December 2021 - January 2022
 
Unless otherwise noted, all proposals to funders outside of Harvard must be sent for review to the Office of Sponsored Programs (OSP) five business days prior to the sponsor deadline. We can help you navigate the routing process for your proposal.
 
Questions?
Please contact our team at research_development@fas.harvard.edu
 
You are receiving this newsletter because you are subscribed to our mailing list. All Harvard University faculty and administrators may subscribe here, and you may unsubscribe at any time. Visit our email archive to see our past newsletters. Harvard affiliates also have access to Pivot, a funding opportunity database. You can also receive personalized suggestions on research funding opportunities via Harvard Link
 
Events and Resources 
New to Campus? 
Visit our Resources for New Faculty page to learn more about the services and support we provide to help faculty find and apply for funding. To request a customized funding search or one-on-one consultation, please contact research_development@fas.harvard.edu.
Funding Opportunities
 
Internal Opportunities
 
For a comprehensive list of Harvard internal funding opportunities, please see here.
 
 
External Opportunities

Match your project to a grant program:
 
I am looking for research support for my project.
     
    I want to visit an archive or library and/or fund my sabbatical leave.
     
    Fellowships or grants that are portable and tenable anywhere.
       
      Fellowships with a residency requirement in the Cambridge area. 
       
      Fellowships with a residency requirement at an institution in the United States.
       
      Fellowships that support or require international travel and/or residency.
       
      I want to host a program or develop curriculum for faculty, scholars, students, or practitioners to expand their knowledge of a topic.
       
      I want to combine digital technology with the humanities, create a website with humanities content, or preserve a collection and/or make it easier for people to access.
       
      I want to develop or put on an exhibition or cultural program for the public or engage in community revitalization.
       
      I want to complete and/or publish a scholarly work.
       
      I am an artist looking for support to create original works of art.

      *Indicates an UPDATED or NEW opportunity added this month.

      Internal Funding Opportunities
      Faculty Special Projects Fund
      Deadline: Rolling
      Award Amount: up to $5,000

      The Harvard Data Science Initiative Faculty Special Projects Fund is intended to support one-time data science opportunities for which other funding is not readily available. Applications are accepted on a rolling basis, and funding will be awarded throughout the year until available funding is exhausted. Applicants may request funding of up to $5,000 to support research, community-building, outreach, and educational activities. Examples of projects that the Fund is intended to support include offsetting the cost of running workshops or seminars, data visualization or research dissemination, and video production. The HDSI welcomes applications from all fields of scholarship.
       
      Trust in Science: Exploratory Awards
      Deadline: Rolling
      Award Amount: up to $5,000 
       

      The Trust in Science program enables faculty across Harvard to study issues related to trust in science, broadly construed. The Trust in Science Project welcomes data-science related initiatives from any field, including humanities and social sciences, ideally involving collaboration that engages with more than one approach, or builds bridges between them. Questions of particular interest include: 

      • How can the processes and products of data science be made more transparent, and how might strategies of democratization affect the trustworthiness of science? 

      • How do methods of visualizing data affect the ways that different groups assess the trustworthiness of that data?

      • How can collaborative team structures in science increase the trustworthiness of their results?

      • What gives rise to extreme or far out interpretations of data and how are conspiracy theories propagated?

      Deadline: January 25, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $150,000 
       

      The Fund is intended to foster collaboration between scholars and to support research projects focused on current issues facing Brazil. Proposals are sought for research projects that address education management and administration; social science and its applications; public administration and policy; technological advances in education; and evidence-based research. Consideration will also be given to projects that propose collaboration between Harvard faculty and Brazilian academics in the life sciences, physical sciences and engineering, and basic and applied sciences. Proposals will be evaluated on the basis of academic merit, feasibility, and their anticipated advancement of the objectives of the Fund. They must meet at least one of the following three criteria, with priority given to those projects that meet more than one criterion:

      1. Focus on Brazil

      2. Include meaningful collaboration with Brazilian academics

      3. Be undertaken in Brazil in whole or in part

      Applications are invited from individuals who hold a faculty appointment at a Harvard school and who have principal investigator rights at that school. Harvard Medical School faculty must hold a faculty appointment with PI rights in one of HMS’s basic or social science departments. Faculty may request support for postdoctoral scholars and graduate students from Brazil; and for Harvard postdocs, graduate students, and undergraduates.

       

      Deadline: February 25, 2022
      Award Amount: up to $7,500

      This fund is intended to support creative, innovative initiatives in the arts and humanities, for projects led by members of the faculty within the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and/or other schools. Proposals might include performances, master classes, conferences, workshops, seminars, and visits by outsiders. They may involve collaborations across departments and divisions of the FAS and the University as well as with colleagues beyond the University. Although a direct tie-in with the curriculum is not an absolute requirement, proposals that have a clear connection to existing courses, new courses, or pedagogical activities more broadly construed will be favored. Because Rothenberg Funds are now fully depleted, the Provostial Fund will also welcome applications to support faculty research. 
       
      Deadline: Rolling
      Award Amount: up to $5,000
       
      The FAS Tenure-Track Publication Fund assists assistant and associate professors in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences with costs related to scholarly publications, broadly defined. For example, this might include expenses associated with research assistance, publication subsidies, copying, word processing, obtaining translations or illustrations, or creating footnotes or indices. 
       
      The Tenured Publication Fund aids tenured FAS faculty members in bringing scholarly book projects to timely completion. Funds will be allocated on a first-come, first-served basis, to help defray eligible expenses. The Fund is meant to supplement other available means of support; faculty are expected to seek departmental, center-based, and external funds before applying to this Fund.
       
      Canada Program Faculty Funding
      Deadline: Rolling
      Award Amount: unspecified; budget required with application
       
      The Canada Program invites proposals from Harvard faculty, departments, and schools across the University, for research funding, or for support in hosting short-term visiting scholars, policy practitioners, and public figures who are engaged in Canadian comparative topics. Visiting Canadianists are welcome to present at Harvard faculty workshops or conferences, or to offer guest lectures for Harvard undergraduate and graduate students. 
       
      External Funding Opportunities
      AAS-NEH Long-Term Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: $5,000 per month over 4-12 months
       
      American Antiquarian Society (AAS) Fellows are selected on the basis of the applicant's scholarly qualifications, the scholarly significance or importance of the project, and the appropriateness of the proposed study to the Society's collections. Fellowships are for persons who have already completed their formal professional training. Foreign nationals who have been residents in the United States for at least three years immediately preceding the application deadline for the fellowship are eligible. Preference will be given to individuals who have not held long-term fellowships during the three years preceding the period for which the application is being made.
       
      AAS-NEH fellows are expected to be in regular and continuous residence at the Society. They must devote full time to their study and may not accept teaching assignments or undertake any other major activities during the tenure of their award. Fellows may hold other major fellowships or grants during fellowship tenure, in addition to sabbaticals and supplemental grants from their own institutions. Other NEH-funded grants may be held serially, but not concurrently.
       
      Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: February 1, 2022 
      Award Amount: varies by fellowship; please see below
       
      The American Center of Research (ACOR) in Amman, Jordan promotes study, teaching, and increased knowledge of ancient and Middle Eastern studies with Jordan as a focus. The following residential fellowships are available:
      • NEH Fellowship: This award is intended for scholars who have a Ph.D. or have completed their professional training. Funding is provided for four to ten months. Eligible fields of research include, but are not limited to: modern and classical languages, linguistics, literature, history, jurisprudence, philosophy, archaeology, heritage studies, comparative religion, ethics, and the history, criticism, and theory of the arts. Social and political scientists are encouraged to apply. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or foreign nationals living in the U.S. for three years immediately preceding the application deadline. The award for ten months is $50,000, of which $32,000 is for stipend and travel and the remainder is for ACOR room and board. Shorter award periods are prorated accordingly. 
      • CAORC FellowshipsThis program offers two- to six-month fellowships for post-doctoral scholars and scholars and professionals with a terminal degree in their field, pursuing research or publication projects in the natural and social sciences, humanities, and associated disciplines relating to the Middle East. U.S. citizenship is required. The maximum award amount is $34,200. 

      Research Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals Sponsor Deadline: December 12, 2021  Award Amount: up to $6,000 
      The American Institute for Indonesian Studies (AIFIS) invites applications from graduate and post-graduate researchers who are US citizens and wish to pursue their research activities in Indonesia. Grants allow scholars to conduct research projects in any field of contemporary or traditional Indonesian Studies. AIFIS encourages applications for projects that foreground collaboration with Indonesian counterparts as well as that produce open-source content for public dissemination and/or curriculum development. These grants can be applied toward travel, accommodation, and support of research activities in Indonesia.
       
      Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: February 1, 2022 
      Award Amount: All applicants will need to submit a budget that is reasonable and appropriate to the project. Budgets should include economy airfare, stipend, lodging accommodations and other research-related expenses.
       
      The American Institute of Pakistan Studies (AIPS) is a bi-national research and educational organization with a mission to promote academic study of Pakistan in the US and to encourage scholarly exchange between the US and Pakistan. Fellows must be AIPS individual members in good standing at the time of application and throughout the tenure of the grant. Research must be at least 2 months and less than 9 months; AIPS reserves the right to shorten the duration of research, pending availability of funds. Research can be conducted in Pakistan only (Islamabad and/or Lahore), or in countries other than Pakistan and the US.
       
      Subventions for Publications
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 8, 2022
      Sponsor Deadline: February 15, 2022
      Award Amount: up to $2,500
       
      The American Musicological Society makes funds available to help with expenses involved in the publication of works of musical scholarship, including books, essay collections, articles, chapters in essay collections, special issues of journals, and works in non-print media. Subventions are granted for any topics of musicological research. Individual authors or editors, or their sponsoring organization, society, or department, may apply for assistance to defray costs not normally covered by publishers. Examples include costs related to illustrations, musical examples, facsimiles, accompanying audio or video examples, and permissions. Subventions are not given to defray costs associated with indexing. Author subventions required by publishers are not eligible for reimbursement.
       
      Phillips Fund for Native American Research
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 22, 2022  Sponsor Deadline: March 1, 2022  Award Amount: up to $3,500
      The Phillips Fund of the American Philosophical Society provides grants for research in Native American linguistics, ethnohistory, and the history of studies of Native Americans, in the continental United States and Canada. The grants are intended for such costs as travel, tapes, films, and consultants' fees. Grants are not made for projects in archaeology, ethnography, or psycholinguistics; for the purchase of permanent equipment; or for the preparation of pedagogical materials. The committee distinguishes ethnohistory from contemporary ethnography as the study of cultures and cultural change through time.
       
      Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 16, 2022
      Award Amount: varies by fellowship; please see below
       
      The American Research Center in Egypt's mission is to support research on all aspects of Egyptian history and culture, foster a broader knowledge about Egypt among the general public, and strengthen American-Egyptian cultural ties. The following programs are accepting applications:
      • CAORC Fellowships: This fellowship is open to U.S. citizen pre-doctoral candidates (ABD), postdoctoral scholars, faculty and independent scholars at museums, universities and institutions worldwide for a minimum stay of three months and a maximum stay of 12 months. Actual per diem ranges from $2200-$3520 per month plus round-trip airfare. 
      • NEH Fellowships: Open to American postdoctoral scholars, faculty and independent scholars at U.S. universities, museums, and institutions. National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) funds may be awarded to foreign nationals who have been residents of the United States for three (3) consecutive years immediately preceding and including the application deadline. Advanced degree candidates must have completed all requirements—except for the actual conferral of the doctoral degree—by the application deadline for the fellowship. ARCE plans to award one four-month (4) fellowship pending notification of its successful grant application in April 2022 (award amount TBD). 
      American Heritage
      FAS/OSP Deadline: 5 business days prior to submission
      Sponsor Deadline: Rolling; concept letters are highly encouraged
      Award Amount: $10,000 - $30,000
       
      The Americana Foundation seeks to promote knowledge, preservation, and accessibility of America's heritage through increasing educational opportunities of future conservators and curators in the field and through preservation and presentation of unique collections in alignment with the interests and collections of the Meyer family. Projects for consideration include: 
      • Preservation and/or acquisition of high style, classic, handcrafted furniture from the 18th and 19th centuries as well as supporting their placement with charitable and educational institutions, and/or the US government.
      • Career development support for curatorial and conservation internships within major institutions and universities.
      • Restoration projects for heritage buildings and cultural landscapes that are listed or eligible for listing in the National Register of historic places.
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 22, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: March 1, 2022 
      Award Amount: varies by project
       
      Grants are made on a project basis to curatorial programs at museums, artists' organizations, and other cultural institutions to originate innovative and scholarly presentations of contemporary visual arts. Projects may include exhibitions, catalogues, and other organizational activities directly related to these areas. The foundation values the contributions of all artists, reflecting the true diversity of the contemporary art field, and encourages proposals that highlight women, artists of color, and under-represented practitioners. 
       
      Artist in Residence Program
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: $2,500 stipend, plus housing and studio space
       
      Bernheim Arboretum and Research Forest is a private, non-profit educational and recreational nature preserve located 25 miles south of Louisville in Clermont, KY. The organization's mission is connecting people with nature, accomplished through the lenses of education, horticulture, land conservation, play, and arts in nature. Up to 4 artists are selected for residencies at Bernheim on an annual basis. One residency is dedicated to a regional artist currently living in Kentucky or in Clark and Floyd counties of Southern Indiana, and one residency is dedicated to an artist whose work addresses environmental issues and climate change. Residencies can be from six weeks to two months in length. 
       
      John Carter Brown Library: Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: varies by opportunity; please see below
       
      Sponsorship of research at the John Carter Brown Library is reserved exclusively for scholars whose work is centered on the colonial history of the Americas, North and South, including all aspects of European, African, and Native American engagements in global and comparative contexts. 
      • Short-term fellowships are open to individuals who are engaged in pre- and post-doctoral, or independent research, regardless of nationality. Short-term fellowships are available for periods of two to four months. Short-term fellowships are available for periods of two to four months and carry a stipend of $2,100 per month.
      • Long-term fellowships are available for periods of five to ten months and carry a monthly stipend of $5,000. Some of the long-term fellowships have citizenship requirements.
      Additional specialized fellowships are detailed on the library's website
       
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 25, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: February 1, 2022
      Award Amount: $5,000 - $50,000
       

      The Trust makes grant awards twice a year to nonprofit organizations in the city of Boston and contiguous communities, as well as to organizations in which Cabot family members maintain philanthropic interest. Awards are put to work in the areas of arts and culture, education and youth development, environment and conservation, health and human services, and for civic and public benefit. Within these fields, as appropriate, the trustees prefer programs mainly serving youth and young adults, with a special interest in programs focused on insuring the healthy growth and development of infants and young children, as a foundation for their future success. Applications recommended for review meet the following criteria:

      • Reflect Cabot family interests and provide benefits to communities and organizations that have been supported by family philanthropy;
      • Extend important services to individuals and groups not served adequately through other programs and institutions;
      • Manage change by assessing community needs and developing programs to meet emerging needs;
      • Promote productive cooperation and full use of resources by nonprofit organizations and community groups; and
      • Test new approaches to problems or adapt solutions that have been successful elsewhere.
      The Cabot Family Charitable Trust will consider grant applications for general support, support for specific programs and activities and for capital campaigns. While most grant awards are for one year, the trustees may award multi-year funding for capital campaign and in limited circumstances, for a period of up to three years where a longer-term commitment can be shown to accelerate positive outcomes.
       
      NEH Scholar in Residence
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: $60,000 
       
      The Center offers a one year residential fellowship in New York City to senior scholars through a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. The award supports original research at the Center in the humanities, including but not limited to Jewish studies, Russian and East European studies, American studies, Germanic studies, as well as musicology, linguistics, anthropology, sociology, and history. Applications are welcome from college and university faculty in any field who have completed a PhD more than six years prior to the start of the fellowship and whose research will benefit considerably from consultation with materials in the collections of the Center's partners - American Jewish Historical Society, American Sephardi Federation, Leo Baeck Institute, Yeshiva University Museum, and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.
       
      Conference/Seminar/Workshop Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 7, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: January 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $25,000. Please note that this sponsor does not allow proposers to budget for indirect costs, which falls short of the 15% overhead required by FAS/SEAS policy. Please discuss options to recover the shortfall with your grants administrator before preparing an application.
       
      The Foundation will consider applications from institutions for grants to hold conferences, workshops, or seminars on specific subjects related to the Foundation's goals and objectives. Applicants are urged to seek matching funds. Applications should be filed before September 15, or January 15 for conferences to be held during the following six-month period. In principle, the Foundation does not provide funding for annual meetings. Priority will be given to collaborative projects involving institutions in Taiwan. Projects on Taiwan Studies are especially encouraged.
       
       
      Publication Subsidies
      FAS/OSP Deadline: N/A; grants are applied for by the academic publisher 
      Sponsor Deadline: January 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: $5,000 - $10,000 
       
      Academic publishers may apply for subsidies for the publication of scholarly works related to the goals of the Foundation. The publication may be in the form of a book or a monograph. Applications will be accepted for completed book manuscripts, but not for books in a series. Priority will be given to first book projects by junior scholars. Publication Subsidy Grants may only be used to cover editing, indexing, and other relevant publication costs. Translation and research-related expenses may not be included. Priority will also be given to collaborative projects involving institutions in Taiwan. Projects on Taiwan Studies are especially encouraged.
       
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 22, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: March 1, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to £2,500
       
      The Classical Association is a major giver of grants to classical projects, mainly but not exclusively in the UK. The applications the Association supports typically fall into one of the following categories: 
      1. Schools
      2. Outreach
      3. Conferences
      4. Continuing Professional Development Events
      5. Summer Schools
      6. Major Projects
      7. Other Initiatives
      Millard Meiss Publication Fund
      FAS/OSP Deadline: March 8, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: March 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: The grant sum is intended to be less than the total cost of production; that is, a substantial portion of production costs must be met by the publisher or be from other sources.
       
      Applications for publication grants will be considered only for book-length scholarly manuscripts in the history of art, visual studies, and related subjects that have been accepted by a publisher on their merits, but cannot be published in the most desirable form without a subsidy. Applications are judged in relation to two criteria: (1) the quality of the project; and (2) the need for financial assistance. Although the quality of the manuscript is the sine qua non for a grant, an excellent manuscript may not be funded if it is financially self-supporting.

      In general, the purpose of the grant is to support presses in the publication of projects of the highest scholarly and intellectual merit that may not generate adequate financial return. The jury is particularly sympathetic to applications that propose enhancing the visual component of the study through the inclusion of color plates or an expanded component of black-and-white illustrations. Expenses generated by exceptional design requirements (maps, line drawings, charts, and tables) are also suitable for consideration. Permission and rental fees/reproduction rights, especially in cases where they are burdensome, are also appropriate.
       
      Recordings at Risk
      FAS/OSP Deadline: December 8, 2021 
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: $10,000 - $50,000 
       
      This program supports the preservation of rare and unique audio, audiovisual, and other time-based media of high scholarly value through digital reformatting. Awards cover costs of preservation reformatting for fragile and/or obsolete time-based media content by qualified external service providers. Eligible media may include, but are not necessarily limited to, magnetic audio and video tape, grooved discs, wax cylinders, wire recordings, and film (with or without sound). An independent review panel, comprised of scholars in a variety of domains and technologists with expertise in digitization and digital preservation, will evaluate applications based on impact, urgency, potential for preservation, and approach to access. 
       
      Research Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 10, 2022 
      Award Amount: $5,500 
       
      Two fellowships provide US $5,500 each (up to US $1500 for transportation and up to an additional US $4000 for research expenses on the island) and are designed for scholars who already have their PhDs, whose research engages the archaeology, history, culture, or geography of Cyprus, and who would derive significant benefit from a month’s research time on the island. Particular consideration is given to applicants whose projects enable them to include Cyprus in their teaching. A minimum of 30 days residence at CAARI is required. Applicants must be U.S. citizens.
       
      Research Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 18, 2022 
      Award Amount: $3,500
       
      The Folger Shakespeare Library has embarked on a major renovation project. While this work is underway and Folger collections are unavailable for in-person consultation, the Folger Institute is committed to continuing its support of collections-based research, and to providing scholars with the resources they need to pursue and advance their work. The renovation offers the Institute the opportunity to create new kinds of awards and to make fellowships more adaptable. Effects of the global pandemic, ongoing at the time of this announcement, require that adaptability.
       
      In 2022–2023, Folger research fellowships will place value on many different forms and phases of scholarly enterprise as well as places to pursue it. The Folger Institute will offer non-residential research fellowships, in the amount of $3,500, to support four continuous weeks of research and writing. In their applications, scholars should make a strong case for their proposed topic’s importance, its relevance to a field of study broadly supported by or contiguous to the Folger’s collections and programs, and the originality and sophistication of its approach. They should also describe the type of work they would like to undertake, with a justification of why and how their research agenda will advance their project. Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, travel to work in archives, libraries, or museums is not a requirement of fellowship support and will not be the basis of an award for 2022–2023.
       
      Conferences
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 18, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: February 28, 2022
      Award Amount: unspecified; detailed budget required 
       
      The Fritz Thyssen Foundation supports scholarly events, in particular national and international conferences with the aim of facilitating the discussion and analysis of specific scholarly questions as well as fostering cooperation and networking of scholars working in the same field or on interdisciplinary topics. An application can be filed in the following areas of support:
      Funding is basically reserved for projects that are related to the promotion areas of the Foundation and have a clear connection to the German research system. This connection can be established either at a personal level through German scientists working on the project, at an institutional level through non-German scientists being affiliated to German research institutes or through studies on topics related thematically to German research interests.
       
      Humanities Program
      FAS/OSP Deadline: 5 business days prior to submission
      Sponsor Deadline: Rolling
      Award Amount: unspecified; past grants range from $2,000 to $50,000+. Please note that this sponsor does not allow proposers to budget for indirect costs, which falls short of the 15% overhead required by FAS/SEAS policy. Please discuss options to recover the shortfall with your grants administrator before preparing an application.
       
      The Foundation intends to further the humanities along a broad front, supporting projects which address the concerns of the historical  studia humanitatis: a humanistic education rooted in the great traditions of the past; the formation of human beings according to cultural, moral, and aesthetic ideals derived from that past; and the ongoing debate over how these ideals may best be conceived and realized. Programs in the following areas are eligible: history; archaeology; literature; languages, both classical and modern; philosophy; ethics; comparative religion; the history, criticism, and theory of the arts; and those aspects of the social sciences which share the content and methods of humanistic disciplines. The Foundation welcomes projects that cross the boundaries between humanistic disciplines and explore the connection between the humanities and other areas of scholarship.
       
      Venetian Research Program
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: up to $20,000 
       
      The Foundation awards travel grants to individual scholars to support historical research on Venice and the former Venetian empire, and for the study of contemporary Venetian society and culture. Disciplines of the humanities and social sciences are eligible areas of study, including (but not limited to) archaeology, architecture, art, bibliography, economics, history, history of science, law, literature, music, political science, religion, and theater.

      Applicants and grantees are advised to plan for the added difficulties surrounding travel during the COVID-19 pandemic. To support scholars, the Foundation has lengthened the grant period to a two-year timeframe. Grantees will be able to adjust their travel plans and submit an updated itinerary.
       
      Grants to Organizations
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 17, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: February 25, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $30,000
       

      The Graham Foundation fosters the development and exchange of diverse and challenging ideas about architecture and its role in the arts, culture, and society. The Graham Foundation offers Production and Presentation Grants to organizations. These grants assist organizations with the production-related expenses that are necessary to take a project from conceptualization to realization and public presentation. These projects include, but are not limited to, publications, exhibitions, installations, films, new media projects, conferences/lectures, and other public programs.

       

      Applications for Publication Support: Unless the applicant is a publisher, an organization applying for publication support should have a committed publisher for the work, that is, a publisher with whom you have a contractual agreement to publish your project.

       

      An academic department/unit at a university may only apply for one grant per year.

      Charles Bullard Fellowships in Forest Research
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: stipend of up to $60,000 
       
      The Charles Bullard fellowship program at Harvard Forest supports advanced research and study by individuals who show promise of making an important contribution, either as scholars or administrators, to forestry and forest-related subjects including biology, earth sciences, economics, politics, administration, philosophy, humanities, the arts, or law. Bullard Fellowships are generally awarded to individuals in mid-career who have established themselves in academia, public service, or in the private sector. Research areas include, for example, forest ecology, tree physiology, forest soils, forest resource management, conservation and biodiversity issues, environmental policy, industrial ecological issues and management processes, forest land planning, public policy, and the arts. A major goal of the Bullard Fellowship program is to enhance research activities at Harvard Forest and build long-term collaborations that connect Harvard Forest with other parts of the University. Fellows can be based at the Harvard Forest or associated with other departments and centers at Harvard University. Fellowships are 6-12 months in length. 
       
      Furthermore Grants in Publishing
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 22, 2022  Sponsor Deadline: March 1, 2022  Award Amount: $1,500 - $15,000 
      Furthermore grants assist nonfiction books having to do with art, architecture, and design; cultural history, New York City, and related public issues; and conservation and preservation. Furthermore looks for work that appeals to an informed general audience, gives evidence of high standards in editing, design, and production, and promises a reasonable shelf life. Funds apply to such specific publication components as writing, research, editing, indexing, design, illustration, photography, and printing and binding. Book projects to which a university press, nonprofit or trade publisher is already committed and for which there is a feasible distribution plan are usually preferred.
       
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 31, 2022 (5:00pm, Hong Kong time) 
      Award Amount: As the duration and destination of each Fellowship varies, the amount of the grant will be varied on a case by case basis. 
       
      The J. S. Lee Memorial Fellowship Programme supports curators, museum professionals and art history research academics taking part in Chinese art topics. In order to realize the goal of promoting international cultural and intellectual exchange in the field of Chinese art, the Programme requires the applicant to be based in a museum or an institution in a place outside of his / her habitual residence. Fields supported include Chinese art history, curatorship, archaeology, conservation, museum management and museum education. Selected Fellows will have the opportunities to work under leading curatorial professionals, and to participate in curatorial work and research for a period of four to twelve months. The Fellowship fund will cover international round-trip airfare, accommodation, and living expenses during the Fellowship period.
      Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: Junior (untenured) fellows receive a stipend of $25,000 per semester; senior (tenured) fellows receive $30,000 per semester, plus housing 
       
      Each year, the Kroc Institute’s Visiting Research Fellows Program brings outstanding scholars focused on peace research to the University of Notre Dame for a semester or a full academic year. The Institute particularly seeks scholars who will actively integrate their research with ongoing Kroc research initiatives. Fellowships begin at the start of the University of Notre Dame’s fall or spring semester (August or January) and can run for one semester or a full academic year. Visiting Fellow openings for 2022-2023 include:
      • Gender, Intersectionality, Conflict, and Peacebuilding
      • Peace Accords Matrix
      • International Mediation
      • Systemic Racism in the United States
       
      Of the People: Widening the Path: Connecting Communities Digital Initiative - Artist or Scholar in Residence Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: December 21, 2021
      Award Amount: up to $150,000
       
      The Library of Congress was awarded an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant titled “Of the People: Widening the Path” to fund a new, multi-part initiative to connect more deeply with Indigenous, Black, Hispanic, and other communities of color by exposing grantees to the Library’s expansive collections, using technology to enable storytelling, and offering more internship and fellowship opportunities. The Connecting Communities Digital Initiative (CCDI) Artist or Scholar in Residence program will fund an Artist in Residence or a Scholar in Residence in 2021, 2022, and 2023. Each Artist/Scholar in Residence will serve for 2 years, supported for $50,000 in their first year and up to $100,000 in their second year. Individuals selected will be either artists or scholars whose artistic or scholarly work connects with the intersections of technology and cultural heritage, and engages with the legacies of racial division in the United States. Proposed projects will help the Library and the American people imagine new ways of preserving, accessing, and sharing the stories of underserved communities, connecting the nation’s past to its future.
       

      During the first year, the artist or scholar in residence will be required to submit quarterly project updates, and to participate in meetings and events at the Library. Before the second year of the grant, the artist or scholar in residence will produce a fully revised and expanded work plan and budget to reflect the developments in the first year for approval by Library staff. During the second year, the artist or scholar in residence will be expected to visit the Library for at least 20 days in person to engage more deeply in the scholarly and artistic life of the Library. In addition, the technical, artistic, and/or scholarly product should be created and shared during this year, resulting in a public-facing research or artistic publication, project, exhibition, or event.

       

      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 22, 2022 Sponsor Deadline: March 1, 2022  Award Amount: unspecified
      The Marc Fitch Fund makes small grants towards the costs of publishing scholarly work in the fields of British and Irish national, regional and local history, archaeology, antiquarian studies, historical geography, the history of art and architecture, heraldry, genealogy and surname studies, archival research, artifact conservation and the broad fields of the heritage, conservation and the historic environment. The following grants are available:
      • Publication Grants: These are intended to help with production costs, including the costs of illustrative material.
      • Research Grants: These are intended to cover incidental expenses, such as the cost of travel and accommodation within the UK/Ireland to visit archives; they are not intended to cover time spent in research and writing. To qualify, the work must already have been provisionally accepted for publication.
      • Special Project Grants: From time to time the Fund considers applications for special projects that do not fit easily into one of the above categories, such as the conservation, cataloguing, scanning, transcription and study of significant primary sources, or the conservation and study of significant artifacts. To qualify, original research and the publication of the results has to be part of the project.
      Prospective applicants should submit a brief outline of their project by e-mail. If the proposal meets the Fund's criteria, the relevant application forms will be provided.
       
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 7, 2022 
      Award Amount: ~$5,410 per Fellowship
       
      The primary purpose of the Foundation is to award fellowships to present and prospective teachers, with an emphasis on present teachers at the college or university level, to enable them to study abroad or at some location or locations other than that with which they are most closely associated. The aim is to stimulate and broaden the minds of teachers so as to improve and enhance the quality of their instruction. Grants are primarily for travel and related expenses and not as salary substitutes, scholarships, or grants in aid.
       
      The Foundation does not maintain a website but application guidelines can be found at the link above. Applicants should submit all required materials along with the candidate information form to the foundation via email. Additional information can be found in the foundation's FAQs.
       
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 25, 2022 Sponsor Deadline: February 1, 2022  Award Amount: unspecified 
      The following grants are available:
      • Co-Funding Grants promote Byzantine studies in North America. These grants provide co-funding to organize scholarly gatherings (e.g., workshops, seminars, small conferences) in North America that advance scholarship in Byzantine studies broadly conceived. The Center is particularly interested in supporting convenings that build diverse professional networks that cross the boundaries of traditional academic disciplines, propose creative approaches to fundamental topics in Byzantine studies, or explore new areas of research or methodologies.
      • Project Grants support discrete and highly focused professional projects aimed at the conservation, preservation, and documentation of Byzantine archaeological sites and monuments dated from 300 CE to 1500 CE primarily in Greece and Turkey. Projects may be small stand-alone projects or discrete components of larger projects. Eligible projects might include archeological investigation, excavation, or survey; documentation, recovery, and analysis of at risk materials (e.g., architecture, mosaics, paintings in situ); and preservation (i.e., preventive measures, e.g., shelters, fences, walkways, water management) or conservation (i.e., physical hands-on treatments) of sites, buildings, or objects.
      • Publication Grants support book-length publications or major articles in the field of Byzantine studies broadly conceived. Grants are aimed at early career academics. Preference will be given to postdocs and assistant professors, though applications from non-tenure track faculty and associate and full professors will be considered. The Center encourages the submission of first-book projects.
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: March 24, 2022
      Sponsor Deadline: March 31, 2022 
      Award Amount: unspecified; detailed budget required
       
      The Max van Berchem Foundation, whose goal is to promote the study of Islamic and Arabic archaeology, history, geography, art history, epigraphy, religion and literature, awards grants for research carried out in these areas by scholars who have already received their doctorate. In recent years, the Foundation has financed archaeological excavations, research projects and studies in Islamic art and architecture in Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Spain, Hungary, Bulgaria, Turkey, Tunisia, Morocco, Iran, Sudan, Iraq, Turkmenistan and India. It has also provided financial support for epigraphical projects in France (the Thesaurus d'Epigraphie Islamique), Spain, Italy, Palestine, China, Yemen, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Bengal. 
       
      Artist Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 24, 2022
      Award Amount: $15,000 (Artist Fellowships); $5,000 (Finalists)
       
      Fellowships are direct grants to artists to recognize exceptional creative work. Applicants must be legal, full-time residents of Massachusetts for at least the last two years. The following disciplines are eligible for this application cycle:
      • Drawing & Printmaking, Fiction/Creative Nonfiction, and Painting
       
      Long-Term Research Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: $5,000 per month for 4-12 months 
       
      The Massachusetts Historical Society in Boston offers assistance to scholars who need to use its library and archival collections. During their residence, MHS Research Fellows become part of a scholarly community that includes other current fellows, MHS staff, Boston-area scholars, and former fellows. They participate in "brown-bag" lunchtime programs, present their own research, attend seminars, and join MHS staff and other fellows for collegial lunches every Thursday at a neighborhood eatery. The program is open to U.S. citizens and to foreign nationals who have lived in the United States for at least 3 years immediately preceding the application deadline. 
       
      Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: December 9, 2021
      Award Amount: $50,000 
       
      Through its program of Fellowships, the Ford Foundation seeks to increase the diversity of the nation's college and university faculties by increasing their ethnic and racial diversity, to maximize the educational benefits of diversity, and to increase the number of professors who can and will use diversity as a resource for enriching the education of all students. Postdoctoral fellowships will be awarded in a national competition administered by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (the National Academies) on behalf of the Ford Foundation. The awards will be made to individuals who, in the judgment of the review panels, have demonstrated superior academic achievement, are committed to a career in teaching and research at the college or university level, show promise of future achievement as scholars and teachers, and are well prepared to use diversity as a resource for enriching the education of all students. This program is open to individuals awarded a Ph.D. or Sc.D. degree no earlier than December 9, 2014 and no later than December 9, 2021 in an eligible research-based field from a U.S. institution of higher education.
       
      Awards will be made for study in research-based programs. Examples include the following major disciplines and related interdisciplinary fields: American studies, anthropology, archaeology, art and theater history, astronomy, chemistry, communications, computer science, cultural studies, earth sciences, economics, education, engineering, ethnic studies, ethnomusicology, geography, history, international relations, language, life sciences, linguistics, literature, mathematics, performance study, philosophy, physics, political science, psychology, religious studies, sociology, urban planning, and women's studies. Also eligible are interdisciplinary ethnic studies programs, such as African American studies and Native American studies, and other interdisciplinary programs, such as area studies, peace studies, and social justice. 
       
      Translation Projects
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 12, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $25,000
       
      Through fellowships to published translators, the National Endowment for the Arts supports projects for the translation of specific works of prose, poetry, or drama from other languages into English. The work to be translated should be of interest for its literary excellence and value. The NEA encourage translations of writers and of work that are not well represented in English, as well as work that has not previously been translated into English. 
       
      Digital Humanities Advancement Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 7, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: January 14, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $50,000 (Level I); up to $150,000 (Level II); up to $350,000 + additional $50,000 in matching funds (Level III) 
       

      The Digital Humanities Advancement Grants program (DHAG) supports innovative, experimental, and/or computationally challenging digital projects, leading to work that can scale to enhance scholarly research, teaching, and public programming in the humanities. The program also supports research that examines the history, criticism, ethics, and philosophy of digital culture or technology and its impact on society. DHAG applicants must respond to one or more of these programmatic priorities:

      • research and refinement of innovative, experimental, or computationally challenging methods and techniques
      • enhancement or design of digital infrastructure, such as open-source code, tools, or platforms, that contribute to and support the humanities
      • research that examines the history, criticism, ethics, or philosophy of digital culture or technology and its impact on society, including racial, religious, and/or gender biases
      • evaluative studies that investigate the practices and the impact of digital scholarship on research, pedagogy, scholarly communication, and public engagement
      In support of its efforts to advance national information infrastructures in libraries and archives, and subject to the availability of funds and agency discretion, the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) anticipates providing funding through this program. These funds may support DHAG projects that further the IMLS mission to advance, support, and empower America’s libraries, archives, museums, and related organizations. IMLS funding supports innovative collaborations between library and archives professionals, humanities professionals, information scientists, and relevant public communities that advance the preservation of, access to, and public engagement with digital collections and services. IMLS encourages DHAG applicants to work in collaboration, and employ the expertise of, library and archives staff at your institution or across the country to strengthen knowledge networks, empower community learning, foster civic cohesion, advance research, and support the traditionally underserved.
       
      Institutes for Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 23, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: March 2, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $250,000
       

      The Institutes for Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities program supports national or regional (multistate) training programs for scholars, humanities professionals, and graduate students to broaden and extend their knowledge of digital humanities.  Through this program, NEH seeks to increase the number of humanities scholars and practitioners using digital technology in their research and to broadly disseminate knowledge about advanced technology tools and methodologies relevant to the humanities.

       

      There is wide latitude in the form and content of institutes. They may focus on a particular computational method, such as network or spatial analysis, or target the needs of a particular humanities discipline or audience. They could be offered only once or offered multiple times to different audiences. They may be as short as a few days or as long as six weeks, held at a single site, multiples sites, or virtually, but the format and duration of a program should allow for full and thorough treatment of the topic and be appropriate for the intended audience. Institutes could be scheduled before or after regularly occurring scholarly meetings, during the summer months, or during appropriate times of the academic year.

       

      Institutes for Higher Education Faculty
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 14, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: February 22, 2022 (Updated Deadline)
      Award Amount: up to $235,000 
       

      NEH Institutes are professional development programs that convene higher education faculty from across the nation in order to deepen and enrich their understanding of a variety of topics in the humanities and enrich their capacity for effective scholarship and teaching. Most fundamentally, institutes:  

      • allow immersive study of topics of significance to the humanities  
      • foster new fields of study and/or revitalize existing areas of inquiry  
      • reinvigorate teaching and increase intellectual impact in the classroom  
      • build lasting communities that foster participants’ intellectual and professional collaboration  

      They should:  

      • ground the study in significant humanities texts and related resources  
      • explore multiple approaches to the topic in a manner that is both rigorous and collegial  
      • provide opportunities for deep and collaborative engagement with the topic  
      • model excellent scholarship and teaching  
      • consider how the topic engages recent developments in the scholarship, teaching, and curriculum of participants’ professional settings  
      • reach the widest possible audience for whom the topic is relevant  
      Institutes for K-12 Educators
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 14, 2022
      Sponsor Deadline: February 22, 2022 (Updated Deadline)
      Award Amount: up to $235,000 
       

      NEH Institutes are professional development programs that convene K-12 educators from across the nation in order to deepen and enrich their understanding of a variety of topics in the humanities and enrich their capacity for effective scholarship and teaching.  

      Most fundamentally, institutes:  

      • allow immersive study of topics of significance to the humanities  
      • foster new fields of study and/or revitalize existing areas of inquiry  
      • reinvigorate teaching and increase intellectual impact in the classroom  
      • build lasting communities that foster participants’ intellectual and professional collaboration  

      They should:  

      • ground the study in significant humanities texts and related resources  
      • explore multiple approaches to the topic in a manner that is both rigorous and collegial  
      • provide opportunities for deep and collaborative engagement with the topic  
      • model excellent scholarship and teaching  
      • consider how the topic engages recent developments in the scholarship, teaching, and curriculum of participants’ professional settings  
      • reach the widest possible audience for whom the topic is relevant  
      Landmarks of American History and Culture
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 14, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: February 22, 2022 (Updated Deadline)
      Award Amount: up to $190,000 
       

      The Landmarks of American History and Culture program supports a series of one-week workshops for K-12 educators across the nation to enhance and strengthen humanities teaching at the K-12 level. The program defines a landmark as a site of historic importance within the United States and its territories. Landmarks could include historic homes, museums, presidential libraries, and sites memorializing literary, artistic, or architectural achievements. Projects could take place in public spaces and neighborhoods, major waterways, national parks, or other locations of historic importance.

       

      Projects employ a place-based approach and are designed to offer educators a unique and compelling opportunity to deepen and expand their knowledge of the diverse histories, cultures, traditions, languages, and perspectives of the American people. Applicants are encouraged to think creatively about place-based learning strategies, experiential learning methodologies, and other professional development goals. Projects explore central themes in American history and culture, including government, literature, the arts, architecture, archaeology, and related humanities subjects.

       

      Media Projects
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 5, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: January 12, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $75,000 (Development); $700,000 (Production); $1M (Chairman’s Special Awards)
       
      The Media Projects program supports the development, production, and distribution of radio programs, podcasts, long-form documentary films, and documentary film series that engage general audiences with humanities ideas in creative and appealing ways. Projects must be grounded in humanities scholarship and demonstrate an approach that is thoughtful, balanced, and analytical. Media Projects offers two levels of funding: Development and Production.
       
      Public Humanities Projects
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 5, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: January 12, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $75,000 (Planning); up to $400,000 (+ additional $100,000 for Positions in the Public Humanities) (Implementation)
       

      The Public Humanities Projects program supports projects that bring the ideas of the humanities to life for general audiences through public programming.  Projects must engage humanities scholarship to analyze significant themes in disciplines such as history, literature, ethics, and art history. Awards support projects that are intended to reach broad and diverse public audiences in non-classroom settings in the United States. Projects should engage with ideas that are accessible to the general public and employ appealing interpretive formats. Public Humanities Projects supports projects in three categories (Exhibitions, Historic Places, and Humanities Discussions), and at two funding levels (Planning and Implementation). Proposed projects may include complementary components: for example, a museum exhibition might be accompanied by a website or mobile app. Project topics may be international, national, regional, or local in focus, but locally focused projects should address topics that are of regional or national relevance by drawing connections to broad themes or historical questions. 

       

      Public Scholar Program
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals 
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: $5,000 per month for 6-12 months 
       
      The Public Scholars program supports the creation of well-researched nonfiction books in the humanities written for the broad public. It does so by offering grants to individual authors for research, writing, travel, and other activities leading to publication. Writers with or without an academic affiliation may apply, and no advanced degree is required. The program is intended both to encourage non-academic writers to deepen their engagement with the humanities by strengthening the research underlying their books and to encourage academic writers in the humanities to communicate the significance of their research to the broadest possible range of readers. NEH especially encourages applications to this program from independent writers, researchers, scholars, and journalists. Applicants must be either U.S. citizens or foreign nationals who have been living in the United States or its jurisdictions for at least the three years prior to the application deadline.
       
      Sustaining Cultural Heritage Collections
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 6, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: January 13, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $50,000 (Planning); up to $350,000 (Implementation) 
       
      The Sustaining Cultural Heritage Collections program helps cultural institutions meet the complex challenge of preserving large and diverse holdings of humanities materials for future generations by supporting sustainable conservation measures that mitigate deterioration, prolong the useful life of collections, and support institutional resilience: the ability to anticipate and respond to disasters resulting from natural or human activity. As museums, libraries, archives, and other collecting institutions strive to be effective stewards of humanities collections, they must find ways to implement preventive conservation measures that are sustainable. This program helps cultural repositories plan and implement preservation strategies that pragmatically balance effectiveness, cost, and environmental impact. Sustainable approaches to preservation can contribute to an institution’s financial health, reduce its use of fossil fuels, and benefit its green initiatives, while ensuring that collections are well cared for and available for use in humanities programming, education, and research. Sustainable preventive conservation measures may also aim to prepare and plan for, absorb, respond to, recover from, and more successfully protect collections in the event of emergencies resulting from natural or human activity.
       
      Dynamic Language Infrastructure - Documenting Endangered Languages Senior Research Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 8, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: February 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $450,000 over up to 3 years (Senior Research Grants); conference funding requests must follow NSF PAPPG guidelines
       
      This funding partnership between the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) supports projects to develop and advance knowledge concerning dynamic language infrastructure in the context of endangered human languages—languages that are both understudied and at risk of falling out of use. Made urgent by the imminent loss of roughly half of the approximately 7,000 currently used languages, this effort aims to exploit advances in human-language technology to build computational infrastructure for endangered language research. The program supports projects that contribute to data management and archiving, and to the development of the next generation of researchers. Funding can support fieldwork and other activities relevant to the digital recording, documentation and analysis, and archiving of endangered language data, including the preparation of lexicons, grammars, text samples, and databases. Funding is available in the form of one- to three-year senior research grants and conference proposals.
       
      Linguistics
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 7, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: January 15, 2022
      Award Amount: varies/wide range
       

      The Linguistics Program supports basic science in the domain of human language, encompassing investigations of the grammatical properties of individual human languages, and of natural language in general. Research areas include syntax, semantics, morphology, phonetics, and phonology. The program encourages projects that are interdisciplinary in methodological or theoretical perspective, and that address questions that cross disciplinary boundaries, such as (but not limited to):

      • What are the psychological processes involved in the production, perception, and comprehension of language?
      • What are the computational properties of language and/or the language processor that make fluent production, incremental comprehension or rapid learning possible?
      • How do the acoustic and physiological properties of speech inform our theories of natural language and/or language processing?
      • What role does human neurobiology play in shaping the various grammatical properties of language? 
      • How does language develop in natural learning contexts across the life-span?
      • What social and cultural factors underlie language variation and change?

      Because NSF's mandate is to support basic research, the Linguistics Program does not fund research that takes as its primary goal improved clinical practice or applied policy, nor does it support work to develop or assess pedagogical methods or tools for language instruction. Support is provided for research and conferences.


      Science and Technology Studies
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 26, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: February 2, 2022
      Award Amount: wide range/varies by award type
       
      Science and Technology Studies (STS) is an interdisciplinary field of research that uses historical, philosophical, and social scientific methods to investigate STEM theory and practice. It may focus on history and socio-cultural formation, philosophical underpinnings, or the impacts of science and technology on broader societal concerns including quality of life, ethics, and culture. STS researchers strive to understand the research assumptions of STEM fields, and the co-production of STEM and society, meaning the many ways in which cultural, economic, historical, social and political contexts influence developments in STEM, and how those developments reciprocally influence these contexts. The STS program supports proposals across the broad spectrum of STS research areas, topics, and approaches. They include, but are not limited to:
      1. Studies of societal aspects of an emerging technology such as artificial intelligence, robotics, big data analysis, neuroscience, synthetic biology, nanotechnology, and quantum technologies (computers, sensors, and encryption).
      2. Research on the social organization of scientific work (e.g., organizations, groups, and collaborations) and how this shapes the knowledge that gets produced and its intellectual and social impacts.
      3. Issues relating science and engineering to broader societal concerns including ethics, policy, governance, equity, race and gender, inclusion, trust, reliability, risk and uncertainty, sustainability, user-centeredness, and globalization.
      4. Research on the historical and conceptual foundations of any of the natural, social, or formal sciences including its nature and fundamentals, its origins, or its place in modern politics, culture, and society.
      5. Mixed methods (qualitative and quantitative) approaches, and approaches that integrate traditional STS perspectives (historical, philosophical, social scientific) with each other or with innovative perspectives from the arts or humanities.
      6. Interdisciplinary projects on topics of broad societal concern that engage in integrative collaborative research involving at least one STS expert and one in some other STEM field with prospective outcomes that serve to advance both fields.
      For this deadline, the following types of applications will be accepted: Standard and Collaborative Research, Scholars, Professional Development, Research Community Development, and Conference Proposals. 
       
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: February 1, 2022
      Award Amount: $5,000
       

      The New England Regional Fellowship Consortium, a collaboration of 30 major cultural agencies, will offer at least two dozen awards in the 2022-2023 application cycle. Each grant will provide a stipend of $5,000 for a minimum of eight weeks of research at participating institutions. Awards are open to U.S. citizens and foreign nationals who hold the necessary U.S. government documents. Grants are designed to encourage projects that draw on the resources of several agencies.

       

      NERFC grants support work in a broad array of fields, including but not limited to: history, literature, art history, African American studies, American studies, women’s and gender studies, anthropology, sociology, philosophy, religious studies, environmental studies, oceanography, and the histories of law, medicine, and technology. Member institutions hold collections that offer a historical perspective on topics in all of these fields and more. For information on each member's resources, see its listing in “Participants” and contact the institution. Each NERFC itinerary must:

      • be a minimum of eight weeks
      • include at least three different member institutions, and
      • include at least two weeks at each of these institutions.

      NERFC expects fellows to visit all the repositories they list in their proposals for the length of time they specify. The Consortium’s policy is to ensure that each member with collections hosts fellows every year. An applicant’s proposed itinerary may be a factor in the decision whether to award a fellowship. In keeping with NERFC’s regional interests, the Consortium may also favor applications that draw on institutions from more than one metropolitan area.

       
      Short-Term Research Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 31, 2022 
      Award Amount: $1,000 per week for a minimum of 2 and a maximum of 4 concurrent weeks 
       
      The New York Public Library is pleased to offer Short-Term Research Fellowships to support scholars, based outside the metropolitan New York City area, engaged in graduate-level, post-doctoral, and independent research in the arts and humanities. This fellowship is intended to support projects that would significantly benefit from research conducted on-site at one of the Library's three research centers, drawing from collections unique to The New York Public Library. U.S. citizens, permanent residents, and foreign nationals who have been in residence in the United States for at minimum three years as of the application closing date are eligible to apply.
       
      Short-term Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 (Short-term Fellowships)
      Award Amount: $3,000 for 1-2 months (Short-term Fellowships)
       
      The Newberry’s long-standing fellowship program provides outstanding scholars with the time, space, and community required to pursue innovative and ground-breaking scholarship. Fellows have access to the Newberry’s wide-ranging and rare archival materials as well as to a lively, interdisciplinary community of researchers, curators, and librarians. The Newberry expects recipients to advance scholarship in various fields, develop new interpretations, and expand our understandings of the past. 
       
      Short-term fellowships are available for 1 to 2 months and must be submitted by 11:59 PM CST on December 15. These fellowships are intended to assist researchers who need to examine specific items in the Newberry’s collection in order to advance a significant scholarly project. These fellowships are mainly restricted to individuals who live outside of the Chicago metropolitan area.
       
      Weiss-Brown Publication Subvention
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required; award is paid directly to the publisher
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: up to $8,000 
       

      Grants subsidize the publication of scholarly book or books on European civilization before 1700 in the areas of music, theater, cultural studies, or French or Italian literature. Applicants must document that their projects have been accepted for publication and provide detailed information regarding the publication and the subvention request. The purpose of this award is to enable the publication of works of the highest quality either:

      • by making it possible to publish a work in a particularly appropriate way (with special typography plates, or appendices, for example) that would otherwise be prohibitively expensive; or
      • by significantly reducing the cover price, allowing the publication to reach a wider audience.

      Once these criteria are met, preference will be given to publications that:

      • are unique, unusual in concept or execution, or that represent a departure from the normal habits of a given publishing house or entity; or
      • bring into print previously unpublished source materials; or
      • promise to reach the broadest possible audience for the type of book envisioned.
       
      Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 3, 2022 (U.S. Research Fellowships); January 10, 2022 (NEH/FPIRI Research Fellowships)
      Award Amount: varies by fellowship type; please see below
       
      The primary mission of the Palestinian American Research Center is to improve scholarship about Palestinian affairs, expand the pool of experts knowledgeable about the Palestinians, and strengthen linkages among Palestinian, American, and foreign research institutions and scholars. The following opportunities are available:
      • NEH/FPIRI Fellowships: This competition is for research in the humanities or research that embraces a humanistic approach and methods. Fellowship awards are for research in Palestine for a minimum of four and a maximum of ten consecutive months for scholars who have earned their PhD or have completed their professional training. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or have lived in the U.S. for last three years. Fellowship awards are for $5,000 per month of research.
      • U.S. Research Fellowships: This competition is for research that will contribute to Palestinian Studies. Any area of study will be considered, including the arts, humanities, social sciences, law, public health, and applied sciences. Applicants must be doctoral students or scholars who have earned their PhD and must be U.S citizens. Research must take place in Palestine, Israel, Jordan, or Lebanon. Fellowship awards can be up to $9,000.
      Mary Isabel Sibley Fellowship
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 17, 2022 
      Award Amount: $20,000 stipend 
       
      The Mary Isabel Sibley Fellowship is awarded annually, alternating in the fields of Greek and French. The award may be used for the study of Greek culture (e.g. language, literature, history, archaeology), or the study of French language or literature. It is not restricted to members of Phi Beta Kappa or to U.S. citizens. The stipend is typically paid in two installments, the first on July 1 of the award year, and the second on January 1 of the following year. The fellowship is intended, according to the donor's wishes, for women in the early stages of their research careers who:
      • Demonstrate ability to carry on original research;
      • Hold a doctorate/have fulfilled all requirements for doctorate except the dissertation (ABD); and
      • Plan to devote full-time work to research during the fellowship year. Under appropriate circumstances, if approved by Phi Beta Kappa, candidates may hold other positions concurrently with the Sibley Fellowship.
      The 2022 application cycle will support scholars in French Studies.
       
      Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: March 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: A stipend of $1100 per month is offered along with $100 for a spouse/partner and each child living with the grantee. An additional $100 stipend for each child ($200 total for children) is currently offered through a matching grant from the Sustainable Arts Foundation.
       
      The Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program in Roswell, New Mexico provides gifted studio based visual artists with the unique opportunity to concentrate on their work in a supportive, collegial environment for a whole year. This "gift of time" allows artists to work without distraction in an effort to break new ground and focus on individual goals. In residence grants are offered to all professional visual artists 21 years of age or older, involved in painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, photography, installation and other fine art media. Grants are not made in the disciplines of performance art or production crafts. 
       
      Pioneering Ideas: Exploring the Future to Build a Culture of Health
      FAS/OSP Deadline: 5 business days prior to submission
      Sponsor Deadline: Rolling 
      Award Amount: The average Pioneer grant in 2019 was $315,031. However, there is not an explicit range for budget requests. Grant periods are flexible, though generally range from 1 to 3 years.
       
      Pioneering Ideas: Exploring the Future to Build a Culture of Health seeks proposals that are primed to influence health equity in the future. The Foundation is interested in ideas that address any of these four areas of focus: Future of Evidence; Future of Social Interaction; Future of Food; and Future of Work. Additionally, the Foundation welcomes ideas that might fall outside of these four focus areas, but which offer unique approaches to advancing health equity and progress toward a Culture of Health.

      The Foundation wants to hear from scientists, anthropologists, artists, urban planners, and community leaders--anyone, anywhere who has a new or unconventional idea that could alter the trajectory of health, and improve health equity and well-being for generations to come. The changes the Foundation seeks require diverse perspectives and cannot be accomplished by any one person, organization, or sector. 

      Please Note: While this call for proposals is focused on broader and longer-term societal trends and shifts that were evolving prior to the COVID-19 outbreak, the Foundation recognizes that the unique circumstances and learning created by the COVID-19 pandemic may inform your response. It is at your discretion whether you propose a project related to the pandemic directly or indirectly.
      Conservation
      FAS/OSP Deadline for Letter of Inquiry: December 8, 2021 
      Sponsor Deadline for Letter of Inquiry: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: unspecified; recent grants range from $10,000 to $21,000
       
      The Conservation Grants program supports the professional practice of art conservation, especially as it relates to European works of art from antiquity to the early 19th century. Grants are awarded to projects that create and disseminate specialized knowledge, including archival projects, development and dissemination of scholarly databases, documentation projects, exhibitions and publications focusing on art conservation, scholarly publications, and technical and scientific studies. Grants are also awarded for activities that permit conservators and conservation scientists to share their expertise with both professional colleagues and a broad audience through international exchanges, professional meetings, conferences, symposia, consultations, the presentation of research, exhibitions that include a prominent focus on materials and techniques, and other professional events.
       
      History of Art Grants    
      FAS/OSP Deadline for Letter of Inquiry: December 8, 2021 
      Sponsor Deadline for Letter of Inquiry: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: unspecified; recent grants range from $6,000 to $20,000
       
      The History of Art program supports scholarly projects that will enhance the appreciation and understanding of European art and architecture. Grants are awarded to projects that create and disseminate specialized knowledge, including archival projects, development and dissemination of scholarly databases, documentation projects, museum exhibitions and publications, photographic campaigns, scholarly catalogues and publications, and technical and scientific studies. Grants are also awarded for activities that permit art historians to share their expertise through international exchanges, professional meetings, conferences, symposia, consultations, the presentation of research, and other professional events.
       
      Convening Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline for Letter of Inquiry: March 8, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline for Letter of Inquiry: March 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: up to $25,000
       
      The Terra Foundation for American Art actively supports projects that question and broaden definitions of American art. Grant funding is available for programs that foster exchange, such as workshops, symposia, and colloquia, and that address critical issues facing the field as well as advance research and scholarship in American art. Recognizing current and historical inequities in the presentations and understandings of American art history, the Foundation encourages projects that redress imbalances and exclusions within the field. To expand histories of American art, the program seeks projects that reflect a commitment to inclusive and equitable research and museum practice; generate new scholarship and interpretive frameworks; employ critical methodologies and innovative models; and/or engage diverse partners and audiences. In addition, the Foundation lends support for projects that build on existing initiatives at institutions engaged in transforming or complicating how the story of American art is told.

       

      For Terra Foundation consideration, the program should focus on art of the United States and/or Native American art, including historical art, or contemporary art that manifests a critical and reflective engagement with US or Native American histories, art, and art histories.

       

      Art of the Spanish Americas Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: $60,000 
       
      The Carl & Marilynn Thoma Art Foundation offers postdoctoral fellowships annually in support of projects and research initiatives that will advance study of the art of the Spanish Americas. Scholars may come from any discipline, but all projects must relate to the study of art and art history. Applicants should propose projects that exhibit original scholarship and/or will make a significant contribution to the understanding of the art of the Spanish Americas and its history. Fellowships range in duration from one to two years and eventuate in major measurable outcomes, including museum exhibitions, dissertations, book publications, scholarly essays, and lecture series. Projects will be considered from all of Spanish colonial Latin America and the Caribbean; however, the Foundation will give strong preference to projects that make specific contributions to the history of painting and sculpture in viceregal South America.
       
      Jacobs Research Funds
      FAS/OSP Deadline: February 8, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: February 15, 2022 
      Award Amount: $3,000, $6,000, or $9,000; please note that this sponsor does not allow proposers to budget for indirect costs, which falls short of the 15% overhead required by FAS policy. Please discuss with your grants administrator before preparing an application.
       
      The Jacobs Research Funds (JRF) and the Kinkade Language and Culture Fund (KLF) are sister organizations that fund linguistic and anthropological research on indigenous peoples of North and South America. The JRF accepts proposals on behalf of both organizations. Priority is given to research on the Pacific Northwest. However, research in other areas of the Americas will be funded if possible. 

      Grants are only for study indigenous languages and cultures of the Americas. There are three categories of grants, with funding limits tied to the US dollar ($3,000, $6,000, and $9,000 USD). Allowed expenses include consultants, research assistants, travel, accommodation, and equipment. Disallowed expenses include researcher salaries, tuition, per diems, food, institutional overhead, and administration.
       
      Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: not required for grants awarded directly to individuals
      Sponsor Deadline: January 14, 2022 
      Award Amount: stipend provided (amount unspecified)
       
      The Fellowship Program is at the heart of the activities of the W. E. B. Du Bois Research Institute at Harvard University. Started in 1975 as the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research, the Institute has annually appointed scholars who conduct research for an academic year or for one semester in a range of fields related to African and African American Studies. With a record of supporting more than 300 Fellows since its founding, the Institute has arguably done more in its short existence to ensure the scholarly development of African and African American Studies than any other pre-doctoral or post-doctoral program in the United States. Fellows work in such areas as art and art history, Afro-Latin American research, design and the history of design, education, hiphop, African studies, the African diaspora, African American studies, literature, journalism, and creative writing. Awards may be held for one or two semesters.
       
      Grants
      FAS/OSP Deadline: December 8, 2021 
      Sponsor Deadline: December 15, 2021 
      Award Amount: $5,000 - $25,000 
       
      The Wyeth Foundation for American Art provides financial support to encourage the study, appreciation, and recognition of excellence in all aspects of historic American art. The Foundation reviews funding proposals to support research, conservation, and exhibition programming in American art. Grants from the Foundation typically support innovative exhibitions that explore new research about American art; innovative and important museum catalogues and books; and conservation and restoration of American masterpieces. The Foundation does not support grant applications exclusively focused on art of the last three decades.
       
      Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art: Grants and Fellowships
      FAS/OSP Deadline: January 24, 2022 
      Sponsor Deadline: January 31, 2022 
      Award Amount:
       
      The Yale Center for British Art: Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art offers a funding program to support scholarship, academic research, and the dissemination of knowledge in the field of British art and architectural history from the medieval period to the present. Awards are made twice a year, in Spring and Autumn. For the Spring 2022 deadline, funding via the following mechanisms will be available:
      For assistance, please contact the Research Development team:
       
      To see previous Arts and Humanities Funding Newsletters, please visit our email archive.
      This message was sent from research_development@fas.harvard.edu to research_development@fas.harvard.edu
      1414 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge, MA 02138


      Update Profile/Email Address | Forward Email | Report Abuse