and conference registration. Virtual conferences are eligible only for conference registration reimbursement. Copies of receipts and proof of payment must be submitted per instructions on form Part B (see links below). Food costs, membership fees, pre-registration fees, submission fees, taxis, and shuttles will NOT be reimbursed. 
  • Students must be registered and enrolled in both the quarter that they complete the travel and the quarter that they will be reimbursed. If a student seeks reimbursement for conference travel during the summer months, they must be registered and enrolled in the previous Spring and the following Fall quarter. In Absentia students are eligible for reimbursement. 
  • Department funds may only be requested after the $1,000 allocation from Division of Graduate Education is used. If your remaining DTG funds are not enough to cover your planned travel, it is possible to use department funds to cover the balance.
  • Each student may be reimbursed a  maximum of $400 in 2023-2024 . Multiple reimbursement requests may be submitted.

HOW TO REQUEST REIMBURSEMENT:

Complete the Conference Travel Grant Application Part A (see link below) to indicate conferences you plan to attend during the period July 1, 2023 to June 23, 2024. Submit Part A to Sara Jimenez at [email protected] . by  October 31, 202 3. Note: if your plans change after October 31, you may still use the department grant funds but will need to submit a new Part A form. Please be advised that departmental funding for conference travel is limited. Submitting your Part A as soon as possible helps ensure you will have funding available to you. Complete the Conference Travel Grant Application Part B (see link below) and submit to Sara Jimenez at [email protected]  as soon as possible after your travel is complete. Please submit your Part B and all applicable receipts and documentation as one PDF document. Please be aware that reimbursement requests (i.e. Part B and receipts) submitted after 6/1 may experience a delay in processing.

REQUIRED FORMS:

Please note the PDF forms are fillable and can be signed electronically. 

  • CONFERENCE TRAVEL GRANT APPLICATION PART A
  • CONFERENCE TRAVEL GRANT APPLICATION PART B

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:

  •  Only the portion(s) that directly pertain to conference travel is eligible for reimbursement. If you will be traveling for personal reasons around your conference travel, or are otherwise requesting airfare with multiple stops, you must also submit an itinerary, with cost information clearly visible, for a comparable direct flight from Los Angeles to the Conference location and back would cost. For more information or assistance, please email Sara Jimenez at [email protected] .
  • No, UC policy prohibits purchase of travel/vacation packages from Internet vendors. You are required to submit detailed, itemized receipts for all expenditures that clearly indicate the amount, method of payment, and zero balance.
  • No, per UC policy only coach airfares are reimbursable.
  • You will be reimbursed for the hotel room rate, room tax, and parking. Extraneous expenses such as meals on the premises, room service, movie rentals, gym fees, etc. are not reimbursable.
  • Yes. Our business office will accept a request for split costs for lodging and rideshare if an original receipt from Person A and proof that Person B paid B’s portion to A (example: Zelle receipt). The original invoice showing the total cost and name of person on the reservation and then a cash app screen shot of who/how/much of the total cost the traveler paid will be accepted.
  • In order to be reimbursed, your name must be on the bill. Please ask the hotel to provide a split bill for each occupant.
  • No, per UC policy lodging expenses are not reimbursable for travel within a 40-mile radius of student’s home or UCLA, whichever is the point of departure.
  • Yes.  Receipts must show itemized charges. Mileage requests must be accompanied by mileage calculation documentation (Yahoo, MapQuest, Google Maps, etc.).

UCLA Express 

The New UCLA Express

Learn About Express

Latest Updates

Express email notifications and reminders are sent to the email address listed as the  Work Email   for the employee in the campus directory . If your email appears as “ notavailableinconcur.ucla.edu ” in Express or if you want to change your Express email, please contact your Department Directory Coordinator to request that they update your  Work Email .   After, Department Directory Coordinator update your work email in the online directory it will take ‘up to 72 hours’ to update in Express .  More information, including a list of Directory Coordinators can be found in the Update Directory Listing section of the campus directory.

Please Note:

Employees cannot update the Business Email through UCPath self-service, this must be done through the Directory Coordinator. 

The field called ‘ E - mail ’ in the Campus D irectory is recorded as the Business Email next day in UCPath.

Email addresses marked as Campus Email within the UCPath System are not used for the Express System .

Express emails will be sent from an  @concursolutions.com  domain. Please ensure your spam/junk mail settings are updated to allow these as a safe sender.

Notifications   sent from:   [email protected]

Reminders   sent from:   [email protected]

Users can change the email notifications they receive under their  Profile Settings > Expense Preferences  and/or  Request Preferences . There are different email notifications based on whether it is an expense report or a request.

If an employee has given permission for a delegate to receive emails on their behalf, the delegate will be copied on all email notifications and reminders. Users can change their delegate’s email permissions under  Profile Settings > Expense Delegates .

Supervisors are copied on certain email reminders; this setting cannot be changed. Express email notifications and reminders are sent to the email address listed as the  Business Email   for the employee in UCPath. If your email appears as “ notavailableinconcur.ucla.edu ” in Express, please contact your department HR to request that they update your  Business Email   in UCPath. Employees cannot update their Business Email through UCPath self-service.  Note: Campus Email addresses from UCPath are  not  used for Express.

Express emails will be sent from an  @concursolutions.com  domain. Please ensure your spam/junk mail settings are updated to allow these email addresses as safe senders:   [email protected]   [email protected]

Travel & Entertainment Card

Use of the Travel & Entertainment (T&E) Card is limited to business travel and event expenses that will be paid directly from the University to US Bank via expense report. The T&E Card should not be used for other types of business expenses and should never be used for personal charges of any kind.

All T&E Card transactions must now be accounted for in the new Express. A cardholder can no longer use the T&E Card, pay US Bank directly (out of pocket), then remove the transaction like they could in the legacy Express.

To account for a T&E Card transaction that the cardholder personally paid to the bank, the transaction must be attached to an expense report and assigned to the “Personal Expense” expense type. Selecting Personal Expense indicates that no payment should be made from the University to US Bank. Selecting Personal Expense for a T&E Card transaction does not necessarily mean that the expense was not for business, but it accounts for the transaction without sending a payment to the bank.

Please note that an expense report cannot be submitted if the only line items on the report are all Personal Expenses (the user will see a red “Action Required” exception message). Personal Expense transactions should be attached to a report in a timely manner, but the report should be held until there are other valid business expenses ready to submit. The Personal Expenses would be combined on the same expense report as the next available business expenses. The trip/event for the next valid business expenses is what the header information (purpose, destination, justification, date range) should be updated to. Be advised that the cardholder (and any delegates who have permission to receive their emails) will continue to receive periodic email reminders until this is resolved by submitting a valid report.

Direct Billed Airfare

Airfare and UCTC service fee charges that are paid via direct billing are also now reconciled via Express. Users will see these company card transactions along with their T&E Card transactions when completing an expense report. To account for these direct bill charges, the company card transaction(s) must be added to an expense report and an approved request must be linked. The transactions can be added to the report as soon as they are available, but the report should not be submitted until after completion of the trip. Any out of pocket or T&E Card transactions should included on the same report, to provide a full accounting of the trip or event.

Please refer to the Quick Reference Guides for detailed Instructions on how to create a report from a request and how to attach company card transactions.

Create a Report from a Request QRG

Add University Card Transactions to an Expense Report QRG

The UC Travel Center (UCTC) will advise you if your ticket may qualify for a refund. Refunds are not guaranteed, and airlines may change their refund policy at any time without notification.

If your ticket may qualify for a refund, you will need to create a Request to cover the applicable airline and UCTC service fees.

Specific instructions for how to format a refund request are available here:

Create Request for a Ticket Refund QRG

The COVID-19 Response and Recovery Task Force has developed new UCLA protocols for planned gathering as we continue to acclimate back to in-person teaching, learning, living and working. These temporary protocols are effective Monday, October 4, 2021 and planned to be in place until Wednesday, December 1, 2021.

Meetings, Meals, and Events Generally, food at indoor events and meetings is not permitted, with exceptions for restaurants, dining halls and conference facilities that have other mitigations in place. Vaccination or recent negative test verification is necessary for all indoor and outdoor events. Please see the protocol document for specific details. Although we plan to have these protocols in place until Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021, UCLA will continue to monitor campus and area case levels, and make changes and adjustments as needed to support the continued safety of our UCLA community and others who attend our events.

UCLA Indoor/Outdoor Organized Event Temporary Protocols Recommendation (PDF)

Recent Articles

Reminder: travel & entertainment document retention policy, sb 447 rescinds state-funded travel prohibition, 2022-2023 fiscal close procedures for travel accounting, summer airline anticipated schedule changes, minor express system update.

10920 Wilshire Blvd., 5th Floor Los Angeles, CA 90024-6541 Mail Code: 143348 Phone: (310) 206-2639 or (800) 235-UCLA (8252)

CST# 2046415-70

Travel Services Directory

© 2024 Regents of the University of California

  • Accessibility
  • Report Misconduct
  • Privacy & Terms of Use

UCLA logo

Travel Study Financial Aid

Financial aid can be applied to cover program costs for UCLA Travel Study. In addition to completing the FAFSA, students must also complete a separate financial aid application that is specifically for their Travel Study program.

Information for UCLA Students

Continuing UCLA students who are eligible for aid during the academic year are generally eligible for summer aid. Aid packages generally include the program fee and estimated costs for airfare, textbooks and meals not included in the program fee. Grants are extremely limited in summer, so be prepared for a financial aid package that consists PRIMARILY of loans, including parent and private loans.

Helpful Resources

  • Here’s a step-by-step guide for UCLA Students (new version coming soon)
  • 2024 Travel Study Financial Aid Info Session PowerPoint presentation will be available in Winter Quarter
  • Travel Study Financial Aid Guide (new version coming soon)
  • General UCLA Summer Financial Aid Information

Applying for Financial Aid

In order to apply for financial aid, UCLA students must complete the following:

  • Confirm your application acceptance materials & pay the nonrefundable $300 deposit to secure your spot in your Travel Study program
  • Submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) by March 2, 2024. The application is available at https://studentaid.gov .
  • Submit the Travel Study Financial Aid Application on MyUCLA to the UCLA Financial Aid Office by March 22, 2024. NO APPLICATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER MARCH 22.
  • Students who have been accepted into their Travel Study program will receive a recording to view Financial Aid information in their student portal beginning in early February.  Virtual Financial Aid Q&A sessions will be hosted with the Office of Financial Aid to address additional questions you may have. The sessions dates will be communicated with applicants and posted on IEO Events Calendar  .
  • Graduate students may have additional requirements, including a letter from the Department confirming the Travel Study program is required for the degree.

**There are separate financial aid applications for Summer Sessions courses here on campus and for Travel Study programs. Be sure your application indicates it is for 2024 Travel Study Programs.

Waitlisted UCLA students must submit the online Travel Study Financial Aid Application on MyUCLA by the March 22 deadline. NO APPLICATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER MARCH 22. Waitlisted students are eligible to submit the financial aid application for summer courses on the UCLA campus while waitlisted for a Travel Study program.

Cancellations

Please note that ALL students applying for financial aid assume full responsibility for all program fees. In order to cancel once you have confirmed participation, please email your program coordinator and copy [email protected]. The $300 deposit is nonrefundable. Financial Aid students who cancel after April 5 will be assessed the full program fee without the possibility of financial aid . See Cancellation Policy .

UCLA Financial Aid and Scholarships Office

If you have Travel Study financial aid questions, please connect with the Financial Aid Office via Message Center . Select “UCLA Study Abroad” from the Topics drop-down to be connected with an advisor familiar with our programming.

UCLA International Education Office

Alejandra Hurtado

Operations Coordinator

[email protected]

Ph: (310) 206-3981

Esteban Puga

[email protected]

Ph: (310) 206-6760

Miranda Ramírez

[email protected]

Ph: (424) 259-5393

Please note, the UCLA Financial Aid Office and the IEO cannot predict your award package.

Information for Non-UCLA Students

Non-UCLA Students

Students should consult with their home institution about financial aid availability and deadlines. Other UC campuses typically allow students to utilize financial aid if eligible to be used toward UCLA study abroad program costs.  Each campus has it’s own process; please check in with your home campus study abroad office and financial aid to confirm the process and requirements.

Here’s a step-by-step guide for non-UCLA students (new version coming soon).

In order to apply for financial aid, non-UCLA students must complete the following:

  • Confirm your application acceptance materials & pay the nonrefundable $300 deposit to secure your spot in your Travel Study program;
  • Submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) by March 2, 2024. The application is available at https://studentaid.gov ;
  • Meet all of the requirements and deadlines set by the home campus financial aid office;
  • Submit a signed Non-UCLA Financial Aid Agreement form to our office by March 22, 2024. The form is available for download in your student portal after acceptance to a Travel Study program.

Please note that ALL students applying for financial aid assume full responsibility for all program fees. In order to cancel once you have confirmed participation, please email your program coordinator and copy  [email protected] .. The $300 deposit is nonrefundable. Financial Aid Students who cancel after April 5, 2024 will be assessed the full program fee. See Cancellation Policy .

Veteran Benefits

All students receiving Veteran Benefits (Cal-Vet College Fee Waiver, GI Bill® Waiver, etc.) must submit a Veteran Benefits Agreement Form by March 22, 2024. Agreement Forms are available in your Portal after program acceptance. UCLA students, please make sure to contact the Assistant Director for Veteran Benefits by email at [email protected] .  More detailed information can be found on our Veteran Benefits page .

Financial Aid Frequently Asked Questions

Logo, Humanities, Center for 17th- & 18th-Century Studies

Research Funding for UCLA Graduate Students

In addition to Graduate Fellowships and support provided to Center/Clark Working Groups , the Center for 17th- & 18th-Century Studies provides the following funding opportunities for UCLA graduate students.

Graduate Certificate in Early Modern Studies

The Center for 17th- & 18th Century Studies and the Department of Spanish & Portuguese offer Ph.D. students in the early stages of their coursework the opportunity to earn a certificate in early modern studies. Students accepted into the program are eligible to apply for a summer mentorship. Learn more.

Graduate Student Researchers

The Center offers financial support in the form of research assistantships to several UCLA graduate students every year. Research assistants participate in research projects of core faculty members and take part in Center and Clark activities. The stipend depends upon the student’s academic level and previous experience at UCLA. A “Call for Applications” is sent out in spring for the following academic year. Please send inquiries to Jeanette LaVere: [email protected] .

Trains Moscow to Elektrostal: Times, Prices and Tickets

  • Train Times
  • Seasonality
  • Accommodations

Moscow to Elektrostal by train

The journey from Moscow to Elektrostal by train is 32.44 mi and takes 2 hr 7 min. There are 71 connections per day, with the first departure at 12:15 AM and the last at 11:46 PM. It is possible to travel from Moscow to Elektrostal by train for as little as or as much as . The best price for this journey is .

Get from Moscow to Elektrostal with Virail

Virail's search tool will provide you with the options you need when you want to go from Moscow to Elektrostal. All you need to do is enter the dates of your planned journey, and let us take care of everything else. Our engine does the hard work, searching through thousands of routes offered by our trusted travel partners to show you options for traveling by train, bus, plane, or carpool. You can filter the results to suit your needs. There are a number of filtering options, including price, one-way or round trip, departure or arrival time, duration of journey, or number of connections. Soon you'll find the best choice for your journey. When you're ready, Virail will transfer you to the provider's website to complete the booking. No matter where you're going, get there with Virail.

How can I find the cheapest train tickets to get from Moscow to Elektrostal?

Prices will vary when you travel from Moscow to Elektrostal. On average, though, you'll pay about for a train ticket. You can find train tickets for prices as low as , but it may require some flexibility with your travel plans. If you're looking for a low price, you may need to prepare to spend more time in transit. You can also often find cheaper train tickets at particular times of day, or on certain days of the week. Of course, ticket prices often change during the year, too; expect to pay more in peak season. For the lowest prices, it's usually best to make your reservation in advance. Be careful, though, as many providers do not offer refunds or exchanges on their cheapest train tickets. Unfortunately, no price was found for your trip from Moscow to Elektrostal. Selecting a new departure or arrival city, without dramatically changing your itinerary could help you find price results. Prices will vary when you travel from Moscow to Elektrostal. On average, though, you'll pay about for a train ticket. If you're looking for a low price, you may need to prepare to spend more time in transit. You can also often find cheaper train tickets at particular times of day, or on certain days of the week. Of course, ticket prices often change during the year, too; expect to pay more in peak season. For the lowest prices, it's usually best to make your reservation in advance. Be careful, though, as many providers do not offer refunds or exchanges on their cheapest train tickets.

How long does it take to get from Moscow to Elektrostal by train?

The journey between Moscow and Elektrostal by train is approximately 32.44 mi. It will take you more or less 2 hr 7 min to complete this journey. This average figure does not take into account any delays that might arise on your route in exceptional circumstances. If you are planning to make a connection or operating on a tight schedule, give yourself plenty of time. The distance between Moscow and Elektrostal is around 32.44 mi. Depending on the exact route and provider you travel with, your journey time can vary. On average, this journey will take approximately 2 hr 7 min. However, the fastest routes between Moscow and Elektrostal take 1 hr 3 min. If a fast journey is a priority for you when traveling, look out for express services that may get you there faster. Some flexibility may be necessary when booking. Often, these services only leave at particular times of day - or even on certain days of the week. You may also find a faster journey by taking an indirect route and connecting in another station along the way.

How many journeys from Moscow to Elektrostal are there every day?

On average, there are 71 daily departures from Moscow to Elektrostal. However, there may be more or less on different days. Providers' timetables can change on certain days of the week or public holidays, and many also vary at particular times of year. Some providers change their schedules during the summer season, for example. At very busy times, there may be up to departures each day. The providers that travel along this route include , and each operates according to their own specific schedules. As a traveler, you may prefer a direct journey, or you may not mind making changes and connections. If you have heavy suitcases, a direct journey could be best; otherwise, you might be able to save money and enjoy more flexibility by making a change along the way. Every day, there are an average of 18 departures from Moscow which travel directly to Elektrostal. There are 53 journeys with one change or more. Unfortunately, no connection was found for your trip from Moscow to Elektrostal. Selecting a new departure or arrival city, without dramatically changing your itinerary could help you find connections.

Book in advance and save

If you're looking for the best deal for your trip from Moscow to Elektrostal, booking train tickets in advance is a great way to save money, but keep in mind that advance tickets are usually not available until 3 months before your travel date.

Stay flexible with your travel time and explore off-peak journeys

Planning your trips around off-peak travel times not only means that you'll be able to avoid the crowds, but can also end up saving you money. Being flexible with your schedule and considering alternative routes or times will significantly impact the amount of money you spend on getting from Moscow to Elektrostal.

Always check special offers

Checking on the latest deals can help save a lot of money, making it worth taking the time to browse and compare prices. So make sure you get the best deal on your ticket and take advantage of special fares for children, youth and seniors as well as discounts for groups.

Unlock the potential of slower trains or connecting trains

If you're planning a trip with some flexible time, why not opt for the scenic route? Taking slower trains or connecting trains that make more stops may save you money on your ticket – definitely worth considering if it fits in your schedule.

Best time to book cheap train tickets from Moscow to Elektrostal

The cheapest Moscow - Elektrostal train tickets can be found for as low as $35.01 if you’re lucky, or $54.00 on average. The most expensive ticket can cost as much as $77.49.

Find the best day to travel to Elektrostal by train

When travelling to Elektrostal by train, if you want to avoid crowds you can check how frequently our customers are travelling in the next 30-days using the graph below. On average, the peak hours to travel are between 6:30am and 9am in the morning, or between 4pm and 7pm in the evening. Please keep this in mind when travelling to your point of departure as you may need some extra time to arrive, particularly in big cities!

Moscow to Elektrostal CO2 Emissions by Train

Ecology

Anything we can improve?

Frequently Asked Questions

Go local from moscow, trending routes, weekend getaways from moscow, international routes from moscow and nearby areas, other destinations from moscow, other popular routes.

UCLA CMRS Center for Early Global Studies

Conference Travel Grants

The CMRS Center for Early Global Studies offers funding in the form of travel reimbursement for UCLA graduate students to attend conferences, symposia, or professional meetings, to present research or scholarly papers on any topic in the field of Medieval and Renaissance Studies.

Applications are accepted on a rolling basis. Please apply at least two weeks in advance of travel departure date. Send the following materials to Professor Zrinka Stahuljak (CMRS-CEGS Director) at zs@humnet.ucla.edu :

  • Letter of request describing the conference to be attended
  • Name of the paper or project that will be presented
  • Budget of travel expenses and/or registration fees for which reimbursement is requested (Mileage in excess of 250 miles cannot be reimbursed.)

The maximum funding is $1,000; only once per applicant per academic year.

View the list of CMRS-CEGS Conference Travel Grant recipients.

UCLA Department of Anthropology

Publications

Awards & grants.

ucla travel grants

Email : [email protected]

Curriculum Vitae

Papers: “The Ubiquitin-Specific Protease USP36 SUMOylates EXOSC10 and promotes the nucleolar RNA exosome function in rRNA processing” Fourth authorship. NAR 2023 Posters : “eQTL analysis of cold adaptation regulation in Peruvian Quechua populations” accepted for the 2024 American Association of Biological Anthropology 2024 •“TDP-43 protein dysregulation in regards to ALS” NIAMS Three Minute Talk Competition 2022 •“Developing Surface-CLIP”.NIH post-baccalaureate poster competition 2021

NSF-GRFP Fellow 2024 Genomic Analysis Training Program Fellow 2024 Departmental Honors in Anthropology 2020 Earned for completion of my Senior Honors Thesis “Exploratory Look at Effective Population Among the Unangax Using a Bayesian Skyline Model” at the University of Kansas. Advisor: Jennifer Raff Dennis R . and Nancy E. Dahl Award 2019 Carroll D. Clark Fund Award 2019 United States Army Medical Research and Materiel Command and Fort Detrick Volunteer Award for the National Museum of Health and Medicine 2018

B.A. Anthropology 2020, University of Kansas

white logo

Campus Resources

  • Maps, Directions, Parking
  • Academic Calendar
  • University of California
  • Terms of Use

Social Sciences Division Departments

  • Aerospace Studies
  • African American Studies
  • American Indian Studies
  • Anthropology
  • Archaeology
  • Asian American Studies
  • César E. Chávez Department of Chicana & Chicano Studies
  • Communication
  • Conservation
  • Gender Studies
  • Military Science
  • Naval Science
  • Political Science

UCLA Center for European and Russian Studies

  • Calls & Conferences
  • Dutch Studies

Underground History: Splendor and Misery of the Moscow Metro

A public lecture by GABOR RITTERSPORN, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris, Centre d'Etudes des Mondes Russe, Caucasien et Centre-Europeen

Duration: 43:53

The Moscow metro is a rare achievement of the Soviet regime continuing to receive virtually unanimous acclaim from post-Soviet citizens. Even those who decry it as a product of Stalinism recognize qualities of the subway's sumptuous architecture and decoration at least by taking it for spectacular kitsch.

The metro is expected to impress the world. It was intended to convey a clear message at the beginning. For fifty-five years the architecture and decoration had been meant to manifest a will to represent and celebrate the Soviet project, which was supposedly the construction of a radically new world of abundance, justice and happiness. The post-Soviet metro is also grappling with the task of representing values, those of the New Regime's architects.

One can make sense of Soviet and post-Soviet imageries of the best of possible worlds through interpreting the decoration of the underground and putting it in historical perspective. The exercise may reveal meanings contemporaries have been unlikely to grasp. It can also open eyes on trends historians are not necessarily aware of.

Please upgrade to a browser that supports HTML5 audio or install Flash.

Audio MP3

Published: Saturday, February 7, 2009

^ top of page ^

• Center for European and Russian Studies • 11367 Bunche Hall• Los Angeles• CA• 90095-1446 • Email: [email protected] • Campus Mail Code: 144603 • Tel: (310) 825-8030 • Fax: (310) 206-3555 •

© 2024 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Terms of Use / Privacy Policy

Claudia Looi

Touring the Top 10 Moscow Metro Stations

By Claudia Looi 2 Comments

Komsomolskaya metro station

Komsomolskaya metro station looks like a museum. It has vaulted ceilings and baroque decor.

Hidden underground, in the heart of Moscow, are historical and architectural treasures of Russia. These are Soviet-era creations – the metro stations of Moscow.

Our guide Maria introduced these elaborate metro stations as “the palaces for the people.” Built between 1937 and 1955, each station holds its own history and stories. Stalin had the idea of building beautiful underground spaces that the masses could enjoy. They would look like museums, art centers, concert halls, palaces and churches. Each would have a different theme. None would be alike.

The two-hour private tour was with a former Intourist tour guide named Maria. Maria lived in Moscow all her life and through the communist era of 60s to 90s. She has been a tour guide for more than 30 years. Being in her 60s, she moved rather quickly for her age. We traveled and crammed with Maria and other Muscovites on the metro to visit 10 different metro stations.

Arrow showing the direction of metro line 1 and 2

Arrow showing the direction of metro line 1 and 2

Moscow subways are very clean

Moscow subways are very clean

To Maria, every street, metro and building told a story. I couldn’t keep up with her stories. I don’t remember most of what she said because I was just thrilled being in Moscow.   Added to that, she spilled out so many Russian words and names, which to one who can’t read Cyrillic, sounded so foreign and could be easily forgotten.

The metro tour was the first part of our all day tour of Moscow with Maria. Here are the stations we visited:

1. Komsomolskaya Metro Station  is the most beautiful of them all. Painted yellow and decorated with chandeliers, gold leaves and semi precious stones, the station looks like a stately museum. And possibly decorated like a palace. I saw Komsomolskaya first, before the rest of the stations upon arrival in Moscow by train from St. Petersburg.

2. Revolution Square Metro Station (Ploshchad Revolyutsii) has marble arches and 72 bronze sculptures designed by Alexey Dushkin. The marble arches are flanked by the bronze sculptures. If you look closely you will see passersby touching the bronze dog's nose. Legend has it that good luck comes to those who touch the dog's nose.

Touch the dog's nose for good luck. At the Revolution Square station

Touch the dog's nose for good luck. At the Revolution Square station

Revolution Square Metro Station

Revolution Square Metro Station

3. Arbatskaya Metro Station served as a shelter during the Soviet-era. It is one of the largest and the deepest metro stations in Moscow.

Arbatskaya Metro Station

Arbatskaya Metro Station

4. Biblioteka Imeni Lenina Metro Station was built in 1935 and named after the Russian State Library. It is located near the library and has a big mosaic portrait of Lenin and yellow ceramic tiles on the track walls.

Biblioteka Imeni Lenina Metro Station

Lenin's portrait at the Biblioteka Imeni Lenina Metro Station

IMG_5767

5. Kievskaya Metro Station was one of the first to be completed in Moscow. Named after the capital city of Ukraine by Kiev-born, Nikita Khruschev, Stalin's successor.

IMG_5859

Kievskaya Metro Station

6. Novoslobodskaya Metro Station  was built in 1952. It has 32 stained glass murals with brass borders.

Screen Shot 2015-04-01 at 5.17.53 PM

Novoslobodskaya metro station

7. Kurskaya Metro Station was one of the first few to be built in Moscow in 1938. It has ceiling panels and artwork showing Soviet leadership, Soviet lifestyle and political power. It has a dome with patriotic slogans decorated with red stars representing the Soviet's World War II Hall of Fame. Kurskaya Metro Station is a must-visit station in Moscow.

ucla travel grants

Ceiling panel and artworks at Kurskaya Metro Station

IMG_5826

8. Mayakovskaya Metro Station built in 1938. It was named after Russian poet Vladmir Mayakovsky. This is one of the most beautiful metro stations in the world with 34 mosaics painted by Alexander Deyneka.

Mayakovskaya station

Mayakovskaya station

Mayakovskaya metro station

One of the over 30 ceiling mosaics in Mayakovskaya metro station

9. Belorusskaya Metro Station is named after the people of Belarus. In the picture below, there are statues of 3 members of the Partisan Resistance in Belarus during World War II. The statues were sculpted by Sergei Orlov, S. Rabinovich and I. Slonim.

IMG_5893

10. Teatralnaya Metro Station (Theatre Metro Station) is located near the Bolshoi Theatre.

Teatralnaya Metro Station decorated with porcelain figures .

Teatralnaya Metro Station decorated with porcelain figures .

Taking the metro's escalator at the end of the tour with Maria the tour guide.

Taking the metro's escalator at the end of the tour with Maria the tour guide.

Have you visited the Moscow Metro? Leave your comment below.

' src=

January 15, 2017 at 8:17 am

An excellent read! Thanks for much for sharing the Russian metro system with us. We're heading to Moscow in April and exploring the metro stations were on our list and after reading your post, I'm even more excited to go visit them. Thanks again 🙂

' src=

December 6, 2017 at 10:45 pm

Hi, do you remember which tour company you contacted for this tour?

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Please go to the Instagram Feed settings page to create a feed.

Thanks for starting your application to {{companyName}}.

To complete your application you must do one of the following:

Forward an email from your mobile device with your resume attached to {{fromEmail}}

Reply to this email from your laptop or desktop computer with your resume attached.

Thank you for your interest, The Recruiting Team

Reply to this email from your laptop or desktop computer with your cover letter attached.

In order to create an account with us and submit applications for positions with our company you must read the following Terms and Agreements and select to agree before registering.

In the event that you do not accept our Terms and Agreements you will not be able to submit applications for positions with our company.

You agree to the storage of all personal information, applications, attachments and draft applications within our system. Your personal and application data and any attached text or documentation are retained by Jibe Apply in accordance with our record retention policy and applicable laws.

You agree that all personal information, applications, attachments and draft applications created by you may be used by us for our recruitment purposes, including for automated job matching. It is specifically agreed that we will make use of all personal information, applications, attachments and draft applications for recruitment purposes only and will not make this information available to any third party unconnected with the our recruitment processes.

Your registration and access to our Careers Web Site indicates your acceptance of these Terms and Agreements.

Dear ${user.firstName},

Thanks for choosing to apply for a job with ${client.display.name}! Please verify ownership of your email address by clicking this link .

Alternatively, you can verify your account by pasting this URL into your browser: ${page.url}?id=${user.id}&ptoken=${user.token}

Please note that your job application will not be submitted to ${client.display.name} until you have successfully verified ownership of your email address.

The ${client.display.name} Recruiting Team

Nice to meet you. 👋

Lets quickly set up your profile

to start having tailored recommendations.

You agree to the storage of all personal information, applications, attachments and draft applications within our system. Your personal and application data and any attached text or documentation are retained by Sequoia Apply in accordance with our record retention policy and applicable laws.

This career site protects your privacy by adhering to the European Union General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). We will not use your data for any purpose to which you do not consent.

We store anonymized interaction data in an aggregated form about visitors and their experiences on our site using cookies and tracking mechanisms. We use this data to fix site defects and improve the general user experience.

We request use of your data for the following purposes:

Job Application Data

This site may collect sensitive personal information as a necessary part of a job application. The data is collected to support one or more job applications, or to match you to future job opportunities. This data is stored and retained for a default period of 12 months to support job matching or improve the user experience for additional job applications. The data for each application is transferred to the Applicant Tracking System in order to move the application through the hiring process. \nYou have the right to view, update, delete, export, or restrict further processing of your job application data. To exercise these rights, you can e-mail us at [email protected] . \nConversion Tracking \nWe store anonymized data on redirects to the career site that is used to measure the effectiveness of other vendors in sourcing job candidates.

Consent and Data Privacy

This application protects your privacy by adhering to the European Union General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Jibe will not use your data for any purpose to which you do not consent.\n

We request use of your data for the following purposes:\n \n User Authentication \n

\n This site retains personally identifiable information, specifically e-mail addresses, as a necessary part of user login. This data is retained for the duration of the user profile lifecycle and enables user authentication.\n

\n \n Usage Analytics \n

We store anonymized usage data to measure and improve the effectiveness of this CRM application in filling job requisitions and managing talent communities.\n

\n \n E-mails to Candidates \n

We collect your personal information such as name and email address. This information is used when you send marketing or contact emails to candidates.\n\n

Enter your email address to continue. You'll be asked to either log in or create a new account.

There was an error verifying your account. Please click here to return home and try again.

You are about to enter an assessment system which is proprietary software developed and produced by Kenexa Technology, Inc. The content in this questionnaire has been developed by Kenexa Technology, Inc., Kenexa’s Suppliers and/or Yum Restaurant Services Group, Inc.’s (“Company”) third party content providers and is protected by International Copyright Law. Under no condition may the content be copied, transmitted, reproduced or reconstructed, in whole or in part, in any form whatsoever, without express written consent by Kenexa Technology, Inc. or the applicable third party content provider. Under no circumstances will Kenexa Technology, Inc. be responsible for content created or provided by Company’s third party content providers.

IN NO EVENT SHALL KENEXA, AN IBM COMPANY, KENEXA’S SUPPLIERS OR THE COMPANY’S THIRD PARTY CONTENT PROVIDERS, BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMANGES WHATSOEVER INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF VOCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF, THE PERFORMANCE OF, OR THE INABILITY TO USE THIS KENEXA ASSESSMENT SYSTEM OR THE CONTENT, REGARDLESS OF WHETHER OR NOT THEY HAVE BEEN ADVISED ABOUT THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.

By clicking below, you are also confirming your identity for purposes of the questionnaire. You may not receive assistance, refer to any written material, or use a calculator (or similar device) while completing the questionnaire.

Unless otherwise directed by the Questionnaire Administrator, you are only authorized to take each requested questionnaire once. Failure to comply may result in disqualification. All Kenexa SelectorTM questionnaires are monitored.

A web browser is a piece of software on your computer. It lets you visit webpages and use web applications.

It's important to have the latest version of a browser. Newer browsers save you time, keep you safer, and let you do more online.

Try a different browser - all are free and easy to install. Visit whatbrowser.org for more information.

If you are using a later version of Internet Explorer, please make sure you are not in compatibility mode of an older version of the browser.

Welcome to the new UCLA Campus Job Opportunities website! Questions or have an application in process?

  • Create / Update Profile
  • Check My Application Status
  • Instructions
  • Applicant Assistance for Persons with Disabilities
  • Application Tips
  • Working at UCLA
  • UCLA Benefits
  • UC Benefits
  • UC Total Compensation Calculator
  • Explore Talent Communities
  • Join General UCLA Talent Community
  • Jobs at UCLA
  • Returning Applicant

Join the UCLA Talent Community

Joining the UCLA Talent Community is a great way to stay informed about potential job openings at UCLA. By registering, you'll be among the first to know when a position that fits your skills and experience becomes available. Plus, you may even be contacted by a UCLA recruiter to encourage you to apply!

Equal Opportunity Statement

UCLA is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer advancing inclusive excellence. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, protected veteran status, or other protected categories covered by the UC nondiscrimination policy. We are committed to attracting and retaining a diverse workforce along with honoring unique experiences, perspectives, and identities. Together, our community strives to create and maintain working and learning environments that are inclusive, equitable and welcoming.

UCLA Conditions of Employment

UCLA seeks to provide a safe and healthy environment for the entire UCLA community. As part of this commitment, all applicants who accept an offer of employment must comply our conditions of employment.

Reasonable Accommodations

UCLA provides reasonable accommodations for applicants with disabilities upon request by calling 310-794-0800 or email [email protected] .

Clery Act Notice

The "Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act" requires UCLA (as an institution of higher education receiving federal financial aid) to report specified crime statistics on college campuses and to provide other safety and crime information to all current and prospective students and employees. The Annual Security and Fire Safety Report is available on the UCLA Police Department website. If you would like a paper copy of the report, you may contact the Clery Coordinator via email at [email protected] or by phone at (310) 893-9147

Cookies are used on this site to assist in continually improving the candidate experience and all the interaction data we store of our visitors is anonymous. Learn more about your rights on our Privacy Policy page.

Montana farmers and ranchers eligible to apply for student loan assistance program

ucla travel grants

The Montana Department of Agriculture’s (MDA) announced Friday that it is now accepting applications for the Department's Student Loan Assistance Program .

This program was developed following the 2019 state legislative session and is intended to encourage and enable Montana’s college-educated youth to pursue a career in farming or ranching. Qualified farmers and ranchers could receive grants equal to 50% of their outstanding student loan debt. The Student Loan Assistance Program aims to reduce financial stress on farm and ranch operators while helping to preserve Montana’s agricultural future.

“When we can keep a family ranch in family hands, that is a success for Montana agriculture.," said MDA Director Christy Clark.

A successful grant applicant must:

  • be a Montana resident;
  • have obtained an associate or baccalaureate degree from an approved Montana college or university;
  • have an outstanding balance on an eligible student loan from obtaining their degree;
  • be the primary owner, heir, successor or assignee of a farm or ranch in Montana;
  • participate in the day-to-day operations of that farm or ranch;
  • agree to operate a farm or ranch in Montana for at least five years; and
  • be in a non-default status on a student loan

The Montana Agriculture and Development Council will review all completed applications to determine whether the candidate meets all the program's requirements. The Council will then rank the applications, giving priority to applicants who show the greatest financial need; are most likely to continue operating a farm or ranch; and who employ sustainable farming practices such as conservation enhancements.

The total amount of loan repayment assistance may not exceed 50% of the applicant's total student loan debt. The minimum outstanding loan amount is $10,000. Successful applicants may choose whether the council makes one annual payment or 12 monthly payments for each year of a qualified farmer or rancher’s eligibility.

Qualified farmers and ranchers are eligible for student loan repayment assistance for up to a maximum of five years. Successful applicants may choose whether to receive one annual payment or 12 monthly payments for each year of a farmer or rancher’s eligibility.

Applications are due June 3 and can be submitted through  WebGrants . Full program guidelines are available department’s website at  agr.mt.gov/Student-Loan-Assistance-Program . Click here  to apply.

For more information, please read the  Program Guidance , or contact Logan Kruse , (406) 444-3684 or Bailey Kaskie , (406) 444-0134 at the Montana Department of Agriculture,

COMMENTS

  1. UCLA Doctoral Student Travel Grants for Conferences, Professional

    The purpose of the Doctoral Travel Grant (DTG) is to encourage eligible UCLA doctoral students to present their work and network at conferences in their field, to support travel associated with off-campus research and to enable students to take advantage of off-campus professional development opportunities

  2. Conference Travel Grants

    For travel occurring July 1, 2024 - June 30, 2025, please apply for the 2024-25 conference travel grant cycle. Applications for 2024-25 conference travel will open June 3, 2024. Guide: My Travel Grant History in DMS; For additional funding opportunities, please refer to the ORCA website. Contact: [email protected]

  3. Travel Grants

    Travel Grant applications are closed for the 2023-2024 academic year. Travel Grant applications for the 2024-2025 academic year will open after July 1. Please note: Due to university fiscal close protocols, the Undergraduate Research Center is unable to process Travel Grants submitted between June 1 and June 30. UNDERGRADUATE CONFERENCES

  4. Undergraduate Research Center—Sciences

    The URC-Sciences Travel Grant supports UCLA undergraduates who have had their life science, physical science, or engineering research abstract accepted for an oral or poster presentation at a regional, national, or international conference. ... (CUR) is offering a limited number of travel grants, up to $250 each, for undergraduate students ...

  5. Funding for Entering Students

    For applicants and entering students, student financial support funds at UCLA are provided to graduate students in the form of grants, awards, traineeships, teaching assistantships and graduate student researcher appointments. Support based solely on need is also provided, in the form of work-study and loans, through the Financial Aid ...

  6. Travel Grants

    Description. Funded through donations from friends and supporters of CSW|Streisand Center, travel grants assist UCLA graduate and undergraduate students with travel expenses related to academic or professional conference presentations and field research on women, gender, and sexuality. CSW|Streisand Center has updated our travel grant structure!

  7. Graduate Student Travel Funding

    Conference and research travel falls under the scope of the UCLA Graduate Division Doctoral Student Travel Grants, through which every UCLA PhD student is allotted $1,000 throughout your career. ... Please note that UCLA will not reimburse travel packages (i.e., package deals of airfare and hotel, airfare and car, etc.). You must purchase these ...

  8. Conference Travel Funding • UCLA Department of Psychology

    Complete the Conference Travel Grant Application Part A (see link below) to indicate conferences you plan to attend during the period July 1, 2023 to June 23, 2024. Submit Part A to Sara Jimenez at [email protected] . by October 31, 202 3. Note: if your plans change after October 31, you may still use the department grant funds but will ...

  9. PDF Graduate Student Travel Policies and Procedures

    UCLA Department of Philosophy Graduate Student Travel Reimbursement Policies and Procedures. Step 1. Request reimbursement from Graduate Division's Doctoral Travel Grant (DTG) 1a. Check your Doctoral Travel Grant (DTG) balance by inquiring with Doug Myers. Each student is provided with $1,000 in DTG funding for their doctoral career at UCLA.

  10. Conference Travel Grants

    • CNES travel grants may only be used to cover costs including airfare, conference registration fees, accommodation/hotel costs, and ground transportation costs, and meals (up to university approved limits). ... CNES Assistant Director, at [email protected]. Published: Monday, December 6, 2021. UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies ...

  11. UCLA Study Abroad

    UCLA Travel Study Scholarship - Provides funding for UCLA students enrolled in any Travel Study Program who is willing to help promote the program through content creation and participation in promotional events. The scholarship covers 50% of program fees. ... Campus France - Scholarships, grants and fellowships for study abroad in France ...

  12. Research and Study Travel Grants

    Please apply at least two months in advance of travel departure date and send the following materials to Professor Zrinka Stahuljak (CMRS-CEGS Director) at [email protected]: The maximum funding is $2500 and students may submit only one CMRS-CEG travel grant request per two academic years. Once available funding for the fiscal year has been ...

  13. Travel Grant Program

    Grants are offered for up to $3,000 (including airfare) per individual and are provided on a cost-reimbursement basis. After travel, reimbursement requests should be sent to GHP at [email protected] and Vijeta Vaswani, GHP Program Coordinator at [email protected]. GHP and UCLA International Health Services will award up to 10 travel ...

  14. Israel Studies Travel Grants

    Travel grants of up to $1,500 are available to UCLA postdoctoral fellows, graduate students and undergraduate students for: (1) presentation of conference papers focused on Israel Studies or (2) Israel-related projects that require limited, site-specific research (e.g., archival research). Grant funds may be used to cover airfare, accommodation ...

  15. Home

    Name updates can take up to 72 hours to show in Concur. If you need to book a flight before your Concur profile has been updated DO NOT BOOK ONLINE, call the UC Travel Center at (310) 206-2639 or email [email protected].

  16. UCLA Study Abroad

    If you have Travel Study financial aid questions, please connect with the Financial Aid Office via Message Center. Select "UCLA Study Abroad" from the Topics drop-down to be connected with an advisor familiar with our programming. UCLA International Education Office. Alejandra Hurtado. Operations Coordinator. [email protected]. Ph: (310 ...

  17. CERS Conference Travel Grants

    CERS awards travel grants to UCLA graduate students who will be presenting conference papers with a European or Russian focus. Students are eligible to receive up to $1,000 in travel funds over the course of two academic years, and may apply for funding if their departmental sources have already been exhausted.Conference paper abstracts must demonstrate how the applicant's project will advance ...

  18. Research Funding for UCLA Graduate Students

    Graduate Student Travel Grants. Graduate students at UCLA may apply to the Center for travel support for participation in professional conferences related to seventeenth- and eighteenth-century studies and Oscar Wilde. Grants are offered for up to $500 for domestic travel and up to $1,000 for international travel.

  19. UCLA transit pass programs improved accessibility and reduced emissions

    Nearly 28,000 UCLA-issued transit passes were distributed — an all-time high for UCLA Transportation, whose annual report reviews travel trends, mobility developments and the commuting habits of the nearly 86,000 students, faculty, staff and others who travel to campus to learn, work, conduct research and visit. ... Bruin U-Pass grants ...

  20. Medical School

    Medical school training grants help produce world-renowned physician-scientists, scientific discovery, and research that informs medical thought leaders.

  21. Forms I Changes to NIH NRSA Institutional Training Grants

    The NIH is issuing updates through SF242 Forms I, which has numerous implications for NRSA Training Grants planning to submit on or after January 25th, 2025.Additional details and guidance will be released later this year, but a summary of major changes, including for Data Tables, are included below:

  22. Trains Moscow to Elektrostal: Times, Prices and Tickets

    The journey from Moscow to Elektrostal by train is 32.44 mi and takes 2 hr 7 min. There are 71 connections per day, with the first departure at 12:15 AM and the last at 11:46 PM. It is possible to travel from Moscow to Elektrostal by train for as little as or as much as . The best price for this journey is . Journey Duration.

  23. Conference Travel Grants

    Conference Travel Grants. The CMRS Center for Early Global Studies offers funding in the form of travel reimbursement for UCLA graduate students to attend conferences, symposia, or professional meetings, to present research or scholarly papers on any topic in the field of Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Applications are accepted on a rolling ...

  24. Emma Young

    Awards & Grants. NSF-GRFP Fellow 2024 Genomic Analysis Training Program Fellow 2024 Departmental Honors in Anthropology 2020 Earned for completion of my Senior Honors Thesis "Exploratory Look at Effective Population Among the Unangax Using a Bayesian Skyline Model" at the University of Kansas. Advisor: Jennifer Raff Dennis R. and Nancy E ...

  25. Underground History: Splendor and Misery of the Moscow Metro

    The Moscow metro is a rare achievement of the Soviet regime continuing to receive virtually unanimous acclaim from post-Soviet citizens. Even those who decry it as a product of Stalinism recognize qualities of the subway's sumptuous architecture and decoration at least by taking it for spectacular kitsch.

  26. Touring the Top 10 Moscow Metro Stations

    6. Novoslobodskaya Metro Station was built in 1952. It has 32 stained glass murals with brass borders. Novoslobodskaya metro station. 7. Kurskaya Metro Station was one of the first few to be built in Moscow in 1938. It has ceiling panels and artwork showing Soviet leadership, Soviet lifestyle and political power.

  27. Senior Financial Analyst (Contract) in Los Angeles, California

    The Annual Security and Fire Safety Report is available on the UCLA Police Department website. If you would like a paper copy of the report, you may contact the Clery Coordinator via email at [email protected] or by phone at (310) 893-9147

  28. Grant's Take: The Travel Bug Is Keeping the U.S. Economy Strong

    The U.S. economy keeps humming along, and strong travel demand is a key reason why. First-quarter GDP will be revealed Thursday and economists expect that the U.S. grew at a 2.4% annual rate.

  29. Elektrostal to Moscow

    Drive • 1h 3m. Drive from Elektrostal to Moscow 58.6 km. RUB 450 - RUB 700. Quickest way to get there Cheapest option Distance between.

  30. Montana farmers, ranchers eligible for grants to repay student loans

    The Montana Department of Agriculture's (MDA) announced Friday that it is now accepting applications for the Department's Student Loan Assistance Program.. This program was developed following ...