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Application deadline April 22, 2026. Application available March 2, 2026. Expected notification January 31, 2027. Project start April 1, 2027 or September 1, 2028.
Public Scholars is sponsored by National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), Division of Research. Public Scholars is a fellowship grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), Division of Research that funds individual authors conducting research and writing for nonfiction books in the humanities aimed at the broad public.
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$60,000 ($5,000 per month) The deadline for this cycle has passed. Updated guidelines will be posted in advance of the next deadline. In the meantime, please use these guidelines to get a sense of what is involved in assembling an application.
The Public Scholars program offers grants to individual authors for research, writing, travel, and other activities leading to the creation and publication of well-researched nonfiction books in the humanities written for the broad public. Writers with or without an academic affiliation may apply, and no advanced degree is required.
The program encourages non-academic writers to deepen their engagement with the humanities by strengthening the research underlying their books, and it encourages academic writers in the humanities to communicate the significance of their research to the broadest possible range of readers. NEH especially encourages applications from independent writers, researchers, scholars, and journalists.
The 2026 Public Scholars competition will only accept projects for research in American history and culture and Western civilization. Competitive applications must focus on topics in the history, culture, and government of the United States in any period from the Colonial Era to the present, or topics in Western civilization from antiquity to the present. Note the changed dates for the application deadline and award periods.
Applicants must have written at least one nonfiction book published by a university or trade press and be credited as its sole author. Public Scholar awards are paid directly to the applicant, not to their institutions. You can apply to only one program at each deadline.
Learn about NEH's implementation of recent Executive Orders .
Examples of Projects Funded by this Grant Program Everybody Comes to Rick's: How "Casablanca" Taught Us to Love Movies Wild Boar: The Monk Martin Luther and the Start of the Reformation The Heavens Might Crack: The Death and Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. The White Devil's Daughters: The Women Who Fought Slavery in San Francisco's Chinatown The Last Years of Alexander the Great (330-323 BCE) Love and Need: A Biographical Essay on the Life and Work of American Poet Robert Frost (1874-1963) Review your application package Read the Notice of Funding Opportunity and the Program Announcement for Public Scholars to ensure you understand all the expectations and restrictions for projects delivered under this program and are prepared to write an effective application.
Public Scholars Program Announcement 2026 (PDF) Individual Programs Notice of Funding Opportunity, 2026 (PDF) Grants. gov application package Policy on the Use of Artificial Intelligence for NEH Grant Proposals Sample Application Narratives The sample applications below do not necessarily comply with the current page limits and formatting requirements. Please be sure to follow the rules in the current Notice of Funding Opportunity.
Application narratives, for instance, may only be three pages long.
The Best Years of Our Lives (Cinema History) Sister Novelists Before the Brontes (British Literature) How the West Was Won (American Civil War) The Sacred Band of Thebes (Ancient Greek History) The Doctors Blackwell (Dual Biography) Ashley's Sack (African American History) Origins of European Genocide A Biography of the American Architect Louis Kahn A History of America through 100 Maps Register for an account on Grants.
gov When you are ready to apply, register for a Grants. gov account . If you already have registered, make sure the account is current.
After registering, you must add an “individual applicant” profile. Click on the “My Account” link, then on “Manage Profiles” and “Add Profile. ” Refer to Grants.
gov’s instructions for adding a profile . Grants. gov Applicant Registration Guidance Complete your application package Follow the instructions outlined in the Notice of Funding Opportunity and Grants.
gov instructions. Submit your application package on Grants. gov You will receive a confirmation from Grants.
gov when you've successfully submitted your application. Verify you have received email messages from Grants. gov After you submit your application, Grants.
gov will send you up to five e-mail messages confirming receipt of your application. These messages represent different stages in the application acceptance process. You should verify that you have received all confirmation messages.
Please note that email filters may send these messages to your spam or junk folder. Monitor the status of the submission of your letters of recommendation The Public Scholars program staff will request letters of reference from your recommenders on or about September 18, 2024 ( three to four weeks after the deadline ). You will be notified by e-mail when each of your letters of reference has been received.
After you have received the fifth message from Grants. gov (confirming that NEH received your application), you may check the status of your letters by logging in to the secure area of NEH’s website . Enter your NEH application number and your Grants.
gov tracking number. You will be able to see the names and e-mail addresses of your letter writers and whether their letters have arrived. If necessary, you may send reminders to your letter writers (including the upload link) from this site.
You are responsible for ensuring that your letter writers have received the solicitations from NEH and submitted their letters.
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Individuals. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The most recent published deadline was April 22, 2026, which has passed. This is an annual program, so a new cycle should follow. Check the funder's website for the next application window.
Public Scholars is funded by National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), Division of Research. 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.
The solicitation lists 2 required documents: Application narrative (max 3 pages) and Grants.gov application package. Check the official notice for formatting and page-limit rules.
TechAccess: AI-Ready America is a national NSF coordination program to accelerate AI literacy, workforce readiness, and deployment across all U.S. states and territories. The program supports three integrated funding mechanisms. State/Territory Coordination Hubs act as neutral convening entities connecting education, workforce, industry, and government stakeholders; they maintain AI resource inventories, develop strategic plans, provide deployment support, coordinate training initiatives, and facilitate sector-specific collaboration. A National Coordination Lead provides national strategy, supports hub operations, manages the AI Deployment Network, and coordinates across priority sectors. AI-Ready Catalyst Award competitions fund innovative pilot projects addressing high-priority AI readiness needs identified by the hubs. The program targets all Americans, with particular emphasis on supporting small businesses, local governments, community and technical colleges, and workforce development organizations across rural, tribal, and underserved communities. Letters of Intent are required and proposals submit in three rounds through 2027.
This U.S. Navy SBIR open topic (DON26BX03-NP002) solicits small-business innovation in counter-unmanned aircraft systems (C-UAS), seeking AI- and machine-learning-driven capabilities for detecting, identifying, tracking, and neutralizing hostile drones. Areas of interest emphasize sensor fusion across radar, electro-optical/infrared, radio-frequency, and acoustic sensors; autonomous threat classification; and real-time decision support for layered drone defense. Phase I awards provide up to approximately $315,000 to establish feasibility, with a path to larger Phase II prototype development and potential transition to Navy programs of record. The topic is part of the DoD SBIR/STTR FY26 cycle with proposals due July 22, 2026.
This U.S. Navy SBIR topic (DON26BZ03-NV061) seeks an AI-driven maritime intelligence platform for predictive movement modeling and automated tracking of vessels and objects of interest. The effort emphasizes machine learning for trajectory prediction, anomaly detection, multi-source data fusion, and autonomous tracking to enhance maritime domain awareness and decision support. Phase I awards provide up to approximately $315,000 to demonstrate feasibility, with a path to larger Phase II prototype development and transition to Navy operational systems. The topic is part of the DoD SBIR/STTR FY26 cycle with proposals due July 22, 2026.
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