As part of the University of Michigan’s (U-M) Office of the Provost’s Anti-Racism Initiatives, the National Center for Institutional Diversity’s (NCID) Anti-Racism Collaborative welcomes proposals for Research Seed Grants to Advance Anti-Racism. Grants in the range of $5,000-$20,000 to support innovative diversity scholarship designed to inform and support social action will be available.
Our broad theme is “Anti-Racism and Precedents for Action.” For this call, anti-racism refers to coordinated action against power relationships that perpetuate white supremacy and attendant hierarchies of race (Crenshaw, 1989; Cox, 1948). Our objective is to fund projects that focus on marginalized, grassroots and collaborative forms of anti-racist action with the potential to transform how we resist structural racism and how we relate to each other as racialized subjects.
We see opportunities to translate the present momentum around anti-racism into sustainable precedents for action. We actively seek proposals that advance knowledge about:
Competitive proposals will describe processes and outcomes that help us to better understand anti-racism and the possibility of anti-racist action, that make meaningful connections between anti-racist and related activist traditions, and/or that identify barriers to anti-racist organizing and actions. While our interest in power relationships that perpetuate white supremacy is foundational to the call, we welcome broad perspectives on anti-racism, prior to and in parallel with the concept’s current popularity.
Competitive proposals will be led by PIs who have demonstrated experience leading or actively participating in anti-racist research and scholarship prior to this submission. We encourage substantive participation or leadership roles for member(s) of the racialized groups or those most vulnerable to the racialized experience that motivates the project’s scope.
Faculty across tracks and research staff at any U-M campus and in any discipline are eligible as primary or co-investigators. Individuals may only serve as primary or co-investigator on one proposal.
Grants between $5,000-$20,000 will be awarded for late summer/fall/spring research projects. To facilitate this grants program, two funding tracks will be utilized to facilitate this grants program.
Smaller grants are intended to support innovative inquiry into localized, time bound anti-racist interventions. This could include studies or evaluations of anti-racist literature, policy, algorithms, practices, curriculum, programming, short-term campaigns or direct action, and other interactions that reveal how anti-racist action is being organized, enacted and embodied in diverse communities in this particular moment.
Larger grants are intended to seed new projects or preliminary studies, or extend or enhance ongoing research that aligns with the call. This could include expanding a data set, increasing samples of research participants to allow for equitable representation or greater ecological validity. Projects that include community partners (as appropriate for the focus and scope of the projects) should do so in meaningful and ethically engaged ways, and with appropriate supports from the project plan and budget. The objective is to more fully integrate meaningful engagement with anti-racist action into the body of research and scholarship produced across campuses.
Applicants can also apply for up to $5,000 in subsidy funds to support graduate students involved on the project. Subsidies can support stipends or hourly pay (e.g. stipend for uncovered spring/summer periods). Subsidies cannot cover tuition. Applicants must provide a thoughtful mentoring and professional development plan for graduate students supported by the subsidy. Attach a maximum one page narrative detailing the mentoring and professional development plan for graduate student(s) involved with the project, including a budget. Incorporate anti-racist principles as relevant and appropriate.
Change grant applications are due August 16, 2021. Awards will be announced in late September 2021.
Grant applications should be no more than 6 single spaced pages, excluding references. We strongly encourage applicants to emphasize the anti-racist framing or tradition that motivates their project’s intention and design. Grant applications should include the following, organized with clear section headings to support a thorough review process:
There could be lots of ways that innovative scholarship could support "change" or social action - from research that addresses important omissions or inaccuracies of knowledge/perspective on marginalized communities that have unfortunately shaped policy/practice; to community participatory research where the research is co-constructed and/or applied; to research on mechanisms of innovative programs, practices, or interventions; etc.
Competitive applications include:
Funding decisions will take place in September 2021 and funds must be used within one year of receipt.
Grant recipients are responsible for working with the NCID staff to arrange for good stewardship of the funds. Funds may be used for salary (for faculty, full-time or temp staff; no more than 50% of the budget should go towards salary), travel to research or action sites, supplies, and other expenses related to the research needs (no more than 50% of the budget should go towards travel).
Note: All projects must adhere to U-M and school/college research and financial rules and guidelines at all times, and be done in accordance with any COVID-related spending restrictions at the time of the project.
Budget proposals should NOT include:
Award amounts are final. Each award stipulates an expiration date, after which any balance remaining is returned to the NCID. Awardees may not retain the monies if they leave the University of Michigan.
Grant recipients will be expected to participate in NCID organized activities focused on disseminating information on funded research projects (e.g., give a talk based on a project at an NCID/Collaborative event, participate on a panel, lead informal coffee discussion, contribute to an NCID publication). NCID will support awardees in determining the best format for their project.
Applicants who receive funding must agree to complete three brief check-in surveys over the course of the grant, and to submit a final report within 60 days of the end of the funding period (report template will be provided).
Any changes in budget items or project period must first be approved by the NCID.
Please direct questions to [email protected].
Crenshaw, K. (1989). Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex: A black feminist critique of antidiscrimination doctrine, feminist theory and antiracist politics. University of Chicago Legal Forum 8, 139.
Cromwell, O.C. (1948). Caste, Class, and Race: A Study in Social Dynamics. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc.