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Research Funding Opportunities in KLS

Phil Ward Research Funding Manager October 2009. Research Funding Opportunities in KLS. Basically two types of funding available…: ‘Responsive Mode’ Grants & Fellowships For research on a subject suggested by you ‘ Managed Programme’ Grants & Contracts

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Research Funding Opportunities in KLS

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  1. Phil Ward Research Funding Manager October 2009 Research Funding Opportunitiesin KLS

  2. Basically two types of funding available…: ‘Responsive Mode’ Grants & Fellowships For research on a subject suggested by you ‘Managed Programme’ Grants & Contracts For research on a subject suggested by the funder Programme Grants are similar to other grants; Contracts tend to have more onerous terms and conditions and generally result in ‘deliverable’ product/report …and five sources of funding: Research Councils Charities Professional and Learned Bodies Government Industry To recap…

  3. So you have to consider… • Remit • Do they fund your area? • Does the scheme fit? (eg Grants/Fellowships) • What are the politics behind the call? • Costs • Will it cover all your costs? • If not, are there other reasons to apply? • Overheads – ‘Full Economic Costs’ (fEC) • Timetable • Deadline – is there enough time to write a proposal? • Duration – will it cover the period of your research? • Success Rate • Is it worth it? • Back up plan

  4. Research Councils 2009-10 • Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council (26% - £814m) (£795m) • Science & Technology Facilities Council (20% - £630m) (£624m) • Medical Research Council (19% - £658m) (£606m) • Biotechnology & Biological Sciences Research Council (14% - £471m) (£427m) • Natural Environment Research Council (13% - £408m) (£392m) • Economic & Social Research Council (5% - £170m) (£165m) • Arts & Humanities Research Council (3% - £104m) (£103m)

  5. Research Council Delivery Plans 2008-11 • RCs laying out their priorities for the next 3 yrs • 4 cross-council priorities: • Energy • Living with Environmental Change • Global Uncertainties • Ageing: Lifelong Health and Wellbeing • ‘Economic and Social Benefit’

  6. …and Strategic Plans • AHRC 2007-12 • to promote and support • the production of world-class • world-class postgraduate training • to strengthen the impact of arts and humanities research • To act as voice and advocate for arts and humanities • ESRC 2009-14 • Global Economic Performance, Policy & Management • Health & Wellbeing • Understanding Individual Behaviour • New Technology, Innovation & Skills • Environment, Energy & Resilience • Security, Conflict & Justice • Social Diversity

  7. AHRC • Delivery Plan Priorities: • Stimulating innovation in the knowledge economy • Global threats to security • Capitalising our cultural assets • NB: Responsive Mode/Strategic 3:1 • Success Rates 2008-09: • Research Grants • Standard 12% (23%, 27%) • Speculative 13% (24%, 31%) • Practice-led 33% (32%, 19%) • Fellowships in the C&P Arts 10% (17%, 18%) • Research Leave 19% (27%, 49%) • Networks & Workshops 30% (21%, 33%)

  8. AHRC • Research Grants • Emphasis on supporting ‘teams’ of researchers • 4 ‘routes’ to applying: • Standard (£20k - £1m) • Early Career (£20k - £200k): <8yrs of PhD, or <6yrs 1st appt • Speculative (£20k - £200k): ‘outcomes uncertain’ • Practice-led (up to £20k): ‘practice as integral component’ • Deadline ‘open’ • Research Fellowships

  9. ESRC • Delivery Plan Priorities: • Succeeding in the global economy • Understanding individual behaviour • Population change • NB: Responsive Mode/Strategic 5:3.5 • Success Rates 2008-09: • Standard Grants 14% (15%,19%) • Fellowships 13% (26%,15%) • Small Grants 25% (36%,39%)

  10. Pros and Cons of RCUK • Benefits of applying to AHRC or ESRC: • Prestige • fEC – generous funding • What to watch out for: • JeS form • The funding ‘politics’ • Social & economic impact • The ‘lure’ of programmes • …but AHRC programme success rate good this year: 41% • Divide between AHRC and ESRC remits • AHRC: Research Grants: ‘Team’ research • ESRC: Small grants/standard grants assessment: • better to be seen by individual or whole Board? • ESRC: Users and Ethics

  11. Remit of AHRC and ESRC • AHRC supports research into the content, procedures, theory, philosophy and history of the law. This includes studies of legal systems and legislation in all periods of history and in all parts of the world. • ESRC supports socio-legal studies, which are concerned with the social, political and economic influences on and impact of the law and the legal system. • Both will provide personal advice on this • No projects should fall in the ‘gap’ • Each might fund projects that include elements of the other • Will use ‘appropriate’ spread of peer reviewers

  12. Charities • General • Leverhulme Trust • Wellcome Trust • Nuffield Foundation • Joseph Rowntree Foundation • Specialist • Often medical • eg Cancer Research UK

  13. Leverhulme Trust • Funds all fields, except social policy and welfare, medicine and education • Supports original, risk-taking research that often transcends traditional discipline boundaries • 2007 expenditure £43.1m (£44.3m), split between: • Sciences 46% (45%,45%) • Humanities 33% (43%,36%) • Social Sciences 21% (12%,19%)

  14. Leverhulme Trust • Success Rates • Visiting Professorships 41% (43%,50%) • Emeritus Professorships 31% (40%,48%) • Study Abroad Fellowships 20% (31%,24%) • Research Fellowships 16% (18%,22%) • Philip Leverhulme Prizes 21% (18%,19%) • Research Grants 22% (20%,22%) • Major Research Fellowships 13% (13%,13%) • Early Career Fellowships 14% (12%,11%)

  15. Leverhulme Trust • Benefits of applying to Leverhulme • Not ‘restricted’ by demands of distributing public money • no ‘political agenda’ • reporting not as onerous • What to watch out for: • Research has to appeal to broad general audience • Trustees all ex-Unilever employees • Depend for advice on: • ‘Advisory Committee’ (for smaller grants): 9 professors • ‘Advisory Panel’ (for larger grants): 32 academics • Interdisciplinary – but not ‘last resort’ • Risk taking • Individual ‘vision’

  16. Wellcome Trust • ‘To foster and promote research with the aim of improving human and animal health’ • Funding expenditure in 2007-2008 £702 (£519m, £484m) • As well as Biomedical Research, also supports ‘Biomedical Humanities’ • Broad remits: • History: ‘research into the historical study of all factors affecting the medical and health experience of people and animals - in all countries and at all periods.’ • Ethics: ‘research into ethical issues that arise in the development and delivery of healthcare or the use of medical techniques in non-healthcare contexts.’

  17. Wellcome Trust • Benefits of applying to Wellcome • Wide range of funding • More useful feedback following rejection • Supportive once you have received funding • What to watch out for • Bringing in electronic submission in Medical Humanities • Biomedical ethics centred on funding for institutions and developing countries • Bewildering choice of funding schemes

  18. Nuffield Foundation • Aims • ‘To advance social well being…by supporting work which will bring about improvements in society.’ • To support the development of research and professional capacity • Research expenditure (2008): £10.6 (£10.9m, £9.5m) • Benefits of applying to Nuffield • 2 part process: initial application very simple, and can apply any time • Can apply for ‘teaching buy out’ in grants • What to watch out for: • Strong social policy element • Small scale funding • Importance of ‘methodology’ • Look at previously successful grants

  19. Nuffield Foundation • Project Grants • Funding for research, practical developments and innovation • Programme areas • Child protection and family justice • Access to justice • Open door • NB: ‘Older People & their Families’ area dropped • Social Science Small Grants • Currently being updated (autumn 2009?) • Up to £12k • Not restricted to policy/practical projects, although do look for ‘social relevance’

  20. Joseph Rowntree Foundation • 3 aims: • Poverty: to examine the root causes of poverty and disadvantage and identify solutions. • Empowerment: to find ways in which people and communities can have control of their own lives. • Place: to contribute to the building and development of strong, cohesive and sustainable communities. • Research expenditure (2008): £3.5m (£5.4m) • Benefits of applying to JRF: • Prestigious • What to watch out for: • Very prescriptive calls for proposals • Relatively small amounts of funding

  21. Professional & Learned Societies • Generally provide some small scale support for visits, conferences, fellowships or smaller research projects • Professional Bodies • Represent people working in a specific area • e.g. Socio-legal Studies Association • Learned Societies • Represent, and act as a forum for, a particular subject or discipline • e.g. Royal Society, British Academy

  22. British Academy • Funds research in Humanities & Social Sciences • Research Expenditure 07/08: £23m (£22.4m, £21.3m) • funding strategy is focused on providing small-scale support, including Development Awards (up to £150k fEC), fellowships, conference grants and agreements with other countries for international projects

  23. British Academy • Success Rates 2007/08: • Small Grants 50% (50%,69%) • Overseas Conference Grants 49% (50%,50%) • Bardas 9% (9%,59%*) • Conference Support 9% (9%,50%**) • Senior Research Fellowships 9% (9%, 9%) • Postdoc Fellowship 8% (8%,5%) *Bardas replaced ‘Larger Grants’, and grant increased from £20k to £150k **Replaced British Conference Grants and increased upper limit from £2k to £20k

  24. British Academy • Benefits of applying to BA • Small Grants have highest success rate out of all relevant funders • Relatively simple forms • ‘useful’ pots of money – eg conference funding, collaboration etc • What to watch out for: • Quite a ‘traditional’ funder • Success rates slump • Electronic forms

  25. Government • National • Government Departments • Usually managed programmes, e.g. DH, DEFRA, DFID • Some responsive mode – e.g. DEFRA’s Darwin Initiative • County Councils • Other Government-funded organisations • British Council – collaborative grants • NESTA • International • Europe • Framework Programme • USA • Federal Grants & National Institutes of Health

  26. Other National Government Funding • County Councils • Commission surveys etc. • British Council • Have collaborative agreements with a number of countries

  27. Dept of Health • Research & Development budget 2008-09: £800m • National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) • Umbrella organisation covering a range of funding programmes, including: • Research for Patient Benefit (RfPB): ‘it funds research into everyday practice in the health service’ • Service Delivery & Organisation (SDO): ‘commissions research on the way health services are organised and delivered by the NHS.’ • Benefits of DH: • A lot of funding available, fEC • NIHR success rate good • What to watch out for: • Complex applications • Research Governance Framework (RGF)

  28. SE Research Design Service • £5m service for SE Strategic Health Authority • Surrey, Sussex, Kent • Advise and support health and social care researchers • Free

  29. European Funding • European Commission • ‘driving force’ behind EU • Drafts laws, manages day-to-day business of EU • Organised into 37 Directorates General & Services, including • Justice, Freedom & Security • eg ‘Daphne II Programme’ to combat violence against children, young people and women • Research • Framework Programme • Regional Policy • Interreg Programme

  30. DG Research • Framework Programme: EU’s main method for funding research and innovation • FP7 running from 2007-13 • Budget €50bn over 7 years • Organised into 4 pillars:

  31. Cooperation Ideas People Capacities JRC FP7: Budget Split 2007-2013 Values in € Millions €1 751 €4 217 €4 728 €7 460 €32 365

  32. FP7: Cooperation Themes • Health • Food, agriculture and biotechnology • Information and communication technologies. • Nanosciences, nanotechnologies, materials and new production technologies • Energy • Environment (including climate change) • Transport (including aeronautics) • Socio-economic sciences and the humanities • Security • Space

  33. FP7 - SSH • 1. Growth, employment and competitiveness in a knowledge society: the European case • 2. Combining economic, social and environmental objectives in a European perspective: Paths towards sustainable development • 3. Major trends in society and their implications • 4. Europe in the World • 5. The Citizen in the European Union • 6. Socio-Economic and Scientific Indicators • 7. Foresight activities • 8. Strategic Activities

  34. FP7 – SSH – Current Call • Deadline 2 Feb 2010 • Collaborative projects (CP) – up to €2.7m • Topics include: • Demand-driven Research and Innovation policies for growth, welfare and wellbeing • The public sector of the future • Local welfare systems favouring social cohesion • Analysis of the impacts of global changes • EU regions and their interactions with the neighbourhood regions • European Identities: Inner and outer perceptions of Europe and the EU • Reinterpreting Europe's cultural heritage: towards the 21st century library and museum?

  35. FP7: European Research Council • Responsive Mode • No requirement for collaborative groups • ‘Starting Independent Researcher Grant’ • 200 to be made annually, each lasting up to 5 yrs • Up to €400k per year • Applicants <10 yrs from PhD • Very over subscribed – success rate approx 5% • Next deadline (SSH 9 Dec 2009) • ‘Advanced Research Grant’ • Up to €700k per year • Applicants must have >10yr track record • Next call: end of the year; deadline in Spring

  36. European Science Foundation • Not part of EU (member countries include Switzerland and Turkey) • Aims to act as a catalyst for brining together European scientists and researchers • Includes Social Sciences & Humanities • Schemes include exploratory workshops, Programmes and COST Networks

  37. Industry • Does provide funding for research, but tend to be more restrictive in the parameters of the research and use of intellectual property • In-house expenditure on R&D • e.g. Pfizer spent £550m on research in UK alone • Some of this used in collaborative projects • Contracts for research services • Grants or award programmes • If specifically seeking industry support, talk to Kent Innovation & Enterprise (KIE)

  38. Key points to remember when applying • Keep it simple • Write for a general audience • Think defensively • Assessors are looking to pick holes • Concentrate on explaining what you will do • Keep theoretical background to a minimum • Make sure costs match outcome • Value for money is a consideration • Show it to your peers • Better to have feedback now

  39. Applying for Funding - Approval • All applications must have Internal Approval Form • Series of yes/no questions as to risks, use of resources etc • Must be signed by: • PI and Co-I(s) • Head of Dept • Research Services • If excessive demand on library/computing services • Head of Computing Service • Subject Librarian • May also need: • Ethical Approval • Research proposals of a clinical, psychological, social or physiological nature involving human participants • Research Ethics Advisory Groups – Ethics Committee • Contact Nicole Palmer (n.r.palmer@kent.ac.uk) • Research Governance Approval • need to get advice and/or approval if your research is in Health or Social Welfare

  40. Funders www.ahrc.ac.uk www.esrc.ac.uk www.mrc.ac.uk www.leverhulme.ac.uk www.nuffieldfoundation.org www.wellcome.ac.uk www.jrf.org.uk www.britac.ac.uk www.cordis.lu/fp7/home.cfm http://erc.europa.eu/index_en.cfm www.esf.org Sources of information www.researchresearch.com www.ukro.ac.uk www.serdsu.org http://fundermental.blogspot.com/ Applying for funding Research Services www.kent.ac.uk/res Je-S https://je-s.rcuk.ac.uk/eforms/secure/Login.asp Help and Support Phil Ward p.ward@kent.ac.uk Jacqueline Aldridge j.aldridge@kent.ac.uk Sources of Information

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