The Ray Goldberg Student Fellowship supports Harvard students across the spectrum of food systems whether their interests lie in food policy, farmworker equity, nutrition science, or supply chain management. 
 

About the fellowship

The purpose of the fellowship is to support Harvard students working in the context of global food systems, which may include work related to agricultural systems, food supply chains, farmer and farmworker well-being and equity, agricultural economics, food justice and sovereignty, agricultural processing and industry, food science and nutrition, hunger, or food policy. The fellowship is designed to enable students to expose themselves to a wide range of researchers and research approaches, and/or non-profit and private sector organizations, early on in their training before they make their ultimate choice of a research or career topic.

Award

We plan to award between one and three grants of up to $7,500 each per academic year. The award can be used for a variety of activities including support for an independent research project, internship, or collaboration with other researchers having limited or no funds to support the participation of an award recipient. Prior awards provided funds to conduct field work, attend conferences, learn a foreign language in a host country, or visit leading scholars, practitioners, and research institutions.  


Applying for the fellowship

Eligibility

Applications will be accepted from students enrolled full time in any degree-granting program at Harvard University at any level: undergraduate, masters, and doctoral. 

Expectations

Recipients will be required to submit a progress report on use of the funds in September and may be invited to make a presentation about their work.

Application deadline

The deadline for 2026 was on March 23. The spring 2027 deadline will be posted in December.

Application process

Candidates should submit both:

  1. The Goldberg Fellowship online application cover sheet including file upload of their Harvard transcript (unofficial version is acceptable). The link to apply will go live on this page after February 1.
  2. Their student application submitted by email as a single pdf file, containing:
    * One-page cover letter summarizing why this opportunity will benefit them;
    * A description of what they would do with the support, including a title and budget (2 pages maximum); and
    * Resume or CV.

The pdf file with your application should be labeled, with your Goldberg_Fellowship_lastname_firstname_ (e.g., Goldberg_Fellowship_Smith_Jane).

Applications should be emailed to nora_oneil@hks.harvard.edu and include, in the subject heading, “Goldberg Fellowship application – [Your first and last name],” e.g., Goldberg Fellowship application – Jane Smith.

Selection will be made by a committee of Harvard faculty and staff. The applicants will be assessed on the quality of their proposed research and the intellectual rigor and relevance to the student's previous work.


2025 Ray Goldberg Fellowship recipients

Jasper Döninghaus headshot.

Jasper Döninghaus

Master of Public Policy candidate, Harvard Kennedy School

Jasper Döninghaus is a Master of Public Policy candidate and McCloy Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School. His project explored how carbon footprint labeling influences consumer behavior and business practices in the food and beverage sector. With support from the Ray Goldberg Fellowship, Jasper conducted comparative fieldwork as part of his project, CarbonTag, to assess the effects of carbon labeling on purchasing patterns and supply chain decision-making. The project’s findings will help shape more effective, inclusive, and economically viable climate communication strategies across the food industry.

Adarsh Kumar headshot.

Adarsh Kumar

Master in Public Policy candidate, Harvard Kennedy School

Adarsh Kumar is a joint-degree student pursuing a Master in Public Policy (MPP) at Harvard Kennedy School and an MBA at MIT Sloan. His is interested in how we can scale private capital to transform food systems in ways that benefit both people and the planet. He contributed to developing the investment theses to identify innovations that align environmental impact and improved farmer livelihoods with venture-scale returns. He engaged directly with entrepreneurs, farmers, and institutional partners across Sub-Saharan Africa, contributing to Equator’s strategy and deepening his own research on aligning financial, ecological, and social value in food systems.


Fellowship outcomes

Several former fellows shared their most impactful fellowship experiences and how their research and professional lives have been affected by the support of the Ray Goldberg Fellowship.

  • 2019

    Marissa Saenger was an undergraduate candidate at Harvard College ’20 concentrating in environmental science and engineering. Through self-guided reading and research, she developed an interest in carbon farming: a collection of land management practices integrating biological systems and climate change mitigation. 

    “The fellowship helped introduce me not only to postgraduate research in a new field, but also enabled me to explore new parts of the United States and gain understanding of specific climate and food system challenges there...The fellowship was invaluable in helping shape my postgraduate trajectory and providing me the opportunity to refine my research skills and interests.”
    - Marissa Saenger

    Marissa Saenger hiking.
  • 2015

    A dual-degree graduate of the Harvard Kennedy School (MPP) and MIT Sloan (MBA), Jess organized the first Food+ Research Symposium on the nexus of food, agriculture, environment, health, and society. The Global Food+ Symposium continues as a collaboration among Boston area universities to connect a vibrant, interdisciplinary community of food academics. Her career has centered on corporate supply chains, sustainability, and direct grower relationships, including previous leadership of the Agriculture Team at Anheuser-Busch InBev. Named to Forbes’ 2018 30 Under 30 – Energy list, Jess is Senior Director of Ag & Sustainability at McCain Foods.

    “The Goldberg Fellowship gave me the freedom and focus to pursue my career pivot from international development to work on regenerative agriculture and sustainability in American agriculture…. I owe so much both to Ray and to the fellowship in his name that enabled me to pursue my passion.”
    - Jess Newman

    Jess Newman headshot.
  • 2015

    Alicia Harley earned her PhD in Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School. During her fellowship she studied innovation in agriculture systems, aiming to aid our understanding of how to govern innovation to improve the well-being of small and marginal farmers. She used a mix of qualitative and quantitative methods, relying heavily on organizational behavior and institutional approaches in political science. Alicia is now a Senior Research Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School's Sustainability Science Program, where she leads the Capacity Building for Sustainable Development (C4SD) research project.

    “The Goldberg Fellowship funded fieldwork at a formative stage of my research, giving me the flexibility to follow unexpected questions across multiple states and cases in India. That experience shaped how I think about sustainable development: as requiring strategic capacities—to promote equity, adapt to shocks, transform pathways, and link knowledge with action—that must be deliberately built and maintained.”
    - Alicia Harley 

    Alicia Harley headshot.


About Ray Goldberg

Ray Goldberg sitting in a classroom smiling.Ray Goldberg was George M. Moffett Professor of Agriculture and Business, Emeritus, at the Harvard Business School where he founded the Agribusiness Senior Management Seminars. 

He taught a course at the Harvard Kennedy School on Food Policy and Agribusiness and a junior tutorial seminar at Harvard College on Climate and Its Impact on the Global Food System. 

He co-founded and moderated the Private and Public, Scientific, Academic, and Consumer Food Policy Group (PAPSAC) which has met annually at the Harvard Kennedy School since the early 1990s. PAPSAC is a university-wide seminar to broaden communication among farmers, business leaders, scientists, public policy leaders, academics, not for profits, and consumer activists on topics of mutual concern to participants of the global food system and the society that it serves.
 

Sponsorship

The fellowship was inaugurated by an anonymous gift from a Harvard Business School alumnus.