Japan and World Bank Graduate Scholarships Program
The JJWBGSP scholarship is available to nationals of specific developing nations who are submitting applications to master’s degree programs in development-related fields and who have relevant professional expertise and a history of aiding their nations’ development efforts.
Depending on financing, JJWBGSP grants scholarships for 45 Participating Master’s Programs at 27 universities in the United States, Europe, Africa, Oceania, and Japan in important development fields such infrastructure management, economic policy management, and tax policy.
Please be aware that you cannot apply for a JJWBGSP Scholarship in 2023 if you are not accepted into one of these 45 Participating Master’s Programs.
The subsequent application procedure will be split into two waves in order to fit the JJWBGSP Participating Programs’ academic schedules:
After receiving their degrees, developing country scholars pledge to go back home and use their newly acquired knowledge to aid in the social and economic development of their own nations.
The benefits of a JJWBGSP scholarship include tuition, a monthly living allowance, round-trip travel expenses, health insurance, and travel reimbursement. View a whole list of advantages.
Who is Eligible to Apply for JJWBGSP Scholarship?
The Application Guidelines for each call for applications provide information on the eligibility requirements in full, and these requirements are scrupulously complied with. Nothing is exempted. In general, nationals of Developing Countries are required to:
- be a citizen of one of the developing nations on this list that is a World Bank member;
- not possess dual citizenship with any advanced nation;
- remain healthy;
- possess a Bachelor’s (or comparable) degree that was acquired at least three years before the application deadline;
- possess a Bachelor’s (or equivalent) degree and three years or more of recent job experience in the development sector;
- be working in a paid, full-time position doing development-related work at the time you submit your scholarship application. possess a Bachelor’s degree (or an equivalent university degree) that you earned no more than 3 years ago and that you obtained no more than 6 years prior to the application deadline. For information on how to calculate eligible part-time employment toward this three-year requirement, please read FAQs—Window 1. For a suggested list of development-related subjects, please read Annex 2 of the Application Guidelines. Only individuals from developing nations who are citizens of a nation on the list of fragile and conflict-ridden states found in Annex 3 of the Application Guidelines are exempt from this requirement.In these rare circumstances, we do take into account the comparatively few employment options in the nations specified in Annex 3.
- Being accepted unconditionally (aside from funding) to at least one of the JJ/WBGSP participating master’s programs outside of the applicant’s country of citizenship and country of residence listed when the call for scholarship applications opens on or before the scholarship application deadline date. Before submitting your application, you must upload the letter of admission. See “How to Apply” for more information.
- The term “close relative” is defined as: Mother, Father, Sister, Half-Sister, Brother, Half-Brother, Son, Daughter, Aunt, Uncle, Niece, or Nephew. You also cannot be an Executive Director, his/her alternate, or staff of any type of appointment of the World Bank Group.
- People who previously got a JJWBGSP scholarship but did not graduate or who previously obtained a scholarship but declined it are ineligible to apply.
Please be aware that all qualifying requirements are rigorously followed. Nothing is exempted. During an open call for applications, eligibility requirements WILL NOT change. However, between the end of one application procedure and the start of the next, this information is liable to alter.
Selection Method of JJWBGSP Scholarship:
The JJ/WBGSP employs the following procedure to evaluate qualifying scholarship applications from citizens of poor countries with the goal of selecting the applicants with the greatest potential to have an impact on their countries’ development after completing their graduate studies. Each eligible application is evaluated independently by two competent assessors, who then rate each application on a scale of 1 to 10, taking into account four key elements and the degree of interdependence between them:
- Professional Experience Quality (30% weight)
- Professional Recommendation Quality (Weight: 30%)
- Quality of Your Home Country Commitment (30% weight)
- Background education level quality (10% weight)
The JJ/WBGSP Secretariat chooses the finalists based on the following criteria and the average score of the two assessors:
- keeping the regional distribution of awards fairly diverse
- preserving a fair distribution of rewards by gender
- when evaluating the employment experience and other parts of an application, unusual situations or challenges;
- Awardsing bursaries to candidates who, other things being equal, have little access to funding for international graduate studies.
Benefits of a scholarship
The JJ/WBGSP scholarship offers the following advantages to the recipient:
- At the beginning of your study program and shortly following the conclusion of the scholarship period, economy class air travel from your home country to the host university is included. Scholars will also get two round-trip flights as well as a $500 US travel reimbursement for each journey;
- Your graduate program’s tuition and the price of your university-provided basic health insurance.
- A monthly subsistence grant to cover all living costs (housing, food, etc., including books) while on campus throughout the scholarship period. Depending on the host nation, the allowance varies in size.
Please be aware that all JJ/WBGSP scholarships only cover the first two years of the graduate program.
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What is not included in the JJ/WBGSP scholarship
- Application fees for visas
- costs associated with supporting and/or bringing a scholar’s family;
- extracurricular training or courses;
- courses that don’t have enough credits to qualify for a graduate degree;
- The graduate program does not provide language instruction;
- more journeys made while pursuing the study program;
- research costs; costs for extracurricular activities, field trips, workshops or seminars; or costs for educational technology, such as computers.
- Permit charge for residents
Application Window #2: March 27 to May 26
London School of Economics
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MSc Development Studies
MSc Global Health Policy
MSc International Social and Public Policy
National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS)
Tax Course of the Public Finance Program
Saitama University
International Graduate Program on Civil and Environmental Engineering
SOAS University of London
MSc International Finance and Development
Stanford University
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Université Clermont-Auvergne – FERDI
Master in Economic Policy Management
University of Leeds
Master of Public Health (International)
University of Oxford
Blavatnik School of Government: Master of Public Policy
Department of International Development: MSc in Refugees and Forced Migration Studies
University of Sussex
MA Environment, Development and Policy
MA Food and Development
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MA Migration and Global Development