Thank you for exploring funding opportunities.
The Price School Advancement Department is your partner in our search for funding that supports research, scholarships, and transformative endowments. At any point in the process (searching for opportunities, completing an LOI, working on an application) you can reach out to:
Carole King
Associate Dean for Advancement
Mobile: 917.757.9875
You may find these links helpful:
If you find a funding opportunity that is aligned with your research goals and needs, please contact Carole King before completing an LOI or application:
Carole King
Associate Dean for Advancement
Mobile: 917.757.9875
[email protected]
External outreach must be coordinated with the Price School Office of Contracts & Grants and University Advancement.
This is funding for full-time research and/or writing. The ultimate goal of the project should be a major piece of scholarly work by the applicant, which can take the form of a monograph, articles, publicly-engaged humanities project, digital research project, critical edition, or other scholarly resources. The fellowships support projects at any stage of development – beginning, middle, or end. This program does not fund works of fiction (e.g., novels or films), textbooks, straightforward translation, or pedagogical projects.
ACLS invites research proposals from scholars in all disciplines of the humanities and interpretive social sciences. Given the disproportionate effect the pandemic’s social and economic disruptions have had on emerging, independent, and untenured scholars, ACLS will continue in the 2023-24 competition year to offer these fellowships solely to untenured scholars who have earned the PhD within eight years of the application deadline. ACLS welcomes applications from scholars without faculty appointments and scholars off the tenure track.
Capacity Building ($250,000):
The Eugene Washington PCORI Engagement Award Program supports projects that encourage active, meaningful involvement of patients, caregivers, clinicians, and other healthcare stakeholders as integral members of the patient-centered outcomes research/comparative clinical effectiveness research (PCOR/CER) enterprise. Projects selected for an Engagement Award will result in ideas, tools and resources that may be useful to other awardees and healthcare research stakeholders for increasing patient and/or other stakeholder engagement in the PCOR/CER process, from topic generation to dissemination and implementation of results.
Stakeholder Convening Support ($100,000):
Convenings supported under this funding opportunity should be designed with the active collaboration and partnership of patients, community groups, and/or other stakeholder organizations. Projects should bring together diverse stakeholders around a central focus or shared priority that unifies stakeholders (e.g., geography, health condition, population) to explore issues related to PCOR/CER or communicate PCORI-funded research findings to targeted end-user audiences.
The PhRMA Foundation seeks to fund research on the use of digital health tools (DHTs) in underrepresented populations in clinical trials to advance FDA regulatory decision-making. Research funded by this program could be directed toward the generation of evidence to support the verification, validation, and/or qualification of DHTs to measure and/or capture data across diverse populations. Funds could also be used to examine the use of DHTs in clinical trial recruitment, retention, and participation, especially for populations underrepresented in research.
The Foundation seeks to invest in equity-focused research on the use of digital health technologies (DHTs) to improve participation of underrepresented populations in clinical trials. These grants aim to support research that will:
Research Scholar Grants (RSG) proposals are investigator-initiated and may pursue questions across the cancer research continuum, as long as they fit within an American Cancer Society (ACS) priority research area. ACS has established these 6 areas to prioritize the research we fund to help advance the mission. All research proposals must fall into at least 1 of these 6 priority areas:
Includes:
Grant awards of 2-3 years have maximum direct costs of $200K per year, with 20% allowable indirect costs; awards of 4 years have maximum direct costs of $165K per year, with 20% allowable indirect costs.
This grant supports rapid learning research to study the effects of health policy changes on patients, providers, and health systems. This includes but is not limited to:
Investigators are encouraged to submit innovative proposals using an array of study designs which may include interventional or non-interventional research such as case control studies, cohort studies, clinical trials, comparative effectiveness research, dissemination and implementation research, cross-sectional studies, ecological, or mixed methods research.
The PhRMA Foundation and the Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy (JMCP) are issuing a competitive call for papers examining crucial challenges in the implementation of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
We invite manuscripts from researchers and patient communities that could be used by CMS to enable the effective implementation of Medicare drug price negotiation under the IRA. Submissions should promote innovative solutions that align with the legislative mandate while considering diverse stakeholder needs.
Three winning submissions will receive a $25,000 Challenge Award and be published in JMCP.
RRF funds research that seeks to identify interventions, policies and practices to improve the well-being of older adults and/or their caregivers. Preference is given to projects aimed at generating practical knowledge and guidance that can be used by advocates, policy-makers, providers, and the aging network. Of particular interest are:
The Pipeline Grants Competition seeks to advance innovative research on economic mobility and access to opportunity in the United States. Research should focus on structural barriers to economic mobility and how individuals, communities and state entities understand, navigate and challenge systemic inequalities.
Grants are not awarded to analyses of health or mental health outcomes or health behaviors as these are priorities for other funders.
Grantees will present findings at a conference during the summer of 2025. Proposals are limited to seven single-spaced pages and should include a very brief literature review (no more than one page), and detailed information on the research question, hypotheses, research methods and data, analytic plan, and project timeline.
Application due November 3, 2023
Decision notification in February 2024
This is a residential fellowship at Stanford University.
CASBS fellowships have been awarded to scholars working in a diverse range of disciplines. These include the five core social and behavioral sciences (anthropology, economics, geography, political science, psychology, and sociology) as well as a wide range of humanistic disciplines, education, linguistics, communications, and the biological, natural, health, and computer sciences.
As appropriate, stipends for the academic year will be awarded to supplement faculty sabbatical support or base salary support; a significant portion of the fellow’s total support is generally provided by sabbatical funds and external funding from awards and grants secured by the fellow. Except in unusual circumstances, Center stipend support is contingent on the applicant’s provision of firm assurances of matching funds.
RSF will accept letters of inquiry (LOIs) under all of its core programs and special initiatives: Behavioral Science and Decision Making in Context; Future of Work; Immigration and Immigrant Integration; Race, Ethnicity and Immigration; Social, Political, and Economic Inequality. It will also accept LOIs relevant to its core programs that address the effects (a) of social movements, such as drives for unionization and mass social protests, and the effects of racial/ethnic/gender bias and discrimination on a range of outcomes related to social and living conditions in the U.S. and (b) of the 2023 Supreme Court decision on race-conscious affirmative action and the relative merits of different models to promote diversity and the educational attainment and economic mobility of underrepresented and lower-income students.
The Russell Sage Foundation’s online LOI requests a total budget amount (no details at this point). The LOI should be no more than four pages and provide detail on how the data, methods and research design are appropriate for answering the questions posed.
Funds awarded to:
Must support the Lloyd’s mission statement: “we support research, innovation, and education to make the world a safer place.”
Will not consider applications for:
AAUW American Fellowships support women scholars who are pursuing full-time study to complete dissertations, conducting postdoctoral research full time, or preparing research for publication.
Career Development Grants (funding is awarded directly to the applicant)
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 in education; health and medical sciences; science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM); or social sciences. Primary consideration is given to women of color and women pursuing their first advanced degree or credentials in nontraditional fields.
Community Action Grants
Community Action Grants provide funding to individuals, AAUW branches and AAUW state organizations as well as community-based nonprofits for general operating support and innovative projects that promote education and equity for women and girls.
There are two types of support:
International Fellowships (funding is awarded directly to the applicant)
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.
The Horowitz Foundation provides small grants to aspiring PhD students at the dissertation level to support the research they are undertaking for their project. Work should address contemporary issues in the social sciences.
Each grant is worth a total of $10,000; $7,500 is awarded initially and $2,500 upon completion of the project. A Trustees’ Award of an additional $3,000 is given to the project judged as the project with the most innovative approach in theory and/or methodology, or. An additional $5,000 is given to the most outstanding overall project for the signature Irving Louis Horowitz award.
This award is designed to stimulate and inform important public policy debates around healthy air and lung disease. The intent is to support research on and evaluation of existing public policy and public health programs, as well as pilot new ideas. The application is open to researchers in public policy, economics, political science, sociology, law, and related disciplines.
Areas of interest include:
ACLS Digital Justice Seed Grants are designed to promote and provide resources for newly formulated projects that diversify the digital domain, advance justice and equity in digital scholarly practice, and/or contribute to public understanding of racial and social justice issues.
ACLS Digital Justice Seed Grants support projects that pursue any of the following activities:
Note: Project’s principal investigator must be a scholar in a field of the humanities of the interpretative social sciences.
The American Council of Learned Societies is pleased to invite applications for Digital Justice Development Grants, which are made possible by The Mellon Foundation. ACLS Digital Justice Development Grants are designed to promote and provide resources for projects that diversify the digital domain, advance justice and equity in digital scholarly practice, and/or contribute to public understanding of racial and social justice issues.
The Digital Justice Development Grants support projects that have advanced beyond the prototyping or proof-of-concept phase. The proposals for such projects should be able to provide evidence of significant preliminary work already completed, as well as articulate the next financial, technological, and intellectual phases of project development.
ACLS Digital Justice Development Grants support projects that pursue any of the following activities:
Recent grants listed HERE.
Application due February 5, 2024
The Zumberge Preliminary Studies Research Award will provide researchers with funds to plan and conduct circumscribed research projects that will generate preliminary data that will be valuable in enhancing the competitiveness of future grant proposals submitted to external sponsors. While financial support may be obtained from any external sponsor, proposals that target federal funding agencies are of greatest interest. The Zumberge Preliminary Studies Research Award consists of four subprograms: (1) Small Program Award; (2) Large Program Award; (3) STEM Program Award; and (4) Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) in Research Award.
Proposals submitted to the Zumberge Preliminary Studies Research Award are required to submit an application to a grant program of a targeted federal agency or external sponsor.
The Russell Sage Foundation (RSF) has established a dissertation research grants program to support innovative and high-quality dissertation research projects that address questions relevant to RSF’s priority areas: Behavioral Science and Decision Making in Context; Future of Work; Race, Ethnicity and Immigration; Immigration and Immigrant Integration; and Social, Political, and Economic Inequality.
These grants will support all aspects of dissertation research (data collection, data preparation, data analysis and writing), but are not intended for students who have completed data collection and analysis and propose to spend the entire grant period writing the dissertation.
The Charles Koch Foundation (CKF) supports research that spurs social progress, contributing to a society of mutual benefit.
Brief proposals are accepted online on a rolling basis.
Charles Koch Foundation provides research grants in these areas of interest:
For example:
Health Care Research Grants
CKF accepts proposals for research, case studies, or comparative analysis on barriers to better health and how best to address them. Specific topics could include:
The demand side of healthcare:
The supply side of healthcare:
The online LOI requests:
The Evidence for Action (E4A) Innovative Research to Advance Racial Equity seeks to fund projects that develop and disseminate evidence about what works to advance racial equity and improve health and well-being in the United States. It prioritizes research evaluating the impact of policies, programs, practices, or other system or structure-level changes in such a way as to establish causal relationships between the interventions and important health and racial equity outcomes. Research designs may include randomized trials, quasi- or natural experiments, secondary analyses of existing data, grounded theory approaches, case studies, network or systems analyses, or other study designs and methods.
Health and well-being outcomes refer to physical, mental, socio-emotional, and well-being outcomes that can be objectively measured using validated instruments. RWJF prioritizes outcomes that directly reflect these dimensions of health, or behaviors known to influence health and well-being. However, the funder will consider intermediary outcomes as proxies or surrogates for health outcomes on a case-by-case basis.
Pioneering Ideas: Exploring the Future to Build a Culture of Health welcomes proposals that are primed to influence health equity in the future. Proposals should address any of RWJF’s Pioneering Ideas for an Equitable Future team’s four current areas of focus: 1) Future of Evidence; 2) Future of Social Interaction; 3) Future of Food; and 4) Future of Work. Additionally, under Open Exploration, this call for proposals seeks ideas that might fall outside of these four focus areas but which offer unique approaches to advancing health equity.
Past Pioneering Ideas for an Equitable Future projects have explored innovative ways to foster meaningful connections in real life and how technology can enhance or hinder these connections. This is only for future-oriented ideas. If your proposal does not center around anticipating the next 5–15 years, it is not a fit for this funding opportunity. Proposals for this solicitation must be submitted via the RWJF online system.
This opportunity is for health services research grant applications that propose innovative and evidence-based interventions that advance the nation’s goal of achieving equity in the delivery of healthcare services including reducing disparities in quality of care, patient safety, healthcare utilization and access, and ultimately, health outcomes.
AHRQ encourages applications that:
The Agency encourages research teams to submit applications in response to this emphasis using AHRQ’s standing R18, R03, and R01 funding mechanisms (PA-18-793, PA-18-794, PA-18-795).