Do you have a project that tells stories of Hawaiʻi to their community? Are you working to preserve cultural material that remembers their history? Are you planning a humanities program that brings together Hawaiʻi communities to explore and share ideas? If Yes, then submit applications for Preservation & Access Grants!
Donor Name: Hawaiʻi Council for the Humanities
State: Hawaii
Type of Grant: Grant
Deadline: 05/31/2022
Size of the Grant: $10,000
Details:
Grants are available to preserve existing resources that are important to a community, and to make them publicly accessible to researchers, students, and the general public.
Values:
- Ideas of the humanities are grounded in Hawai‘i’s people and places
- Kuleana to their communities’ histories and futures
- Courage to dive deeply into important questions and ideas
- Brave and safe space for diverse voices and experiences to actively share and listen
- Create connections that strengthen their communities’ resilience and ability to change.
Funding information
- Up to up to $10,000
What kinds of projects and formats are eligible for a Preservation & Access grant?
They encourage originality and imagination in your public program plans. Please note that while grant funds can be used as to help create a resource, a good portion of the grant should be used for public programs that broaden perspectives, enrich lives and strengthen communities.
Examples of activities and formats include:
- Organizing a panel and facilitated community discussion about challenging and relevant issues;
- Developing thought-provoking community engagement for exhibitions, publications, films, or performances
- Creating humanities guides or essays or other materials to complement a program and that provide access to expertise and deeper questions on the issue;
- Creating and launching media—film, podcasts, sound recordings, and online media;
- Designing a collaboration between humanities and science communities that helps to more deeply explore a challenging and relevant issue
- Community meetings, workshops, symposia, and similar gatherings for non-academic audiences;
- Creating an interpretive exhibit that helps us dive more deeply into historical and contemporary issues
- Developing a guided tour of a historic site
- Developing a historical theater performance
- Research in the humanities and presentation of results to the community;
- Preserving an important cultural resource in a way that increases public access to the materials (e.g. creating an online archive or a database).
Who may apply?
- Grant applications require a sponsoring nonprofit group or public institution based in Hawaiʻi.
For more information, visit Preservation & Access Grants.