Academic Professionals

From postdocs and librarians to researchers and specialists, inspired academic professionals are vital contributors to the University’s status as a world-class teaching and research institution.

Academic Professional ranks at Princeton include:

Researchers

  • Senior Scholar
  • Senior Research Scholar
  • Research Scholar
  • Associate Research Scholar
  • Postdoctoral Research Associate
  • Postgraduate Research Associate
  • Senior Research Assistant
  • Postdoctoral Research Fellow
  • Visiting Research Scholar
  • Visiting Postdoctoral Research Associate

Librarians

  • Librarian III
  • Senior Librarian
  • Librarian
  • Associate Librarian
  • Visiting Librarian

Professional Specialists

  • Senior Professional Specialist
  • Professional Specialist
  • Associate Professional Specialist
  • Visiting Professional Specialist

Academic Research Managers

  • Senior Academic Research Manager
  • Academic Research Manager
Incoming Academic Professionals

Complete the onboarding process and access the many resources available to you at the University.

Benefits for Academic Professionals

Explore the comprehensive suite of benefits available to you and your family as an academic professional at Princeton.

Academic Professional Career Ranks & Advancement

Explore Princeton’s career ladders and approach to advancement.

Research for Academic Professionals

At Princeton, we are dedicated to fostering research opportunities that cultivate well-rounded academic professionals.

Professional Development for Academic Professionals

Deepen your research and work with a collection of career and learning opportunities.

Professor Claire Gmachl teaches a first-year physics course

Research Highlights

In partnership with the NSF and the NIH: The Mo Lab and antibiotics discovery
July 15, 2025

Seyedsayamdost’s partnerships with the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have led to remarkable discoveries in the field of antibiotics and infectious disease by tackling the global antimicrobial resistance crisis.

A new way to wobble: Scientists uncover mechanism that causes formation of planets
July 7, 2025

Researchers already knew that wobbles could grow from the interaction between plasma and magnetic fields in a gravitational field. But these new results show that wobbles can more easily arise in a region between two jets of fluid with different velocities, an area known as a free shear layer.

New tool allows researchers to track assembly of cells’ protein-making machines
July 2, 2025

By tracking the movement of RNA molecules inside the nucleolus using advanced imaging and genomics techniques, the new method allows researchers to watch these processes as they unfold without destroying the cell or its fragile components.

Additional Guidance