Open Grants Today8,055$74.6B
Opened This Week163$594.9M
Closing This Week97$4.5B
Open Grants Today8,055$74.6B
Opened This Week163$594.9M
Closing This Week97$4.5B
GrantExec

Grants for State governments - Humanities

Explore 104 grant opportunities

Public Impact Projects at Smaller Organizations
$25,000
NEH (National Endowment for the Humanities)
Federal

Application Deadline

Jun 26, 2024

Date Added

Jul 31, 2023

The Public Impact Projects at Smaller Organizations program supports small and mid-sized museums and cultural organizations in the creation of public humanities programming and strengthens their capacity to develop such programming. NEH’s Public Impact Projects encourage you to think critically about the humanities programming your organization currently offers and to assess your organization’s relationship to your community and surrounding neighborhoods. You will develop or implement strategies to strengthen the interpretive goals of your organization and ensure your public programing meets audience needs. Funded projects may focus on evaluating current interpretive programing, collections, and other available resources to identify new story opportunities or interpretive methods. Additionally, you may choose to propose the implementation of new programs you have already developed. Another option is to request support for professional development opportunities that will assist your staff and volunteers in expanding their skills as interpreters of humanities grounded material. You may also combine one or more of these approaches to create a strategy that meets the needs of your organization and audience.

Humanities
State governments
Combating Forced Labor and Labor Trafficking of Adults and Children
$8,362,897
DOL-ETA-ILAB (Bureau of International Labor Affairs)
Federal
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Jul 28, 2023

This is a Notice of Intent only. The U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL), Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB), intends to award funding to an existing Cooperative Agreement with Verit, Inc. to extend the implementation of a project to build the capacity of governments, businesses, worker organizations, and civil society organizations to prevent, detect and eliminate forced labor and labor trafficking in supply chains. The project will expand and improve coordination around ongoing labor trafficking enforcement efforts in Ghana, Cte d'Ivoire, and Benin. By putting the right tools in the hands of labor inspectors, business owners, workers, and service providers, the project will advance greater supply chain transparency and accountability to ensure that they are free of exploitative labor.Authority: DLMS 2-836 G.3: Services are available from only one responsible source and no substitute will suffice; or the recipient has unique qualifications to perform the type of activity to be funded.

Humanities
State governments
Dangers and Opportunities of Technology: Perspectives from the Humanities
$150,000
National Endowment for the Arts & Humanities (National Endowment for the Humanities)
Federal

Application Deadline

Sep 12, 2024

Date Added

Jul 25, 2023

The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Office of Digital Humanities is accepting applications for the Dangers Opportunities of Technology: Perspectives from the Humanities program. This program supports research that examines technology and its relationship to society through the lens of the humanities, with a focus on the dangers and/or opportunities presented by technology, broadly defined. NEH is particularly interested in projects that examine the role of technology in shaping current social and cultural issues.

Humanities
State governments
Fellowship Programs at Independent Research Institutions
$565,000
National Endowment for the Humanities
Federal

Application Deadline

Aug 14, 2024

Date Added

May 30, 2023

The Fellowship Programs at Independent Research Institutions (FPIRI) program supports institutions that provide fellowships for advanced humanities research in the U.S. and abroad, foster communities of intellectual exchange among participating scholars, and provide access to resources that might otherwise not be available to the participating scholars. Fellowship programs may be administered by independent centers for advanced study, libraries, and museums in the U.S.; American overseas research centers; and American organizations that have expertise in promoting humanities research in foreign countries. Individual scholars apply directly to the institutions for fellowships. In evaluating applications, consideration is given to the library holdings, archives, special collections, and other resources—either on site or nearby—that institutions make available to fellows. FPIRI fellowship tenure must be continuous and last from four to twelve months. Residential fellows are expected to be in residence during their entire tenure period and to work on their projects on a full-time basis. Likewise, nonresidential NEH-funded fellows are expected to work on their projects on a full-time basis. If a fellow is obliged through special circumstances to depart before the end of the tenure period, he/she shall receive a prorated stipend. Step 1 Review your application package Read the Notice of Funding Opportunity and application to ensure you understand all the expectations and restrictions for projects funded in this program and are prepared to write the most effective application. Application Materials Fellowship Programs at Independent Research Institutions Notice of Funding Opportunity 2024 (PDF) Fellowship Programs at Independent Research Institutions Grants.gov application package Budget Resources FPIRI Sample Financial Form (prior-year financial report form), 2023 (PDF) FPIRI Financial Forms to Fill Out (prior-year financial report form), 2020 (XLS) Program Resources FPIRI Instructions for Fellowship Selection Reports, 2023 (PDF) Fellowship Programs at Independent Research Institutions Frequently Asked Questions 2023 (PDF)

Humanities
State governments