About the opportunity
What this programme is offering
Co-design a research project with the Library for a 12-month funded-fellowship, where you will be embedded in our expert curatorial and research teams.
Applications are now open inviting two research proposals that develop one of two themes: Colonial Deposit and our Newspaper Collection and Local Large Language Models to Enable Discovery and Access for Personal Digital Archives. Applications will close on 15 July 2026.
Thanks to a generous donation from Joanna and Graham Barker, this early career fellowship scheme is designed to support and equip researchers, creatives and cultural professionals with the practical skills, professional insight and interdisciplinary experience needed to thrive in a rapidly changing knowledge landscape. A key element of this opportunity is to provide a structured pathway for Fellows to gain transferable, future-facing skills, project- and line-management experience, feel supported within our research community, and generate new expertise for the wider world.
You can find out more about the research themes, eligibility and how to apply on the opportunities pages, but the main requirements are:
Applicants must be a postdoctoral, early-career researcher
Applicants must hold a doctorate in a relevant subject or have equivalent professional experience and skills
Applicants must be eligible to work in the UK for the full period of the fellowship
Fellowships will run for 12 months from 1 September 2026, or longer if undertaken part time.
Structure, outputs and eligibility
Fellowship structure
Fellows will be hosted and supervised within the relevant area of the Library and supported by the Research Development team. They will be embedded within their team, provided with desk space and ICT equipment and will benefit from privileged staff-level access to collections.
The Fellow will also be invited to join departmental meetings enabling them to learn more about curatorial activities and the wider collections. They will be offered mentorship, networking, and assisted in identifying opportunities to gain experience in institutional research culture, public programming, and collections-based scholarship. They will be able to access the wide range of workshops, talks, training and expertise available at the Library, including but not limited to: the Digital Scholarship Training Programme, Cultural Property Training, Researcher Packed Lunches and Carbon Literacy training.
Outputs, training and development
By the conclusion of the Fellowship, each Fellow will have:
advanced a significant programme of original research demonstrating the value of collaborative, collections-based research within a national cultural institution
produced or prepared substantial professional or scholarly outputs, in line with their submitted research proposal
contributed meaningfully to the interpretation and visibility of British Library collections through presentations, public engagement work, and other activities
presented their work at an internal staff talk and submitted a written report of 1000 words upon completion of their project, detailing collections used, findings, outputs, planned future activities and recommendations. This report will be uploaded to the Library’s Shared Research Repository
supervised a 3-month PhD Placement supported through the Library’s PhD Placement Scheme.
Eligibility
To apply for a fellowship, you must meet all the following criteria:
hold a doctorate in a relevant subject or have equivalent professional experience and skills
have a demonstrable commitment to working with the cultural and heritage sector
be based, and be eligible to work, in the UK for the full period of the fellowship
self-identify as an postdoctoral Early Career Researcher in accordance with the AHRC guidance on training and developing early career researchers in the arts and humanities: ‘In encouraging self-identification, we hope to recognise the breadth of the arts and humanities research community and the diverse career paths which early career researchers follow... Eligibility is determined on the basis of funding history, and we do not consider years post-PhD or job title to be a marker of career progression.’
If you have passed your viva before the application deadline with minor corrections, you are eligible to apply. You will not be eligible if you must make major corrections which need to be re-assessed so the final submission of your thesis falls after the application deadline.
How to apply

