There are various sidney prize available to those who are able to make a difference in the world. They are not only offered by the federal government but also by local councils and community groups. They are a great way to encourage people to get involved and help others in need. These awards come with their own advantages and requirements, so it is important to understand how they work.
The Neilma Sydney Short Story Prize is a writing competition run by Overland magazine in conjunction with the Malcolm Robertson Foundation. Each year the prize receives over 500 submissions from writers around Australia. The judges, Patrick Lenton, Alice Bishop and Sara Saleh, select a shortlist from these pieces, and a winner and two runners-up. The winner is awarded a $5,000 prize and publication in Overland.
Established in honor of the late Sidney Hollander (1881-1972), the prize commemorates his work towards achieving equal rights for African Americans. The award was formerly known as the Addison Brown Prize. The prize is offered annually for a written work on a subject related to public law or maritime law.
SFCU Cash Giveaway (the “Giveaway”) is open to legal permanent residents of the fifty (50) United States and the District of Columbia who have reached the legal age of majority in their state or territory of residence at time of entry, which is eighteen (18) in most states but nineteen (19) in Alabama and Nebraska, and twenty-one (21) in Mississippi. Employees, officers and directors of SFCU and its subsidiaries, as well as immediate family members of employees, officers and directors, are not eligible to win. Void where prohibited by law.
The Sidney Cox Memorial Prize is given for that piece of undergraduate writing which most nearly meets those high standards of originality and integrity which Sidney Cox set in his teaching and in his book, Indirections for Those Who Want to Write. Any kind of undergraduate writing in English may be submitted; it is not limited to those studying a major or minor in English. A previous winner, Dr Clare Jackson, a graduate of the College who went on to complete her PhD on royalist ideas in late seventeenth century Scotland at Trinity Hall, is currently Senior Tutor and Walter Grant Scott Fellow, Director of Studies in History.
The annual Sidney J. Levy Award competition is named in honor of one of the founders of Consumer Culture Theory, and is presented to the author of a published dissertation-based article that makes an outstanding contribution to the field of consumer culture theory and/or related theoretical areas. The deadline for submitting articles is February 15, 2022. Click here for more information about the competition and the submission guidelines.