[Air-L] Fwd: Call for proposals: Joint digital rights research/advocacy projects

Nathalie Marechal marechal at usc.edu
Wed Mar 8 03:32:57 PST 2017


Funding opportunity for joint research projects between academics and advocacy groups. 

Nathalie

>> From: Internet Policy Observatory <internetpolicy at asc.upenn.edu>
>> Date: March 8, 2017 at 12:00:14 PM GMT+1
>> To: <marechal at usc.edu>
>> Subject: Call for proposals: Joint digital rights research/advocacy projects
>> Reply-To: Internet Policy Observatory <internetpolicy at asc.upenn.edu>
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Call for Proposals: Joint Digital Rights & Internet Policy Research Projects 
>> Within the constellation of actors engaged in internet policy and digital rights debates, academics are uniquely positioned to mobilize evidence-based research for advocacy and policymaking. However, the research conducted within academic communities is often siloed within disciplinary spaces and only occasionally produced in collaboration with activists and with impact objectives in mind.
>> 
>> The Internet Policy Observatory at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania invites organizations and individuals to apply for funding for research projects that have specific and tangible policy & advocacy impact objectives. Individual or joint applications are encouraged from civil society organizations, those working in digital rights advocacy and policymaking, and those engaged in academic research. The goal of this call for proposals is to generate collaborative research projects on topics of relevance to the internet freedom community that are empirically rigorous as well as pertinent to current international, regional, or local digital rights advocacy efforts.
>> 
>> Requirements:
>> 
>> Applications should propose a research project that would provide empirical weight and further advocacy efforts in an area related to digital rights and internet freedoms. Topics of relevance include but are not limited to access to online resources, freedom of expression online, the economic and social effects of internet policies, ICT companies and human rights, privacy and surveillance online. Applicants should be able to justify the need for the research and are expected to produce a set of deliverables that are relevant to academic, advocacy, and policymaking communities.
>> 
>> The organizing committee will accept several categories of applications. These include:
>> 
>> Individual academics looking to partner with a relevant advocacy organization to integrate his/her research into current advocacy campaigns or policymaking debates.
>> Civil Society organizations currently engaged in advocacy campaigns that seek to identify a research partner able to operationalize a particular research question of interest/relevance to the organization’s current work.
>> Joint applications between a researcher/research team and one organization engaged in advocacy, activism, or policymaking. Joint applications can come from newly established partnerships or from groups that have worked together in the past.
>> For the first two types of applicants, the IPO team will work with promising individuals and groups who apply after the initial application process to help identify relevant partners and build the project.
>> 
>> Funded projects will be expected to include the following deliverables:
>> 
>> An academic paper/report to be submitted for peer review and/or published with the IPO.
>> A shorter-form, digestible, media-ready product to be distributed to appropriate stakeholders (policymakers, politicians, the public).
>> Examples include short reports, user guides, primers, infographics, etc.
>> A publicity plan for impact: How will your team publicize the findings amongst relevant stakeholders to maximize policy and advocacy impact. This can include a media plan, small launch event or private meeting with stakeholders, among other ideas.
>> The IPO invites applications on a rolling basis. The closing date for all applications for review will be April 30. Applications should include a concept note between 3-5 pages (detailed information on application requirements are available here). Joint proposals will be provided up to $15,000 USD as seed funding for pilot projects that could later become larger and longer-term collaborative initiatives. 
>> 
>> For more information, please see the full call here or email internetpolicy at asc.upenn.edu.  
>> 
>>            
>> Reminder: Apply to the 19th Annenberg-Oxford Media Policy Summer Institute
>> Held this June 26- July 7, the Annenberg-Oxford Media Policy Summer Institute brings together top early career communications scholars, media lawyers and regulators, human rights activists, and policymakers from countries around the world to discuss the effects of technology and policy from a global and multidisciplinary perspective. The Summer Institute provides participants with an intensive two week curriculum that combines expert instruction from media policymakers and scholars with hands-on activities such as stakeholder mapping, policy analysis, group case studies, and participant presentations. Applications are due April 3. For more information, please click here. 
>> 
>> Contact us
>> Interested in learning more about the Internet Policy Observatory? Have an idea for impactful research? Working on a project we should know aboutPlease send us an email at internetpolicy at asc.upenn.edu. 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Copyright © 2017 Internet Policy Observatory, All rights reserved. 
>> You are receiving this email because you signed up for the Internet Policy Observatory at the Annenberg School's newsletter. If you no longer wish to receive this newsletter, please feel free to unsubscribe. 
>> 
>> Our mailing address is: 
>> Internet Policy Observatory
>> 3901 Walnut St
>> Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
>> 
>> Add us to your address book
>> 
>> 
>> Want to change how you receive these emails?
>> You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list 
>> 
>> 



More information about the Air-L mailing list