1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Program runs two cycles per year; next deadline is May 15, 2026 at 11:59 p.m. MST. Subsequent cycle deadline is November 15.
Law and Science Dissertation Grant (LSDG) Program is sponsored by Arizona State University (funded by NSF SBE #2016661). The Law and Science Dissertation Grant (LSDG) program provides financial support for graduate students in diverse law-and-science disciplines to conduct their doctoral dissertation research. Although administered by ASU, any doctoral student in law and science at a U.S. institution is eligible to apply.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Arizona State University (funded by NSF SBE #2016661)” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
Law and Science Dissertation Grant | New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences Law and Science Dissertation Grant A program for graduate law and science students The Law and Science Dissertation Grant (LSDG) program provides financial support for graduate students in diverse law-and-science disciplines to conduct their doctoral dissertation research.
This program is funded by an award from the Law & Science program at the National Science Foundation (SBE #2016661) to Arizona State University. Not just for ASU students Although the LSDG program is administered by ASU, any doctoral student in law and science at a U.S. institution is eligible to apply. See more eligilibity information here .
All proposals are evaluated the same, regardless of the applicant’s institution based on the merit review process . The LSDG team at ASU receives guidance from an Advisory Council, which was put together in consultation with the professional societies that comprise the Law and Science research community.
The council is a diverse group of highly accomplished scholars who hold faculty appointments in anthropology, criminology and criminal justice, law and legal studies, political science, psychology, and sociology, as well as interdisciplinary programs. The next submission deadline is May 15, 2026 at 11:59 p. m.
MST . Find more info on how to apply . LSDG conducts two review and award cycles per year.
Unless otherwise noted on this page, annual deadlines will be on May 15 and November 15 (or the first business day thereafter if the date falls on a weekend or federal holiday).
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Doctoral students in law and science at any U.S. institution. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The published deadline was May 15, 2026, which has passed. Check the official notice for any future application windows before investing time in a proposal.
Law and Science Dissertation Grant (LSDG) Program is funded by Arizona State University (funded by NSF SBE #2016661). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
Educational Technology, Media, and Materials for Individuals with Disabilities Program (Stepping-up Technology Implementation competition) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Education. This program aims to improve results for students with disabilities by promoting the development, demonstration, and use of technology; supporting educational activities of value in the classroom for students with disabilities; providing captioning and video description; and ens…
The Robotics Grant Program is a grant from the Alabama State Department of Education (ALSDE) that funds school-based robotics programs for elementary, middle, and high school students. Awarded through a competitive application process, the program provides up to $3,500 to eligible local education agencies (LEAs) in Alabama. Applicants must be public school systems submitting on behalf of schools with K–12 students. The grant supports the purchase of robotics equipment and program development aligned with AMSTI guidelines. Applications are submitted online through the AMSTI Robotics Grant portal. The Fiscal Year 2026 application deadline was September 30, 2025. Questions should be directed to robotics@amsti.org. The program is managed by the Alabama State Department of Education under State Superintendent Eric G. Mackey.
DARPA and NSF launched a joint program on June 1 to fund university work on AI interpretability, control, and adversarial robustness. Awards run $750K to $3M+ per project, the forum launches this summer, and the universities listed in the AI Forge repository will sit closest to the money. The Request for Information closes June 22.
Read articleOn June 1, 2026, DARPA and the National Science Foundation announced AI Forge — a jointly governed forum that will fund, guide, and manage university-led research on AI interpretability, AI control, and adversarial robustness. The RFI on sam.gov closes June 22. The forum itself will be administered by a new nonprofit launching in summer 2026. The structure is what matters: this is not a one-off solicitation, it is a multi-year venue for university-government-industry research that operates outside the normal merit-review timelines of either agency. What university research teams should be doing in the seventeen-day window between the announcement and the RFI deadline — and what the forum model means for federal AI funding through FY 2028.
Read articleThe FY2027 budget proposes eliminating NSF's Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences directorate entirely. With only 613 grants funded this year, social scientists face an existential funding crisis.
Read article