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The purpose of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology is to promote and facilitate research in the areas of culture and psychology. The IACCP believes that it is important to encourage high quality intercultural research at the predoctoral level. The Harry and Pola Triandis Doctoral Thesis Award is intended to honor and reward good research and to advance the early careers of dedicated researchers. Support for the award is provided by the Harry and Pola Triandis Fund that was established in 1997 (see Bulletin, June, 1997). The first award was given in Pultusk, Poland in 2000 and at all subsequent Congresses.
US$500, one year membership in IACCP, free registration at the next IACCP biennial Congress, and partial airfare to the Congress. The winner will be asked to give a presentation of his or her research at the Congress and to write a short summary for the Bulletin.
Your doctoral thesis (dissertation) must be relevant to the study of cross-cultural/cultural psychology, with particular emphasis on important and emerging trends in the field; scholarly excellence; innovation and implications for theory and research; and methodological appropriateness. Doctoral theses eligible for an award must have been completed (as defined by your university) during the two calendar years ending on December 31 of the year prior to the Congress year (i.e, between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. Submissions must be received by the IACCP Deputy Secretary/General by October 30 of the year before the Congress year (i.e., October 30, 2007).
| 2002 (Indonesia) |
Jan 1, 2000 - Dec. 31, 2001 |
October 31, 2001 |
| 2004 (China) |
Jan 1, 2002 - Dec. 31, 2003 |
October 31, 2003 |
| 2006 (Greece) |
Jan 1, 2004 - Dec. 31, 2005 |
October 31, 2005 |
| 2008 (Germany) |
Jan 1, 2006 - Dec. 31, 2007 |
October 31, 2007 |
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Please submit a 1500-word abstract of the doctoral
thesis in English. The abstract must contain no information that
identifies the applicant, thesis supervisor, or institution.
The abstract must include complete details of theory, method,
results, and implications for the field. The abstract must be
submitted double spaced on paper and electronically (email attachment, CD, disk, etc.) using a common word processing file format such as Microsoft
Word, Wordperfect, RTF, or html.
A letter from the thesis advisor certifying the university
acceptance date of the thesis must be included. This letter must be sent directly from the supervisor to the Deputy Secretary-General. Please provide the supervisor’s email address.
The application cover letter must include complete
applicant contact information, including an address or addresses
through with the applicant can be contacted during the evaluation
process, including telephone numbers, fax number, and e-mail addresses.
Following a preliminary evaluation, finalists will
be asked to send copies of their complete doctoral thesis, in the
language in which it was written, to the evaluation committee.
Deputy Secretary-General (see Officers section of
web site)
| 2000 |
Candan Ertubey, University of Luton, United Kingdom |
Bulletin September, 2000 |
| 2002 |
Samar Zebian, American University of Beirut |
Bulletin June-Sept, 2002 |
| 2004 |
Fran Brew, MacQuarie University, Sydney, Australia |
Bulletin December, 2004 |
| Judit Arends-Tóth, Tilburg University, The Netherlands |
Bulletin March-June 2005 |
| 2006 |
Arief Darmanegara Liem, National University of Singapore |
Bulletin December 2006 |
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