Grants for Nonprofits - Federal
Explore 5,233 grant opportunities
Application Deadline
Jul 2, 2024
Date Added
Feb 22, 2024
This Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) invites applications for a U54 Specialized Center (henceforth: Consortium) to provide resources, expertise, and coordination to advance innovative, high-quality research on palliative care for those with serious illness across the lifespan. This research infrastructure will encompass Alzheimers disease and Alzheimers disease-related dementias (AD/ADRD), cancer, and other serious illnesses and populations relevant to the partnering Institutes, Centers, and Offices (ICOs). NIH currently funds many palliative care research projects across the ICOs, and there is a need for a structure to leverage synergies, coordinate efforts, develop the scientific workforce, and address remaining gaps in the field. The goals of this initiative include generating new scientific knowledge, in part through supporting pilot and exploratory studies; fostering development of early- and mid-career palliative care investigators; serving as a national platform to provide research resources and facilitate high-quality palliative care research; engaging healthcare systems and community-based organizations as research partners and settings for palliative care research; and disseminating research findings, best practices, data, and other impactful resources to the palliative care research and clinical communities. An important focus of the Consortiums work will be on facilitating research to understand and address disparities in access, quality, and use of palliative care services for health disparities populations or in underserved areas.
Application Deadline
Apr 15, 2025
Date Added
Dec 23, 2024
This funding opportunity supports organizations and individuals in Myanmar to implement programs that strengthen cultural ties with the United States, focusing on education, entrepreneurship, media literacy, English language learning, and bilateral relations.
Application Deadline
Oct 22, 2024
Date Added
Aug 30, 2024
The "Puerto Rico Energy Resilience Fund: Resilient Communities Program" grant aims to use $1B in funding to enhance Puerto Rico's energy resilience and clean energy economy, particularly focusing on mitigating power outage impacts on low-income residents, ensuring energy reliability for healthcare services in disadvantaged communities, and supporting the growth of the clean energy workforce, through the installation of solar PV and battery storage in subsidized multi-family properties and community healthcare facilities.
Application Deadline
Mar 6, 2025
Date Added
Jan 7, 2025
This funding opportunity provides financial support to various organizations for improving healthcare and education services in rural areas through advanced telecommunications technology, with a focus on addressing substance use disorders and enhancing access to specialized resources.
Application Deadline
Oct 1, 2024
Date Added
Nov 28, 2023
The "Revision Applications for Incorporation of Novel NCI-Supported Technology to Accelerate Cancer Research" grant aims to encourage existing NCI P50 specialized centers to enhance their current cancer research by integrating new technologies or methods developed by the NCI Innovative Molecular Analysis Technologies program.
Application Deadline
Jan 15, 2025
Date Added
Dec 3, 2024
This program provides funding and resources to support aspiring women entrepreneurs in Bangladesh, particularly those from marginalized communities, by offering business training, mentorship, and networking opportunities.
Application Deadline
May 6, 2024
Date Added
Mar 8, 2024
The Department of States Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (TIP Office) is pleased to invite organizations to submit proposals to provide technical assistance focused on establishing survivor leadership and partnership structures in support of its global Training and Technical Assistance (T) Program. The Department of Stateโs Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (TIP Office) announces an open competition for projects to provide technical assistance focused on establishing survivor1 leadership and partnership structures 1 For simplicity and consistency, the terms โsurvivorโ and โsurvivor leaderโ are used throughout this document. While some individuals who have experienced trafficking choose to embrace the title โsurvivor,โ others do not. Terminology regarding human trafficking varies based on a countryโs respective laws and language(s). The word โsurvivorโ is not generally defined by law, nor is it in support of its global Training and Technical Assistance (T&TA) Program. The TIP Office manages foreign assistance programs dedicated to combating human trafficking outside of the United States. The TIP Office awards grants to combat all forms of human traffickingโsex trafficking, child sex trafficking, forced labor, domestic servitude, forced child labor, and the unlawful recruitment and use of child soldiers. The Department of Stateโs annual Trafficking in Persons Report (TIP Report) provides a diagnostic assessment of the efforts of governments to combat human trafficking and shapes our foreign assistance priorities. More information is available at: https://www.state.gov/international-programs-officeto-monitor-and-combat-trafficking-in-persons/. The TIP Officeโs Training and Technical Assistance (T&TA) program aims to increase government and/or civil society capacity to combat human trafficking. T&TA is most appropriate for addressing specific knowledge or other capacity gaps through targeted, short-term interventions. The TIP Office can provide training and/or technical assistance on topics spanning all 4Ps โ Prevention, Protection, Prosecution, and Partnership. T&TA interventions are most often initiated by requests from U.S. Embassies abroad, or sometimes from our T&TA implementing partners. The TIP Office reviews requests for T&TA on a rolling basis throughout the year. Selected T&TA requests are then referred by the TIP Office to the relevant implementer, depending on the type of assistance requested, the implementerโs areas of universally used or accepted in the context of human trafficking. In some countries, โsurvivorโ may refer to those who have experienced historical, collective, or cultural trauma. Within the United States, there are some widely used terms for individuals who have experienced human trafficking and subsequently decided to engage in anti-trafficking related work on a professional level. Individuals may prefer to be referred to as โsurvivor leaders,โ โsurvivor advocates,โ or โsubject matter experts with lived experience of human trafficking.โ Some may have other titles or prefer not to identify based on this experience at all. In recognizing individualsโ full life experiences, skill sets, and professional goals, it is important to always ask someone how they want to be identified. Policymakers and stakeholders should not assume that someone who identifies as a โsurvivor leader,โ โsurvivor advocate,โ or โexpert with lived experience of human traffickingโ should be referred to as such in a professional setting or that identification as a survivor leader makes it acceptable to inquire about someoneโs personal experience with human trafficking. expertise, and funding availability. The timeline to complete T&TA activities will depend on a variety of factors such as strategic priorities and country contexts. The selected implementer should be able to create an intervention concept note and budget in response to the specific T&TA request before the intervention is approved for implementation. The selected implementer should also expect to work closely with TIP Office staff throughout the development and implementation of interventions and activities. T&TA interventions can be standalone or they can lay the groundwork for or complement other programing, but they do not take the place of longer, multiyear programs. Individual T&TA interventions can sometimes also be structured in phases, with each phase being subject to TIP Office approval. T&TA activities may be conducted in countries across all regions of the world, so the scope of T&TA implementersโ capabilities must be global. The selected applicant should be able to respond to unanticipated requests for assistance in any country and/or region, with few exceptions. Some examples of what past T&TA interventions have looked like include the following: โข Review of and edits to draft legislation or implementing regulations on a 24-hour turnaround; โข Development and adoption of Foreign Government National Action Plan over the course of five months from receipt of request to final adoption; โข Targeted technical assistance on the process to accede to United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC) and the Palermo Protocol; โข Rapid diagnostic needs assessment on anti-trafficking capacity gaps of specialized anti-trafficking practitioners conducted within 4 weeks of initial request, followed by the development and delivery of a tailored training curriculum; โข Tailored trainings delivered to law enforcement, prosecutors, and judges on how to build a human trafficking case in a country with limited resources and low capacity; โข Tailored trainings delivered to shelter staff to improve identification, screening, and assistance of victims of trafficking, as well as technical assistance to develop necessary tools, such as screening forms and risk assessments; โข Creation and implementation of a training series curriculum tailored to psychological and legal service providers to victims of trafficking in urban and rural locations both virtually and in-person, delivered over the course of several months; โข Regional training for law enforcement and prosecutors, tailoring the materials to for applicability across various participating countries in the region. While some T&TA activities can be conducted remotely, and the ability to provide some programming virtually is an asset to the T&TA Program and to the selected implementers, the majority of T&TA activities are conducted in-person. Because T&TA interventions can take place in settings where utilities, such as internet connectivity, are unreliable, the TIP Office will not be able to consider applications whose model of T&TA delivery is entirely remote.
Application Deadline
Mar 20, 2025
Date Added
Dec 18, 2024
This funding opportunity provides financial support for research projects that implement effective treatments for opioid and stimulant use disorders, focusing on improving care systems and addressing health disparities.
Application Deadline
Jul 25, 2024
Date Added
Jun 26, 2024
The U.S. Department of States Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL), in coordination with the Bureau of International Narcotic and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), announces an open competition for organizations interested in submitting applications for a professional development program to strengthen the practical skills and resiliency of anticorruption actors to combat corruption more effectively in Central America.
Application Deadline
Not specified
Date Added
Aug 8, 2024
This funding opportunity supports states, local governments, and nonprofit organizations in developing community-based programs that help divert individuals with mental health and substance use disorders away from the criminal justice system.
Application Deadline
Nov 17, 2024
Date Added
Mar 18, 2022
This grant provides funding for researchers to conduct preclinical studies on the effects of radionuclide-based cancer therapies, aiming to improve treatment strategies and outcomes for cancer patients.
Application Deadline
Dec 3, 2024
Date Added
Oct 28, 2024
This funding opportunity is designed to establish a center that will coordinate and manage data for collaborative research on rare diseases, supporting various research consortia and engaging stakeholders to improve diagnosis and treatment.
Application Deadline
Oct 29, 2024
Date Added
Nov 19, 2022
The intent of this solicitation is to request proposals from organizations who are willing to serve as resource providers within the NSF Advanced Computing Systems and Services (ACSS) program. Resource providers would (1) provide advanced cyberinfrastructure (CI) resources in production operations to support the full range of computational- and data-intensive research across all of science and engineering (S), and (2) ensure democratized and equitable access to the proposed resources. The current solicitation is intended to complement previous NSF investments in advanced computational infrastructure by provisioning resources, broadly defined in this solicitation to include systems and/or services, in two categories: Category I, Capacity Resources: production computational resources maximizing the capacity provided to support the broad range of computation and data analytics needs in S research; and Category II, Innovative Prototypes/Testbeds: innovative forward-looking capabilities deploying novel technologies, architectures, usage modes, etc., and exploring new target applications, methods, and paradigms for S discoveries. Resource Providers supported via this solicitation will be incorporated into NSFs ACSS program portfolio. This program complements investments in leadership-class computing and funds a federation of nationally available HPC resources that are technically diverse and intended to enable discoveries at a computational scale beyond the research of individual or regional academic institutions. NSF anticipates that at least 90% of the provisioned resource will be available to the S community through an open peer-reviewed national allocation process and have resource users be supported by community and other support services. Such allocation and support services are expected to be coordinated through the NSF-funded Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services Support (ACCESS) suite of services, or an NSF-approved alternative as may emerge. If this is not feasible for the proposed resource, proposers must clearly explain in detail why this is the case and how they intend to make the proposed resource available to the national S community. The ACSS Program especially seeks broad representation of PIs (including women, underrepresented minorities, and individuals with disabilities)and institutions (including those that have not historically provided nationally allocatable cyberinfrastructure)in both the community of resource awardees and resources users to continue growing the scale and diversity of the S community.
Application Deadline
May 31, 2025
Date Added
May 1, 2025
This funding opportunity provides financial support for projects that promote U.S.-Angola and U.S.-Sรฃo Tomรฉ and Prรญncipe relations through education, cultural exchange, and professional development initiatives.
Application Deadline
Oct 4, 2024
Date Added
Jun 12, 2024
The "Clinical Trial Readiness to Understand and Develop Solutions to Social, Ethical, Behavioral Implications and Barriers to Health Equity in ADRD" grant aims to fund research that prepares for clinical trials focused on understanding and addressing the social, ethical, and behavioral barriers that prevent equal health outcomes for Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias (ADRD) in underserved and marginalized communities.
Application Deadline
Mar 17, 2025
Date Added
Feb 21, 2025
This funding opportunity provides financial support to organizations and institutions working to implement and promote research findings that improve the lives of individuals with disabilities through better community living, health, and employment outcomes.
Application Deadline
Jul 1, 2024
Date Added
May 10, 2024
With this solicitation, BJA seeks to support the development and testing of new or innovative approaches to improving community safety and trust that are alternatives to traditional enforcement mechanisms for neighborhoods experiencing high rates of less serious and low level criminal offenses. This model will involve coordination with law enforcement entities to improve public safety and community residents perceptions of law enforcement and procedural fairness and legitimacy. This solicitation also supports funding for national training and technical assistance (TTA) to support site-based grants and the field in building capacity and partnerships essential to this work.
Application Deadline
Jun 12, 2025
Date Added
May 13, 2025
This funding opportunity provides financial support to state and tribal historic preservation offices in disaster-affected areas to enhance their capacity for recovery efforts and manage increased workloads.
Application Deadline
May 28, 2024
Date Added
Apr 3, 2024
This program funds projects that improve the safety, efficiency, and reliability of intercity passenger and freight rail. The Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements (CRISI) Program is authorized under 49 U.S.C. 22907. The purpose of the CRISI Program is to invest in a wide range of projects within the United States to improve railroad safety, efficiency, and reliability; mitigate congestion at both intercity passenger rail and freight rail chokepoints to support more efficient travel and goods movement; enhance multi-modal connections; and lead to new or substantially improved Intercity Passenger Rail Transportation corridors. This program invests in railroad infrastructure projects that improve safety, support economic vitality (including through opportunities for small businesses), create good-paying jobs with the free and fair choice to join a union, increase capacity and supply chain resilience, apply innovative technology, and explicitly address climate change, gender equity and racial equity. The purpose of this notice is to solicit applications for the competitive CRISI Program provided in Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, division L, title I, Public Law 117โ328 (2023 Appropriation), Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024, division F, title I, Public Law 118โ42 (2024 Appropriation) and the 2023 and 2024 advance appropriation in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, division J, title II, Public Law 117โ58 (2021).
Application Deadline
Dec 12, 2024
Date Added
Mar 1, 2024
This grant provides funding for innovative research to develop organoid systems that can process information and interact with technology, targeting researchers and engineers in fields like biology, computer science, and engineering.
