Early Career Grants for Individuals.
Early Career Grants for Individuals
The National Geographic Society is seeking proposals for its Early Career Grants to offer less experienced individuals an opportunity to lead a project.
Focus Areas
National Geographic Society–funded projects should be bold, innovative, and transformative. All proposed projects must be novel and exploratory and align to their mission and focus areas:
- Changing Planet grants focus on their Earth’s dynamic terrestrial, marine, and freshwater ecosystems. These are the foundations of life on the planet, yet are increasingly threatened by exploitation, mismanagement, and climate change.
- Human Journey focuses on learning more about who they are and what their future will be on this planet.It supports projects in a range of fields that are helping us understand the origins and development of their species.
- Wildlife includes species-focused projects and the local evolutionary and ecological processes that sustain them.This area of focus supports projects that seek to discover and identify species and ecosystems and to mitigate threats to Earth’s life forms.
Funding Information
Projects are typically funded for US $5,000 and cannot exceed US $10,000.
Eligibility Criteria
- There is no maximum age limit for Early Career Grant applicants. However, applicants must be at least 18 years old at the time of application submission.
- Applicants are not required to have an advanced degree.Anyone with more than five years of professional experience in the field of their project focus does not qualify for an Early Career Grant and should apply for an Exploration Grant instead.
- The society encourages applications from around the world.If applicants are planning to work outside of their home country or community, applicants must include the name and contact information for at least one local collaborator as a project team member in the application.
- They do not usually consider applications that support strictly laboratory or collections work.
- Grants are awarded on the basis of merit and exist independent of the Society’s other divisions.
- If applicants have previously received an Early Career Grant or a Young Explorers Grant from National Geographic, applicants may submit a new proposal after they have closed their previous grant record.
- The applicants must also submit a two-minute video that will be used to help evaluate the proposal.Applications Accepted All Year Round!
For more information and application details, see; Early Career Grants for Individuals
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