Graduate Anti-Racism Research Grant
The Bowman Center offers small grants to graduate students, enabling them to pursue research projects centered around racism, racial equity, and justice.
These funds support students in conducting independent scholarship under the guidance of a faculty mentor or extending their faculty advisor's research. To apply for the grants, students must submit a project proposal, budget, and a faculty support letter.
Grantees are strongly encouraged to participate in monthly meetings during the Fall and Winter semesters. These meetings serve as a platform for sharing research progress and discussing the unique challenges faced by scholars in academia and foster a sense of community among the grantees. The Bowman Center amplifies the work of our graduate grantees through social media, the annual Graduate Research Showcase at the end of the Winter semester, and in Bowman Center events during the academic year.
More Information
Award Details
Candidates must submit the online application form and include the following documents by Friday, March 13, at 11:59 p.m. ET:
- 100-word (or less) abstract of the project
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Project narrative (no more than five pages), including:
- The objectives and scope of the proposed project, and how the project is important to the applicant’s research goals. If the proposed project is an extension of their faculty advisor’s research project, please describe how the student’s project uniquely contributes to (i.e., is distinct from) their faculty advisor’s project.
- How does the project illuminate and address issues of racism, racial inequality, and racial justice? How does this work challenge or dismantle systemic racism?
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How does the project align with the Bowman Center's understanding of anti-racism scholarship (detailed below)?
- The Bowman Center promotes the production of anti-racism scholarship that articulates how racism operates in the contemporary world (especially as that world reflects dimensions of identity fluidity unique to modern times). Central to this agenda is supporting the production of scholarship that embraces and fosters understanding of intersectionality as fundamental to how different people may experience and respond to racial phenomena.
- This agenda also includes articulating strategies for social interventions that assist in the eradication of racism in contemporary life.
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We understand anti-racism scholarship to explicitly:
- Recognize how racism operates within and is reinforced by systems, institutions, policy, social forces, and throughout history
- Highlight the connection between anti-racism scholarship and continued efforts to challenge or dismantle systemic racism
- How might the research likely inform practice, public engagement, and action to advance anti-racist principles and organizing?
- Note: The reference list of sources cited in the narrative is not included in the 5-page limit.
- How the proposed project may forward the student’s progress toward a degree
- Student’s prior experience, history, and/or propensity for anti-racist praxis (practice)
- Contribution of the proposed project to the field, particularly as it relates to challenging and/or dismantling systemic racism
- How the faculty advisor will support the student and/or project
See our FAQs sheet for additional information, including information on submitting team proposals.
Budget proposals may include:
- Expenses for research materials (e.g., laboratory supplies, transcription services, data analysis tools)
- Transportation and lodging at research or field sites
- Compensation for undergraduate research assistants, participants, and community partners
Budget proposals should not include:
- Travel expenses not directly related to research or scholarly activity
- Hosting expenses not directly related to research or scholarly activity
- Per diem
Projects awarded will include a clear description of how the project will:
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Address issues of racism, racial inequality, and racial justice in novel ways (e.g., theoretically and/or methodologically)
- While the specific focus of the proposed research may focus on impacts, processes, and change at the individual or interpersonal level as it relates to racism, the project narrative should also articulate how this work is related to continued efforts to challenge or dismantle systemic racism.
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Advance anti-racism and anti-racist praxis in alignment with the Bowman Center's definition of anti-racism scholarship:
- We understand anti-racism scholarship to explicitly:
- Recognize how racism operates within and is reinforced by systems, institutions, policy, social forces, and throughout history
- Highlight the connection between anti-racism scholarship and continued efforts to challenge or dismantle systemic racism
- Inform practice, public engagement, policy, and/or action to advance anti-racist principles and organizing
Applicants will be evaluated based on the following criteria:
- Budget
- Feasibility of Project Plan
- Clarity & Alignment with Institutional Objectives of Anti-Racism
- Potential for Impact
