Collaborative Grants in Media and Communications

 

2007-2008 Large Grants Competition


Letters of Inquiry Due April 22, 2007


 

 

The SSRC is pleased to offer two types of 'Collaborative Grants' in 2007 for 
academic-advocacy partnerships in media and communications.

 

Small Grants provide up to $7500 for short-term academic research in support of 
advocacy and activism in media and communications. The next application 
deadline is April 4, 2007 with subsequent competitions held at roughly 4-month 
intervals.  For application procedures, criteria, past recipients, and other 
details, see http://www.ssrc.org/programs/media/ .

 

Large Grants provide up to $30,000 in support for academic-advocacy research 
collaborations designed to change media / telecommunications infrastructure, 
practices, or policies.  General areas of interest for the program include:

 

*       Measuring the success or failure of mainstream media in advancing 
different public interest goals or values. 
*       Measuring the impact of existing alternative or community media systems 
on communities, public discourse, or democratic processes.
*       Developing better, actionable accounts of the role of 'new media' in 
people's lives.  
*       Analyzing policymaking and/or regulatory systems.
*       Analyzing emerging systems, frameworks, or models of media and 
communications that transcend the current regulatory framework.
*       Analyzing economic models, industry structure, markets, or audiences 
for different kinds of media
*       Creating analytical tools or research resources for use by advocates, 
communities, or the public.
*       Documenting or evaluating advocacy or organizing strategies around 
communications and media issues.

 

Both large and small grants are awarded through competitive application 
processes, with recipients selected by an independent committee of researchers 
and advocates.

 

Grants are expected to fund up to 1 year of work.  

 

Grant recipients will be part of a cohort that meets and communicates over the 
course of the program.

 


The Large Grants Competition: Process


 

Application for the Large Grants Competition consists of two stages: 

 

*       A 'Letter of Inquiry' of less than 1,000 words outlining the proposed 
project, partners, and goals.  Entries will be vetted by program staff in order 
to help applicants navigate the challenges of building effective collaborations 
in this area.  More substantial proposals will then be requested from those 
LOIs that meet the program criteria.  The LOI must be submitted by April 22, 
2007.  

 

*       A more detailed proposal describing the research, the partners, budget, 
timeline, and proposed outcomes.

 

The LOI must be submitted via email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with subject line 
"Collaborative Grant Letter of Inquiry."

 


Applicant Criteria


 

Projects must involve substantive collaboration between:

 

*         A researcher based at a university, college, or other 
academically-oriented research institution.  Advanced graduate students are 
eligible.  

 

*         A US-based non-profit advocacy, organizing or community group working 
on media and/or telecommunications issues. 

 

Letters of interest and proposals must be submitted by the person primarily 
responsible for conducting the proposed research.

 

Other Conditions:

 

*       Public-interest groups with unusual financial status (e.g., non-profit 
fiscal sponsorship or non-commercial for-profit status) should contact SSRC 
program staff.  
*       The academic research partner cannot be a paid staff member of the 
partnering nonprofit organization.  
*       International proposals will be solicited from SSRC partner 
organizations.
*       There are no citizenship requirements for participation in the program. 
 
*       Applicants may apply for both small grants and large grants.  
Applicants with current SSRC collaborative grant funding should explain how the 
new proposal builds on completed work from that grant.

 


Project Criteria


 

All projects must:

 

*       Be strategically useful in their proposed advocacy and/or organizing 
context.
*       Produce scholarship that meets academic standards. 
*       Have a realistic workflow, budget, and timeframe.

 

Collaborations will be evaluated in part on whether they meet some or all of 
the following criteria: 

 

*       Have a clear plan for the application of research findings in 
policy-making processes or advocacy campaigns.  Research that facilitates 
field-building (i.e. curriculum development, tool-building, analysis of best 
practice) is also eligible.
*       Are useful for organizations, communities, and advocacy efforts beyond 
the partner organization.
*       Build new capacity-skills, tools, experience, access to data 
sets-within the "user" organization and/or community. 
*       Involve collaboration between two or more advocacy/community groups in 
the project design and the plan of use for the research.
*       Use participatory methods to engage community and/or advocacy group 
members in framing the questions, data collection, and/or analysis.
*       Use methods or models of research that have proved effective in 
analogous contexts.
*       Address issues of disparate impact on communities on the basis of race, 
class, gender, ethnicity, age or other identity/status category. 
*       Reflect diversity in the staff or group involved with the project. 

 

Letters of inquiry not exceeding 1,000 words should include the following: 

*       Name or topic of the proposed research project;
*       A brief statement (two or three sentences) of the purpose and nature of 
the proposed study;
*       The significance of the issue addressed by the project;
*       How the research will address the issue;
*       How the issue relates to the applying organization, and why the 
organization is qualified to undertake the project;
*       Novelty and utility of the project vis à vis existing research;
*       Geographic area or country where the work will take place;
*       Time period for which funding is requested;
*       Information about those who will be helped by and interested in the 
work and how you will communicate with them;
*       Amount and breakdown of the funding requested (estimates are 
acceptable).

SSRC staff will respond to letters of inquiry within three weeks.

 

Contact Information

In order to expedite a letter of inquiry, the applicant must provide the 
following contact information in a separate memorandum:

*       Name, address (and postal address if different), phone number, and fax 
number of principal researcher;
*       Name of the partnering organization;
*       Organization's address (and postal address if different), phone number, 
fax number, e-mail address and web address, if any;
*       Name of the partnering organization's chief executive officer or 
equivalent;
*       Name and title of the main project contact person at the organization, 
if different from the above;
*       Address (and postal address if different), phone number, fax number and 
e-mail address of main contact.


Program Background


The Collaborative Grants project is part of the Necessary Knowledge for a 
Democratic Public Sphere (NKDPS) Program of the Social Science Research 
Council, working in partnership with the Center for International Media Action 
and the McGannon Center for Communications Research at Fordham University. The 
program is funded by the Knowledge, Creativity, and Freedom program of the Ford 
Foundation.

 

For more information on the program, see http://www.ssrc.org/programs/media 
<http://www.ssrc.org/programs/media> .  For all program-related inquiries, 
please write to [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  . Subscribe to 
MediaResearchHub-News for program updates, research funding opportunities, and 
conference information at 
http://listserve.ssrc.org/mailman/listinfo/mediaresearchhub-news 
<http://listserve.ssrc.org/mailman/listinfo/mediaresearchhub-news>  .

 

 

 

 

 

 

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