Funding in Humanities and Fine Arts
Opportunities for Research Funding in Humanities and Fine Arts
The following lists include several federal agencies and foundations that provide national-level funding of research in the Arts and Humanities. To maximize your likelihood of success in obtaining funding, choose a funding source and mechanism that best matches the topic, scope, and budget of your proposed research, as well as your career level. Private agencies can be good sources of seed money needed to collect preliminary data for larger scale federal funding. Several agencies offer email alerts when new funding opportunities become available; see individual agency websites for details.
- Program: Fellowship
Deadline: TBD
Grants of up to $20,000 will be awarded to support socially engaged projects that promote art as a catalyst for social change. A Blade of Grass Invites Letters of Interest for Fellowship for Socially Engaged Art. - Program: Fellowships And Awards Deadline: Varies Since 1934, the Academy of American Poets has provided visibility and financial support to poets demonstrating artistic excellence. Guidelines and entry forms are provided, where applicable. All poets who receive an Academy of American Poets Prize are strongly promoted, including features in American Poets magazine, on social media, and, of course, on Poets.org.
- Program: Grants Deadline: December This program was conceived in order to recognize and support the serious, fully-committed artist. Successful applicants will be able to demonstrate that they have been working in a mature phase of their art for at least 20 years.
- Program: Fellowships Deadline: November (annually) This program was conceived in order to recognize and support the serious, fully-committed artist. Successful applicants will be able to demonstrate that they have been working in a mature phase of their art for at least 20 years.
- Program: Visiting Scholars Program
Deadline: October (annually)
One-year research fellowships in the areas of science, scholarship, business, public affairs, and the arts, for postdoctoral scholars and junior faculty; stipends of up to $60,000 Visit the funder's site
Program: Hellman Fellowship in Science and Technology Policy
Deadline: January
The Hellman Fellowship in Science and Technology Policy provides an opportunity for an early-career professional with training in science or engineering to learn about a career in public policy and administration. To be eligible for the Hellman Fellowship applicants must have a Ph.D. in an area of science or engineering and some experience or a demonstrated interest in an area related to science and technology policy. The Ph.D. must be conferred prior to the start of the fellowship. Visit the funder's site - Program: Short-Term Visiting Academic Research Fellowships
Deadline: January
The American Antiquarian Society offers short-term visiting academic research fellowships tenable for one to two months each year.
The following short-term fellowships are available for scholars holding the Ph.D. and for doctoral candidates engaged in dissertation research. Candidates holding a recognized terminal degree appropriate to the area of proposed research, such as the master's degree in library science or M.F.A., are also eligible to apply.
Program: Long-Term Visiting Academic Research Fellowships
Deadline: October/January
The American Antiquarian Society offers long-term visiting academic research fellowships tenable for four to twelve months each year. (Short-term fellowships are available for scholars holding the Ph.D. and for doctoral candidates engaged in dissertation research.)
All awards are for a period of residence to use the AAS library's resources for research and writing. The following long-term awards are intended for scholars beyond the doctorate.
Program: Fellowships for Creative and Performing Artists and Writers
Deadline: October
The fellowships will provide the recipients with the opportunity for a period of uninterrupted research, reading, and collegial discussion at the Society, located in Worcester, Massachusetts. At least three fellowships will be awarded for residence of four weeks at the Society at any time during the period January 1 through December 31.
- Program: Grants
Deadline: January
AAC&U provides 3 levels of funding for campus projects: Proposals are requested for projects during 2012-2014 that will promote engaged learning, civic development and engagement, and psychosocial well-being of college and university students. We are especially interested in efforts that will enable students to have transformational educational experiences, and for institutions to transform and sustain their priorities and practices. Presumably study abroad projects would qualify, so long as activity occurs at a campus-wide rather than individual level.
- Program: Career Development Grants
Deadline: December
Career Development Grants provide funding to women who hold a bachelor’s degree and are preparing to advance or change careers or re-enter the workforce. Primary consideration is given to women of color and women pursuing their first advanced degree or credentials in nontraditional fields.
Program: International Fellowships
Deadline: December
International Fellowships are awarded for full-time study or research in the United States to women who are not U.S. citizens or permanent residents. Both graduate and postgraduate studies at accredited U.S. institutions are supported. Visit the funder's site
Program: International Project Grants
Deadline: December
When AAUW International Fellows pursue education in the United States, their commitment to empowering women and girls in their home countries does not end — and their need for funding does not either. To create lasting support for women and girls across the globe, AAUW gives grants to recent International Fellowship alumnae who have returned to their home countries to build on their academic work and implement community-based projects that will improve the lives of women and girls.
Program: Selected Professions Fellowships
Deadline: Varies by Program
Selected Professions Fellowships are awarded to women who intend to pursue a full-time course of study at accredited U.S. institutions during the fellowship year in one of the designated degree programs where women’s participation traditionally has been low. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents.
Program: American Fellowships
Deadline: November
American Fellowships support women scholars who are completing dissertations, planning research leave from accredited institutions, or preparing research for publication. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents. Candidates are evaluated on the basis of scholarly excellence; quality and originality of project design; and active commitment to helping women and girls through service in their communities, professions, or fields of research. Visit the funder's site - Program:
- Collaborative Research
- Digital Innovation Fellowships
- Programs in China Studies
- Public Dellows Program
- African Humanities Program
- Comparative Perspectives on Chinese Culture and Society
- Luce/ACLS Dissertation Fellowships in American Art, China Studies
- Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships
- Program in East Europe Studies
- Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Program in Buddhist Studies
- Frederick Burkhardt Residential Fellowships for Recently Tenured Scholars
Deadline: Varies
ACLS is the leading private institution supporting scholars in the humanities and related social sciences at the doctoral and postdoctoral levels. Fellowships and grants are offered through multiple programs.
- Program:
- Albert J. Beveridge Grant
- Michael Kraus Research Grant
- Littleton-Griswold Grant
- Bernadotte E. Schmitt Grant
- J. Franklin Jameson Fellowship
- Fellowship in Aerospace History
Deadline: February/April
The American Historical Association awards several research grants with the aim of advancing the study and exploration of history in a diverse number of subject areas. All grants are offered annually and are intended to further research in progress. Grants may be used for travel to a library or archive; microfilming, photography, or photocopying; borrowing or access fees; and similar research expenses.
- Program: Library Fellowships, Long-Term Pre-Doctoral Fellowships
Deadline: March
One-year resident fellowships to assist in the completion of doctoral dissertation research. One fellowship is offered in each of three areas of study: Native American and Indigenous Research Early American History (to 1840) History of Science, Technology and Medicine.
Program:
- APS/ British Academy Fellowship for Research in london
- APS/Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities Fellowship for Research in Edinburgh
Deadline: March
A scholarly organization of international reputation, the American Philosophical Society promotes useful knowledge in the sciences and humanities through excellence in scholarly research, professional meetings, publications, library resources, and community outreach.
Program: Digital Humanities Fellowship
Deadline: March
This two-month fellowship is open to scholars who are comfortable creating tools and visualizations, as well as those interested in working collaboratively with the APS technology team. Scholars, including graduate students, at any stage of their career may apply. Special consideration will be given to proposals that present APS Library holdings in new and engaging ways. Examples include (but are not limited to) projects that incorporate timelines, text analytics, network graphs, and maps.
Program: Library Resident Research Fellowship
Deadline: March
The American Philosophical Society Library offers short-term residential fellowships for conducting research in its collections. We are a leading international center for research in the history of American science and technology and its European roots, as well as early American history and culture.
- Program: Various Programs
Deadline: Varies by program
APSA sponsors several programs to support individual research and training endeavors and also maintains lists of non-APSA sources of funding opportunities for study and research in political science and related disciplines.
- Program: Fellowships
Deadline: Varies by program
The Malcolm H. Wiener Laboratory for Archaeological Science provides funding for scholars pursuing interdisciplinary research on archaeological questions pertaining to the ancient Greek world and adjacent areas. Three different types of Fellowship funding are offered Post-Doctoral (3 year), Pre-Doctoral (2 year term), and Senior (5-10 months), as well as shorter duration, more focused Research Associate positions. Applicants are welcome from any college or university worldwide.
- Program: Grants and Fellowships
Deadline: October
The American-Scandinavian Foundation (ASF) offers fellowships (up to $23,000) and grants (up to $5,000) to individuals to pursue research, study or creative arts projects in one or more Scandinavian country for up to one year. The number of awards varies each year according to total funds available. Awards are made in all fields.
- Program: Grants
Deadline: Prospective grantees should review program area guidelines before inquiring about a particular project. Must be invited to propose.
Funds programs focused on higher education and scholarship in the humanities; museums & art conservation; performing arts; conservation and the environment.
- Program: Grants
Deadline: March/September
Funds programs for scholarly exhibitions at museums; curatorial research; visual arts programming at artist-centered organizations; artist residencies and commissions; arts writing; and efforts to promote the health, welfare and first amendment rights of artists.
- Program: Fellowships and Grants
Deadline: Varies by Program
A nonprofit, non-political, scholarly society - is the leading international organization dedicated to the advancement of knowledge about Central Asia, the Caucasus, Russia, and Eastern Europe in regional and global contexts.
- Program: Research Award
Deadline: November
The Bancroft Prizes are awarded annually by Columbia University in the City of New York. Under the terms of the will of the late Frederic Bancroft, provision is made for two annual prizes of equal rank to be awarded to the authors of distinguished works in either or both of the following categories: American History (including biography) and Diplomacy.
- Program: Research Grant/PhD/ABD/Dessertation Grant
Deadline: December
The program at Freie Universität Berlin supports scholars in all social science and humanities disciplines, including historians working on the period since the mid-18th century.
- Program: Fellowships
Deadline: December
The Blakemore Foundation was established in 1990 by Thomas and Frances Blakemore to encourage the advanced study of Asian languages and to improve the understanding of Asian fine arts in the United States. Language Refresher Grants are short-term grants available to former Blakemore Freeman Fellows and other post-graduate professionals.
- Program: Research Grant/PhD/ABD Dissertation Grant
Deadline: January
Each year, the Bogliasco Foundation awards approximately 50 Fellowships, without regard to nationality, age, race, gender, or religion, in any subject area of the following disciplines: archaeology, architecture, classics, dance, film/video, history, landscape architecture, literature, music, philosophy, theater, visual arts.
- Program: Fellowships
Deadline: Varies by Program
Visiting Scholars: Early career post-doctoral fellowships for 2-6 months of collaborative research with a UK host. Other awards also available for a wide variety of projects in the humanities and social sciences.
- Program: Fellowships/Canadian Women
Deadline: November
CFUW is committed to improving the status of women, promoting quality education and advancing the status of women, human rights, justice and peace. The Federation awards numerous fellowships to Canadian women for study in Canada, the US and elsewhere.
- Program: Residential Fellowships
Deadline: July/November
Offers a residential fellowship program for scholars from this country and abroad. These include the five core social and behavioral sciences (anthropology, economics, political science, psychology, and sociology) as well as humanistic disciplines, education, linguistics, communications, and the biological, natural, health, and computer sciences.
- Program: Grant/Graduate Research
Deadline: October
Graduate Research Grants of up to $10,000 will be awarded to support research for a Master’s thesis or dissertation relating to craft in the United States by students enrolled in a graduate program at any accredited college or university. No capital equipment purchases, tuition or living expenses are eligible for support. This category is not for PhD dissertations, PhD candidates are welcome to apply in the Project Grant category.
- Program: Grant
Deadline: Varies by program
Small grants for programs that encourage and create opportunities for chamber music activities.
- Program: Dissertation Fellowship
Deadline: November
In addition to topics in religious studies or in ethics (philosophical or religious), dissertations appropriate to the Newcombe Fellowship competition might explore the ethical implications of foreign policy, the values influencing political decisions, the moral codes of other cultures, and religious or ethical issues reflected in history or literature.
- Program: Grant, Research
Deadline: October
The Foundation’s programs encompass four regions: the Domestic Region (Taiwan), the American Region (the United States, Canada and Mexico), the European Region, and the Asia-Pacific Region (including Hong Kong and Macau). Grant programs differ among the four regions. Please follow the appropriate links for your own location. Developing Region covers the European and Asia-Pacific regions. In 2012, NED funded about 1236 projects in 92 countries around the world. Grant amounts vary depending on the size and scope of the projects, but the average grant lasts 12 months and is around $50,000.
- Program: Grant
Deadline: February
ChLA Faculty Research Grants have a combined maximum fund of up to $5,000 per year, and individual awards may range from $500 to $1,500, based on the number and needs of the winning applicants. The grants are awarded for proposals dealing with criticism or original scholarship with the expectation that the undertaking will lead to publication and make a significant contribution to the field of children's literature in the area of scholarship or criticism.
- Program: Fellowship Competition
Deadline: October (annually)
The Columbia Society of Fellows in the Humanities, with grants from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the William R. Kenan Trust, will appoint a number of postdoctoral fellows in the humanities for the academic year 2016-2017. Fellows newly appointed for 2018-2019 must have received their PhD between 1 January 2016 and 1 July 2018.
- Program: Post-Doctoral Fellowship
Deadline: October (annually)
Fellowships support postdoctoral research exploring and clarifying the interrelationships within the humanities as well as their relationship to the natural and social sciences. Fellows carry out their research and teach within humanities departments at Columbia University.
- Program: Post-Doctoral Fellowship
Deadline: February
The program promotes the recruitment and retention of a diverse faculty at the College by advancing the careers of individuals from groups in US society that have been historically underrepresented in the academic profession.
- Program: Multiple Programs
Deadline: Online inquiry
Support transformative leadership and courageous storytelling, inspiring action toward a peaceful, just, sustainable future. Their mission highlights a sense of urgency and a willingness to take risks in order to transform the way we live. A positive future requires innovative ways of understanding and naming the problems we face, as well as new methods for collaborating to solve them.
- Program: Fellowships at Cornell University
Deadline: March
The College of Human Ecology at Cornell University invites faculty members, research scholars, and advanced graduate students (must be eligible to work in the United States) with demonstrated background and experience in historical studies to apply for this post-graduate opportunity. The fellowship recipient will receive an award of $6,500 for a summer or sabbatical residency of approximately six weeks to use the unique resources available from the College and the Cornell University Library system in pursuit of scholarly research in the history of Home Economics and its impact on American society.
- Program: Core Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program
Deadline: August
Traditional Fulbright Scholar Program Grants for U.S. faculty and professionals to lecture and conduct research abroad in a wide variety of academic and professional fields.
Program: Fulbright Specialist Program
Deadline: January
The Fulbright Specialist Program (FSP) promotes linkages between U.S. scholars and professionals and their counterparts at host institutions overseas. Grant Duration: Two- to six-weeks.
- Program: Research Grant
Deadline: Continuous
The program is designed to encourage research and promote the study of cultural, political, historical, economic and social aspects of modern and contemporary German affairs from an inter- and multidisciplinary perspective.
Program: Dissertation/Post-Doctoral Fellowship
Deadline: November/May
DAAD Short-term Graduate and Postdoctoral Research Grants are awarded to qualified PhD candidates and recent PhDs. Ten-month scholarships must take place during the German academic year (October 1 through July 31).
- Program: Dissertation Scholarship
Deadline: March
Advanced doctoral and postdoctoral students of excellent achievement and promise studying topics related to the fields chosen for each year, are invited to apply for the Dan David Prize Scholarships that particular year
- Program: Dissertation Scholarship
Deadline: January
Liebmann Fellowships support graduate study in any field of the humanities, social sciences, or natural sciences (including law, medicine, architecture, and other formal professional training programs).
- Program: Dissertation Scholarship
Deadline: April
The Fund provides grants to students actively working for peace and justice. These need-based scholarships are awarded to those able to do academic work at the university level and who are part of the progressive movement on the campus and in the community. Recent grantees have been active in: the struggle against racism, sexism, homophobia and other forms of oppression; building the movement for economic justice; and creating peace through international anti-imperialist solidarity.
- Program: Grants
Deadline: Applications are accepted at any time, but the deadline is April 1 for the annual selections, which are announced in May.
The Dirksen Congressional Center invites applications for grants to fund research on congressional leadership and the U.S. Congress. The Center, named for the late Senate Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen, is a private, nonpartisan, nonprofit research and educational organization devoted to the study of Congress. Since 1978, the Congressional Research Grants program has invested more than $998,026 to support over 451 projects.
- Program: In Residence - room only
Deadline: January
Serve writers and visual artists from all walks of life, by providing time and space in which to work without disturbance.
- Program: Grants
Deadline: Last two months of the calendar year
FEL is committed to raising awareness of endangered languages and supporting revitalization and preservation of endangered languages throughout the world. We award grants to projects consistent with our aims as and when our funds permit.
- Program: Grants
Deadline: March/September
Furthermore grants assist nonfiction books having to do with art, architecture, and design; cultural history, the city, and related public issues; and conservation and preservation. We look 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.The grants, ranging roughly from $1,500 to a maximum of $15,000.
- Program: Fellowships
Deadline: November
Awards fellowships for independent projects in selected fields of the liberal and creative arts for early mid-career individuals, those who have achieved recognition for at least one major project.
- Program: Research Award
Deadline: November
The Gilder Lehrman Lincoln Prize is awarded annually for the finest scholarly work in English on Abraham Lincoln, the American Civil War soldier, or a subject relating to their era.
- Program: Departmental Grant
Deadline: Continuous
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.
- Program: Fellowships and Grants
Deadline: Varies
Offers international fellowships and grants to women graduates for postgraduate research, study and training awards. May be used in any country other than the one in which the applicant was educated or habitually resides.
- Program: Grant
Deadline: September/February
Project-based grants to individuals and organizations and produces public programs to foster the development and exchange of diverse and challenging ideas about architecture and its role in the arts, culture, and society.
- Program: Grant
Deadline: Varies by program
All grants require applicants to explain how their project will contribute new information to previous scholarship, and how Hagley’s research materials are pertinent to their project. Exploratory grants are limited to one week and Henry Belin du Pont research grants may be up to 8 weeks. Often researchers first apply for an exploratory grant and then ask for a longer research grant if our collections warrant more attention. Anyone can apply for one of these research grants, but only advanced graduate students are eligible for our Henry Belin du Pont dissertation grant and Miller Center/Hagley Library fellowship.
- Program: Dissertation Fellowship/Final PhD year
Deadline: February
The Guggenheim Foundation sponsors scholarly research on problems of violence and aggression in relation to social change, intergroup conflict, war, terrorism, crime, and family relationships, among other subjects.
- Program: Research Fellowship
Deadline: Application instructions for 2018–2019 fellowships will be posted in the summer
For projects that require substantial on-site use of its collections. The fellowships support research in all areas of the humanities, including literature, photography, film, art, the performing arts, music, and cultural history.
- Program: Grants
Deadline: January
The Foundation makes targeted grants for work in all major areas of the social sciences, including anthropology, area studies, economics, political science, psychology, sociology, and urban studies, as well as newer areas such as evaluation research. Preference is given to projects that address contemporary issues in the social sciences and issues of policy relevance. Applicants are not required to be citizens or residents of the United States. Awards are based solely on merit, not to ensure a representative base of recipients or disciplines.
- Program: Research Grant/PhD
Deadline: Continuous
Academics from abroad, regardless of their discipline or nationality, may be nominated for a Humboldt Research Award. The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation particularly encourages the nomination of qualified female academics.
- Program: Fellowships
Deadline: November (annually)
Short-term and long-term fellowships available. The Huntington is an independent research center with holdings in British and American history, literature, art history, and the history of science and medicine.
- Program: Fellowships and Grants
Deadline: Varies
The ISRF seeks to fund innovative research which breaks with existing explanatory frameworks so as to address afresh empirical problems with no currently adequate theory or investigative methodology. Innovation may also come from controversial theoretical approaches motivated by critical challenge of incumbent theories. Interdisciplinarity in the generation of new investigative initiatives may be achieved by combining, cross-fertilising, and so transforming empirical methods and theoretical insights from the social sciences. Projects ranging across the breadth of the social scientific disciplines and interdisciplinary research fields are welcome, and relevant applications from scholars working within the humanities are also encouraged.
- Program: Dissertation Fellowship
Deadline: December
The fellowships support promising scholars who are committed to diversity in the academy in order to better prepare them for tenure track appointments within liberal arts or comprehensive colleges/universities.
- Program: Exchange Fellowships
Deadline: February (annually)
Candidates must be citizens or permanent residents of the United States. Candidates must be professional creative artists (contemporary or traditional) working as architects, choreographers, composers, creative writers, designers, media artists, playwrights, librettists, visual artists and solo theater artists who work with original material (including puppeteers, storytellers and performance artists). Artists who create original work in a multidisciplinary form are also eligible.
- Program: Fellowships
Deadline: February
Fellowships are offered to Americans and Norwegians for a year of graduate, post-doctoral, or professional study/research. Americans may apply to come to Norway in even-numbered years (2014, 2016, 2018…) and Norwegians may apply in odd-numbered years (2013, 2015, 2017, 2019…). The primary purpose of the program is to increase understanding between scholars from the two countries.
- Program: Grants
Deadline: None
The Infinity Foundation is calling for project proposals to do research and/or develop educational materials, whose objective would be to improve the authenticity of portrayal of Indic traditions in the educational system.
- Program: Fellowships
Deadline: July
The Guggenheim Foundation seeks to further the development of scholars and artists by assisting them to engage in research in any field of knowledge and creation in any of the arts. Often characterized as “midcareer” awards, Guggenheim Fellowships are intended for those who have already demonstrated exceptional capacity for productive scholarship or exceptional creative ability in the arts.
- Program: Fellowships
Deadline: January
Open to students in any discipline, including international students, who are currently enrolled in a university or college in the US. Only candidates for the PhD who will defend their dissertation in or about June 2019 and undergraduates entering their senior year (will receive bachelors degree in June 2019) are eligible for consideration.
- Program: Residential Fellowships
Deadline: July
Invites qualified scholars to conduct research using the Library of Congress collections and resources for a period of 4 to 11 months. Encourages humanistic and social science research that makes use of the Library's large and varied collections. Interdisciplinary, cross-cultural, or multi-lingual research is particularly welcome.
Program: Kluge Fellowships in Digital Studies
Deadline: December
The John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress announces a new Kluge Fellowship in Digital Studies to examine the impact of the digital revolution on society, culture and international relations using the Library’s collections and resources.
Program: Jay I. Kislak Fellowships for the Study of the History and Cultures of the Early Americas
Deadline: October
The Kislak Fellows Program supports scholarly research that contributes significantly to a greater understanding of the history and cultures of the Americas. It provides an opportunity for a period of 3 months of concentrated use of materials from the Kislak Collection and other collections of the Library of Congress, through full-time residency at the Library. The program supports research projects in the disciplines of archaeology, history, cartography, epigraphy, linguistics, ethno-history, ethnography, bibliography and sociology, with particular emphasis on Florida, the circum-Caribbean region and Mesoamerica. We encourage interdisciplinary projects that combine disciplines in novel and productive ways.
Program: David B. Larson Fellowship in Health and Spirituality
Deadline: April
The fellowship is designed to continue Dr. Larson's legacy of promoting meaningful, scholarly study of these two important and increasingly interrelated fields. It seeks to encourage the pursuit of scholarly excellence in the scientific study of the relation of religiousness and spirituality to physical, mental, and social health. The fellowship provides an opportunity for a period of six to twelve months of concentrated use of the collections of the Library of Congress, through full-time residency in the Library's John W. Kluge Center. The Kluge Center is located in the splendid Thomas Jefferson Building of the Library, and it furnishes attractive work and discussion space for its scholars as well as easy access to the Library's specialized staff and to the intellectual community of Washington. If necessary, special arrangements may be made with the National Library of Medicine for access to its materials as well.
Program: Lomax Fellowship Description
Deadline: TBD
The Alan Lomax Fellows Program provides an opportunity, for a period of up to 8 months, for concentrated use of materials from the Lomax Collection and other collections of the Library of Congress, through full-time residency at the Library. The program supports research projects in the disciplines of anthropology, ethnomusicology, ethnography, ethno-history, dance, folklore and folklife, history, literature, linguistics, and movement analysis, with particular emphasis on the traditional music, dance, and narrative of the United States, England, Scotland, Ireland, Italy, Spain, and the Caribbean, as well as methodologies for their documentation and analysis. We encourage interdisciplinary projects that combine disciplines in novel and productive ways.
- Program: Grants and Fellowships
Deadline: Varies
Program focus is on advancing the history, conservation, and enjoyment of European art, architecture, and archaeology from antiquity to the early 19th century.
- Program: Travel Grant/PhD within last 6 years
Deadline: December
This grant is designed to pay for cost incurred by new PhD's pursuing research in the history of philosophy.
- Program: Grant
Deadline: August 15th of each year
The Law School Admission Council (LSAC) Research Grant Program funds research on a wide variety of topics related to the mission of LSAC. Specifically included in the program’s scope are projects investigating precursors to legal training, selection into law schools, legal education, and the legal profession. To be eligible for funding, a research project must inform either the process of selecting law students or the process of legal education itself in a demonstrable way. Projects will be funded for amounts up to $200,000.
- Program: General Scholarship
Deadline: No deadline
The Law School Admission Council (LSAC) Research Grant Program funds research on a wide variety of topics related to the mission of LSAC. Specifically included in the program’s scope are projects investigating precursors to legal training, selection into law schools, legal education, and the legal profession. To be eligible for funding, a research project must inform either the process of selecting law students or the process of legal education itself in a demonstrable way. Projects will be funded for amounts up to $200,000.
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