Grants Database
Search grants awarded since 2004 to discover funding amounts, descriptions, dates awarded, and duration. Newer records include the geographic area served by a grant. For older grants, please refer to our archives.
7323 Results
Results:
7323 Results
Project Title
As a final grant for a podcast series on U.S.-China relations
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
Rising bilateral tensions between the United States and China have drawn Americans’ attention to China in unprecedented ways. Building off the success of its first two seasons, the next season of the Face Off: US vs China podcast will aim to explain the development of the modern U.S.-China relationship to a broad audience. Episodes will range from the rapid advances of China’s military to its relationship with American allies in the Pacific. Hosted by former New York Times Beijing bureau chief Jane Perlez with commentary from Harvard China historian Rana Mitter, Face Off merges narrative storytelling with expert interviews to create an educational podcast on the nature of the U.S.-China impasse as well as encourage thoughtful and diplomatic solutions to it.
Website
Project Title
In support of the Belle da Costa Greene Fellowship Program
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
36 months
Description
Incorporated in 1924, the Morgan is a museum, independent research library, music venue, architectural landmark, and historic site. Their mission is to celebrate and share the history and process of human creativity from antiquity to the present day through the preservation, study, and interpretation of a dynamic and growing collection.The Belle da Costa Greene Fellowships (“Greene Fellowships” or “Fellowships”) are a flagship program of the Morganand part of multifacetedefforts to create opportunities for emerging professionals with experiences and perspectives that have not been adequately reflected in art museum curatorship, rare book librarianship, and arts leadership. A grant from the Carnegie Corporation will help to support the Greene Fellowships over the next three academic years.
Website
Project Title
For a project to scale student-led civic engagement through the Civic Action Project and the National Youth Board
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Teach Democracy, delivers nonpartisan, standards-aligned civic education programs that prepare students for informed participation in a diverse democracy. Teach Democracy will scale its Civic Action Project (CAP)—an in-school civics program where students identify local issues, analyze public policy, and take civic action—and expand its National Youth Board. The project will reach 7,920 students and 132 teachers across California, North Carolina, and Washington, supported by a Leadership Cadre of six educators. At least 80 percent of students will report increased civic confidence and instructional efficacy. The Youth Board will grow from ten to twenty members, with students co-leading events, shaping materials, and supporting peer civic leadership. CAP is currently being evaluated by the Civic Engagement Research Group at UC Riverside, with early findings showing statistically significant gains in civic efficacy, pluralism, engagement, and civic knowledge.
Website
Project Title
For a project to develop civic education metrics to strengthen implementation and adoption
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Currently, there is no coherent set of high-quality assessment metrics aligned with modern civic learning goals. This grant will support the University of California, Riverside, in leading the Civic Impacts Project. The initiative is led by three of the nation’s most respected civic education scholars—Joseph Kahne (University of California, Riverside), in collaboration with David Campbell (Notre Dame) and David Kidd (Harvard), who bring complementary expertise in civic learning, impact assessment, and metric design. The Civic Impacts Project will produce two national synthesis reports and six technical research briefs and convene cross-partisan leaders to inform the development of practical, equity-focused civic metrics. The project builds on recent efforts to catalog existing tools but shifts the focus to rigor, relevance, and alignment with the Educating for American Democracy (EAD) Roadmap.
Website
Project Title
For project support of the Freedom and Citizenship Program
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
15 months
Description
Columbia’s Freedom and Citizenship program is a year-long civic education and college access initiative for first-generation, low-income high school students in New York City. The program combines a three-week residential seminar in political philosophy with a nine-month civic leadership experience and individualized college advising. Students develop critical thinking skills, strengthen civic self-efficacy, and engage in civic leadership projects. Since its founding in 2009, the program has served 463 students and inspired a national Knowledge for Freedom network across 34 campuses. This grant will support a cohort of 45 students. Participants will complete academic portfolios, receive personalized mentorship, and be supported through each step of the college application process. Outcomes include increased college acceptance and enhanced civic agency. Students will also receive last-mile Carnegie Scholarship to help cover college expenses.
Website
Project Title
In support of educational programming
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
36 months
Description
Founded by Andrew Carnegie in 1895, the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh now encompasses 20 locations along with virtual programming.Its mission is to foster literacy, enable exploration, and create connections with all their constituencies. While books remain central to its core mission, the Library is a community-based organization which focuses on education, workforce and economic development, and neighborhood vitality. Its core values include building communities, prioritizing people, providing access, and enabling learning. With Corporations support, librarians will continue their work in providing educational programs, services, and resources for children, teens and adults.
Website
Project Title
For support of the State Policy Center
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
36 months
Description
Despite decades of effort in both K-12 and higher education policy reform, the gaps in access and success in college remain large and stark, even though we know a four-year college degree continues to be the single best predictor of socioeconomic mobility. Founded by former West Virginia Governor Bob Wise in 2001 to draw attention to the plight of American high schools and drive improvement, All4Ed has since established itself as the premier national policy organization dedicated to ensuring all students graduate high school prepared for college, work, and life. Building on the organization’s influential role at the federal level, All4Ed launched the State Policy Center in 2023 to provide technical assistance and legislative support to state-level education policymakers nationwide, focusing on college and career pathways, digital equity, and next-generation accountability. Corporation support would enable All4Ed to develop a comprehensive suite of college and career pathways policy resources for all fifty states, offer targeted technical assistance to at least ten states, and provide intensive support to three to five states.
Website
Project Title
For support of Carnegie scholarships for University of Baltimore near completer students
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
36 months
Description
While a four-year college degree continues to be the single best predictor of socioeconomic mobility, many of the barriers faced by low-income and first-generation students can persist even after they gain admission to college. Research recently commissioned by Carnegie shows that currently, nearly 37 million adults aged 25 to 65 have “stopped out” of college, earning some college credits without completing a bachelor’s degree. The University of Baltimore (UBalt) is one of the most diverse universities within the University System of Maryland:85 percent of its nearly 3,000 students come from Maryland, 40 percent of students are first-generation, 60 percent are Pell Grant eligible, and 70 percent receive financial aid. UBalt experiences higher student stop-out rates than traditional universities, with approximately 30 percent of students who enroll in an academic year not persisting to the next. To address retention concerns, UBalt identifies and provides near completer students – an undergraduate student within thirty credit hours of finishing a bachelor’s degree – with scholarships to reduce the financial barrier to completion. Corporation support would enable UBalt to award approximately sixty to one hundred near completer students annually with scholarships ranging from $500 to $5,000 each semester.
Website
Project Title
In support of a conference on Sexual Violence and Antisemitism
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
In February 2026, Harvard Divinity School will host a conference with scholars from the US, Europe, and Israel to examine historical incidents of sexual assault on Jewish women, the challenges of archival research, and the theoretical implications for understanding antisemitism. The conference aims to stimulate scholarly interest and generate additional research. Selected papers will be published as a volume, supported by tentative funding. While primarily closed to invited participants, the conference will include a public event and involve some Harvard faculty and students.
Project Title
For project support for the next phase of the Focus City Strategy
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Narrative 4 (N4) was founded in 2013 to help young people harness the power of stories to drive change in their communities. N4 envisions a world where “every young person leads with compassion and loneliness and isolation are replaced with connection, community, and action”. N4 established a new model for arts-based leadership and social engagement with the belief that stories, empathy, and connection can be used in innovative ways to cultivate the essential practices of curiosity, deep listening, imagination, and positive action. N4 has expanded to four continents, reaching more than 51 countries and 37 states in the United States. With Corporation support, Narrative 4 will expand its work in the United States by 1) strengthening local impact by identifying anchor institutions in each city, 2) expanding to four new urban hubs and nearby rural areas, 3) forging 200 new community partnerships to engage 16,000 students in story-driven leadership programs, and 4) streamlining community engagement to accelerate partnerships and align with core goals. The Corporation’s support remains critical to sustain momentum; scale locally led models and refine their replicable framework.
Website
Project Title
As a one-time grant for support of a report and national public workshop on developing information literacy
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
The National Academies’ Board on Science Education proposes a two-day public workshop to advance media literacy education for youth at a critical moment in the information landscape. In today’s fragmented, AI-driven media environment, young people face growing challenges in evaluating sources, identifying misinformation, and engaging meaningfully in civic life. While media literacy is increasingly recognized as essential to civic engagement, its implementation across schools and informal settings—such as libraries and museums—remains uneven, with limited cross-disciplinary integration and unclear measures of success. This hybrid workshop will bring together educators, researchers, and practitioners to share promising practices, highlight evidence gaps, and explore how to embed media literacy across core content areas. Proceedings including a report and resources will be made publicly available, with the National Academies Press ensuring broad dissemination. This timely convening offers a strategic opportunity to strengthen media literacy, promote civic readiness, and build youth resilience to misinformation.
Website
Project Title
In support of student scholarships
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Established in 1877, St Leonards School in St Andrews, Scotland, is an educational charity committed to advancing equality and social mobility by providing exceptional learning opportunities to students from diverse and underserved backgrounds. A Carnegie Corporation grant would support six fully-funded bursaries – Carnegie Scholarships – in the Sixth Form,for students engagedin the equivalent of 11th and 12th grades in the US,over a two-year period, 2025 – 2027. Scholarships will be awarded to students facing significant socioeconomic disadvantage, are first-generation university applicants, or have experienced displacement. Outcomes will be measured by students’ completion of the IB Diploma (International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme) and progression to higher education or professional pathways. Scholars will join an alumni network, fostering long-term engagement with the programme and the values it represents.
Website
Project Title
As one time funding for a project to develop a roadmap to strengthen space security as part of a Request for Proposals on “Emerging Technologies and Nuclear Weapon Risks”
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
The rapid growth of commercial satellites, especially in low Earth orbit, has raised the risk of accidents, miscalculations, or malicious actions that could quickly escalate into conflict between nuclear-armed states. At the same time, the increasingly influential commercial space sector faces growing exposure to anti-satellite weapons and nuclear dangers, with little coordinated capacity to respond. This creates a unique opportunity to engage private space actors as partners in reducing nuclear and broader risks in outer space. To address this opportunity, the Foreign Policy Research Institute will conduct new research and a dialogue with various commercial space actors to create a roadmap for improving space security. This roadmap will outline steps private companies can take to reduce the risk of conflict in space and offer recommendations to policymakers to strengthen space security.
Website
Project Title
For one time funding for a project analyzing the use of emerging technologies to bolster conventional deterrence in place of expanding nuclear capabilities as part of a Request for Proposals on “Emerging Technologies and Nuclear Weapon Risks”
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
18 months
Description
China’s rapidly expanding nuclear arsenal has led to major debates about whether the U.S. must significantly expand its own nuclear forces. However, there has been little rigorous analysis of whether non-nuclear capabilities could now fill roles long considered the exclusive domain of nuclear weapons. To address this challenge, the RAND Corporation will assess whether emerging and disruptive technologies—such as artificial intelligence, space-based sensors, advanced conventional strike, and cyber capabilities—can offset growing nuclear threats and enhance deterrence without a large-scale nuclear expansion. The project will also estimate the financial costs associated with implementing technological offsets and compare them to the expenses of expanding U.S. nuclear capabilities.
Website
Project Title
For one-time funding for a project assessing the implications of emerging and disruptive technologies for the stealth and security of nuclear launch platforms as part of a Request for Proposals on “Emerging Technologies and Nuclear Weapon Risks”
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
The rapid development of emerging and disruptive technologies (EDTs) could pose a significant risk to the second-strike capabilities of nuclear-armed states. Yet, there is a notable gap in public research on the ability of EDTs to detect mobile nuclear launch platforms, which rely on stealth and relocation. If EDTs can reliably detect mobile launch platforms, the major implications include disrupting longstanding notions of nuclear stability. To analyze this dilemma, the Federation of American Scientists will assess the destabilizing impacts of EDTs on mobile nuclear launch platforms, specifically land-based and sea-based platforms, with the goal of providing experts and policymakers with data to recommend short- and medium-term risk reduction measures. Findings will also include recommendations for open-source intelligence practitioners for the responsible use of new tools to ensure open-source analysis does not contribute to nuclear instability.
Website
Project Title
For one time funding for a joint project mitigating the risks of AI integration into nuclear operations as part of a Request for Proposals on “Emerging Technologies and Nuclear Weapon Risks”
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Much of the existing research on the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into nuclear weapons operations has focused on the risks it poses to crisis stability, but policy-relevant recommendations have remained vague. With recent public calls by military officials for the adoption of AI into nuclear or nuclear-adjacentsystems, the development of specific recommendations to mitigate these dangers is crucial. To address this gap, the Arms Control Association will bring together leading scholars of AI policy and nuclear weapons operations to analyze the risks of AI integration and develop specific, targeted solutions to prevent the worst harms of AI integration into nuclear operations. This project will utilize roundtable discussions and tabletop simulations to explore scenarios, test hypotheses, and share findings among key experts and policymakers. By focusing on the need for concrete and practical safety recommendations for AI and nuclear operations, the project aims to move the conversation forward from theoretical origins to practical measures.
Website
Project Title
For project support of the Media Literacy Incubator Cohort
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
The Alliance for Decision Education (ADE), a national nonprofit founded in 2013, is working to improve education by helping K-12 students think critically, evaluate evidence, and navigate complexity. Through partnerships with 150 schools across 28 states and districts and education leaders, ADE integrates Decision Education or lessons about how to make thoughtful, informed choices into schools, trains teachers, and builds a network focused on helping students make better decisions for themselves and their communities. In an era of misinformation, these skills foster informed citizenship and support the Corporation’s vision for an informed and engaged youth population. With the Corporation’s support ADE will refine and expand its Media Literacy Incubator models, enabling the development of new tools, impact measurement, and strategic partnerships to reach more students. This support will help launch a third cohort and amplify efforts to equip students with critical decision-making skills in today’s polarized media landscape while fostering collaboration among educators, researchers, and policymakers, enabling them to scale the initiative nationally.
Project Title
For one time funding for a joint project to analyze how emerging technologies affect nuclear escalation dynamics as part of a Request for Proposals on “Emerging Technologies and Nuclear Weapon Risks”
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
With the rapid development of emerging and disruptive technologies (EDTs), there remains a critical knowledge gap in understanding how these technologies impact nuclear decision-making and escalation dynamics during a crisis. To address this challenge, the Rhode Island School of Design will host realistic, immersivesimulations of likely nuclearcrisis scenarios. These simulations will be conducted in multiple iterations to both examine decision-making across experience levels and determine how different EDTs influence nuclear risks across regional contexts. The project findings will lead to practical recommendations to promote risk reduction during a crisis and reduce the risks of nuclear use.
Website
Project Title
For support of licenses for expanded access to Futre for 5,000 low-income students
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Futre.me is a research-aligned software platform designed to assist young people in exploring and navigating career and life pathways grounded in cutting-edge research on learning and development from Dr. David Yeager, a prominent developmental psychologist and author of “10 to 25: The Science of Motivating Young People.” Futre supports individuals aged fifteen through twenty-five explore personalized career pathways by providing detailed information on over 800 career pathways, including entry-level and long-term salary data, required education or training, and how these factors align with living expenses across different geographies to build knowledge and enhance decision-making. Students can adjust variables on the platform to test different paths and compare options transparently, making Futre unique in offering both breadth and personalization. Futre aims to significantly enhance career exploration and pathway navigation for students by distributing a total of 5,000 ten-year licenses, to low income students across approximately fifty schools representing diverse settings, states, and student demographics.
Project Title
As a final grant in support of the Atlas of Impunity
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
The Atlas of Impunity provides high-quality, credible, and transparent quantitative scores that allow activists, journalists, businesspeople, and ordinary citizens to track the degree of impunity experienced by the people of their country and its global peers. The Atlas also helps readers pinpoint which sites within society (e.g., conflict and violence, unaccountable governance, environmental degradation) are the greatest drivers of impunity. Finally, the Atlas’s qualitative analysis provides further context by highlighting global trends, hypothesizing drivers and causes of impunity, and identifying policies that may be most effective in fighting it. With global coordination in short supply and roughly 60 state-based conflicts ongoing—the most at any time since the end of World War II—human rights abuses are becoming more frequent, as the rule of law is weakening in a number of countries.
Website
Project Title
For project support of the Beyond Ready Program
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Many young people across the United States, particularly those in rural and underserved communities, lack access to high-quality opportunities to build civic knowledge. This grant will support the National 4-H Council’s Beyond Ready, a multi-year strategy to prepare up to 10 million youth for civic, career, and life success by 2030. Over the two-year grant period, Carnegie’s investment will support three core activities. 4-H will launch a new Civic Engagement Track at Ignite by 4-H, the organization’s national youth summit in Washington, D.C., engaging approximately 3,400 students and providing Carnegie-funded scholarships to 200 youth from underserved communities to attend the summit. Second, the Lead to Change initiative will fund and mentor 30 youth-led civic action projects with seed grants. Third, the grant will support training for 300 adult volunteers, enabling them to deliver high-quality civic learning experiences to approximately 15,000 youth nationwide.
Project Title
For one-time funding of PBS NOVA's Space Wars documentary
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
22 months
Description
The accelerating militarization of outer space has ushered in a new era of strategic competition with significant security implications, including heightened nuclear dangers. As space becomes a central warfighting domain, commercial actors are also playing an increasingly influential role in shaping the space environment and its vulnerabilities. Yet public understanding of these developments remains limited. To address this gap, NOVA will producea newdocumentary exploring the rapidly developing outer space security environment.The film willexamine thetechnologicaland policy dimensions of space militarization, including the potential deployment anduse of nuclear weapons in orbit. The project aims to deepen public understanding of developments in outer space andhow these trends could escalate crises and increase nuclear and global securitydangers.
Website
Project Title
For support to increase naturalization rates of legal permanent residents
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
According to the Department of Homeland Security, over 10 million Lawful Permanent Residents are currently eligible for naturalization, yet less than 10 percent apply annually. Barriers such as cost, legal complexity, and lack of accessible support disproportionately affect low-income immigrants and immigrants of color. This grant will support the Immigrant Legal Resource Center (ILRC) in increasing U.S. naturalization rates through additional support to one of its key founding partners, the NALEO Educational Fund. NALEO Educational Fund will use these funds to provide direct assistance to approximately 3,000 aspiring citizens—both Latino and non-Latino—which includes application preparation, bilingual support via its hotline, and education about the application process. About half of all applications submitted will include requests for fee waivers. With Corporation support, ILRC will also increase support for the NAC’s national policy advocacy efforts through its stewardship of NAC’s Naturalization Working Group, providing up-to-date analysis on immigration policy changes, engaging with USCIS, and building national awareness.
Website
Project Title
As a one-time only grant for an educational game on topics related to nuclear security issues
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
The salience of nuclear weapons is higher today than at any point since the end of the Cold War. Yet public awareness about nuclear dangers, especially among younger generations who grew up after the end of the Cold War, remains low. With a rapidly shifting geopolitical climate and renewed concerns about nuclear proliferation, it is essential to educate today’s high school students—tomorrow’s voters and leaders—about the history, policies, and consequences of nuclear weapons. Building upon the success of its educational resources on nuclear weapons and security policy, GBH Education, the parent organization of NOVA, will research and develop a youth-friendly, game-based interactive experience that aligns with key learning objectives related to nuclear security. The goal of the game will be to deepen the next generation’s understanding of nuclear policy and global nuclear arsenals, while inspiring students to tackle efforts to strengthen international nonproliferation and arms control. The game will also enhance student critical thinking, decision-making, and information literacy skills.
Website
Project Title
As a one-time grant for support of two conferences on countering polarization through academic collaboration
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
Pressure for academic boycotts of Israelishampering trans-national efforts to address the challenges of national and international polarizationthrough collaboration.With the support of Carnegie, the organizers hope to produce research into the sources and thedomestic and international risks of polarization, to offer timely and actionable strategies for remediation, while serving as an example of cross-border collaboration.This will be achieved through two major academic conferences, convened by top Israeli, European and American scholars who work in two areas of interest to Carnegie: Democracy and international peace and security. One will focus on “Public Institutions Under Stress” and the other on “Statecraft in An Age of Fracture”
Website
Project Title
As a final grant for the Healthcare Pathways Professional Learning Community
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
Community colleges must continue to find ways to be nimble in response to their students’ needs. These institutions provide post-secondary education, social services, professional development for individuals transitioning careers, employment, and human capital for the local workforce. Successful community colleges understand this challenge and center their students’ experience toward completion and economic mobility. For over sixteen years, Achieving the Dream (ATD) has provided colleges with tools, services, and supports to meet the ever-changing demand and help community colleges increase economic outcomes for low-income students. With Corporation support, ATD partnered with four Texas-based community colleges to develop and strengthen pre-healthcare pathways for students aspiring to enter the sector. ATD facilitated professional learning communities with college teams to strengthen these pathways by making them more accessible, aligning them to preexisting dual enrollment programs, and creating awareness of these pathways. With a final grant from the Corporation, ATD will continue working with these community colleges to focus on sustaining their pathways.
Website
Project Title
For project support of the launch of teacher apprenticeships in New York State
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
36 months
Description
The New York State Educator Workforce Development HUB (The HUB) is poised to address the state’s urgent need for over 180,000 new teachers in the next decade through the expansion of teacher apprenticeship programs. Established in 2022 with funding from the US Department of Labor’s Apprenticeship Building America program, The HUB focuses on creating well-prepared educator workforces by developing teacher Registered Apprenticeship Programs. Collaborating closely with state labor and education departments, the HUB has successfully navigated the complex regulatory landscape to support and expand these teacher apprenticeship programs. The proposed grant will enable the HUB to establish ten apprenticeship programs, benefiting 260 teacher and teacher assistant apprentices across five regions and significantly increasing the earnings potential of participants, with new teacher assistants potentially seeing a 43 percent increase and new teachers up to 116 percent increase in earnings. Additionally, The HUB will provide technical assistance, develop resources, and implement a centralized data system to monitor progress.
Website
Project Title
For project support of the development of teaching pathways
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
36 months
Description
City Year is a national organization with over thirty years of experience in improving educational quality and fostering a diverse pipeline of future educators through national service. As part of a state-wide effort in New York, this grant will leverage the City Year service year to create sustainable pathways into teaching careers. With a successful track record of serving 133,000 students in over 250 schools, and 6,000 alumni teachers who persist longer in classrooms and serve high-need areas, City Year is well-positioned to address workforce development challenges. City Year will engage 1,000 Corps Members in New York State, guiding approximately 450 towards education careers through access to their newly developed teacher pathway programs. Additionally, City Year will establish a statewide coalition to advocate for essential investments and policies, form workforce development partnerships, design apprenticeship standards, and engage local partners. The anticipated impact includes an increased number of Corps Members entering teaching careers, scaling the apprenticeship model, and positioning national service as a pre-apprenticeship experience.
Website
Project Title
For one-time support for an independent cost assessment of Golden Dome
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
The proposed “Golden Dome”missile defense system has reignited debate over thetechnical feasibility, strategic value, and political viability of national missile defense programs.At the same time, the cost to develop and deploy such a system remains unknown. To address this gap, the American Enterprise Institute (AEI)will provide atransparentand publicly available cost estimate covering thedevelopment, procurement, and long-term sustainment of Golden Dome.AEI will also create an online simulator to help users explore and better understandthe potential costs, capabilities, and deployment timelines ofGoldenDome. By providing credible, accessible analysis, the project aims to inform public debate, guide policymakers, and establish a common reference point for discussions about the future of theU.S. national missile defense program.
Website
Project Title
For implementation of Social Emotional Learning in early childhood in selected states as well as a pilot to train practitioners in out of school settings
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Think Equal is a global nonprofit founded in 2016 by acclaimed filmmaker and human rights advocate Leslee Udwin to promote Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) as a fundamental human right during the most formative years of life, ages 3–6. The organization partners with governments, teacher unions, and communities in 37 countries to deliver a neuroscience-based curriculum that fosters emotional literacy, self-regulation, empathy, and school readiness. With support from this Carnegie grant, Think Equal will expand its work in the United States through strategic partnerships with teacher unions. Planned activities include securing agreements with school districts, training Pre-K educators, and distributing high-quality classroom and home-based SEL materials. To increase accessibility, the program will also produce American Sign Language (ASL)versions of its storybooks and resources. Light-touch evaluation methods will guide implementation and ensure responsiveness to educator and family feedback. At its core, Think Equal equips young children with the social and emotional skills they need to thrive in school, in relationships, and as active participants in civic life.
Website
Project Title
As a one-time grant for support of the educational programming, including the civics component of the America 250 Exhibition
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
36 months
Description
The Museum of the City of New York (MCNY) engages audiences by celebrating, documenting, and interpreting the city’s past, present, and future through exhibitions, education programs, and community events. As part of New York City’s America250 celebrations, MCNY will present The Occupied City: New York and the American Revolution in 2026. The exhibition will challenge the notion that New York played a minor role in the Revolution, focusing on 1763–1789 and spotlighting the diverse individuals who shaped the city and the nation. With Corporation support, MCNY will develop related education programs—including field trips, professional development, and family offerings—that integrate American history and civics to help students understand their roles as citizens today. These efforts will extend beyond the exhibition’s run through ongoing civics-focused programming.
Website
Project Title
For support of its public policy work
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
15 months
Description
With the concurrence of economic and civil society crises in the United States, public trust in American institutions and nonprofit organizations has plummeted in recent years. Yet, without a strong social sector and improved public-private partnerships, the country will be unable to address its myriad social and economic challenges. Founded in 1949, the Council on Foundations is a nonprofit membership association that guides philanthropies as they advance their grantmaking. Informed by a diverse membership of more than 950 grantmakers representing private, community, family, and corporate foundations, the council is well-positioned to provide policy insights, legal assistance, and networking opportunities for its members. With Corporation support, the council will educate policymakers about the value of philanthropy to their communities and the importance of promoting charitable giving.
Website
Project Title
As a final grant for support of its voting and voting rights program
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
12 months
Description
Despite no challenges to the 2024 presidential election results, false claims of election fraud in the 2020 election continue to fuel efforts to restrict voting access for Americans across the country. At the same time, a combination of social media, artificial intelligence (AI), and bad actors (foreign and domestic) seek to spread disinformation and sow division, contributing to increased public distrust in elections and government. With renewed Corporation support, The Leadership Conference Education Fund aims at increasing voting and protecting voting rights and in addressing the impact of AI in spreading disinformation and misinformation. The Leadership Conference Education Fund will also further its efforts to promote greater technology platform accountability, especially as AI advances, to ensure tech companies have in place and enforce voter interference/election disinformation policies.
Project Title
For one time funding for a project to evaluate the capabilities of key emerging technologies for the future of nuclear deterrence dynamics as part of a Request for Proposals on "Emerging Technologies and Nuclear Weapon Risks"
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Rapidly advancing emerging and disruptive technologies (EDTs) have serious implications for nuclear security. New space-based sensors, artificial intelligence, quantum detectors, and advanced missile defense systems could make nuclear weapons more visible, vulnerable, or easier to target. This could push nuclear-armed states toward more aggressive nuclear postures and increase the risk of nuclear escalation and conflict. To address these dangers, the Program on Science & Global Security at Princeton University will conduct an independent assessment of how these technologies may impact the survivability of nuclear forces. The project will analyze the technical capabilities and limitations of EDTs related to nuclear stability, explore how current destabilizing nuclear dynamics may be exacerbated by EDTs, and identify policy options for reducing future nuclear dangers.
Project Title
For "Catalyst Sponsor" support of the Leadership Roundtable's 20th Anniversary
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
4 months
Project Title
For support of "A Land for All"
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
0 months
Description
The continued instability in the Middle East and lack of progress toward peace have renewed interest in alternative approaches to resolving conflict in the region. While many frameworks for peace have been proposed in the past, these methods have struggled to gain traction amid changing political and demographic realities. With new funding, the International Peace Institute, in partnership with “A Land for All” (a joint Israeli-Palestinian initiative), will collaborate on an effort to test new models for peace rooted in principles of shared governance, cooperation, and mutual recognition. Through expert consultations, stakeholder engagement, and scenario-based exercises, the project will assess the viability of these approaches and offer constructive options for policymakers and peacebuilding actors committed to long-term regional stability.
Website
Project Title
For a project on teaching peace and reconciliation using archives and technology to promote a multi-perspective approach
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
21 months
Description
Led by Professor Ian McBride, Pembroke’s Quill Project will support a junior research fellow to create innovative digital and archival resources to teach contested histories of the Northern Ireland peace process. The project combines digitized archives with interactive tools, an open-source e-book, teacher training, an online interactive course, and a youth British-Irish conference. It is closely aligned with Carnegie’s historic commitments to the diffusion of knowledge, the support of libraries, and furthering understanding of conflicts in society, while also fostering new strategies to prevent and resolve conflict. The applicant anticipates that the pilot will result in a €10 million European Research Council grant to further expand the digital and archival teaching and learning platform. If approved, Carnegie will be recognized for its contribution through digital platforms and in promotional materials.
Website
Project Title
For one time support for a roundtable on African philanthropy and conference participation
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
The Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy (IU) proposes to strengthen the scholarly community in African philanthropic studies by convening African scholars at the 2025 Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action (ARNOVA) annual conference. Building on a separate Corporation-supported workshop hosted by IU, this project will extend the scholars’ engagement and networking opportunities through conference participation and a roundtable session on African philanthropy. Outputs will include a convening report, an edited volume authored by participating scholars, and article publications.
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Project Title
For a cross-partisan dialogue for democracy
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
The National Democratic Institute (NDI), in partnership with the International Republican Institute (IRI), will convene three high-level bipartisan gatherings with European parliaments over two years to help senior political leaders from across the transatlantic community craft practical strategies for lowering polarization and reinforcing democratic norms. The first meeting will explore ways to revitalize democratic practices and broaden public participation; the second will tackle contentious policy areas such as security, trade, energy, and emerging technologies; and the third will focus on boosting democratic resilience in Eastern Europe and the Balkans, where malign foreign influence remains a threat. Between conferences, the institutes will run virtual peer exchanges, publish recommendations, and draw on their complementary networks to keep the dialogue politically and geographically balanced, with the goal of turning trust-building discussions into concrete bipartisan reforms.
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Project Title
For project support of the Explainers and Garden-wide internship programs
Date
Sep. 11, 2025
Duration
15 months
Description
The New York Botanical Garden (NYBG), a cultural and scientific public institution in the Bronx since 1891, will launch a unified, pedagogy-driven internship initiative with support from Carnegie. Building on twenty-fiveyears of experience and responding to persistent barriers faced by first-generation and low-income youth, this pilot program will expand access to paid, real-world learning opportunities for high school students in the Bronx and across New York City. Carnegie funding will support five core activities: integrating a formal learning and development framework, providing departmental work experiences, implementing college and career readiness workshops, delivering information literacy training through the LuEsther T. Mertz Library, and guiding students through capstone research projects. Interns will build technical and soft skills, explore diverse career pathways, and gain tools for navigating misinformation and participating in civic life.
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Project Title
For one time funding for a feasibility study on the verification of nuclear weapons in orbit under the Outer Space Treaty as part of a Request for Proposals for the Consortium to Reduce Nuclear Dangers
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
0 months
Description
The 1967 Outer Space Treaty prohibits the deployment of nuclear weapons in orbit, but the agreement offers no verification measures. Indeed, verification of the Treaty remains a major technical challenge, given the harsh radiation environment and limited detection options. This project, led by a team of nuclear scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), will conduct a novel feasibility study of whether new technologies related to passive radiation signatures and related detection methods can confirm or disprove the presence of nuclear warheads in orbit. The research will combine computational modeling, sensitivity and background studies, and policy analysis in collaboration with other MIT nuclear experts. By developing novel verification techniques that leverage the space radiation environment, the project seeks to deter covert nuclear deployments in space and provide policymakers with new technical options for outer space arms control.
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Project Title
For one-time funding for a project on understanding public attitudes of nuclear proliferation among U.S. allies
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
As U.S. strategic priorities shift and questions about security guarantees intensify, debates over the need for independent nuclear capabilities have grown in traditional allied countries, including South Korea, Japan, Poland, and Germany. These developments have raised concerns that public opinion is shifting toward support for domestic nuclear weapons programs, which could undermine the global nonproliferation regime and increase nuclear dangers. Yet, existing public opinion data in these countries is largely outdated. To address this gap, the Chicago Council on Global Affairs will conduct representative surveys in key allied countries to assess threat perceptions, views on alliances and treaties, and potential support for domestic nuclear weapons programs. The Council will also survey American attitudes toward further proliferation abroad and its implications for U.S. policy. Working with local pollsters, the Council will produce findings that will inform policy recommendations and help communicate the risks of nuclear proliferation.
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Project Title
As a final grant for a study on nuclear targeting, civilian casualties, and the laws of war
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Despite rising concerns about nuclear risk, core aspects of U.S. nuclear posture remain shielded from the public, including policies on launch authority, weapons deployments, targeting, and the humanitarian effects of nuclear use. The National Security Archive Fund will continue its work to shed light on the evolution of U.S. nuclear policy and its implications for global security. The project will use Freedom of Information Act requests, oral histories, and archival research to uncover primary source documents related to nuclear targeting, presidential launch authority, weapons effects, accident protocols, and other dimensions of U.S. nuclear posture. Newly declassified materials will be published and analyzed on the Archive’s Nuclear Vault platform, providing scholars, journalists, and the public with access to historically grounded resources that inform debates about the consequences of U.S. nuclear policy.
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Project Title
For a project training journalists in nuclear weapons issues
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Despite rising nuclear risks, coverage of nuclear issues in media remains limited, due in part to the technical complexity and lack of accessible training. With renewed support, the Outrider Foundation will continue to provide training workshops, educational materials, and access to non-governmental experts for journalists and editors to improve overall coverage of nuclear issues across news and entertainment platforms and specifically boost the media coverage of Carnegie nuclear security grantees. Building on the strong response and success of the 2024 summit supported by a previous grant, Outrider plans to expand its reach to include creative professionals and screenwriters, helping to broaden the conversation on reducing nuclear dangers.
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Project Title
For support of a project mobilizing small businesses for smart legal immigration pathways
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Across the country, critical industries including agriculture, healthcare, hospitality, construction, and retail are struggling with unprecedented labor shortages that threaten their ability to grow, compete, and serve their communities. Misalignment between workforce needs and immigration policy hinders local economies, stifles innovation, and imposes unsustainable burdens on small business owners. Public Private Strategies Institute (PPSI) was founded to bring together leaders of nonprofits, corporations, and small businesses to address pressing societal challenges. Small Business for America’s Future (SBAF)—a project of PPSI—is a national coalition of more than 200,000 business owners committed to advancing an economic framework that supports small businesses, their employees, and their communities. With Corporation support, SBAF will mobilize small business leaders to promote a national narrative linking federal immigration reform to small business success, advance legal workforce integration, and ensure the United States economy meets workforce demands.
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Project Title
For general support
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
The Center for Tech and Civic Life (CTCL), founded in 2015, is a nationally recognized nonprofit advancing professional, secure, and accessible election administration by partnering with roughly 8,000 local election departments across all fifty states and Washington, D.C. Election officials face mounting challenges—including chronic underfunding, uneven capacity, outdated technology, and rising cybersecurity threats—while managing responsibilities that span election law, public relations, logistics, and personnel. CTCL addresses these gaps by providing training, civic technology, data infrastructure, technical assistance, and convenings that help officials better serve their communities. The organization has a proven track record, including piloting a 2024 Rural and Nonmetro Election Infrastructure Program that distributed $3.7 million in grants to small, under-resourced jurisdictions. With Corporation support, CTCL will continue equipping election officials with training, tools, and resources to administer secure and accessible elections, strengthen cybersecurity infrastructure, expand support for rural jurisdictions, and help secure sustained public funding for election administration.
Project Title
For project support to build the foundation for scalable, cross-curricular integration of media literacy
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Today’s students must navigate a complex information ecosystem saturated with polarization, misinformation, and AI-generated content, which demands critical thinking skills for effective civic participation. However, media literacy education is unevenly taught in K-12 schools, largely due to significant barriers for teachers, including a lack of clear standards-aligned guidance, limited professional development, and scattered hard to navigate resources, which prevents its effective integration across subject areas. Founded in 1997, the National Association for Media Literacy Education (NAMLE) is the nation’s leading voice for advancing media literacy as an essential life skill, supported by a robust network of 9,000 individual educator members and 67+ Organizational Partners. This proposed grant will leverage that network to spearhead a multi-year initiative to deeply embed media literacy into K-12 education by producing a suite of scalable resources, like guides for teaching media literacy in English and social studies and offer training for educators across the country.
Project Title
For a project on transforming peacekeeping and peacebuilding knowledge through direct engagement with multiple African publics
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
36 months
Description
This three-year collaboration between the University of Pretoria and Cambridge University will examine the past, present, and future of African peacekeeping and peacebuilding, synthesizing 35 years of lessons into a 30-chapter edited volume, two monographs, and policy briefs. Alongside these publications, the project will mentor African postdoctoral fellows, convene policymakers and civil society in Pretoria, and engage communities in Sierra Leone and Burundi to ensure findings are grounded in lived experience and inform more effective conflict prevention and peacebuilding strategies.
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Project Title
For a project on developing scalable documentation and archiving models for conflict-affected African communities
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
The Reckoning Project seeks support to launch the Darfur Archives, a two-year initiative that documents atrocities and preserves collective memory as tools for accountability and peacebuilding. TRP will train and equip a locally led team of researchers in trauma-sensitive documentation, collect and codify 100 in-depth testimonies from Darfuri refugees in Uganda and South Sudan, and host four workshops with civil society to set priorities, verify findings, and foster dialogue. The project will conduct a sociological survey to complement the testimonies, produce a culminating report, and hold two advocacy events with African stakeholders to ensure survivors’ voices inform regional and international policy debates. The resulting digital and physical archive will serve as a foundation for future truth-telling, education, and reconciliation efforts.
Project Title
For core support of the Nuclear Policy Program
Date
Dec. 11, 2025
Duration
24 months
Description
Rising tensions among nuclear-armed powers, the breakdown of arms control agreements, and the development of emerging technologies have heightened the risk of nuclear conflict. With renewed core support, the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace will continue its work to reduce the likelihood of nuclear use and proliferation and strengthen strategic stability. The program will use research and policy engagement to explore how technologies, such as missile defenses, artificial intelligence, and advanced nuclear energy are shaping escalation risks, and will use wargames with policymakers to test approaches to managing escalation. It will also focus on reducing proliferation risks among U.S. allies in Europe and Asia and will continue interactions with Chinese experts to develop shared analysis on minimizing proliferation risks from advanced nuclear energy technologies.
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