Scholarship

Holding Redlich Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Scholarship

The University of Queensland
Award AUD 10K–10K ≈ €6K
Closing date Closed
Location AU
For Individuals

About this opportunity

The Holding Redlich Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Scholarship is part of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Scholarship Scheme at The University of Queensland. This scholarship aims to support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students studying law who are experiencing financial hardship. The scholarship provides $10,000 in support and can be renewed for up to four years. Two scholarships are awarded annually, with applications opening in September 2025 and closing in February 2026. Holding Redlich, a law firm, established this scholarship to create greater positive impact for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students aspiring to study at UQ for generations to come. The scholarship specifically focuses on students enrolled full-time in any undergraduate program from the School of Law, including associated dual programs. Selection is based on multiple criteria including demonstrated financial hardship, strength of personal statement, personal qualities including leadership potential, academic capability as demonstrated by overall academic performance, and any other matter considered relevant to future academic success. Recipients must be domestic students as defined by the University's Fee Policy and be able to demonstrate their Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander status.
12 - 49 mo
2 awards
Renewable (4yr)

Who can apply

Applicant Types

individual

Citizenship

🇦🇺 Australia

Residency

🇦🇺 Australia

Region

Australia

Priority Groups

indigenous

How to apply

Stages

  1. 1 single_stage

Required documents

transcripts

Review process

Applications are reviewed based on demonstrated financial hardship, strength of personal statement, personal qualities including leadership potential, academic capability, and other relevant factors for future academic success.

Restrictions

  • employment_restrictions