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Feb 4 at 5:26 history left closed in review Lee Mosher
Henry.L
Alexey Ustinov
Original close reason(s) were not resolved
Jan 31 at 3:17 review Reopen votes
Feb 4 at 5:26
Jan 30 at 18:20 history closed Sam Hopkins
LSpice
godelian
abx
Daniele Tampieri
Not suitable for this site
Jan 30 at 17:28 history made wiki Post Made Community Wiki by Stefan Kohl
Jan 30 at 16:44 history edited David White CC BY-SA 4.0
deleted 6 characters in body; edited title
Jan 30 at 16:21 comment added YCor @BorisBukh the tag information describes the topic/subfield intended by the tag, but doesn't mean by any means that the topic is appropriate for MO, or that every question that fits in that topic is appropriate for MO.
Jan 30 at 15:20 comment added LSpice @BorisBukh, re, ah, I see, thanks. I read the title about "grants supporting sabbatical year in US" as meaning "grants in the US supporting a sabbatical year", but I now see from the body that that was exactly wrong.
Jan 30 at 15:15 history edited Martin Sleziak
edited tags
Jan 30 at 15:12 answer added David White timeline score: 7
Jan 30 at 14:46 comment added Boris Bukh @LSpice From eligibility "A Simons Fellow in Mathematics must have a teaching or administrative tenured position at ... U.S. or Canadian college or university ... ". So, the only non-US country that OP can be tenured at and apply to this scheme is Canada.
Jan 30 at 14:19 comment added LSpice @BorisBukh, re, I think that Simons grants are in the US. (I don't see at a glance at their website any geographical limitations, but I know I've held a grant from them in the US.) Another useful Simons grant, actually now treated as a gift, is simonsfoundation.org/grant/travel-support-for-mathematicians .
Jan 30 at 14:10 comment added Boris Bukh @DavidZureick-Brown That is useful only if OP is in Canada.
Jan 30 at 14:09 comment added David Zureick-Brown simonsfoundation.org/grant/simons-fellows-in-mathematics
Jan 30 at 13:54 comment added Sam Hopkins I don't think the question is appropriate for here. But I also think it is a little unclear: I'm guessing the intended question is "are there grants from US institutions/government agencies supporting a sabbatical year in the US?"; but for example it is certainly possible that your home institution/country has grants which support sabbatical years many places, including the US.
Jan 30 at 13:52 comment added R. van Dobben de Bruyn Normally, generic academia questions that do not have a specific maths component are better suited for academia.stackexchange.com.
S Jan 30 at 13:32 review Close votes
Jan 30 at 18:20
Jan 30 at 13:24 comment added Boris Bukh @MikhailKatz The "soft-question" tag is described as "Questions that are about ... job of a research mathematician, without being mathematical problems...". This seems to fit the description. Perhaps the description should change, if the community consensus is to discourage such questions (though I personally see little wrong with it).
Jan 30 at 13:02 answer added Boris Bukh timeline score: 7
Jan 30 at 12:42 comment added Mikhail Katz The research content of this question seems limited.
S Jan 30 at 12:40 review First questions
S Jan 30 at 13:32
S Jan 30 at 12:40 history asked guest CC BY-SA 4.0