Application information
This document is for reference only. It describes the ELDP grants programme for 2007/8; how to choose a type of grant, and how to apply. Professor Graham Furniss, chair of the ELDP panel is conducting a review of all ELDP grants and administrative procedures. The Board of Arcadia will discuss the report resulting from the review in November 2008. We are planning to change the timetable to allow candidates more time to submit their grant applications. It is also possible that certain types of grant will be modified and some new grant types added.
This means that we are not advertising a funding round in July/August of this year, as has happened in previous years. There will be a further notice on this website at the end of November 2008 when we have heard the decision of the Arcadia Board.
- The Engangered Languages Documentation Programme
- Types of grants available
- Application procedure
- Timetable
- Contacts
1. Endangered Languages Documentation Programme
The Programme
The Endangered Language Documentation Programme (ELDP) offers research grants to support documentation of the
world's endangered languages in collaboration with language communities.
ELDP is a component of the Hans Rausing Endangered Languages Project (http://www.hrelp.org/). It is administered by a team located in the Research Office at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London. An Internation Panel of experts oversee the selection process chaired by Professor Graham Furniss (SOAS).
It plans to award a total of £15 million in research grants over a ten-year period.
The Programme is a response to the rapid rate of extinction of human languages throughout the world.
The extinction of any language is not only a loss of cultural expression for the community involved, but also a loss
of human knowledge and diversity of traditions.
Objectives
ELDP aims to preserve the diversity of human languages by supporting documentation of as many languages as possible,
together with their social and cultural contexts, by:
- encouraging fieldwork on endangered languages, especially by younger scholars skilled in language documentation
- fostering the creation and preservation of a body of language resources for use by the linguistic and other
social sciences, and language communities
Criteria
Applications for grants are assessed for their intellectual quality, the degree of language endangerment, the urgency
of the issues they raise, their relation to a language’s social and cultural contexts, and their prospects for
raising levels of knowledge of the language and expertise in field linguistics,
including among members of the language community. Projects should result in documentation materials that are:
- accessible to and usable by members of the language community and the wider scientific community
- as comprehensive as possible, including a range of recordings of language usage from everyday conversation to narrative, oratory, ceremonial speech, and verbal art, as well as transcription and analysis of such materials
- represented and described using standard formats, conventions and theories in order to maximise access and use
- cumulative, to allow data to be annotated and supplemented
- secure against abuse, to protect the rights of the language community
- properly archived, to provide long-term preservation of the data
- contributions to the development of documentation methodology and the understanding of language endangerment
ELDP is an international programme and welcomes applications from researchers of any nationality to undertake projects
in any part of the world. Applicants should be researchers with qualifications in linguistics and experience in linguistic
fieldwork (including suitably qualified graduate students). Projects may be undertaken by teams or individuals.
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2. Types of grants
- Individual Postdoctoral Fellowship
- Major Documentation Project
- Individual Graduate Studentship
- Pilot Project Grant
- Field Trip Grant
Individual Postdoctoral Fellowship (IPF)
IPF applications are invited from individuals seeking their own support costs for up to two years (or if adequately justified,
three years) duration. In addition to fieldwork costs, you may seek salary costs for the period. We anticipate that all
postdoctoral fellowship applicants will be academically junior and/or young researchers.
You should normally have secured your PhD no more than five years prior to the proposed start date of this fellowship.
If successful, you will be required to hold your fellowship at an institution other than the institution where you undertook
postgraduate studies.
Nearly all IPF grants awarded to date have been between £50,000 and £100,000.
Major Documentation Project (MDP)
MDP applications by established principal investigators are welcomed. Your application could involve a number of elements
including fieldwork, salary costs of researchers and stipend costs of graduate students (while engaged in the field and
processing work) whose doctoral research will contribute to the project as a whole. You may request support for between
six months and three years. Support for four years may be considered in exceptional cases. Applications for small as well
as fairly large grants will be considered.
Most MDP grants awarded to date have been between £40,000 and £130,000.
Individual Graduate Studentship (IGS)
IGS applications are invited from individuals seeking their own support costs for up to two years (or if adequately justified,
three years). In addition to field trip costs, you may a seek a stipend to cover the period while undertaking field research
and processing the results. To be eligible at the time the award is due to commence, support is only available to individuals
who will have successfully completed at least one full-time academic year (or equivalent) of postgraduate training.
This period of training may include time spent on completing an MA (prior to a PhD).
Please note that a stipend provides funding to cover direct living costs and is not a salary.
As such, no employment-based taxes should be claimed.
The average IGS grant has been no more than £15,000
Pilot Project (PPG)
PPG applications may be submitted for the purposes of assessing and demonstrating the feasibility of a larger project.
The aim of this grant is to provide "pump priming" in order to enable you to progress to a full and more
elaborate project.
The duration of the PPG project should be between 6 -12 months and field trips will normally be involved.
It is expected that the maximum grant available for a PPG will be £6,000.
Field Trip Grant (FTG)
FTG applications may be submitted for fieldwork trips between 6 and 12 months in duration.
In such cases, it is presumed that, at the time of the fieldwork, you have already undertaken preliminary or supplementary research to prepare for or advance the documentation of the language(s) to be documented; furthermore,
the language(s) should either be closely related to well documented languages or
already be the subject of substantial documentation.
It is expected that the maximum grant available for a FTG will be £10,000.
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3. Application procedure
Eligibility
ELDP welcomes applications from researchers of any nationality to undertake projects in any part of the world. Applicants should be researchers with qualifications in linguistics and experience in linguistic fieldwork (including suitably qualified graduate students). Projects may be undertaken by teams or individuals.
Application Forms
For each type of grant, an application pack (set of documents and forms) is available
at http://www.hrelp.org/grants/apply/packages/.
Documents in the pack have advice for writing and submitting the application.
Before applying, you must register the details of the applicant online at:
Institutional links
Applicant(s) should have, or be in a position to make, a formal link with a university or comparable research
institution. The institution will be expected to act as host institution and administer the grant,
be responsible for its proper expenditure, and submit regular and authenticated accounts of the expenditure.
Training workshop
ELDP recognises that language documentation is a new field which involves a range of new understandings about how language materials are collected and represented. To assist grantees ELDP offers a one-week training workshop aimed at promoting good practice in language documentation. The workshop deals with the theory and practice of language documentation and will cover a range of topics and practical activities. We will fund the costs of attending the workshop so you should not include these in your budget. We normally require the principal investigator of IPF, MDP and IGS grants to attend the workshop before starting fieldwork. It may be possible for an alternative or additional team member to attend.
See http://www.hrelp.org/events/workshops/ for a link to this year's workshop.
Revitalisation projects
ELDP's objective is language documentation. Although documentation and revitalisation are linked,
projects aimed only at revitalisation without significant emphasis on documentation will not be funded.
Nevertheless, applicants are encouraged to create documentation in ways that assist communities
to maintain and strengthen their languages. This may increase the possibilities for combining ELDP
funds with revitalisation funds from other sources.
Assessment
All applications are assessed by ELDP's international panel. See http://www.hrelp.org/aboutus/staff/panel/ for the panel membership.
Panel members have been selected to serve in their capacity as scholars and researchers in the field.
Based on its assessment, the panel will submit its final recommendations to Arcadia.
In making its assessments at the full application stage, the panel may consult independent referees.
You may identify people who you do not wish the panel to consult. We will keep your request confidential.
For further details on the assessment criteria refer to the guidance notes in the
application packages.
Project Outcomes
The outcomes and products of funded projects will include a corpus of materials such as digital audio and video recordings, text collections, dictionaries and grammatical sketches.
The core of a documentation is a corpus of audio and/or video materials with time-aligned transcription, multi-tier annotation, translation into a language of wider communication, and relevant metadata on context and use of the materials.
All materials generated by your project must be deposited with
the Endangered Languages Archive (ELAR) at SOAS. See the Guidelines document in the application package for further details.
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4. Timetable
Deadlines
This information last updated 15 July 2007
| Type of Project
| Advert
| Deadline
|
|
Major Documentation Project (MDP)
| July
| 8 Oct 2007
|
| Individual Postdoctoral Fellowship (IPF)
| July
| 8 Oct 2007
|
| Individual Graduate Studentship (IGS)
| July
| 2 Jan 2008
|
| Pilot Project Grant (PPG)
| July
| 2 Jan 2008
|
| Field Trip Grant (FTG) First round
| July
| 2 Jan 2008
|
| Field Trip Grant (FTG) Second round | July
| 12 May 2008
|
References
You should ensure that referees receive a complete copy
of your full application in sufficient time to comment. Referees
should use the correct form, and send one electronic copy
directly to ELDP no later than midnight (GMT) on the relevant
deadline. We will not consider late references.
Announcement of results
The results of applications will be announced in the following
March. For FTG applications submitted in May, the results
will be announced in the next July.
Starting date
Projects must commence within 12 months of the date of the
initial offer letter.
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5. Contacts
For further information, and application forms,
see http://www.hrelp.org/grants/
Email: eldp@soas.ac.uk
Postal address
Endangered Languages Documentation Project
Research Office
School of Oriental and African Studies
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square
London WC1H 0XG
UK
ELDP Application Introduction vers. 28 June 2007
http://www.hrelp.org/grants/apply/information/
|