ACLS HBCU Faculty Fellowships and Grants - ACLS
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ACLS HBCU Faculty Fellowships and Grants

Supporting the scholarship of humanities and social sciences faculty at Historically Black Colleges and Universities
  • ACLS HBCU Faculty Fellowships and Grants
    • ACLS HBCU Faculty Fellowships
    • ACLS Project Grants for HBCU Faculty
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More About This Program
Program Status
Active
ACLS HBCU Faculty Fellowship and Grants, with image of Fisk University Jubilee Hall

The American Council of Learned Societies invites applications for the HBCU Faculty Fellowship and Grant Program. HBCUs are a vital component of the higher education ecosystem with a distinguished record of teaching and research contributions to the academic humanities and interpretive social sciences. This program supports the work of faculty at HBCUs by providing awards that attend to the specific teaching, research, and service contexts of their institutions. The program is the result of an extensive series of listening sessions and consultations with HBCU faculty and administrators from a wide range of institutions about opportunities and needs for research support at their colleges and universities.

Based on these consultations, the program will offer two types of awards to advance HBCU faculty scholarship:

  1. Grants of up to $10,000 for research project development, with a grant term of 12 to 15 months.
  2. Fellowships of up to $50,000 to support more sustained time and engagement with a significant research project, with an award term of 15 to 27 months.

For the 2024-2025 competition cycle, ACLS will award up to 12 grants and up to eight fellowships. Both award types allow applicants to structure their budgets and workplans in ways that best fit their research goals and professional commitments. Applicants are encouraged to select the award type that best matches the goals, scale, and stage of their proposed projects. Award funds may be used for anything that is necessary to advance the project.

Please join us for office hours, where ACLS program staff answer your questions about the application process, program parameters, and more.

Receive program and application updates

Sign up below if you would like to receive updates about this program, including information about upcoming webinars, project development workshops, and draft proposal feedback.

Sign up here!

In addition to the fellowship or grant stipend, each awardee will have access to networking and mentorship opportunities that align with their scholarly goals and institutional circumstances. For both fellowships and grants, each award also comes with an additional institutional grant of $2,500 to the awardee’s home institution to support humanities programming or infrastructure.

Applicants who advance to the finalist round of review will receive a $500 grant to support their research, in addition to access to project and proposal development workshops.

Application Support
ACLS offers the following support for HBCU faculty who are interested in these fellowship and grant opportunities. Please sign up above to receive notifications of webinars, office hours, and application feedback opportunities.

  • Informational webinars about the application process.
  • Office hours for applicant support: Sign up here.
  • Feedback on draft applications: ACLS will provide feedback on draft applications (complete or incomplete drafts of proposals, workplans, and budgets) submitted by August 28, 2024. Unfortunately, we cannot provide feedback on drafts received after that date.

These resources are intended to support applicants’ final submission to the grant or fellowship competitions and to create pathways for scholars at HBCUs to national and international research funding. Note that participation in these optional resources is not required to apply for a grant or fellowship, nor does it guarantee the receipt of a fellowship or grant award.

ACLS seeks to advance equity, justice, and inclusive excellence in all of our programs and initiatives. The ACLS HBCU Faculty Fellowship and Grant program especially welcomes applicants from historically underrepresented groups such as Black/African American, Hispanic/Latinx, Asian American and Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaskan Native scholars, first generation college graduates, scholars from low-income backgrounds, formerly incarcerated scholars, queer and trans scholars, and scholars with disabilities. 

Projects must only be submitted to one of the year’s competitions, for fellowships or grants; the same project cannot be submitted for both awards.

ACLS HBCU Fellowships and Grants

Name Type Due
ACLS HBCU Faculty Fellowships Fellowship

November 6, 2024, 9 PM EDT

ACLS Project Grants for HBCU Faculty Grant

November 6, 2024, 9 PM EDT

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Formed in 1919, ACLS is a nonprofit federation of 81 scholarly organizations. As the preeminent representative of American scholarship in the humanities and interpretive social sciences, ACLS holds a core belief that knowledge is a public good.

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