All Disciplines
Serbia
Number of recipients
In addition to being a prestigious academic exchange program, the Fulbright Program is designed to expand and strengthen relationships between the people of the United States and citizens of other nations and to promote international understanding and cooperation. To support this mission, Fulbright Scholars may be asked to give public talks, mentor students, and otherwise engage with the host community, in addition to their primary activities.
Applicants can apply for research only grants, teaching only grants, or research/teaching combined grants.
For teaching grants, applicants will be asked to teach elective undergraduate or graduate courses in area of specialization; advise graduate students and consult on curriculum development. For combined teaching and research grants, there is no preference as to how your time is split between these activities.
Grantees will have the opportunity to pursue their own research interests.
Scholars selected for this grant will be required to attend a mandatory Pre-Departure Orientation in Summer 2025.
Scholars should affiliate with one of the public institutions listed below:
Three months to nine months. For Flex grants, see Flex Option section.
One semester grants must begin in either October 2025 or February 2026; two semester grants must begin in October 2025. Flex grants must be completed by September 30, 2027 but can begin as early as October 2025.
Flex awards are offered for teaching, teaching/research and research grants.
The Flex Award is designed for scholars who require multiple visits to the host country. This option allows grants to be conducted over two or three short segments. Applicants must select Flex in the application form, and clearly describe their plans for Flex in their project statement, including a project timeline. Flex grantees may be asked to give public talks, mentor students, and otherwise engage with the host-country academic community.
Scholars selected for this grant will be required to attend a mandatory Pre-Departure Orientation in Summer 2025.
All applicants must meet the Program eligibility requirements (click to review the requirements).
For more information on potential host institutions, please contact:
Ms. Branka Janda-Markovic, Head of International Relations Office, University of Belgrade at branka.janda.markovic@rect.bg.ac.rs.
Ms. Olivera Mijatovic, International Relations Officer, University of Kragujevac at olivera.mijatovic@kg.ac.rs
Ms. Vesna Lopicic, Vice Rector for International Cooperation, University of Nis at vesna.lopicic@ni.ac.rs
Ms. Ivana Vujkov, International Relations Officer, University of Novi Sad at ivana.vujkov@uns.ac.rs
Ms. Jasmina Milovanovic, International Relations Officer, University of Arts in Belgrade at jasmina.milovanovic@arts.bg.ac.rs
Vukica Stankovic, Public Engagement Specialist, U.S. Embassy in Belgrade via email at BelgradeFulbright@state.gov
All teaching will be in English. Host institutions will provide interpreters, as necessary.
For research, language proficiency sufficient to complete the proposed project is required. For applicants without local language proficiency, feasibility of conducting the project must be demonstrated in the project statement.
Applicants with a Ph.D. who are at least at the assistant professor level are preferred, but professionals with at least three years of university teaching experience are also encouraged to apply.
You may be asked to participate in an interview as part of the in-country selection process.
$4,250
For Flex grants: round-trip travel will be included for each segment of the grant for the grantee only.
$1,500 books and educational materials allowance for teaching and teaching/research grants; should be donated to the host institution (or other entity) upon grantee's departure.
Additional living and housing allowance is provided for grantees with one accompanying dependent or two or more accompanying dependents. These amounts range from $150/month to $300/month. In addition, travel allowances are provided for dependents: $2,000 for one dependent, and $4,000 for two or more dependents.
Reimbursement for dependent education expenses may be available on a limited basis, depending on funding availability and grant duration. Grantees should confirm with IIE that proposed expenses meet eligibility criteria; however, availability of funds may not be known until the end of the academic year.
Dependents must accompany the grantee for at least 80% of the period abroad and a minimum of one semester in order to qualify for additional dependent benefits. Dependent benefits are not provided to Flex grantees.
$700-1,000/month apartment rent
$500/month utilities
$600/month food
Please refer to the figures above for an estimate of total monthly Fulbright award benefits. Benefits may include a monthly base stipend, living and housing allowances, and additional one-time allowances. Benefits may vary based on a scholar's current academic rank (or professional equivalent), the city of placement, the type of award (teaching, teaching/research, or research), and the number of and duration of stay of accompanying dependents. Research-only or Professional Project grantees receive a standard stipend that is not adjusted for academic rank. In most cases, dependent benefits will not be provided to Flex grantees, or to grantees pursuing grants less than four months (or a semester) in length.
Final grant amounts will be determined prior to the start of the academic year and are subject to the availability of funds. The United States Department of State reserves the right to alter, without notice, participating countries, number of awards and allowances.
Serbia
Located in the central part of the Balkan Peninsula in Central Southeastern Europe, Serbia was once the political and cultural center of Yugoslavia. Some 80 percent of the country’s population of more than 7.1 million inhabitants are ethnic Serbs, while the 20 other resident nationalities include Hungarians, Bosnians, Roma, Croats, Albanians, Slovaks, Vlachs, Romanians and Bulgarians. The main religion is Orthodox Christianity; the language is Serbian; and official alphabets are Cyrillic and Latin. The literacy rate is 96 percent. Belgrade (Beograd) is the capital city with 1.6 million inhabitants.
Higher education in Serbia includes university education (faculties and art academies) and non-university education (post-secondary schools) where courses last from two to three years. There are six public universities in Serbia (with 75 faculties), and nine private universities (with 67 faculties) with a total country-wide student population of approximately 250,000. The state universities include University of Belgrade, University of Novi Sad, University of Nis, University of Kragujevac, University of Arts in Belgrade and State University of Novi Pazar. Private universities and faculties in Serbia include Metropolitan University, Alpha University, Megatrend University, Singidunum University, Educons University, Union, University Privredna akademija, International University of Novi Pazar and European University. According to the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia, there are 56 scientific institutions which are completely independent from universities and predominantly engaged in research. The scientific institutes are not directly involved in education. Since 2000, Serbian higher education institutions have adopted European reforms and harmonization, known as the Bologna Process. Considerable reforms have been launched since Serbia signed the Bologna declaration in 2003.
Further development of Serbia’s higher educational system is a primary Fulbright Program goal, bringing with it human resources development and economic growth. Through the Fulbright Program, U.S. Scholars establish contacts with Serbian universities and promote potential cooperation beneficial to both sides. Fulbright administrators would like to see U.S. lecturers and researchers interested in working outside of Belgrade, especially in cities in the south of Serbia such as Nis, Kragujevac and Novi Pazar. The Program is open to a diverse array of academic disciplines. While historically there has been an emphasis on the fields of economics, law, American Studies and English language, candidates in the STEM fields are also very desirable. Serbia has undergone a unique series of political, economic, social and cultural changes over the last three decades that make the country a veritable laboratory for studying this kind of dramatic transformation. Grantees have many wonderful opportunities to contribute their expertise to this transition.
Visit our Scholar Directory to view and search all Fulbright alumni. You can also learn more about Fulbright Alumni Ambassadors.
The academic year in Serbia runs from October through June, consisting of two semesters: the first semester is from October 1 to January 20, and the second semester is from February 1 to June 30.