Commonwealth Professional Fellowships are for mid-career professionals from low and middle income countries to spend a period of time at a UK host organisation working in their sector for a programme of professional development.
Opportunity Details
Purpose: To provide professionals with the opportunity to enhance knowledge and skills in their given sector, and to have catalytic effects on their workplaces.
Intended beneficiaries: Mid-career professionals (with five years’ relevant work experience) working organisations in low and middle income Commonwealth countries.
These fellowships are offered under six development themes:
The CSC aims to identify talented individuals who have the potential to make change. We are committed to a policy of equal opportunity and non-discrimination, and encourage applications from a diverse range of candidates. For further information on the support available to candidates with a disability, see the CSC disability support statement.
Different UK based organisations have applied to host Commonwealth Professional Fellows in 2026. Each host organisation has submitted an application to run a bespoke programme that fellows can apply for.
You can find the details of each organisation and the programme that they are running on this page. Please see a summary for each programme below and click the links for further information.
Beekeeping is an income-generating activity much practised in developing commonwealth countries in Africa. Bees are less expensive than other forms of livestock, they do not need daily care and feeding and yet the market for good quality honey and beeswax is thriving. In Ghana cashew-farmers who keep bees produce twice as many cashew nuts than famers without bees, due to the pollination the bees provide.
The Fellowship will provide exposure, new knowledge and enhanced capacity to three professionals who are dedicated to supporting this otherwise marginalised sector.
On returning to their home countries the Fellows will return to their roles as change-agents and work for organisations who serve beekeepers nationwide and in addition to delivering services directly (knowledge, information, scientific advances) they will also catalyse like-minded organisations to support the sector.
The training programme will build on the experience of hosting 16+ fellows since 2012.
Firstly, the primary aim is to provide experience and training in modern geochemistry laboratories, alongside learning systems of work (e.g. Quality Assurance, H&S, infrastructure maintenance). Further objectives may include experience in contributing or leading on scientific outputs, use or presentation of data for interpretation (e.g. statistics, QGIS – depending on interest).
The trainee will be led through a simplified Theory of Change process to evaluate their current laboratory capability and then how lessons learnt can be applied to their home situation for onward improvement and cascading of information to colleagues.
Depending on the candidate, we will provide flexibility for writing skills (papers, proposals, reports, standard operating procedures), experimental planning and grant proposals. Depending on the candidate, we will provide training in the use of R for statistics/GIS for the display and communication of data.
Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council will offer a 3 month placement in its Digital Services unit, working to a detailed weekly programme.
This is Council’s third application, the previous two having been successful. Before local government reorganisation in 2015, one of its four legacy councils, Coleraine Borough Council, hosted 5 Fellowships over the previous 10 year period.
Council’s experience was that the concepts underpinning it’s functions are transferable to the developing world. However the limited resources available in the developing world require a quite different delivery of these concepts to that in the West.
The Fellows thus will be encouraged to maintain a weekly work diary; and each week to identify what concepts are applicable in their home work place. At the end of the 3 months, they will be encouraged to develop short and long term programmes for the transfer of these concepts to their home work place.
CNWL has been working in partnership with Mirembe National Mental Health Hospital in Tanzania since 2010 and we are currently helping them to establish a new community based mental health service.
Since 2020 2 new international healthcare partnerships have been established in Zimbabwe and one in The Gambia with the Gambian Ministry of Health and Tanka
Tanka Hospital. This Professional Fellowship will enable candidates from eligible Commonwealth countries (3 Tanzanian colleagues and 2 Gambian colleagues) to visit CNWL’s community and inpatient mental health, substance use and Health & Justice services, to have exposure to UK practices, and develop contacts with CNWL staff for further mentoring/liaison support. Training opportunities will be provided during the programme. The expected impact of the programme will be enhanced clinical expertise and practice and a strengthened management team to improve the quality of mental health and substance use services in their own countries.
Mental Health (MH) services in LMICs face significant challenges including limited funding, shortages of trained professionals, widespread stigma and skyrocketing demand.
Tanzania has less than 50 psychiatrists for a population exceeding 55 million. Additionally, most MH professionals are concentrated in urban areas, leaving rural communities further underserved.
Recent surveys conducted by K4C in secondary schools in Fort Portal (Uganda) found 57% of 261 adolescent students displayed symptoms indicative of major depressive disorder, 40.2% of moderate to severe anxiety and (more alarmingly) 18% had recent thoughts of selfharm/suicide, highlighting urgent need for targeted community-based interventions in rural areas.
This Fellowship will identify health and social workers with keen interests in adolescent MH to undertake comprehensive training programmes in partnership with experts from ‘Arts for the Blues’, LSTM, Salford University and Bury CE Highschool. K4C will facilitate Fellows to implement pilot interventions aimed at improving adolescent MH upon returning to Uganda/Tanzania.
Against a backdrop of sustained engagement with African stakeholders, we have been funded through the British Council, British Academy and the FCDO to conduct action research around the development of capacity-building training programmes to ‘stimulate sustainable entrepreneurial thinking in scientists’ (SSETS) in Africa. We have worked with multiple African partners in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Uganda and Zambia to undertake the co-design and piloting activities and developed an online toolkit to empower institutions to develop their own entrepreneurial capacity as well as design their own programmes that create impactful collaborative solutions to place-based global challenges using eco-innovative thinking.
At Lancaster, we launched our Centre for Global Eco-innovation in 2012 and since then it has grown into a multi award-winning centre that has delivered challenge-led/solution-driven R&D with a wide range of regional SMEs. We would like to use this framework to engage institutions to think more entrepreneurially about opportunities to develop hubs for eco-innovative partnerships that support greater partnerships between the academic and private sectors.
These Fellowships will support up to 5 Professional Fellows to champion place-based eco-innovation thinking, create a roadmap to launch their own Centre for Global Eco-innovation and encourage a catalytic effect on uptake and outcomes from connected entrepreneurial ecosystems.
The Fellowship aims to empower professionals from Commonwealth countries with knowledge and tools that promote safety, informed migration, entrepreneurship, and climate resilience in their communities.
Lifegate Outreach Center’s focus for 2026 includes addressing contributory factors of community vulnerability that correlate with community building and resilience systems, leading to internal migration and mass emigration of the productive population. This migration is driven by limited opportunities to thrive and prosper, exacerbating the effects of climate change and weakening community cohesion. The fellowship aims to enhance migration literacy, counter fraud, and support youth employment through entrepreneurship and UK-Africa trade links.
Fellows will engage with UK institutions like the Home Office and British Council to gain insights into legal migration and scalable community interventions in the West Midlands. Upon return, Fellows will lead awareness campaigns, support and incubate local businesses, and policy dialogues, reducing migration-related vulnerabilities and promoting communities.
Tackle uses the popularity of football to address HIV and sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) among young Africans.
Tackle and CSC Collaboration: The CSC partners with Tackle to provide professional development opportunities for individuals involved in the program, enhancing their skills and ability to deliver their vital work and better manage their programmes.
This collaboration helps Tackle Africa expand its reach and impact, while providing valuable professional development opportunities for individuals involved.
Each Fellowship provides:
To be eligible for these Fellowships, prospective Fellows must:
In addition to the above, prospective fellows must ensure they meet any eligibility criteria set out by each individual host organisation.
The CSC aims to identify talented individuals who have the potential to make change. We are committed to a policy of equal opportunity and non-discrimination and encourage applications from a diverse range of candidates. For further information on the support available to fellows with a disability, see the CSC disability support statement.
Please note: Your personal information will be used to conduct necessary due diligence checks to CSC’s satisfaction, before CSC proceeds with any type of formal agreement or contractual relationship. In most cases, the due diligence checks will be straightforward, however further information may be requested, so we ask for your full co-operation to speed up the process.
If you do not agree to your personal data being used for the purpose of conducting due diligence, unfortunately CSC will not be able to proceed further with the application process.
Eligible countries
Bangladesh
Belize
Botswana
Cameroon
Dominica
Eswatini
Fiji
Gabon
The Gambia
Ghana
Grenada
Guyana
India
Jamaica
Kenya
Kiribati
Lesotho
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Mauritius
Montserrat
Mozambique
Namibia
Nauru
Nigeria
Pakistan
Papua New Guinea
Rwanda
St Helena
St Lucia
St Vincent and The Grenadines
Samoa
Sierra Leone
Solomon Islands
South Africa
Sri Lanka
Tanzania
Togo
Tonga
Tuvalu
Uganda
Vanuatu
Zambia
Applications for the 2026 Professional Fellowship are now open.
To apply for a Commonwealth Professional Fellowship you must complete the application form by clicking on the link below
Professional Fellowship Application Form
The form will close at 4pm BST Friday 22 August.
Host organisation programmes
Details for each host organisation running a programme for the 2026 professional fellowships programme are listed above. Please read the details of these programmes and select the most appropriate programme for you.
Completing the application form
Applications for the 2026 Professional Fellowship are now open.
To apply for a Commonwealth Professional Fellowship you must complete the application form by clicking on the link below:
Professional Fellowship Application Form
The form will close at 4pm BST Friday 22 August.
In the application form, prospective Fellows are asked to:
Provide a development impact statement in four parts.
Apply for Commonwealth Professional Fellowships