Research Cluster Grants

  • Deadline: April 29, 2024  
  • Value $15,000/Cluster. Up to 2 Clusters funded. 
  • Eligibility: Principal Investigator must be a UBC-V Faculty member (tenured/track) in the Faculty of Arts, Faculty of Education, or Allard School of Law. Research Cluster team members must be appointed to a minimum of two different departments. 
  • Supports innovative public humanities research and emergent stages of collaboration, and/or knowledge mobilization among interdisciplinary teams of public humanities scholars at UBC and beyond (5+ UBC faculty members from 2+ departments) with the intent subsequently to apply for Tri-Council funding.  
  • For queries related to this grant, please contact the Public Humanities Hub manager, Heather Tam, phh.manager@ubc.ca.

APPLICATION PROCEDURES 


INTRODUCTION 

Cluster Grants support interdisciplinary research cluster development among Humanities scholars in the Faculties of Arts and Education and the Allard School of Law at UBC-V. The grants are intended to promote research activity and collaboration among humanities scholars at UBC and beyond and to help collaborators leverage funding to secure additional support.  

Unlike the VPRI Cluster Grant funding program, the Public Humanities Hub Cluster grants permit the use of grant funds for the direct costs of research. The Public Humanities Hub Cluster grant funds direct costs of research activities and the costs of cementing the group by means of collaborative gatherings and/or events. 

 

 

ELIGIBILITY 

Relationship to VPRI Cluster Grant Program. Cluster Grant applicant groups must fall into one of two modes of relationship with the VPRI Cluster Grant program:  

(a) Applicants have not applied for, nor have been awarded a VPRI Cluster Grant. The intended PHH Cluster Grant must not have been awarded funding previously. 

(b) Applicants have applied for, and been granted, funds for a VPRI Cluster Grant.  

All other things being equal, the PHH Cluster funding will prioritize those applicants who have not already been funded by the VPRI Cluster grant program.  

Cluster Teams. The Public Humanities Research Cluster Grant Fund will provide funding to research teams made up of at least five full-time, tenured or tenure-track UBC-V faculty members appointed to a minimum of two different departments, plus graduate students and staff in Arts, Law, and Education to work on Public Humanities research, including the development of the cluster itself.  

 

 

PUBLIC HUMANITIES HUB RESEARCH CLUSTER PROPOSALS 

The Public Humanities Research Cluster should:  

  1. Be framed and designed through critical, Public Humanities methods and scholarship;  
  2. Identify a significant knowledge advance that represents a contribution of this scholarly work; 
  3. Acknowledge that public scholarship of necessity attends to human rights and other minoritizing histories and processes that characterize public settings; 
  4. Include a Principal Investigator from the UBC-V Faculty of Arts, Faculty of Education, or Allard School of Law;   
  5. Represent research that is clearly designed to address exclusions to access to knowledge.

Applicants who will hold additional cluster support through another award or grant during the tenure of this award must disclose this.  

 

 

PUBLIC HUMANITIES SCHOLARSHIP 

  1. Humanities? The Public Humanities Hub (PHH) supports scholarship across a range of fields of inquiry in Arts, Education and Law; academic work that is located within a diverse set of interpretative and analytical knowledges and critical methods that represent how we, as the PHH, understand public humanities scholarship. Humanities and posthumanist, or digital methodologies in academic humanities projects are primarily analytical, critical and speculative and are not typically deployed positivistically to produce empirical data. Humanities methodologies are not usually oriented towards those determinative accounts of cause-effect commonly located in the social sciences. Humanities research typically involves scholarly usage of particular qualitative, interpretive, digital, hermeneutic, exegetic methodologies, including narrative, memoir, genealogy, phenomenology, literary/visual/acoustic analysis, composition, theory, performance, ekphrasis, archivism, animated archives, enhanced critical curation, visualization, cultural analytics, fluid textuality, filmmaking, mapping, poesis and diverse other methods. 
  2. Public Humanities? For the Public Humanities Hub (PHH), public humanities scholarship can refer to humanities research that prioritizes public-facing engagement; research that aims to bring high-brow cultural artifacts within reach of a broader audience. Alternately, public humanities can refer to academic engagement that seeks to reimagine and collaboratively curate and in fact, redistribute, access to the capacity to create knowledge amongst a very broad set of publics, including most particularly, communities historically and persistently marginalized. 

 

 

CLUSTER GRANT  

The grant consists of  

  1. Up to $15,000 of funding 
  2. Administrative support from the Hub staff.  

Typically, though not without exception, research teams should accomplish most of their research goals within two years of receiving funding. Eligible expenses include all SSHRC-eligible expenses, both direct and indirect research costs.   

Successful applicants are expected to attend Public Humanities Hub events throughout the year, to acknowledge Hub funding in any publicity linked to their research project and, at the end of their award, to write a short public-facing reflection on their research and cluster-related activities, which will be shared on the Hub website and social media channels and in the Hub’s annual report. 

The Public Humanities Hub will: 

  1. help publicize the Cluster’s research  
  2. promote events related to clusters’ projects on all its communication channels 
  3. introduce cluster members to relevant community partners 
  4. invite cluster members to contribute to our Public Scholar Training Series, our Massy Reads series and/or other Hub programming, and  
  5. support clusters’ applications for additional research funding. For example, all forms of support outlined above can also be mentioned as monetary/in-kind “matching funds” on SSHRC Connection and other grant applications. 

 

 

ELIGIBLE EXPENSES 

Grantees are highly encouraged to use PHH funds to hire Graduate Research Assistants (GRAs), although most direct costs of research eligible under the Tri-Agency expense guidelines will be permissible except those related to conferences (registration, travel, accommodation, per diem, paper preparation, etc.), computer equipment purchases, and collaborator travel expenses in excess of $500. If the group has been funded for a VPRI Cluster, then the budget may not include any costs for events or gatherings.

 

 

ACCESS TO FUNDS  

A UBC Research Project Information Form (RPIF) and brief budget will be submitted with your application. Funds for grant recipients will be transferred to an ORS research account that will be administered by your home department. Funds will be accessible for two years. 

 

 

REPORTING REQUIREMENTS 

Recipients agree to submit a final brief report on the project supported by the Cluster grant, and to be featured in Hub communications (including our website, annual report, and social media). Any promotion of your project should acknowledge that this is a Public Humanities Hub-funded project by including the Hub logo. Depending on your project, the Hub may also be able to provide communications and event support. 

 

 

ADJUDICATION 

The Adjudication committee, a multi-disciplinary committee of UBC Humanities scholars chaired by the Academic Director of the Public Humanities Hub (Dr. Mary Bryson), will consider the following criteria when evaluating proposals: advancement of public humanities scholarship; significance of the outlined research project and anticipated outcomes; clarity of EDID (equity, diversity, inclusion, and decolonization) and human rights methods and approaches; research track record of the Principal Investigator and Team Members; the feasibility of the plan to mobilize knowledge through public-facing forms of scholarship; plans to develop a longer-term research agenda and apply for external (e.g. Tri-Agency) funding; appropriateness of the budget. 

Notification of awards will be made by May 2024. 

 

 

APPLICATION PROCEDURES 

Please complete the following: 

Note: DOWNLOAD AND COMPLETE the Grant Proposal Form IN ADOBE. DO NOT COMPLETE FORM IN BROWSER. 

The completed Grant Proposal form and all attachments must be submitted as a single bookmarked PDF. The Research Project Information Form (RPIF) is submitted as an additional PDF. (Note: Attachment formatting requirements and file-naming protocol provided below). 

Grant Proposal Attachments as Described Below 

  1. Detailed Description (maximum 2 pages). A description of the proposed research and cluster-related activities that effectively communicates: a. The research questions to be explored through the proposed activities; b. Rationale and significance of the proposed research and cluster-related activities grounded in relevant literature; c. The methodology for the research activities; and d. How the research cluster grant funds will help advance a new line of research. <<PDF Bookmark Label: Detailed Description>> 
  2. Attachment: How will your research advance knowledge in the public humanities? ((maximum half-page) as defined here) <<PDF Bookmark Label: Knowledge Advancement>> 
  3. Attachment: How does your project/methodology represent a commitment to social justice? (maximum half-page) <<PDF Bookmark Label: Social Justice>> 
  4. Attachment: How will your project offer opportunities for graduate student training and/or mentorship? (maximum half-page) <<PDF Bookmark Label: Graduate Student Training>> 
  5. Attachment: Principal Applicant’s peer-reviewed publication history since 2015 and Principal Applicant’s competitively adjudicated research grants history since 2015. Please do not submit full UBC CVs and please do not submit Team Member CVs (no page limit). <<PDF Bookmark Label: Principal Applicant Publications & Grants>> 
  6. Attachment: Team Member’s peer-reviewed publication history since 2015 and Team Member’s competitively adjudicated research grants history since 2015 (1-page per team member). <<PDF Bookmark Label: Team Member Publication & Grants>> 

For the attachments #2-6, note Attachment Requirements 

The RPIF should be signed by the Principal Applicant, the Principal Applicant’s Department/Unit Head, and the Faculty Dean or designate, typically the Associate Dean Research. Please check the turnaround times for Department and Faculty signatures. 

 

 

Attachment Requirements 

The completed Application Form and all attachments must be submitted as a single bookmarked PDF which conforms to the following formatting conventions: 

  • Font: Size 12 pt Times New Roman 
  • Page size: 8 ½” x 11” 
  • Spacing: Single-spaced 
  • Margins: Minimum ¾ inch (1.87 mm) 
  • Whole PDF must be Bookmarked 

(How to bookmark a PDF) 

(How to merge PDFs) 

Please save these documents, in this order, as a single, bookmarked PDF file and name the Application and the RPIF files by using the following respective formats: 

ResearchClusterGrant2024Applicantsurname.pdf  

ResearchClusterGrant2024ApplicantsurnameRPIF.pdf 

Please upload both the bookmarked form & attachments as a single PDF, as well as the RPIF PDF, via the online submission form below. 

Proposals are due April 29, 2024. 

For queries related to this grant, please contact the Public Humanities Hub manager, Heather Tam, phh.manager@ubc.ca.