NEH has announced the 2018 competition for Summer Stipends for the summer of 2018. Summer Stipends support continuous full-time work on a humanities project.
Summer Stipends support individual scholars (not teams) pursuing advanced research of value to humanities scholars, general audiences, or both. Recipients usually produce articles, monographs, books, digital materials, archaeological site reports, translations, editions, or other scholarly resources. Stipends support continuous full-time work on a humanities project (at any stage of development) for a period of 2 consecutive months.
This is a limited submission opportunity, for which UM may select only two nominees. Josh Gladden, Interim Vice Chancellor for Research and Sponsored Programs at the University of Mississippi, jgladden@olemiss.edu, is the UM Nominating Official for this year’s competition. Full-time faculty members who would like to be considered for these slots should prepare a pre-proposal and submit it to the ORSP by the date indicated below. Pre-proposals will be evaluated in keeping with the ORSP Standard Procedure on Limited Submissions (http://www.research.olemiss.edu/resources/limitedsubmissions), and UM’s two nominees will be chosen from among the pre-proposals received.
Amount and Duration: An outright grant of $6,000, payable directly by NEH to the awardee, for 2 consecutive months of full-time research and writing.
Eligibility
UM full time faculty members who have completed their formal academic training are eligible to be nominated by UM for Summer Stipends. Applicants should be U.S. citizens, native residents of U.S. jurisdictions, or foreign nationals who have been legal residents in the U.S. jurisdictions for at least the 3 years immediately preceding the app. deadline.
2018
July 16 Pre-proposals uploaded to https://olemiss.infoready4.com.
July 17 – July 31 Internal review process conducted
Aug 3 UM selections completed; Nominees announced
Aug 4 – Sep 18 Selected nominees improve and finalize full proposals
Sep 12 Date Grants.gov registration should be complete (latest!)
Sep 19 Due date for proposals to ORSP to review (optional)
Sep 26, 10:59 p.m. Central Proposals due to NEH; Nominees submit via grants.gov
Oct 18 Letters of rec. & confirmation of nomination to NEH
2019
March-April NEH Selections announced
May Projects to begin
Instructions for UM Pre-Proposals
To be considered for one of the two institutional submission slots, prospective nominees should upload a pre-proposal to the ORSP InfoReady Review Portal https://olemiss.infoready4.com
The pre-proposal must consist of:
· The 3-page project narrative, exactly following the requirements outlined in the NEH program guidelines; narratives not meeting all of the guidelines (including formatting, sections, length, font, etc.) may not be considered. Guidelines may be downloaded from
https://www.neh.gov/grants/research/summer-stipends.
- The two-page Supplemental Information for Individuals form, which may be downloaded from http://apply07.grants.gov/apply/GetGrantFromFedgrants?opportunity=20180926-FT&agencycode=NEH including the Field of Project, Project Director Field of Study, Status (Senior or Junior Scholar), and the names, e-mail addresses, and affiliations for your proposed letter-of-recommendation writers.
- The bibliography (one page or less).
- A resume (two pages or less), in the format described in the instructions.
For the pre-proposal, do NOT submit:
- An appendix
- Letters of Recommendation
Final proposals from selected nominees will be submitted by the individual nominee via Grants.gov in accordance with NEH recommendations. Projects will begin in May 2019.
Questions
Questions about NEH guidelines and the Grants.gov online submission process should be directed to the ORSP pre-award specialist (Lesha Agnew, Ken Sleeper, or Mickey McLaurin) assigned to the faculty member’s home department. For questions about what makes a competitive proposal, or about how the internal competition will work, or if you don’t remember who your ORSP specialist is, please contact Jason Hale or Mickey McLaurin. See also the NEH Frequently Asked Question page for this program: https://www.neh.gov/files/grants/summer-stipends-faqs_2018.pdf.
General Information
NEH Summer Stipend grants provide individuals with an opportunity to pursue research in the humanities that contributes to scholarly knowledge or to the public's understanding of the humanities. Projects should be completed during the tenure of an award or represent part of a long-term endeavor. Summer Stipend recipients may hold other research grants for the same project during the tenure of their awards, but must work full-time on their projects during the 2 months of their tenure. Summer Stipends normally support work carried out during summer months, but arrangements can be made for holding tenure at other times of the year.
What are the humanities?
According to the 1965 National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities Act, “The term ‘humanities‘ includes, but is not limited to, the study of the following: language, both modern and classical; linguistics; literature; history; jurisprudence; philosophy; archaeology; comparative religion; ethics; the history, criticism and theory of the arts; those aspects of social sciences which have humanistic content and employ humanistic methods; and the study and application of the humanities to the human environment with particular attention to reflecting our diverse heritage, traditions, and history and to the relevance of the humanities to the current conditions of national life.”
Program Statistics
In the last five competitions the Summer Stipends program received an average of 834 applications per year. The program made an average of 77 awards per year, for a funding ratio of 9 percent.
For More Information: http://www.neh.gov/grants/research/summer-stipends