Bundestag’s International Parliamentary Scholarships (IPS) 2027 Available
Berlin is once again positioning itself as a training ground for Africa’s next generation of democratic actors. The German Bundestag has confirmed that applications for its International Parliamentary Scholarship (IPS) for African countries 2027 will open on 1 April 2026, with a four-week residency in the German capital running from 4 January to 2 February 2027.
A Quiet but Strategic Programme
Unlike the louder, larger IPS cohorts drawn from Europe and the Americas, the African edition of the Bundestag scholarship has operated with deliberate modesty since its launch in 2020. Up to 24 graduates are selected each year from nine countries grouped into three regional clusters: Botswana, Namibia and South Africa in the south; Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda in the east; and Ghana, Nigeria and Senegal in the west. The programme was conceived as a long-term investment in parliamentary literacy across regions where civic space is uneven and, in several cases, contracting.
Inside the Berlin Residency
The four-week IPS Africa 2027 programme is built around a one-week placement in the office of a sitting member of the Bundestag, an experience few comparable fellowships in Europe offer to African graduates. Around that core sit structured sessions on Germany’s parliamentary system, workshops on pluralism, minority protection and Erinnerungskultur, and practical training in anti-corruption work, intercultural competence and project management.
Scholars are expected to leave Berlin with the outline of a civic project they intend to run on return home, a requirement that distinguishes the Bundestag scholarship from the more observational fellowships run by other European legislatures.
Who the Bundestag Is Looking For?
Eligibility for the International Parliamentary Scholarship 2027 is tightly drawn. Applicants must hold the nationality of one of the nine participating countries, have completed a university degree, and be under 30 on 1 January 2027. German language proficiency at B2 level on the Common European Framework is non-negotiable, a bar that quietly filters the applicant pool long before the selection committee meets.
Beyond paper credentials, the Bundestag is explicit that it wants candidates with a record of civic engagement and a credible intention to return home and work on democratic strengthening, rather than use the residency as a stepping stone to migration.
Funding and Logistics
The Bundestag covers the full cost of participation in the IPS Africa programme, including a monthly stipend, accommodation in Berlin, health and accident insurance, and return travel from the participant’s home country. There are no tuition fees because the residency is not a degree programme; it is a structured immersion. For graduates from countries where a month in Berlin would otherwise be financially out of reach, this matters more than the headline prestige.
How to Apply?
Applications for the IPS Scholarship for African countries 2027 must be submitted through the Bundestag’s online portal and routed via the German diplomatic missions in each eligible country. Required documents include a passport photograph, a copy of a passport or national ID, the university degree certificate, proof of German language ability, a motivation letter written in German, and a current letter of recommendation. The application window runs from 1 April to 15 May 2026, a notably short six-week period that rewards candidates who prepare their files in advance.
A Verdict Worth Stating Plainly
Measured against the broader landscape of Europe-Africa fellowships, the Bundestag’s IPS Africa scholarship is neither the largest nor the most generous. What it offers instead is rare access: a working seat inside one of Europe’s most consequential parliaments, paired with a network of African alumni now scattered across civil society, journalism and public administration. For a politically engaged graduate who already speaks German, the 2027 cohort is one of the more substantive opportunities on the calendar.