I'm pleased to announce our fourth round of funding. Please forward to your
networks, thanks. Apologies for cross-posts.


CSSN Request for Proposals Spring 2023

*Request for Proposals for Social Science Research into the Structural,
Political, and Institutional Dynamics of Climate Change Politics*

The Climate Social Science Network <https://cssn.org/>, a global network of
scholars headquartered at Brown University, announces its interest in
fostering research and other activities to enhance our understanding of the
cultural, institutional, and political dimensions of climate change
politics.  This fourth call for proposed research seeks to close gaps in
our understanding of key sectors and types of actions obstructing action on
climate change. See our previous grants at https://cssn.org/current-grants/
The period of the work will be from 1 June 2023 to 31 May 2025.

Proposals for the following types of projects are solicited:

   1. Research to determine the historical activities of institutions that
   oppose action on climate change. This includes historical and archival
   research, as well as time series analyses of organizational data. This
   includes the role of the oil and gas sector, the petrochemical sector,
   agricultural and forestry industries (including livestock, ethanol,
   farming), transportation (rail, automobile shipping and air transport),
   coal, steel, utility, and real estate sectors.
   2. Empirical analysis of the role of public relations firms in creating
   and maintaining organized political opposition to climate change action.
   Research on the impact of PR campaigns on the political process is desired,
   including empirical analysis of the impact of advertising campaigns on
   elite discourse, media coverage, and public opinion.
   3. Analysis of the roles and relationships between organizational actors
   in climate change politics engaged in obstructing climate action, including
   management, finance, and other consultancies, think tanks, law firms,
   advocacy organizations, foundations, corporations, public relations and
   lobbying firms, and trade associations.
   4. Examination of the role of finance actors such as banks, investment
   firms or insurance companies in fostering efforts to obstruct climate
   action, including greenwashing, establishing misleading ESG goals and
   climate action plans, and failure to hold institutions accountable for
   their actions.
   5. The role of nation states and state owned enterprises in obstructing
   climate action.
   6. Efforts by corporations, foundations, or trade associations to
   influence primary, secondary, and university teaching and research to
   support the viewpoints of fossil fuel related interests.
   7. The use and impact of sponsored content in major media outlets by
   opponents of climate action.

This letter solicits proposals from scholars in sociology, political
science, public policy, geography, communications, or other
interdisciplinary social science areas.  More competitive proposals will
focus on East and South Asia and Oceania; Latin America and Africa, the
Near and Middle East, and the former Soviet Republics.  Proposals focused
on the United States and Canada focused on the agricultural and forestry,
transportation, and the real estate sectors will be prioritized for
funding. This RFP does not solicit research into individual or
psychological perspectives on climate change, discourse analysis, or public
opinion polling.

Successful proposals will have scientifically sound research plans that are
explicitly rooted in relevant social science theory and literature.
Proposals will be evaluated using criteria of intellectual merit and their
potential contribution to informing pragmatic and timely actions to address
climate change.

Funding for *seed grants and PhD dissertation support* with a maximum
amount of $20,000 is available.  All recipients of seed grants are expected
to apply for further funding from other sources, and the grant application
must specify how this funding will be utilized to apply for further funding
from other funding sources.  A small number (1-2) of *research grants* of
up to $50,000 for major research efforts is available.  Applicants for seed
grants should submit a maximum three-page research proposal (plus
appendices), and applicants for research grants should submit a maximum
five-page research proposal containing the following items:

·      Title

·      Participating researchers, affiliations, nations, and email
addresses.

·      Abstract describing the overall project, time frame and budgetary
requirements.  This should be no longer than 250 words.

·      A 150 word abstract that could be used publicly if the grant is
awarded.

·      Research Objectives, including specific aspect of the RFP (#1-7
listed above) that the proposal addresses.  Research grant proposals should
include specific hypotheses that will be tested in the research.

·      Intellectual Merit of the Proposed Research – including how this
research expands the peer reviewed literature in the specified scholarly
area.  Research grant proposals should include a detailed literature
review; seed grants should include a detailed list flagging the most
relevant pieces.

·      Broader Political Importance and value of the research to addressing
climate change.

·      Proposed Budget and Schedule, including intermediate outputs and
planned peer reviewed publications.

·      For seed grants, identification of future funding sources.

Indirect costs are prohibited; the approved indirect cost rate for this
(RFP) is 0%.

Research projects involving human subjects (defined here:
https://www.brown.edu/research/irb-review) will usually require approval at
your home institution and through Brown University’s institutional review
board. This is all feasible, and is getting more streamlined, but may
require a couple months, which should be built into the project schedule.

This call for proposals is open to all members of the Climate Social
Science Network. If you are not a member, contact us at
https://cssn.org/contact/.

The application must be received by April 1, 2023. Apply online:
https://forms.gle/5LHkRHJaJCr7tKQy8

Grant awardees will be required to report on their project’s outcomes at
CSSN’s annual conferences in June, and in a brief final report.

Direct questions to: Timmons Roberts, Executive Director, CSSN
[email protected]

-- 
J. Timmons Roberts
Ittleson Professor of Environmental Studies and Sociology, Brown University
<https://vivo.brown.edu/display/jr17>
Executive Director, Climate Social Science Network <http://cssn.org/>
Director, the Climate and Development Lab
<http://www.climatedevlab.brown.edu>
Institute at Brown for Environment and Society
<https://www.brown.edu/academics/institute-environment-society/>
Brown Department of Sociology
<https://www.brown.edu/academics/sociology/people/j-timmons-roberts>
On Twitter @timmonsroberts <https://twitter.com/TimmonsRoberts>
For Office Hours appointments visit here
<https://calendar.google.com/calendar/u/0/selfsched?sstoken=UUprdHRuTEdzaXRifGRlZmF1bHR8NmZiMWQ3MDY4Nzk0YzFhZGQzNGFmN2U0Yjk1YmFlOTQ>

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Attachment: CSSN Request for Proposals Spring 2023 (V3 1 Feb).docx
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