The DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) is once again offering in-country/in-region scholarships for postgraduate studies in Eastern Africa. Successful Master and Ph.D. candidates will receive financial support to pursue their degrees
Applicants
• have successfully completed generally a three-year university degree (Master candidates) or a two-year university degree (doctoral candidates) with above average results (upper forth of class)
• clearly show motivation and strong commitment
• have thorough knowledge of the language of instruction
• have completed their last university degree not more than 6 years ago at the time of application
• must be nationals or permanent resident of Sub-Sahara Africa
• should generally be a) staff member of a public university, b) candidate considered for teaching or research staff recruitment, c) from the public sector d) DAFI-Alumni (Albert Einstein German Academic Refugee Initiative)
Female applicants and candidates from less privileged regions or groups are especially encouraged to participate in the programme.
The scholarships are initially granted for one year and can be extended to upon receipt of an application for extension. Scholars must demonstrate satisfactory progress before an extension is granted. All further information will be provided after admission to the scholarship programme.
Eligible Fields:
The In-Country/In-Region Scholarship Programme supports studies in subject areas with strong relevance to national development.
The scholarships at Ethiopian Institute of Architecture Building Construction & City Development are available in the following fields:
• Land Administration and Development
• Architectural Design
The duration
• of the PhD programme is generally three years
• of the Master programme is generally two years
generally starting in September 2018
Documents to be submitted:
- Hand signed curriculum vitae (please use the european specimen form at http://europass.cedefop. Europa.eu), including a list of publications (if applicable). - Recommendation letter by university teachers (Master 1 letter, PhD 2 Letters)
- Letter of admission for the host university / institution / network
- Certified copies of university degree certificates including transcripts / Student copy / Grade sheet
- Letter of motivation (if applicable: mentioning the planned research stay in Germany, see “Additional benefits”)
- Copy of the passport
PhD candidates have to submit the following additional documents:
- Declaration of acceptance from the academic supervisor from EiABC
- Detailed and precise PhD proposal, including detailed work and time table (if applicable: mentioning the planned research stay in Germany, see “Additional benefits”)
- Abstract of the proposal on one page (please include name and title of proposal
Additional Benefits:
DAAD In-Country/In-Region scholarship holders are also encouraged to apply for a research grant in Germany for 2 up to 6 months, if the necessary financial means are available.
The short-term research scholarship includes:
• a monthly scholarship payment for living costs which amounts to 1.000 € per month
• health/accident/personal liability insurance
• a flat-rate travel allowance All further details regarding additional benefits and the additional application processes will be provided after admission to the scholarship programme.
Closing date for the submission of DAAD scholarship applications is 25th February 2018
Submit documents to
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and put in copy This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Email Subject: DAAD Application 2018/2019 - Name
for example- DAAD Application 2018/2019 - Nebiyu Sultan
1st Ethiopian Landscape Forum together with IFLA, the International Federation of Landscape Architecture, on 15th and 16th December, 2016
The making of Ethiopian Landscapes
Thefirst quarter of the twenty-first century is threatened by three global phenomena namely the high rate of urbanization, erratic climatic anomalies and terror driven by human migration. The positive and negative impacts of their these phenomena are continually etched on global landscapes. Landscape is a spatial entity that evolved over a period of time as a result of natural and cultural processes interaction. Natural processes refer to a bio-geomorphic system, while cultural processes are the sum total of human systems grafted on the environment for economic, social, recreational, transportation, military, religious and agricultural purposes. These usages create diverse landscape features, which in turn are responsible for diverse human adaptations for survival in a bioregion. Dynamic developmental economic survival has in recent years become the destructive stripping of natural landscapes of their originality and distorting precious cultural landscapes. This is being compounded by climate change phenomenon,urbanization and environmental injustice. Global players look in the direction of UNESCOInternational Landscape Convention; United Nations Habitat III; and Conference of Parties (COP) for solutions. The later, ‘COP’, stands for 196 signatories of United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
Ethiopia is conscious of its urban and rural landscapes and was one of the first countries to submit its Intended Nationally Determined Contribution to the UNFCCC with interests on eveloping a green economy and meeting food security within its rapidly growing urbancentres. Though Ethiopia’s 16% urbanization seems low compared with other global south nations, the worry is what will influence our urban morphology, especially the desired public realm, green, grey and blue infrastructures? The October 1st UN Habitat III gathering in Quito, Ecuador was about an urban paradigm shift reflecting on the ‘cities we need’, This paradigm shift sees landscape as a human construct showing dialogue that occurs between human and ecological processes, as expressed in the UN 2015 Sustainable Development Goals. Our national landscape of today evolved from the decisions made in yesteryears. The decision for tomorrow’s landscapes is being made now.What type of Ethiopian urban, social, rural, academic, touristic, agricultural, forest, riverlandscapes do we want tomorrow? What intellectual capacity building do we give to Ethiopian youths that will develop, manage, and preserve these landscapes? Your opinion matters. Please join us to dream about identity conscious Ethiopian landscapes for the next generation.
Contact
Chair of Landscape Architecture
Aziza Abdulfetah, e: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or
Kelly Leviker, e: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Calls: Landscape Architecture in Africa Exhibition (Professional Category)
Landscape Architecture in Africa will be a multi-media exhibition of landscape architecture works from across the continent. Works that exhibit a public impact, increase resilience and demonstrate a multidisciplinary effort are especially encouraged to participate. The works should demonstrate the potential of landscape architecture in solving pressing issues, especially within the African context.
Aim: to raise awareness of the profession and its potential amongst government officials and the public as well as for landscape architect professionals to gain a broader understanding of the professional works happening across the continent.
Submission Format: Format submission is partially open. Semi-interactive formats, such as pamphlets, videos, photo albums, innovative materials used, amongst others, are encouraged, as to engage a wider audience. Panels should be A1 Portrait. There should be either 3 or 6 panels.
Each submission should include who were the designers, city and country of the project, and a 250 maximum written description of the project.
Submission Deadline:midnight, December 9, 2016
Exhibition Output: a book, Crafting African Landscapes
Calls:Landscape Architecture in Africa Exhibition (Student Category)
Landscape Architecture in Africa will be a multi-media exhibition of landscape architecture
works from across the continent. Works that exhibit a public impact, increase resilience and demonstrate a multidisciplinary effort are especially encouraged to participate. The works should demonstrate the potential of landscape architecture in solving pressing issues,especially within the African context.
Submission Format: Format submission is partially open. Semi-interactive formats, such as pamphlets, videos, photo albums, innovative materials used, etc.,are encouraged as to engage a wider audience. Panels should be A1 Portrait. There should be either 3 or 6 panels.
Each submission should include who were the designers, city and country of the project, and a 250 maximum written description of the project.
Submission Deadline:midnight, December 9, 2016
Exhibition Output: a book, Crafting African Landscapes
Hosting Institution
EiABC, (Ethiopian Institute of Architecture, Building Construction and City Development),with its former name Building College, was established in 1954 by Emperor Haile Selassie.Currently, the institute has 3,200 registered students. The total number of staff is around 430, of which 200 are academic staff, and 230 are administrative and service staff.EiABC is an autonomous Institute of Technology under Addis Ababa University, offering programs related to the built environment at the Bachelor, Master and PhD level. EiABC has become a leader in excellent education, applied research as well as in offering consultancy services to the industry and it, therefore, benefits to society as a whole. It offers its students, faculty, and researchers an inspiring environment and its doors
are open for all partners in the academic and applied fields of the building industry.EiABC has more than 3,000 students and offers academic opportunities with various Bachelor, Master and PhD programs. It gained a reputation as the leading Institute of Technology in the field of the built environment in East Africa and it is continuing to offer new chances, study opportunities, and research possibilities to all its students, faculty, and national as well as international partners.
Master of Landscape Architecture
The Chair of Landscape Architecture was formed in 2014, when it branched out from the Chair of Environmental Planning. For its first year, it focused on aspects of landscape architecture within the Master of Environmental Planning and Landscape Design and individual landscape architecture classes within the undergraduate architecture program.
In September 2015, we launched the Master of Landscape Architecture. It is a two-year program and is the first program dedicated fully to the profession of landscape architecture within Ethiopia as well as within the Horn of Africa. As the program and profession establishes itself, the program will have a particularly practical nature, as the program is also about how to establish a profession. Once, the profession and program are more established, the program will acquire a more theoretical nature.
Besides teaching, the other objectives of the Chair are to complete research and to serve within and create community outreach programs. This semester our Chair is involved with two community outreach programs. The first program is being completed together with an organization called Out of the Box. Our students together with this organization and students from other chairs are designing and building a playground within a condominium development which previously was designed without a space to accommodate children.The second project which serves as both a research and community outreach project was the design and on-going research of a roof garden and suitable roof garden plants for the Horn of Africa Regional Environment Centre and Network headquarters building.
Addis Ababa
The relatively new capital of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, was first established in 1886 by King Menelik and Queen ‘Taitu. The discovery of fast-growing Eucalyptus trees, bahir zef,allowed for an adequate supplies of firewood and enabled a transition from a nation with roaming capitals to a settled capital. Addis Ababa, new flower, is the only African capital that was not colonized and, thus, the only African capital with an indigenous settlement pattern.
Now, it is known as not only the capital city of Ethiopia, but the diplomatic capital of Africa, with the headquarters of the African Union, United National Economic Commission as well as the regional (African) office of the United Nations Development Programme. It is the fourth highest capital city in the world with elevations ranging from 2136 to 3197 meters as well as the fourth largest city in Africa. Despite being a capital city, the city is known for being relatively safe. It is the stage upon which a fast-paced modernization process is being enacted. The built form of the city consists of a stark contrast between sky scrapers competing for height and traditional neighborhoods. There are no multinational companies that dot the landscape and just by arriving on Ethiopian soil you will be seven years younger! Ethiopian uses its own calendar, similar to the Julian or Coptic calendar, which is seven–eight years behind the Gregorian calendar and includes 13 months. From this, Ethiopia is sometimes captioned as a country with ’13 months of Sunshine’.
Sites to see in Addis Ababa: The Ethnological Museum (within the former palace of Emperor Haile Selassie), National Museum (with Lucy), St. George Cathedral, ‘Red Terror’ Martyrs museum, Merkato (largest outdoor market in Africa), Holy Trinity Cathedral, Addis Ababa museum, Entoto mountains, traditional ‘azmari betoch’ (establishments hosting traditional singing, mixed with poetry, and dancing).
Ethiopia
Ethiopia is known as the water tower of Africa, as it hosts fourteen rivers that descend from its mountainous terrain. One of theses rivers is one of the two sources of the Nile. Besides some of the highest elevations in Africa, there is the Danakil Depression, which is one of the lowest points on earth at 125 meters below sea level. Within the Danakil Depression is Erta Ale, which is one world’s oldest active lava lakes. This is in the Afar triangle, where the East-African Rift Valley begins, which will one day separate Africa into two. The Rift Valley runs from the Red Sea through the middle of Ethiopia down into Mozambique.
Nikoli Vavilov named Ethiopia as a biodiversity hotspot as well as the centre of origin for many cultivated, cereal crops, during his visits to the country in 1927. Ethiopia helped him to develop his theory the plants were domesticated not at random, but there were centres of domestication. There are now around 6,000 known species within the country, of which 10–12% are endemic.
Ethiopia is home to one of the oldest known humans ‘Lucy’, Australopithecus afarensis,named after where she was found, Afar. It is the oldest independent country in Africa and it also was one of the first nations to accept Christianity as a state religion. In addition, the then kingdom of Aksum accepted some of the first followers of the Prophet Mohammed, thus some of the first Muslims, who were being persecuted in Mecca. The country has a long history of religious tolerance and co-mingling. There are nine UNESCO-listed world heritage sites (Lalibela, Negash village, Semien Mountains, Harar, Aksum, Fasil Ghebbi in Gondar, the cultural landscapes in Konso, Awash lower valley, and Tiya) in Ethiopia. There are over 80 ethnic groups within the country and it is one of the least urbanized countries in the world. In 2015, Ethiopia was awarded as the best tourist destination by the European Council on Tourism and Trade.
Places to see in Ethiopia: Simien Mountains, Lake Tana, Blue Niles Falls, Harar, Omo National Park, Aksum (supposedly the location of the Ark of the Covenant), coffee forests,Lalibela, Danakil Depression, amongst many others.
1st ETHIOPIAN LANDSCAPE FORUM, 15th and 16th December, 2016
On 15th and 16th December, 2016, the Ethiopian Institute of Architecture, Building
Construction and City Development (EiABC) by the initiative of the Chair of Landscape Architecture will host the 1st Ethiopian Landscape Forum together with IFLA, the International Federation of Landscape Architecture. Landscape architecture is a design field which deals with the spaces between building and roads and aims to build a holistic relationship between ecosystems and the built environment.
Thefirst quarter of the twenty-first century is threatened by three global phenomena namely the high rate of urbanization, erratic climatic anomalies and terror driven by human migration. The positive and negative impacts of their these phenomena are continually etched on global landscapes. Landscape is a spatial entity that evolved over a period of time as a result of natural and cultural processes interaction. Natural processes refer to a bio-geomorphic system, while cultural processes are the sum total of human systems grafted on the environment for economic, social, recreational, transportation, military, religious and agricultural purposes. These usages create diverse landscape features, which in turn are responsible for diverse human adaptations for survival in a bioregion. Dynamic developmental economic survival has in recent years become the destructive stripping of natural landscapes of their originality and distorting precious cultural landscapes. This is being compounded by climate change phenomenon, urbanization and environmental injustice. Global players look in the direction of UNESCO International Landscape Convention; United Nations Habitat III; and Conference of Parties (COP) for solutions. The later, ‘COP’, stands for 196 signatories of United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
Ethiopia is conscious of its urban and rural landscapes and was one of the first countries to submit its Intended Nationally Determined Contribution to the UNFCCC with interests on developing a green economy and meeting food security within its rapidly growing urban centres. Though Ethiopia’s 16% urbanization seems low compared with other global south nations, the worry is what will influence our urban morphology, especially the desired public realm, green, grey and blue infrastructures? The October 1st UN Habitat III gathering in Quito, Ecuador was about an urban paradigm shift reflecting on the ‘cities we need’, This paradigm shift sees landscape as a human construct showing dialogue that occurs between human and ecological processes, as expressed in the UN 2015 Sustainable Development Goals. Our national landscape of today evolved from the decisions made in yesteryears. The decision for tomorrow’s landscapes is being made now. What type of Ethiopian urban, social, rural, academic, touristic, agricultural, forest, river landscapes do we want tomorrow? What intellectual capacity building do we give to Ethiopian youths that will develop, manage, and preserve these landscapes? Your opinion matters. Please join us to dream about identity conscious Ethiopian landscapes for the next generation.
EvenInfo->http://eiabc.edu.et/index.php/ifla-conference
click Here to download IFLA Schedule.
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