Grants
Since 2019, the Georgetown Humanities Initiative has supported interdisciplinary work through a variety of grants for scholarly, digital, and public-facing projects.
The Georgetown Humanities Initiative invites Georgetown faculty to apply for the following grants for AY 2024-25:
Application deadline: May 3, 2024
Faculty Book Manuscript Workshop Grants for Assistant and Associate Professors in the Humanities
Faculty Book Manuscript Workshops support the scholarly work of Assistant Professors in the humanities who started working at Georgetown before the 2023-24 academic year and of tenured humanities Associate Professors. Social science faculty who conduct qualitative scholarship, adopting humanistic approaches and methods, will also be considered if they are Associate Professors or Assistant Professors who began working at Georgetown prior to AY 2023-24.
Workshops provide a context to facilitate constructive criticism on scholarly monographs in progress, when authors can most effectively benefit from experts’ feedback to turn their scholarly projects into first-rate publications in view of their promotion to the next academic rank.
The Humanities Initiative makes grants available of up to $3,000 each, towards travel and other expenses associated with bringing experts to Georgetown to review and offer guidance on monographs in progress by humanities Assistant or tenured Associate Professors with the aim to secure a publishing contract or strengthen the monograph before the final version is submitted.The program allows faculty to invite to campus two experts in their field for a day-long workshop in AY 2024-25. In case of Covid-related travel and gathering restrictions, workshops will be planned on Zoom.
Eligibility
- Humanities tenured Associate Professors and Assistant Professors who started working at Georgetown before AY 2023-24 are eligible to be considered for this one-time funding opportunity.
- Faculty conducting qualitative scholarship in the social sciences, adopting humanistic approaches and methods, will also be considered.
- Applicants should show evidence of substantial progress toward manuscript completion at the time of application.
- Only monographs will qualify for funding.
- Workshops need to take place within AY 2024-25. Extensions are not allowed.
Application Material
Workshop proposals must include the following components:
- Faculty C.V. including contact information (name, title, department, email address, telephone number, and campus address).
- A one-page, single-spaced description of the monograph in progress; a table of contents; an accurate schedule for completion; a brief statement specifying whether or not the work is under contract with a publisher, a list of publishers who have expressed interest, or that the applicant feels would be ideal for the project but who have not yet been contacted.
- A polished sample chapter.
- A one-page, single-spaced narrative specifying the workshop objectives, why and how this opportunity will be important for the completion of the monograph, the approximate date and location of the workshop within AY 2024-25, and what the applicant’s timeline is for promotion to Associate or Full Professor.
- A proposed list of scholars, with affiliations and areas of specializations. Applicants should not make advance commitments to any listed scholar but may check scholars’ general interest in participating.
- Workshop Budget
- Permissible expenses include:
- Travel expenses (e.g., airfare, ground transportation, lodging);
- External members’ honoraria;
- Workshop expenses (e.g., space charges, copying services, meals).
- Permissible expenses include:
The grants will be awarded as reimbursement for incurred expenses, upon submission of receipts. Expenses must be consistent with Georgetown University’s reimbursement rules, including class of travel restrictions, and meal/hotel caps.
Application material should be submitted by email as a single PDF attachment to humanitiesgu@georgetown.edu by May 3, 2024.
Grant awardees will be asked to submit a report (500 words) to Georgetown Humanities upon completion of their workshop.
Georgetown Humanities Collaboratory (GHC) Grants
The Georgetown Humanities Initiative seeks innovative, experimental proposals that foster collaborative inquiry in the humanities in creative ways and generate a shared community around a set of well-defined humanities research questions or issues. The aim of the GHC grants is to connect Georgetown humanities scholars across academic units, world regions, historical eras, and disciplines and to imagine a more expansive presence for the humanities at our university.
Georgetown Humanities plans to sponsor up to two grants up to $10,000 each for AY 2024-25.
Proposals should address the following:
- Who will lead the collaboratory? If more than one director, what role will each co-director fulfill?
- Which research questions or issues will this collaboratory address?
- What will collaboration allow the group to do that could not be accomplished separately? Which cohorts does the proposal seek to involve – for instance, faculty (TL, FTNTL, adjunct), graduate students, undergraduate students, staff? Does the proposal include participation from non-Georgetown faculty and students, non-Georgetown institutions, or the general public?
- How will the collaboratory bring people together; what sorts of events or activities will the collaboratory organize? How does the proposed project facilitate modes of interaction, engagement, and scholarly dissemination that did not exist before?
- With what defined output will the collaboratory contribute to humanities research and inquiry–for instance (but not exclusively), public-facing work; a major grant proposal, publication, or conference; websites or other digital projects; performances or visual productions; impactful curricular offerings?
All full-time faculty members holding appointments in Georgetown humanities departments are eligible to apply.
Preference may be given to faculty members who have not received funding from GHI or other Georgetown University sources during the past three years.
Please submit the following as a single PDF file to humanitiesgu@georgetown.edu by May 3, 2024:
- A 1500-word proposal that addresses the questions above.
- A detailed budget for the proposed project.
- Director or co-director’s CVs (5 pages maximum), including name and contact information, title and departmental affiliation, education and positions held, relevant publications and presentations, honors and awards, and information about GHI and other Georgetown grants received in the last three years.
Grants will be awarded as reimbursement for incurred expenses upon submission of receipts. Purchase of computers or other tech equipment is not an eligible expense. Expenses must be consistent with Georgetown University’s reimbursement rules.
Project activities and expenses must pertain to AY 2024-25. Grants cannot be postponed.
The Georgetown Humanities Initiative reserves the right not to make awards if applications appear not to warrant them.
Project directors or co-directors awarded a Georgetown Humanities Collaboratory (GHC) grant are expected to send a written report (500 words) of grant activities and outcomes to the Georgetown Humanities Initiative at the end of the award coverage period, including an accounting of all expenditures.
GHC grant recipients are asked to credit Georgetown Humanities Initiative support in their research outputs and events publicity. The Georgetown Humanities Initiative provides support to publicize events; please email GHI with event details at least two weeks prior to the event date.
Georgetown Humanities Individual Research Grants
The Georgetown Humanities Initiative will award several grants between $500 and $3000 on a competitive basis for individual faculty’s research or creative projects in the humanities.
Grants can support a variety of projects, including (but not strictly limited to) the following models: research and travel support for archival work or other research for scholarly projects (new or in progress); starting or supporting a new journal; digital or public-facing projects; translation support for one’s own work; graduate or undergraduate student assistantship for projects in the planning stage, in progress, or under contract; manuscript editing or indexing; copyright permissions; organization of research seminars, round-tables, or conferences benefiting the Georgetown community of humanities scholars and students.
All full-time faculty members holding appointments in Georgetown humanities departments are eligible to apply.
Preference may be given to faculty members who have not received funding from GHI or Georgetown University sources during the past three years.
Please submit the following as a single PDF file to humanitiesgu@georgetown.edu by May 3, 2024:
- An 800-word proposal that describes the project, addresses clearly both its significance and feasibility, and explains how the applicant’s work will be advanced by a grant.
- A detailed budget for the proposed project.
- A 3-page CV, including applicant’s name and contact information, title and departmental affiliation, education and positions held, relevant publications and presentations, honors and awards, and information about GHI and other Georgetown grants received in the last three years.
Grants will be awarded as reimbursement for incurred expenses upon submission of receipts. Conference travel and purchase of computers or other tech equipment are not eligible expenses. Expenses must be consistent with Georgetown University’s reimbursement rules.
Project activities and expenses must pertain to AY 2024-25. Grants cannot be postponed.
The Georgetown Humanities Initiative reserves the right not to make awards if applications appear not to warrant them.
Grant recipients are expected to send a written report (500 words) of grant activities and outcomes to the Georgetown Humanities Initiative at the end of the award coverage period, including an accounting of all expenditures.
They are also asked to credit Georgetown Humanities Initiative support in their research outputs and events publicity. The Georgetown Humanities Initiative provides support to publicize events; please email GHI with event details at least two weeks prior to the event date.