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Grants and Resources
APSA
Centennial Center for Political Science & Public Affairs
Visiting Scholars Program
Assists scholars from the United States and abroad who
would benefit from a stay in and access to the resources available
in Washington, DC, providing infrastructure including furnished
work space with computer, phone, fax, conference space, and
library access.
Contact: Centennial Center
Newberry
2005 - 2006 Fellowships in the Humanities
Provides access to Newberry Library resources.
Deadline forACM/GLCA Faculty Fellowships and most short-term
fellowships: March 1,
Applications available online
Fulbright
Scholar Program
The Fulbright Scholar Program is offering lecturing/research
awards in some 140 countries for the 2004-2005 academic year.
Opportunities are available not only for college and university
faculty and administrators, but also for professionals from
business and government, as well as journalists, lawyers,
scientists, artists, independent scholars and many others.
While foreign language skills are needed in some countries,
most Fulbright lecturing assignments are in English. Some
80 percent of the awards are for lecturing.
Application deadlines include:
Fulbright
Distinguished Chairs Program: The Fulbright Distinguished
Chairs Program awards are among the most prestigious appointments
in the Fulbright Scholar Program. Most awards are in Western
Europe, although a few are available in Canada and Russia.
Deadline: May 1, 2005
Fulbright
Senior Specialists Program: The Fulbright Senior Specialists
Program provides short-term Fulbright grants of two to six
weeks. Activities offer U.S. faculty and professionals opportunities
to collaborate on curriculum and faculty development, institutional
planning and a variety of other activities. Rolling Deadline
Fulbright
(Non-U.S.) Visiting Scholar Programs
Fulbright Visiting Non-U.S. Scholar Program: This program
is for non-U.S. scholars interested in applying for research/lecturing
grants in the United States.
Fulbright
Visiting Specialists Program: Direct Access to the Muslim
World: This new program will support 20-25 grants for visits
of between two and six weeks by scholars and professionals
from abroad who are former Fulbrighters to American institutions
that desire to enrich understanding and knowledge of Islamic,
Middle Eastern and South Asian societies and cultures. Deadline:
April 1, 2005
Visiting
Scholar Occasional Lecturer Program (OLP): Provides support
for scholars and professionals who are already in the United
States on Fulbright grants to visit other campuses for the
purpose of guest lecturing. Individual faculty, departments,
and institutions are encouraged to contact scholars directly;
scholars apply to CIES for reimbursement of their round-trip
transportation costs.
For information, contact the Council for International Exchange
of Scholars (CIES) at 3007 Tilden Street, NW, Suite 5L, Washington,
DC 20008-3009. Telephone: 202-686-7877; E-mail.
Information and an online
application are also available on the Web.
National
Association of Broadcasters Research Grants
Funds research on economic, business, social, and policy issues
important to station managers and other decision-makers in
the U.S. commercial broadcast industry
Contact: Brian Baxter
or (202) 429-5490
Deadline: January 31
Applications available online.
Johnson
Foundation Wingspread Conferences Program
Co-sponsors conferences on public interest issues.
Contact: Barbara
J. Schmidt, Program Secretary
P.O. Box 547
Racine, WI 53401-0547
Phone: (262) 681-3343
Fax (262) 681-3325
Web forms
available.
Charles
Stewart Mott Foundation Civil Society Program
Supports efforts to assist in democratic institution building,
strengthen communities, promote equitable access to resources,
and ensure respect of rights and diversity.
Web forms
available
National
Endowment for the Humanities
Supports research, education, preservation, and public programs
in the humanities.
Deadlines: Vary with programs
The
Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation Dissertation Fellowship
The Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation (HFG) welcomes proposals
from any of the natural and social sciences and the humanities
that promise to increase understanding of the causes, manifestations,
and control of violence, aggression, and dominance. Highest
priority is given to research that can increase understanding
and amelioration of urgent problems of violence, aggression,
and dominance in the modern world.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: A 1
William
T. Grant Foundation Funding Opportunities
The goal of the William T. Grant Foundation is to help create
a society that values young people and enables them to reach
their full potential. It pursues this goal by investing in
research and in people and projects that use evidence-based
approaches. We support research on how contexts such as families,
programs, and policies affect youth, how these contexts can
be improved, and how scientific evidence affects influential
adults.
Deadlines: Applications are reviewed at Board meetings in
March, June and October of each year.
The National
Science Foundation's Social
and Economic Sciences Division supports research to develop
and advance scientific knowledge focusing on economic, legal,
political and social systems, organizations and institutions.
In addition, SES supports research on the intellectual and
social contexts that govern the development and use of science
and technology. SES programs consider proposals that fall
squarely within disciplines, but they also encourage and support
interdisciplinary projects, which are evaluated through joint
review among Programs in SES, as well as joint review with
programs in other Divisions, and NSF-wide multi-disciplinary
panels, as appropriate.
Deadlines: Vary with programs.
Pew
Charitable Trusts
Six program areas of culture, education, environment, health
and human services, public policy, and religion, as well as
the interdisciplinary Venture Fund.
Web forms
available
APSA lists numerous other funding
opportunities.
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