[APOLOGIES FOR CROSS-POSTING]

This is a reminder that the U.S. National Endowment for the Humanities Division 
of Preservation and Access Research and Development grant 
program<https://www.neh.gov/grants/preservation/research-and-development> has a 
May 18, 2021 deadline for submission.  A free recorded information webinar 
about the program is available on the program home 
page.<https://www.neh.gov/grants/preservation/research-and-development>


CONTACTING NEH



Program officers will review optional draft proposals submitted by April 13, 
2021. Program staff cannot respond to drafts submitted after this deadline. 
Although this optional preliminary review is not part of the formal review 
process and has no bearing on the final outcome of the proposal, previous 
applicants have found it helpful in strengthening their applications. If you 
choose to submit a draft proposal, please send it as an attachment to 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.



ABOUT THE PROGRAM



The Research and Development program supports projects that address major 
challenges in preserving or providing access to humanities collections and 
resources.  These challenges include the need to find better ways to preserve 
materials of critical importance to the nation’s cultural heritage—from fragile 
artifacts and manuscripts to analog recordings and digital assets subject to 
technological obsolescence—and to develop advanced modes of organizing, 
searching, discovering, and using such materials.



This program supports projects at all stages of development, from early 
planning and stand-alone studies, to advanced implementation.  Research and 
Development projects contribute to the evolving and expanding body of knowledge 
for heritage practitioners, and for that reason, outcomes may take many forms.  
Projects may produce any combination of laboratory datasets, guidelines for 
standards, open access software tools, workflow and equipment specifications, 
widely used metadata schema, or other products.



Research and Development supports work on the entire range of humanities 
collection types including, but not limited to, moving image and sound 
recordings, archaeological artifacts, born digital and time-based media, rare 
books and manuscripts, material culture, and art.  Applicants must demonstrate 
how advances in preservation and access through a Research and Development 
project would benefit the cultural heritage community by supporting humanities 
research, teaching, or public programming.


For additional information about the program, please visit 
https://www.neh.gov/grants/preservation/research-and-development or contact 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.





Joshua Sternfeld

Senior Program Officer
Division of Preservation and Access
National Endowment for the Humanities
400 Seventh Street, S.W.
Washington, DC 20024
202-606-8570 (fax) 202-606-8639

Visit the NEH Website at www.neh.gov<http://www.neh.gov/>

Follow the Division on Twitter: @NEH_PresAccess

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