The Stavros Niarchos Foundation Global Center is recruiting communicators to help transform child and adolescent mental health services in developing nations. The fellowship targets professionals in low- and middle-income countries who want to shape how mental health care gets delivered and discussed in their communities.
The program operates through the Child Mind Institute's core country offices in Brazil, Greece, and South Africa, but welcomes applications from communicators working beyond these locations. Fellows will focus on elevating conversations around youth mental health in regions where access to care remains limited and stigma often prevents families from seeking help.
This fellowship addresses a genuine gap. Most mental health communication work concentrates in wealthy nations, leaving communicators in developing countries without formal training or networks to advance the conversation. The SNF Global Center recognizes that effective mental health advocacy requires people embedded in local communities who understand cultural context, language barriers, and the specific challenges families face.
The fellowship supports a range of communication professionals. Journalists, social media strategists, public health communicators, and mental health advocates can all apply. Fellows gain skills in storytelling, evidence-based messaging, and campaign development. They also connect with a global network of peers working toward similar goals.
Child and adolescent mental health ranks among the most underfunded health areas globally. Depression, anxiety, and behavioral disorders affect young people everywhere, but countries with fewer resources struggle most. Local communicators play an outsized role in changing how communities perceive mental health, reducing shame, and encouraging families to pursue treatment.
Applications open now through the Child Mind Institute's website. The fellowship includes structured training, mentorship from experienced communicators, and funding to support fellows' work in their home countries. Selected fellows commit to creating communication strategies that resonate with their specific communities while connecting to broader global mental health movements.
For communicators passionate about youth mental health advocacy, this represents a concrete opportunity to build skills and access support systems that don't
