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Find similar grantsThe third round closed September 5, 2024. No current open round; next round timing not announced.
100&Change is sponsored by John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
A competition for a $100 million grant to fund a single proposal that promises real and measurable progress in solving a critical problem of our time.
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Propose your bold solution. Thank you for participating in 100&Change . Before starting your application, we recommend that you carefully read all the requirements provided by Lever for Change.
We encourage you to review the Scoring Rubric that will be used to assess all valid applications. Applications must be submitted in English. Supporting documents (including financial documents) can be submitted in a different language.
We understand that using English as the sole language for our review process may pose a challenge to those who do not speak it as their first language. However, we made this decision to ensure consistency and minimize the risk of translation errors or misinterpretations in the application process. Please note that English language proficiency is not a requirement for applying, and we welcome applicants from all over the world.
We carefully selected expert reviewers from diverse backgrounds to provide a global perspective. Thank you for your accommodation and understanding. We encourage everyone to apply regardless of their language background.
The deadline for submitting your application is 5:00 PM U.S. Central Time on Thursday, September 5, 2024. Kindly take note that if your project progresses through different stages of the challenge, it will be evaluated by no less than five fellow applicants during Participatory Review and no less than five Wise Heads, as well as 100&Change stakeholders and challenge administrators.
Your application may be shared online and with other evaluators. To get a better idea of what information may be displayed, you can visit the Bold Solutions Network and view previous initiatives. Make a powerful first impression by providing a concise and captivating summary of your project.
Avoid using technical terms, acronyms, or complex language that may be difficult for the general public to comprehend. Keep in mind that this section will be publicly accessible online and will be reviewed by applicants during Participatory Review and by Wise Heads of 100&Change . Project Title (10 words) Provide a descriptive title for your project that sets it apart from other projects.
This will make it easy for others to identify and understand your solution. Project Description (35 words) Provide a brief and simple description of your project using language that can be easily understood by individuals without specific/relevant expertise. Avoid using any technical terms or abbreviations.
For example: “Civic Revolution will develop a force of 100 million diverse citizens who consistently share news, policy, and voting information with friends and family, increasing voter participation and pressure for democracy reforms. ” Executive Summary (250 words) Write an overview of your project that answers the following questions: What problem are you seeking to solve? How do you plan to solve it?
What are your intended outcomes? How will your solution impact the lives of the people you aim to serve, including those who have been historically marginalized within that population? Your Executive Summary should be clear and concise, able to stand on its own, and convey your project's problem and solution to anyone who reads it.
This summary will be used to introduce your project to readers, including applicants (during Participatory Review), Wise Heads, potential donors, and the general public. It should be accessible to a non-technical audience and avoid the use of jargon, abbreviations, and first-person language whenever possible.
As part of the project submission requirements, you need to provide a video that showcases your work and describes why it deserves support. This is a chance for you to demonstrate your enthusiasm and concisely present your story. We aim to give you an opportunity to express your vision to the reviewers in a unique way, not limited to the traditional written proposal format.
This does not need to be a professionally produced video – a video shot on a smartphone is acceptable. To successfully submit this portion of your application, your team must upload a short digital video using YouTube. Please ensure that the Privacy Settings on your video are either Public or Unlisted – do not set them to Private.
Your video will be reviewed by applicants during Participatory Review and by Wise Heads of 100&Change . When you submit your video, please keep in mind that it may be shared with the public and other donors. Therefore, it's important to create content that appeals to a wide audience.
Video submissions should follow these guidelines to ensure your registration remains eligible. Failure to comply may result in disqualification. A length of no more than 90 seconds.
Your video must be in English, or if in another language, subtitled in English. Your video must be captioned. See instructions on how to caption YouTube videos here .
Your video should not contain any images of individuals who have not given their permission to be part of the submission and should not contain images of children (under age 18) without express parental consent. Set the Privacy Settings on your video to Public or Unlisted – do not set them to Private. Here are general suggestions for delivering a high-quality video pitch: Introduce yourself and your organization(s) and/or team.
Describe the problem that you are committed to solving. Explain what is unique about your solution. Describe what success looks like and how you plan to measure it.
Examples of videos from past challenges can be found here . Additional technical guidance on creating and captioning videos can be found on our Video Supports page. Previously, you provided a brief overview of your organization.
Now we kindly request you to highlight the experience and management of your team. This section will be viewed by applicants during Participatory Review and by Wise Heads of 100&Change . During the registration process, you identified the Lead Organization responsible for receiving and taking accountability for any grant funds, as well as providing the direction, control, and supervision for the project.
If the Lead Organization has changed, please Edit Registration from the Profile menu to update this information. Primary Area of Expertise Please select one primary area of expertise for the Lead Organization. You may start typing in a subject area to narrow your search from this list.
Does your team consist of two or more organizations? No, our team does not consist of two or more organizations. Yes, our team is a new partnership (i.e., consists of two or more organizations working together for the first time).
Yes, our team is an existing partnership (i.e., consists of two or more organizations that have a history of working together). Yes, our team is a partnership of multiple organizations, some of which are new partners and others who have a history of working together.
If your team consists of two or more organizations, please list them using the legal name of each partner and share the website and contact info for each partner organization. If your team does not consist of two or more organizations, please enter “Not Applicable. ” If your team includes more than five partners, you can use the Case for Partnership or Why Your Team sections to list additional partners.
Key Partner #1 - Key Partner #5 Enter partner organization name or “Not Applicable. ” NOTE: A response to this question is required. For the partner organization, enter location (country), website, contact first and last name, and contact email, or “Not Applicable.
” NOTE: A response to this question is required. Memorandum of Understanding If your team consists of two or more organizations, all of the partners working within a formal collaboration must execute a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in which one organization clearly has control and discretion over the use of the grant funds. Learn more about MOUs by watching this webinar on Common Legal Challenges for applicants .
For additional guidance, read the Requirements Regarding Any Proposed Collaboration . A fully-executed MOU that controls the relationships among the parties must be uploaded. You must upload a single PDF file that does not exceed 10MB.
If your team does not consist of two or more organizations, please select “Not Applicable. ” Case for Partnership (150 words) If your team consists of two or more organizations and has executed an MOU, present a clear case as to why it is important to collaborate and why you believe this will be an effective collaboration. Have the entities successfully collaborated in the past?
What can the two or more organizations accomplish together that they couldn’t accomplish alone? Explain how the partnership is positioned to deliver the solution as an integrated team. If your team does not consist of two or more organizations, please enter “Not Applicable.
” Why Your Team? (250 words) Please provide a description of your team's leadership, members, and any collaborators or partners involved in your project. If applicable, explain the reasons behind the collaboration and how it was formed.
Highlight how your team's unique positioning enables you to deliver results and why you are the optimal choice for solving this problem. Emphasize your team's relevant experience, skills, and dedication to successfully executing the project. Kindly provide the first and last names of the top three project managers, along with the name of their affiliated organization and a brief biographical statement of up to 100 words.
The statement should highlight the manager's title, relevant credentials, and experiences that contribute to the project's success. In this section, you have the chance to elaborate on the challenge you aim to address and demonstrate your understanding of the nuances that have informed your strategy. This section will be viewed by applicants during Participatory Review and by Wise Heads of 100&Change .
Challenge Statement (300 words) Explain the problems/challenges that your solution aims to address, using non-expert language. Focus on providing context for the problem instead of discussing how you plan to solve it. Who is impacted by the challenge or challenges identified?
Why does the challenge exist in the current environment? What are the most influential ways to bring about the required change? How can your solution lead to substantial impact on a large scale?
This section enables you to elaborate on your proposed solution to the issue you've identified. This section will be viewed by applicants during Participatory Review and by Wise Heads of 100&Change . Select the option that best describes the stage of your solution.
Please keep in mind that start-up/early-stage organizations with a new idea or approach may not be competitive in 100&Change .
Start-up/early-stage organization with a new idea or approach New partnership with a new idea or approach Existing organization/partnership with a new idea or approach Existing organization or an existing partnership with a proven idea that is ready to scale Solution Overview (500 words) Using non-expert language, address the following questions: How does your solution meaningfully contribute to resolving the identified challenge(s)?
Describe the impact that your solution will have on the chosen challenge over a five-year grant period. Will it have broad impact on a large population or geography, or will it have deep and intense impact on a small population or geography? Describe the communities your solution will serve and the benefits or outcomes of your solution to those communities.
How will you know that you are making progress? Technical Process Description (200 words) If your solution requires a technical, scientific, medical, or engineering process, then provide an explanation of your solution. Describe how it involves a technical, scientific, medical, or engineering process.
Use this space to offer more detail for your specific technical approach that was not suitable for a non-expert audience. If necessary, you may cite academic literature or papers in this section by placing a bracketed number [#] next to each citation that you will later reference in your Bibliography. If your solution does not require a technical, scientific, medical, or engineering process, please enter “Not Applicable.
” Select your priority population(s) as the primary target for your solution. While not all projects directly serve human populations, applicants should be able to identify a target population that will be served by the project (including advocacy or environmental projects where human populations may be indirectly served).
You must select at least one priority population as your primary target, and you are welcome to provide up to three. Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (250 words) Compelling proposals will fully demonstrate a commitment to the values of diversity, equity, and inclusion .
Not only do we expect teams to be thoughtful about working with a range of populations, but we also expect teams to think carefully about how to actively plan for and include people who have been marginalized from within those populations in solution design, program planning, and ongoing work.
Explain how you will ensure or have ensured that the design and implementation of your solution authentically embrace diversity, equity, and inclusion, including persons with disabilities, religious or ethnic minorities, people of color, native/Indigenous peoples, women, gender identity and sexual orientation.
Provide additional details on how you will provide opportunities and reasonable accommodations for those populations to either engage with and/or benefit from your solution, including staff, advisors, partners, et al.
Opportunities and Accommodations (150 words) How will you provide opportunities and reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities to actively participate and/or benefit from your solution, including as staff, advisors, partners, consultants, etc.? Theory of Change (250 words) State your project’s theory of change and the underlying evidence that supports the results you want to achieve.
Emphasize the methodologies that you intend to employ and how they create a causal link to your shorter-term, intermediate, and longer-term goals. As you develop your response, consider these Theory of Change resources . Barrier Assessment and Risk Mitigation (150 words) Describe any barriers to the short- and long-term success of the project and your plans to mitigate them.
Barriers can include problems inhibiting solution scalability, political or public policy concerns, or any other potential operational or tactical hurdles that may hinder your solution’s success. What are the most threatening barriers? How are you prepared to address them?
Select the primary subject area of the solution that you and your team are proposing. We understand a solution could fall under more than one subject area. You may select a secondary subject area in the following question and describe other subject areas in responses to Executive Summary, Challenge Statement or Solution Overview .
Select the secondary subject area of the solution that you and your team are proposing. Where are you currently implementing your solution? Select up to five locations that apply.
If your work is national or regional, please select locations that best represent the work your organization does. If you are not currently implementing your project, you may select NOT CURRENTLY IMPLEMENTING SOLUTION. For U.S. only.
For all other countries, select “Not applicable. ” Where do you plan to implement your solution if awarded this grant? Select at least one and up to five locations that apply (only one location is required).
These locations may or may not be the same as the locations where you are currently implementing your solution. For U.S. only. For all other countries, select “Not applicable.
” Sustainable Development Goals Provide a list of up to 5 keywords or phrases that can best be used to describe your project [e.g., social enterprise, vocation, internship, training]. Choose keywords that capture the essence of your project and its intended outcomes. The keywords should be different from the selected “primary subject area.
” This section provides the opportunity for you to provide evidence that supports your solution. Evidence of Effectiveness (250 words) What evidence do you have, or why do you believe that the solution you propose will work? Present any internal evidence or formal academic evidence.
You may cite academic literature or papers in this section by placing a bracketed number [#] next to each citation that you will later reference in your Bibliography. What kind of data do you collect and/or will you collect to measure success? Which best describe the kind of evidence you currently have or will have to show that your solution works?
Select all that apply.
Informal check-ins with the people you serve to see how things are going Formally collecting and documenting qualitative feedback Routinely collecting program and other data on progress Piloting or user testing new programs, products, or policies Internally conducting evaluation or assessment of outcomes Externally conducting evaluation or assessment of outcomes External assessment on impact (e.g. randomized control trial; quasi-experimental design; contribution analysis; collective impact) Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning (250 words) As you develop your responses, review our Guidance for Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning for context.
The MacArthur Foundation values monitoring, evaluation, and learning activities that are capable of flexing as the context may change and as the work evolves, yet sufficiently rigorous to document and measure results, learn from them, course correct, and adapt, as necessary. Briefly describe what you expect to learn over the course of implementing your solution and how you plan to learn it.
This is the first step toward developing a more comprehensive Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning plan. Your response should address: How are you thinking about evaluating your Theory of Change? What are your methods for collecting data?
How will that data be used in ongoing performance improvement? How will you use data to determine the project is successful? Planning for Scale and Amplifying Impact (250 words) Describe your plan for scaling your solution and its benefits.
Scale may mean expanding to new populations or geographies, or it may mean how you intend to amplify your impact more deeply in one geography or population or context. If appropriate, explain whether and how you will need to tailor and adapt your solution for scaling and/or amplifying impact. What is the evidence, or why do you believe your results can be replicated?
As you prepare your response, read Scaling-Up: Tools & Techniques for Practitioners . Durability of Impact (150 words) Describe the durability of your solution. Does your solution expect to solve the problem in five years or create a pathway to solving the problem over a longer time horizon?
If you included citations [#s] in the Technical Explanation section above and/or in the Evidence of Effectiveness section above, provide your bibliography here with a corresponding bracketed number [#] for each citation. If you did not use citations, offer a list of resources that may be used to validate general claims made in your application. Please link to any articles that may be accessed online, even if behind a paywall.
Explain your project plans and the related costs to implement your solution. Divide your project into three phases over a five-year grant period. For each of your three phases, provide a name, the total duration in months, and a brief description.
As part of your description, explain the milestones that you intend to measure and any key activities critical to reaching those milestones to know if you are successful or on track to be successful during the prescribed duration.
This could be a plan for achieving full impact, if your solution can be completed in a five-year grant period, or this could be a plan to show your interim results toward achieving longer-term impact over more than five years. Your description of each phase will be used later to compare any details for achieving milestones against the financial details of your project.
PHASE 1 Duration (number of months) PHASE 2 Duration (number of months) PHASE 3 Duration (number of months) Total Resource Requirements (100 words) Will the total projected costs exceed $100 million (USD)? Your budget must be a minimum of $100 million to be considered. If your total projected costs exceed $100 million (USD), then explain how you have secured (or plan to secure) the balance of any necessary funds.
You may find these financial sustainability resources helpful. If your total projected costs do not exceed $100 million (USD), please enter “Does not require more than $100 million. ” Please provide the following information for at least three and up to five of the top funders of your organization over the last three years.
For each funder, provide the legal name of the entity responsible for funding your organization. Provide the period of funding (in months to date) for the funding. Last, provide the amount of funding within the prescribed period.
If your project has not received any support from other funders, please enter “Not Applicable” under Funder #1. FUNDER #1 First Year of Funding FUNDER #1 Last Year of Funding FUNDER #1 Amount of Funding (total dollar amount in USD) Budget Narrative (250 words) Offer a broad and narrative description of your budget needs for the $100 million (USD) grant.
As you draft this narrative, map your costs against each of your three defined phases. Here are general guidelines for writing your Budget Narrative: Your budget must sum to $100 million (USD). Your budget must allocate no more than $10 million (USD) to a contingency fund or budget buffer.
In MacArthur’s experience, funds to support Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning activities typically require anywhere from 5-20% of the total projected total costs. Review our Guidance for Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning for more context. Familiarize yourself with the Indirect Cost Policy and represent how you intend to address any indirect cost categories.
Your budget should afford reasonable accommodations to make your project accessible to people with disabilities, as implementers, participants, and populations served. Estimates frequently used for an inclusive (i.e. non-disability-specific) project are 1-3% of administrative costs and 5-7% of program costs. Review this Guidance on Budgeting for Inclusion for more context.
As you link descriptions of your budget needs to the three phases that you have previously described, a reviewer should be able to read your description of the phases and key results and understand how your budget relates to the milestones that you are planning to achieve. Based on the three phases that you have described, provide a detailed breakdown of total costs for each phase.
Cost categories for each phase should include, but not be limited to, descriptions that you’ve already explained in more detail as part of your Budget Narrative. You are encouraged also to include any more detailed cost categories that support a more thorough description of your total costs. Use this opportunity to reflect and clarify any general explanations provided in your Budget Narrative and elsewhere in your application.
As you describe each line item for each phase, avoid terms that are ambiguous or vague (e.g., miscellaneous). Instead, offer descriptions of costs which directly correlate to your previous explanations of the project. A reader should be able to review your detailed budget and understand how the pieces fit together.
The sum of all costs for all phases must total $100 million (USD) for proposals to be eligible. Financial Sustainability (250 words) How do you plan to operate and sustain the impact of your project over time? Given the time-limited, one-time nature of this support, how would you handle staffing up and then staffing back down as the project concludes?
If your plan requires additional resources in the future, above and beyond the $100 million (USD) budget, to be sustainable, describe the most likely pathway for securing any additional and ongoing support. If you believe your plan will NOT require additional financial resources to be sustainable, explain why.
Other Resource Requirements (100 words) This is your opportunity to describe your need for any non-financial resources, to achieve the goals articulated in you plan. The following information is required to ensure your compliance with specific legal conditions, which are further explained in the Rules . Charitable Purpose (150 words) What is the charitable purpose of your project?
Describe how the public or a subset, which is a charitable class, will benefit from your project. A charitable class must generally be an indefinite number of individuals who are the subject of the charitable purpose and not a limited number of specified individuals. For example, the class can be needy persons within a disadvantaged community but not a specified person in the community, even if the person is disadvantaged.
There can be a comparatively small number of individuals, if the individuals are not identified and the class is open-ended. Learn more about Charitable Purpose by watching this webinar on Common Legal Challenges for applicants .
Private Benefit (150 words) Will private interests (such as shareholders, for-profit companies, contractors, consultants, or other individuals) benefit more than incidentally from the project as compared to the public or charitable benefit?
If your project will trigger any private benefit to one or more individuals, provide an explanation of how the public benefit cannot be achieved without necessarily benefiting those individuals and to what degree any private benefit compares to public benefit. It is insufficient to say that benefits gained will be due to all of humanity benefitting.
Learn more about private benefits by watching this webinar on Common Legal Challenges for applicants and by reading our Private Benefit Rules . If your project will not benefit any private interests, provide an explanation of your response.
Lobbying Activities (150 words) Does your project involve any efforts to affect public policy through changes in existing legislation or the enactment of new legislation, and does your project require lobbying activities with respect to a specific legislative proposal? Refer to our Lobbying Policy for clarification.
If your project does involve any lobbying activities, then explain how these lobbying activities comply with the Lobbying Policy . If your project does not involve any lobbying activities, please enter “Not Applicable. ” Should your application be selected as a Finalist, you will be asked to describe any specific research that involves human subjects.
You will be asked to Include in your response evidence of specific plans and the support mechanisms required to safeguard the rights and welfare of those human subjects. Refer to our Human Subjects Research Policy for clarification. Does your project require any research that would involve human subjects?
I. Administrative Information In this section, we ask you to provide some additional information about the Lead Organization. Before answering, use the Organizational Readiness Tool to understand your ability to be competitive according to the size of your annual operating budget.
Country – Identification Number for Lead Organization The Lead Organization must be incorporated in an appropriate jurisdiction. Typically, an identifying number is provided upon incorporation. Select the Country and Identification Type of number that the Lead Organization has been provided.
United States: Employer Identification Number (EIN) Australia: Australia Business Number (ABN) Brazil: CNPJ (for companies) Canada: Revenue Agency Business/Registration Number India: FCRA Registration Number South Africa: Nonprofit Organization Number United Kingdom: Charity Number United Kingdom: Company Number OTHER.
Enter name of country Identification Number for Lead Organization Based on your selection above, enter the associated identification number for the Lead Organization. Any identification number that you provide will be used to link your application to other key data that is publicly available for the associated organization.
If you selected OTHER and your country does not provide an identification type of number, please enter “Not Applicable. ” Annual Operating Budget for Lead Organization What is the annual operating budget in United States Dollars (USD) of the Lead Organization?
If the Lead Organization is a program, center, or department within a larger institution (e.g., college or university), please indicate the annual operating budget that the specific program, center, or department has at its disposal. $750. 1 Million to $1 Billion Lead Organization Number of Employees How many full-time employees does the Lead Organization employ?
If the Lead Organization is a program, center, or department within a larger institution (e.g., college or university), please indicate the number of full-time employees that the specific program, center, or department employs. The following categories are standard across Lever for Change initiatives.
Fewer than 10 Full-time Employees 10 to 25 Full-time Employees 26 to 50 Full-time Employees 51 to 100 Full-time Employees 101 to 300 Full-time Employees 501 to 1,000 Full-time Employees 1,000+ Full-time Employees Lead Organization Organizational Leadership Does at least half of your organization’s leadership (e.g., leader and leadership team or leadership decision-making body) reflect the community you serve in any of the following respects?
I don’t know/We do not collect this information Not applicable/None of these apply Audited Financial Records We require information necessary to understand the financial health of the Lead Organization. Upload audited financial reports from the past three (3) years for the Lead Organization. Financial Records will not be shared during the participatory review process.
However, financial information is important to assessing your financial health and potential to receive a $100 million (USD) grant from the MacArthur Foundation.
Financial records may be shared with the following persons: MacArthur staff and directors, financial, technical and other experts assisting MacArthur with the assessment of applications, persons assisting with administrative reviews, and other consultants retained by MacArthur in connection with the competition. You may submit the three years of audited financial records in any standard format.
You must upload a single PDF file that does not exceed 10MB. NOTE: Audited financials can be submitted in a different language, if necessary. J.
Additional Information to be Provided If your team is invited to participate in any future phases of this competition, you may be required to provide additional information (refer to the Rules and Timeline ), including but not limited to: A Tax Determination Letter, if applicable. Articles of Incorporation, Charter, or similar documentation. A more comprehensive Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning Plan for the project.
Existing policies, if any, addressing conflicts of interest, whistleblower, internal controls, anti-money laundering, intellectual property, human subjects research, code of conduct, ethics, gifts, and any similar policies governing the organization.
If you are not a public charity, a statement that any MacArthur Foundation grant funds will not be used for lobbying purposes, or if you are a public charity under the Internal Revenue Code, a lobbying budget in which you specify the amount of lobbying expenses and non-lobbying expenses.
The MacArthur Foundation reserves the right to perform background checks on key individuals associated with the project, and the refusal by the key individuals to provide necessary authorizations will be
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Nonprofit organizations, universities, and other entities worldwide. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates $100,000,000 Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
The MacArthur Foundation has launched AI Opportunity as a new Big Bet Program focused on expanding who creates, uses, and benefits from artificial intelligence, with emphasis on the intersection of AI, the economy, and the workforce. The program centers on young people in Chicago, community-centered AI development, and nonprofit applications of AI. MacArthur has already awarded $10 million in initial aligned grantmaking to organizations including the AI Now Institute ($2M), Brookings Institution ($2M), London School of Economics ($2M), New America ($1M), Pulitzer Center ($1M), Washington Center for Equitable Growth ($1M), Data and Society ($500K), and Human Rights Data Analysis Group ($500K). The foundation is actively hiring an AI Opportunity Director and building program staff. While not currently accepting unsolicited proposals, interested organizations can submit ideas through a web form on the MacArthur website.
Journalism & Media Grant is sponsored by John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. The Journalism & Media Grant aims to promote inclusive narratives and accurate media that engage communities in democratic processes. It supports U.S.-based nonprofit organizations focused on professional reporting, multimedia storytelling, and civic media. The grant addresses barriers to media participation and fosters innovation in journalism, providing essential infrastructure for a diverse media landscape.
Small Business Innovation Research Program (SBIR) Phase II is sponsored by Administration for Community Living. Small Business Innovation Research Program (SBIR) Phase II is a forecasted funding opportunity on Grants.gov from Administration for Community Living. Fiscal Year: 2026. Assistance Listing Number(s): 93.433. <p>The purpose of the Federal SBIR program is to stimulate technological innovation in the private sector, strengthen the role of small business in meeting Federal research or research and development (R/R&D) needs, and improve the return on investment from Federally-funded research for economic and social benefits to the nation. The specific purpose of NIDILRR's SBIR program is to improve the lives of people with disabilities through R/R&D products generated by small businesses, and to ...
The J.M.K. Innovation Prize is a grant from The J.M. Kaplan Fund recognizing early-stage social entrepreneurs working on environmental, heritage, and social justice challenges. The prize rewards individuals and organizations demonstrating innovative, entrepreneurial approaches to enduring problems. Applications for the 2025 prize were accepted February 11 through April 25, 2025 via an online portal. Spanish-language applications are welcomed, and a Spanish application form is available for download. The prize is biennial and open to a broad range of applicants across the United States working on forward-thinking solutions at the intersection of environment, community, and cultural heritage.