Funding Call: Research Development Fund 2017

The Centre for Hidden Histories is proud to announce a call for funding for community co-production projects that would begin in early 2017 and be complete by 31 December 2017.

As one of the five AHRC First World War Engagement Centres, the CHH can provide funding to support academic members of its research network working with community partners to develop projects related to the centenary of the First World War.

Grants will normally be for no more than £15,000. There will be no more than seven or eight awards made.

Eligibility

Applications must be led by and submitted by a university-based academic; non-academic groups may not submit applications independently.

To qualify for funding, projects should involve substantial engagement in research activities which require a significant input of time and/or other research resources. The Centre is looking to fund high-quality research activities and outputs co-produced by academic researchers and their community partner(s). Proposals that link several of communities, community groups or cultural partnerships will also be welcomed.

Priority in this additional call will be given to projects that diversify engagement in centenary activities, including, for example, engagement with minority or marginalised groups in society, including BAME, and/or projects that seek to uncover hidden narratives or that strengthen the coverage of under-represented or hidden narratives or unheard/disregarded voices relating to the centenary.

Details of the engagement centres can be found here, and information about research network membership can be found on individual centre websites.

Projects must be led by members of the academic research network but must also address needs or opportunities identified and agreed with the community partner(s) and must provide evidence of the support of those partner(s).There is no requirement under this additional call for projects to build on existing HLF projects although connections with HLF projects will be welcomed.

Advice for academic researchers on public engagement activity can be found on National Co-ordinating Centre for Public Engagement’s website. The articles on co-inquiry and engaging the public as researchers may be particularly helpful in developing applications:

Timescale          

  • Call announced: 1st August 2016
  • Application deadline: midday on 3rd October
  • Decisions made: 1st November
  • Projects notified: 16th November
  • Projects begin in 2017 to be completed by 31st December 2017

Funding

Funding can only be held by eligible UK based Research Organisations. In practice this means awards can only be held by Universities, or by a small number of organisations recognised by the AHRC as Independent Research Organisations (IROs), such as museums and galleries. Community partners cannot apply independently in their own right for Research Council Funding, or be paid directly for their activities by the Research Councils.

Funding is available for any activity that is directly related to the research project being proposed. This can include activity undertaken or delivered by community partners, but only where this is clearly related to the delivery of the research project. Funding is not available for community partners to continue to deliver their core business, and funds cannot be used outside the dates of the award itself.

Applications should be costed at 100% full economic costs but funding will only be provided by the AHRC through the engagement centre for 80% of the full economic costs. In authorising the application the lead applicant’s research organisation (along, where appropriate, with other project partner research organisations) must commit to meeting the remaining 20% full economic costs of the project.

Decision-making

All applications will be assessed by a funding panel appointed by the Centre, and including experts in the study of the First World War period, and in working with community groups.

Assessment Criteria

All applications will be judged according to the engagement centres’ shared Assessment Criteria which can be found here. Please consult this carefully when preparing your application.

Queries may be directed to john.beckett@nottingham.ac.uk

Connected-Communities-logo

CentreForHiddenHistoriesColour

Save the Date: Global Perspectives and People’s Pathways, Leeds 21-22 October

Leeds

Leeds City Museum and the Centre for Hidden Histories invite you to save the dates for a pair of events taking place at the museum on the 21st and 22nd October.

Study Day (£20pp*)
Global Perspectives on WW1
11am – 4pm, Friday 21st October

Community Day
Peoples’ Pathways: Soldiers from Overseas in WW1
11am – 3pm, Saturday 22nd October

Call for Participation
We’d love to hear from experts and community-led projects that explore these themes. Slots from between 30mins and an hour are available at each event for talks, presentations, workshops and performances. Please email lucy.moore@leeds.gov.uk by 31/8/16 if you are interested.

*Some bursaries may be available to help with costs. Please get in touch for more details.

Stereoscopic Views of the War Beyond the Western Front: A call for submissions

One of the Centre’s academic researchers, Dr Tudor Georgescu, shares his call for stereoscopic images of the First World War.

127: Our intrepid infantry still "foot slogging" : on the longAs part of an exhibition focussed on the war beyond the Western Front at Oxford Brookes University, Dr Tudor Georgescu is looking to convert a series of stereoscopic views to 3D pictures and would very much value your help in putting together a set of twenty to thirty images to highlight a remarkable history of the War and its visual legacy.

If you have stereoscopic pictures capturing the Italian, Balkan, Middle Eastern or Russian campaigns, for example, he would be really grateful if you could let him use these for the exhibition planned for 18 Nov – 16 Dec 2016, at Glass Tank, Oxford Brookes University.

The exhibition sets out to explore hidden histories of the First World War that go beyond the well trodden trenches of the Western Front, refocusing on themes and theatres that have remained elusive. As seen through the prism of the Oxf and Bucks battalions’ experiences of the Italian, Balkan, Middle Eastern and Russian campaigns, a remarkable and graphic history emerges, one that also lucidly illustrates the truly global dimensions of the First World War and our role therein.

18689: A bristling forest of bayonets. Russian troops on reviewHe is keen to have high resolution scans of pictures that can be scaled up to A3 or A2 or larger size to make the most of their visual impact, and if you could send him a picture that would be great, or he can arrange for them to be sent to his office at Brookes and he’ll return them to you after digitisation.

He will, of course acknowledge you as the source, and if you have a story to go with the pictures and their journeys certainly let him know! Similarly, if you have any comments, questions or otherwise about it all.

Should you be able to contribute please get in touch, he would need to finalise the list of pictures by 31st August 2016.

 

For further information, please contact Tudor Georgescu

E: Tgeorgescu@brookes.ac.uk

Postal: Oxford Brookes University, Gipsy Lane Campus, Tonge 6.59, Oxford, OX3 0BP

Visit the “War Beyond the Western Front” Project webpage: Link