Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 64— - AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH, EXTENSION, AND TEACHING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VIII— - INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH, EXTENSION, AND TEACHING › § 3293
The Secretary of Agriculture must create the Cochran Fellowship Program to give fellowships to people from eligible countries who work in agriculture. Fellows can study in the United States or at a college in their own country that has good science and tech facilities, a partnership with a U.S. college, and U.S. faculty helping design and teach the courses. The Secretary will work with U.S. agricultural counselors, trade officers, commodity groups, other government agencies, universities, and agribusiness to find candidates from public and private sectors and to design and run the training. Private agricultural producers may get fellowships. Fellowships must help recipients learn skills to build their country’s agriculture, meet food and fiber needs, and improve trade or health and safety links between their country’s rules and U.S. agriculture. Eligible countries include certain middle-income countries, countries moving toward representative democracy, some former Soviet states the Secretary approves, and other emerging markets. Funds may be provided as needed and remain available until spent, but annual limits are $4,000,000 for subsection (b)(1) countries, $3,000,000 for subsection (b)(2) countries, and $6,000,000 for subsection (b)(3) countries. The Secretary may also accept gifts, grants, and property for the program and use the proceeds.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 3293
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73