Below is a recap of research funding opportunitiesthat were recently announced, nationwide. While these alerts are intended to provide you with a broad-reaching overview of the opportunities available, we certainly want to hear if thereare specific opportunities that you would like to pursue. Please let your Content Director know if you have any questions or are interested in learning more.
OurGrant Alerts dashboard profiles relevant previously announced national-level funding opportunities, which can be sorted by type, agency/funder, and date. Also, your dedicated Content Director and Relationship Director are ready to help with custom research solutions to the challenges you are facing.
Quick Links to Opportunities
These links will take you directly to the websites of the grant opportunities.
This program supports planning grants to assess feasibility and/or determine best practices to conduct community-engaged health equity research in neurological disorders with populations that experience health disparities. If successful, these planning grants would support, enable, and/or lay the groundwork for future clinical studies or trials.
This program aims to support research designed to, in parallel in human-based and model-based studies, advance fundamental understanding of basic disease-related molecular mechanisms of vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia. Specifically, this NOFO solicits applications focused on molecular mechanisms of small cerebral vessel diseases, including one or more of arteriolosclerosis, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, and atherosclerosis (direct impact or downstream effects on small vessels) that contribute to dementia diagnoses.
The goal of this NOFO is to encourage research to understand the impact of ableism on health outcomes. Research on the underlying mechanisms by which ableism adversely influences the health of persons with disabilities, as well as developing and/or testing interventions at a community or health systems level to mitigate adverse health effects of ableism are high priority.
This program aims to support research on interdisciplinary population approaches to increasing awareness of the relationship between alcohol and cancer risk, understanding and changing social norms related to alcohol consumption, developing and/or evaluating alcohol policy approaches, and the development, testing, and implementation of population-level interventions to reduce alcohol-related cancer risk.
This program aims to fund research to expand theoretical and scientific understanding of cyberspace windows of superiority, such that one can rapidly and reliably identify, predict, and create these windows to provide military and civil leadership with multiple courses of action. DOD also wants to discover novel knowledge and advance the scientific foundations of multidomain cyber deception, cyber resilience, and machine learning for cybersecurity applications.
This program is soliciting innovative research proposals in the area of synthetic quantum materials that enable enhanced functionalities or novel capabilities for quantum information science. In particular, the SynQuaNon program aims to develop and benchmark novel routes to enhanced superconducting nanoelectronic devices based on electronic metamaterials.
Eligibility:
There are no eligibility restrictions.
Dates:
Abstracts are due very soon, less than two weeks after the program was announced: by August 25, 2023.
Projects proposed for funding under this FOA include all scientific study and experimentation directed toward increasing fundamental knowledge and understanding in those fields of the physical, engineering, environmental, life sciences, and information sciences related to long-term national security needs. PIs are encouraged to consider innovative approaches for their research projects with a view toward enhancing the ability of their institution to develop stronger science and engineering programs that will enable the institution to participate more competitively in a variety of defense research programs, attract and retain good students by exposing them to state-of-the-art research, and encourage them to pursue careers in STEM disciplines.
Eligibility:
There are no eligibility restrictions.
Dates:
This program renews annually; the next deadline is October 30, 2023.
This program is designed to support projects that address critical needs of the museum field and that have the potential to advance practice in the profession to strengthen museum services for the American public. Projects are expected to generate results such as models, new tools, research findings, services, practices, and/or alliances that can be widely used, adapted, scaled, or replicated to extend the benefits of federal investment; reflect a thorough understanding of current practice and knowledge about the subject matter and an awareness of and support for current strategic priorities in the field; use collaboration to demonstrate broad need, field-wide buy-in and input, and access to appropriate expertise; articulate intentional impact across one or more disciplines within the museum field; and employ novel approaches to the project area, as may be appropriate.
Eligibility:
A museum located within a parent organization that is an IHE may apply on its own behalf.
The Foundation supports new and established investigators based on investigator-directed topics. Appropriate research areas may include but are not limited to the following as they relate to scleroderma: scleroderma-related lung disease, pediatric scleroderma, vascular manifestations, studies of animal models, therapeutic modalities, mechanisms of end organ damage, immunologic studies, endothelial cell biology, fibroblast biology, models and markers of gender and genetic factors, cell signaling, epidemiology studies, matrix biology, stem cell biology, health services research (e.g., quality of life, healthcare delivery), and study of clinical manifestation.
The Foundation’s fellows program seeks to make sabbatical research leaves more productive by extending them from a single term to a full academic year. Fellows will receive salary replacement up to 50 percent (for a maximum of $125,000) of the fellow’s current academic-year salary, whether typically paid over nine or 12 months, and up to an additional $10,000 for expenses related to the leave. The fellow’s home institution will receive an additional 20 percent overhead on allowable expenses. The foundation expects to award up to 50 mathematics fellowships in 2024.
This program aims to support university-based research institutes, schools, and centers in building sustained research-practice partnerships with public agencies or nonprofit organizations to reduce inequality in youth outcomes. The grant requires that research institutions shift their policies and practices to value collaborative research. Institutions will also need to build the capacity of researchers to produce relevant work and the capacity of agency and nonprofit partners to use research. Applications from partnerships in youth-serving areas such as education, justice, prevention of child abuse and neglect, foster care, mental health, immigration, and workforce development are welcomed.
Eligibility:
There are no eligibility restrictions.
Dates:
Proposals are due by September 13, 2023.
Questions?
We'll be happy to help you find the right grants opportunity for your organization.
About Hanover Research: Founded in 2003, Hanover Research is a global research and grant development firm. The Hanover Grants practice provides research development, grant writing, and strategic advising support to a wide range of institutions and organizations. Our professionals deliver customized proposal review, revision, and production support, while also helping to align strategic priorities to funding trends and opportunities at all levels. To learn more about Hanover Research, visit www.hanoverresearch.com.
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