Grants

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

For a project to strengthen biological threat reduction capabilities across Africa

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

36 months

Description

This initiative will establish a structured pipeline for African biosecurity leadership through annual policy courses for up to 30 African leaders per cohort, training and placing post-graduate fellows in operational roles with key international health security, biosecurity, and biological threat reduction organizations. Fellows will convene annually alongside global biosecurity events and produce policy briefs to strengthen biological threat reduction practices. By equipping a new generation of African experts with the skills and networks needed to govern biosafety and biosecurity, the program aims to strengthen continental preparedness and reduce biological threats to peace and stability, leveraging Brown University’s Pandemic Center expertise and partnerships to create lasting capacity beyond the grant period.

Project Title

For core support of the Science and Global Security Program

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

The global landscape of nuclear dangers is rapidly shifting, driven by accelerating technological advances, emerging security rivalries, and the erosion of long-standing arms control agreements. Scientific and technical research is critically necessary to analyze these developments, assess and guide the policies states propose in response, and design new approaches to monitor nuclear activities and verify potential future arms control and disarmament agreements. In tandem, education and training are essential to ensure there is a next generation of nuclear scientists and scholars equipped to address these challenges. With renewed funding, Princeton’s Program on Science and Global Security (SGS) will continue research to develop practical policy options and expand its training of emerging experts on technical areas including verification of arms control agreements, nuclear weapon effects, and the nuclear security implications of space-based technologies.

Website

Project Title

For support of a project on immigration policies in state legislatures

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) was founded in 1975 to improve the quality and effectiveness of state legislatures, promote policy innovation and communication among them, and ensure they have a strong, cohesive voice in the federal system. Today, NCSL remains the only bipartisan organization representing all 7,386 state legislators and 30,000 legislative staff, uniquely positioned as a trusted, nonpartisan source of analysis and convening power. This grant would allow NCSL to expand its immigration policy work at a time when immigration is politically fraught and deeply polarized. With federal reform stalled, states have both significant opportunities and challenges to advancing pragmatic, innovative laws that foster immigrant integration and bring communities together rather than divide them.By investing in NCSL’s capacity, the Corporation can ensure lawmakers receive credible research, bipartisan education, and opportunities for thoughtful policy exchange.

Project Title

For project support to the Applied Social Media Lab to implement the Frankly platform in youth dialogue projects

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

0 months

Description

In today’s polarized climate, the need for constructive dialogue among diverse groups is more urgent than ever. And in an increasingly online world, digital tools designed to foster deliberation and empathy are essential for advancing prosocial civic discourse among young people. In response to this pressing societal need, the Applied Social Media Lab at Harvard’s Berkman Klein Center (BKC) developed Frankly, the only open-source video discourse platform natively built for structured civil dialogue. Frankly offers unique features including organized agendas within conversations and algorithmic group matching for balanced breakouts. With support from Carnegie, BKC will complete a 12-month pilot in partnership with two of the Education Program’s current grantees—Columbia University’s Center for Public Research & Leadership and Narrative 4—to adapt Frankly for use in their youth civic education programs. Frankly will host at least twenty events over a one-year pilot, receiving real-time feedback from these partners as they implement and refine new features and document outcomes to inform broader adoption by educational and civic organizations.

Project Title

As one time funding for a project modeling the effects of nuclear use in outer space as part of a Request for Proposals on “Emerging Technologies and Nuclear Weapon Risks"

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Recent public reports suggest that the risk of nuclear use in outer space is rising. However, the consequences of such an event remain poorly understood. Existing public knowledge related to nuclear explosions in space relies on outdated data that does not reflect the modern commercial and military space environment. The University of Texas at Austin will apply updated modeling techniques to examine how nuclear detonations in space would affect key military and civilian satellite constellations across different orbits, as well as ground-based electrical and electronic infrastructure. The study will also estimate the potential economic and socio-political impacts of these disruptions. The findings will inform practical policy recommendations to reduce security vulnerabilities and identify diplomatic strategies to lower the risk of nuclear use in space.

Project Title

For project support of participatory budgeting simulations

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

School participatory budgeting (PB) engages students in decision-making while building skills in deliberation, leadership, and collaboration. The NYC Department of Education’s Civics for All initiative created a PB program, but participation is voluntary, and many schools lack the staff capacity to join. The Making Democracy Real (MDR) initiative, will address this gap by partnering with six New York City middle schools over two years. Students will collect ideas, develop proposals, deliberate with their peers, and vote on school improvement projects, supported by Civic Fellows and teachers who will co-design and co-implement the program. MDR is expected to reach up to 2,100 students and increase student political efficacy, policy knowledge and overall engagement in school life.

Project Title

For core support of the Voting Rights Working Group

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Democracy in the United States facesmounting threats: restrictive voter identification laws, voter roll purges, limits on early voting, and partisan gerrymandering. These measures disproportionately harm voters of color, who are young, who are low-income, and/or with disabilities. Since its launch in 2010, the State Infrastructure Fund (SIF), housed at NEO Philanthropy, has worked to expand voter participation and protect voting rights in underrepresented communities, raising over $200 million, and serving as a trusted donor collaborative. With Corporation support, SIF will resource its Voting Rights Working Group (VRWG)—a coalition of eleven leading national civil rights organizations, including the ACLU, Brennan Center for Justice, Legal Defense Fund, and the Native American Rights Fund. VRWG coordinates proactive and defensive litigation to expand ballot access, challenge tactics that undermine voter turnout, and protect voters throughout the election process. With this grant, VRWG will continue to provide a coordinated legal defense against efforts to undermine voting.

Project Title

In support of the American Academy in Berlin Fellows Program

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

36 months

Description

The American Academy in Berlin, founded in 1994 by U.S. Ambassador Richard C. Holbrooke, is dedicated to strengthening transatlantic ties through advanced study and dialogue in the humanities, arts, social sciences, and public policy. With Corporation support, the Academy seeks to establish the Andrew Carnegie Fellowship, where one distinguished scholar, artist, or policy expert will be selected and will spend four months in residence at the Academy, focusing on European security, democracy, and transatlantic Over a three-year cycle, this fellowship will deepen the Academy’s focus on critical global challenges, expand its programming, and extend its impact across Germany, Europe, and the wider transatlantic community.

Project Title

For core support of College Promise

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

College Promise is a nonpartisan organization that helms the national ‘promise movement’ to provide public funding the first two or more years of postsecondary education. They directly support a network of over 450 “Promise programs” across all fifty states with the goal of ensuring that all students in the United States have access to the education, training, and support necessary to achieve social and economic mobility. To address male economic disconnection, where only 57 percent of male high school graduates proceed to college, and many men aged 18-24 are neither in education nor employment, College Promise will collaborate with stakeholders in Louisiana, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Georgia. They will develop state-level frameworks integrating Promise programs with workforce priorities, train 40-60 staff, and develop policy briefs and a comprehensive implementation guide to ensure men receive seamless support for education, career counseling, and financial assistance. This initiative will enable states to adopt policies that help men enroll in and complete programs leading to high-demand jobs.

Project Title

In support of the Carnegie Scholarship Initiative

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

12 months

Description

Founded in 1996, the Kyiv School of Economics (KSE) was established to build Ukraine’s domestic capacity to educate a new generation of economists. Ukraine now faces an urgent human capital crisis. Decades of brain drain have significantly worsened following the 2022 outbreak of war with Russia, jeopardizing the country’s ability to rebuild and modernize its economy. With Corporation support, the KSE will launch the Carnegie Scholarship Initiative, within the School’s Come Back Home program, which aims to retain and attract talented young people to pursue their education within Ukraine.

Website

https://kse.ua

Project Title

For general support

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs (Pugwash) has a legacy of engaging the world’s top scientific minds to reduce nuclear dangers. Under new leadership, the organization is modernizing its work to respond to today’s complex global threats, including those posed by advanced technologies and geopolitical instability. Through a combination of research and dialogues among leading scientists across the globe, Pugwash continues to bring together experts from across geopolitical divides—including countries often excluded from international forums—to foster dialogue and develop actionable policy ideas. The organization remains a rare, trusted platform for diplomacy grounded in scientific integrity. This renewal supports Pugwash’s new initiatives and intergenerational efforts to prepare future scientific leaders to support research and diplomatic efforts to reduce nuclear dangers.

Project Title

In support of the Waterford Treasures Children's Museum

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Between 1986 and 1992, a major archaeological excavation in Waterford, Ireland’s historic city center uncovered important Viking and medieval artifacts, leading to the creation of the Waterford Treasures Museum in 1999. The museum preserved seven historic buildings and expanded educational outreach. In 2022, the Museum of Childhood project sought a permanent home at 18 Lady Lane, an 18th-century merchant’s house. The museum explores childhood in all its dimensions—joyful and difficult—while promoting education, diversity, and community engagement. Initial Corporation funding supported workshops and planning; a renewal grant will help develop interactive exhibits and educational content.

Project Title

For an Asia-U.S. peace and security dialogue

Date

Mar. 06, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

The adversarial relationship between the United States and China is fueled by widening perception gaps and a lack of substantive dialogue, with effects on the entire Asia-Pacific region. The Asia-Pacific Leadership Network (APLN) will engage experts from the United States, China, and wider Asia-Pacific in Track II dialogues and rigorous analysis to clarify expectations and assess how to build common ground in pursuit of regional stability. By approaching U.S.-China relations from a regional perspective, APLN can evaluate the steps necessary to avoid confrontation and better understand the long-term trajectory of political and security relationships. The dialogues will generate practical policy recommendations that APLN will share with decision-makers and policy communities in the United States, China, and the Asia-Pacific.

Project Title

As a final grant for the U.S.-Russia Relations Initiative

Date

Mar. 06, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

High quality education and research on Russian foreign policy are essential for U.S. policymakers to effectively address Russia’s strategic challenges to U.S. interests. Since its establishment with Corporation support in 2016, the U.S.-Russia Relations Initiative at Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy has provided premier graduate-level training on Russia and its global role. With final support, Fletcher will continue preparing the next generation of American experts through comprehensive study of Russian foreign policymaking and U.S.-Russia relations. Fletcher will expand course development, host visiting Russian scholars in exile for research and teaching, and facilitate academic track-two dialogues with Russian counterparts.

Project Title

As a one-time only grant in support of humanitarian assistance in Sudan

Date

Jun. 05, 2025

Duration

12 months

Description

The International Rescue Committee (IRC), founded in 1933, responds to the world’s worst crises, providing health care, infrastructure, learning, and economic support to more than 25 million people annually.Sudan is currently the largest humanitarian and displacement crisis in the world. Since the outbreak of fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in April 2023, the IRC scaled up its emergency response activities, including the deployment of a new team to Darfur. In January 2025, IRC was close to finalizing a funding agreement with USAID’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance that would have provided stable support for operations in Darfur and South Kordofan. However, the freeze on U.S. foreign assistance halted the issuance of that funding, and there is little expectation that it will resume soon. A grant from Carnegie Corporation would enable the IRC to implement a one-year, integrated health, nutrition, and water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) project across Tawila (North Darfur) and Zalingei (Central Darfur), delivering 13 targeted interventions for vulnerable internally displaced persons and conflict-affected communities—helping to stem the deepening humanitarian crisis in the region.

Project Title

For a project to expand educational services to school districts across the country

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Many children from immigrant backgrounds face challenges in schools due to poverty, language barriers, and unfamiliarity with the education system. With educators lacking understanding of how to support them, students experience stress, which negatively impacts their school performance. ImmSchools, an organization founded in 2018, fills a critical gap in the field by providing resources and professional development to school districts, leaders, and teachers, focusing on supporting immigrant students. With Corporation support, ImmSchools will triple their annual reach to meet growing demands from educators in the states. In response, they will provide educationalworkshops to more than 15,000 educators, students, and families, fostering informed communities, improving education access, and advancing immigrant civic integration.

Project Title

For support to expand National Education Equity Lab's model to serve an additional 26,000 additional high school students over three years

Date

Mar. 06, 2025

Duration

36 months

Description

The surest path toward economic mobility and civic participation remains a four-year college degree. However, students from low-income communities do not have consistent access to the academic preparation needed to unlock the world of higher education. Founded in 2019, with a single Harvard humanities course in twenty-five high schools, the National Education Equity Lab (Ed Equity Lab) has provided over 25k students across thirty-two states with access to actual credit-bearing courses at top universities at no cost to the students. Eighty percent of all students completing courses have passed, earning over 47k college credits, and representing an estimated $60M+ in college tuition cost savings. Prior Corporation support enabled the Ed Equity Lab to significantly scale the number of participating scholars and double and triple their presence in three of the country’s largest school districts. Renewed support will enable the Ed Equity Lab to expand the program to approximately 26k low-income high school scholars over the next three years and onboard two to three additional higher education partners.

Project Title

As a one-time grant for the Teaching America250 Awards

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

15 months

Description

Through fellowships, innovative learning tools, and an annual national summit, the Jack Miller Center (JMC) fosters a deeper understanding of the essential texts and ideas of the American political tradition among a network of over 4,000 K-12 educators and professors in forty-ninestates. The 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence in 2026 presents an opportune moment to celebrate the teachers who are equipping their students with a strong understanding of America’s founding principles. With support from Carnegie, JMC will launch the Teaching America250 Awards—a one-time national awards program recognizing one outstanding teacher in each state—in the fall of 2025. The Awards will empower exceptional educators to develop projects that celebrate America’s founding principles and bring its history to life: a powerful catalyst for renewed enthusiasm and meaningful action in American civic education. Applicants will design projects that teach the Declaration’s founding principles and foster civic purpose—via field trips, assemblies, clubs, or community art. Fifty educators will receive a $5,000 award to carry out their project, and a select number will present their projects at JMC’s National Summit on Civic Education.

Project Title

For project support to advance civic engagement and democracy education through hands-on, experiential learning opportunities

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Too few adolescents have access to high-quality civic learning during the middle school years. To address this gap, Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA), a national organization founded in 1912 and committed to fostering girls’ leadership and civic engagement, willlaunch a civics initiative for middle school girls delivered directly in schools through facilitators. The program builds on a successful 2025 pilot that demonstrated the effectiveness of school-based programs in reaching low-income girls who may not otherwise access troop experiences. With Carnegiesupport, GSUSA will create a co-branded Civics Series Experience Box containing program guides, activity prompts, and badges. Through in-school sessions, girls will earn the Democracy for Cadettes Badge, pursue the True North Award through values-driven civic action, and culminate with a real-world civics experience such as state capitol visits or advocacy events, earning a co-branded Carnegie patch. The initiative will launch in 40 schools across the country, reaching 2,000 Cadettes and their families, with priority given to low-income communities.

Website

Project Title

For Russia Matters

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Given Russia’s consequential role in world affairs, it is essential for the United States to have aclear and accurate understanding ofdevelopments in its foreign and domestic policies. With support from Carnegie, theRussia Matters website was launched in 2016 to offer fact-based analysis, data, and informed debate on the factors shaping Russian behavior. It serves expert and policymaking communities in the English-speaking world, as well as the general public. With final funding, the site will continue to grow its content by commissioning new research and analysis on topics such as Russia’s political, economic, and social stability; U.S.-Russia strategic relations; and the future of Euro-Atlantic security. The grant will support the production of research, publications, convenings, and briefings.

Project Title

For project support to expand the National Civics Bee Competition

Date

Jun. 05, 2025

Duration

18 months

Description

The Civics Bee is a national competition engaging students in history, government, and civics. Launched in 2024 by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation, it served 2,500 students from twenty-eight states. With Corporation support, it will expand to all fiftystates, partnering with 300 chambers to host essay contests, local quiz events, and state championships. By 2026, 50,000 middle schoolers will enter the first stage, with 6,000 advancing to local events and 900 to state competitions. State champions will compete in a nationally televised championship—featuring fortystates in 2025 and all fiftyby 2026. Prizes range from $500 locally to $100,000 nationally, with the Corporation presenting second- and third-place awards at the 2025 and 2026 championships.

Project Title

For core support of More Perfect

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

More Perfect is an alliance of cross-partisan partners that includes all thirty-seven U.S. Presidential Centers, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a diverse network of more than 130 additional organizations. This alliance is committed to strengthening and renewing the nation’s democratic foundations through five core democracy goals (as recommended by the American Academy’s A Common Purpose report): ensuring universal civic learning, making national and state service and volunteerism a shared expectation, reducing polarization by bridging divides, securing trusted elections and a more representative and responsive government, and expanding access to high-quality, nonpartisan, and reliable information at the local, state, and national levels. With Corporation support, More Perfect aims to protect and revitalize democracy as the United States approaches the commemoration of its 250th anniversary and beyond.

Project Title

For project support to expand the Democracy in Dialogue Virtual Exchange Program

Date

Jun. 05, 2025

Duration

18 months

Description

As the nation prepares to celebrate its 250th anniversary in 2026, the Smithsonian Institution will engage communities across the country with an invitation to celebrate, commemorate, and contemplate the founding of the nation and the tenets of our democracy. Unfortunately, many U.S. education systems currently lack comprehensive civics instruction, leaving a critical gap in educating students about the nation’s founding ideals and the rights and responsibilities of all citizens. Currently in its pilot phase, The Democracy in Dialogue Virtual Exchange Program (DiDVE) run by the Smithsonian empowers young people ages thirteen to eighteenby connecting local stories to national narratives through civic engagement and community storytelling. By combining place-based pedagogy with Smithsonian resources, DiDVE fosters meaningful dialogue among students from diverse backgrounds while providing educators with the tools and training to lead these exchanges. With the Corporation’s support, the Smithsonian aims to establish the program as a signature educational offering, expanding its reach from just over 1,000 students served as of spring 2025 to 5,000 studentsnationwide by the end of 2026.

Project Title

For support of the Think, Learn, Create Change program

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Many young people in the United States lack access to high-quality civic learning experiences during adolescence. This grant will support the expansion of Boys & Girls Clubs of America’s Think, Learn, Create Change civic engagement program from eighty to one hundred Clubs between 2025 and 2027, increasing youth participation from approximately 3,600 to 4,500. It will fund a new Carnegie-supported Youth Leading Change cohort involving ten Clubs, engaging 200 students in deeper civic learning through project-based action, mentorship, and advocacy events, while reaching an additional 1,000 youth through expanded Town Halls, Service Projects, and State Advocacy Days. The grant also supports the 2026 Summit for America’s Youth in Washington, D.C., which will convene 600 youth during the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Youth will also participate in advocacy training and engage with national leaders.

Website

Project Title

For project support to expand debate programs to foster civic skills

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

The Bill of Rights Institute (BRI) has been at the forefront of promoting civic education since 1999, striving to bridge gaps in civic knowledge and creating opportunities for students to engage in civic practices. With a vast network of over 83,000 civics teachers, BRI empowers both teachers and students through engaging debate initiatives that emphasize critical thinking, public speaking, and constructive dialogue. The proposed project aims to expand BRI’s impact by scaling up two key initiatives over the next two years. 1) The DebateWorks in the Classroom series will provide essential resources to 575 civics teachers, thereby impacting 60,000 students by facilitating discussions on current events and 2) the Debating Matters TransAtlantic Tournament will connect U.S. and U.K. students for global debates with plans for annual in-person championships. Support from the Corporation will enable BRI to significantly enhance student participation in debates, both in classrooms and through various events, fostering a deeper understanding of civic values and engagement.

Project Title

For one time funding for a project to develop social digital twin simulations for nuclear risk reduction as part of a Request for Proposals for the Consortium to Reduce Nuclear Dangers

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

As nuclear threats become more complex, traditional nuclear deterrence and escalation models are increasingly ill equipped to understand modern political, social, and behavioral drivers of nuclear dangers. To address this gap, Search for Common Ground, in partnership with CulturePulse, will launch the Modeling the Reduction of Nuclear Dangers (MODRN) initiative. The project will design and deploy a next-generation simulation platform using social digital twinning and multi-agent artificial intelligence capabilities to model escalation dynamics, test de-escalation pathways, and generate evidence-based options for reducing nuclear dangers. MODRN will engage intermediary actors, including governmental actors, to provide them with actionable tools to inform policy and dialogues that reduce nuclear dangers. MODRN’s goal is to give policymakers pathways for restraint and de-escalation during a nuclear crisis.

Project Title

For project support of the New York Alliance for Early College Pathways to advance State policy to expand early college pathways in New York

Date

Jun. 05, 2025

Duration

24 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 in New York, even though we know a four-year college degree continues to be the single best predictor of socioeconomic mobility. The New York Alliance for Early College Pathways (NY4ECP) is a non-partisan, cross-sector initiative formed in 2024, modeled after a successful statewide effort in Massachusetts, which enabled hiring flexibilities central to early college models and secured public funding for early college programs among other critical policy wins, including conferring state designations for twenty-six early college programs across thirty-eight participating high schools and twenty colleges, enabling approximately 4K students to accrue significant amounts of college credit. Corporate support will enable NY4ECP to advance state-level policies that strengthen and expand early college pathway programs over the next two years, grow to include 100 member organizations, and launch a policy fellowship for ten early college alumnae.

Project Title

For support of a public engagement campaign for a documentary exploring the continuum of principles and beliefs defining the American identity

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Citizen Film, a documentary production company founded in 2002, has more than two decades of experience promoting civic engagement through storytelling and by collaborating with civic organizations, educators, and community leaders. Its ongoing American Creed project, produced in partnership with Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David M. Kennedy, political scientist, Condoleezza Rice, PBS, and national civic organizations, explores America’s foundational ideals and encourages engagement across divides using character-driven stories. With PBS disseminating new American Creed content through 2025 and 2026 as part of its America @250 programming, Citizen Film will lead a public engagement campaign targeting high school students and intergenerational audiences nationwide. New episodes will feature dialogues between Kennedy, Rice, and young leaders, accompanied by curricular materials, educator workshops, and community events to inspire civic reflection and bridge divides. Since its 2018 launch, American Creed has engaged more than 1.5 million viewers, including high school students, across all fifty states, through broadcasts, curricular activities, and public events.

Project Title

For general support

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

Despite decades of research confirming the benefits of civic education, student proficiency has stagnated at twenty to twenty-five percent for more than twenty-five years. Declining public investment, politicized curricula, and rising polarization have exacerbated civic disengagement—particularly among youth, who increasingly report a loss of faith in democratic institutions. Founded by former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor in 2009, iCivics is the leading civic education organization in the United States, known for its accessible curriculum, bipartisan coalitions, and expansive policy reach. With Corporation support, iCivics will continue leading the CivXNow Coalition to advance bipartisan policies that restore civic learning to classrooms across all fifty states. Additionally, $500,000 of this general support grant will be dedicated to the Carnegie Civics Youth Fellowship—a national leadership and civic engagement initiative that will train young people to organize, advocate, and participate in efforts to improve democracy and civic education.

Project Title

For general support

Date

Mar. 06, 2025

Duration

36 months

Description

Founded in 2019, the American Exchange Project’s (AEP) mission is to foster meaningful connection between Americans from different political, socioeconomic, and cultural backgrounds. Its program brings high school seniors together for a two-week domestic exchange program. The experience consists of a week-long trip to an American hometown radically different from the one participating students call home, followed by a week where those students host other seniors in their hometown. In just four years, AEP has sent nearly 1,000 students on more than 150 exchanges across 36 states. With Corporation support, AEP will increase capacity from 650 seniors to 3,000 students annually in all 50 states to encourage meaningful dialogue between people across lines of difference and equip young people with the knowledge, skills, disposition, and agency to actively engage as members of their communities, states, and country.

Project Title

As a final grant for the University Consortium

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

36 months

Description

At a time whenpublic discourse is increasingly polarized and deepexpertise on Russia is in decline, the University Consortium (UC)strengthens the foundations for more coherent, coordinated, and far-sightedpolicy toward Russia and European security.By convening scholars, policy practitioners, and rising experts from across Europe, America, Russia, and beyond, the UC promotes informed, cross-regional debate that bridges national, ideological, and generational divide. With renewed support, the program will deepen transatlantic collaboration on Russia-West relations; enhance Westernstrategic thinking through academic diplomacy; train and mentor the next generation of Russia/Eurasia experts; and strengthen a growingalumni network.

Project Title

For the Project on Media and National Security

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

In an era where national security threats are increasingly complex and global, accurate and fact-based reporting is crucial. The Project for Media and National Security (PMNS) responds tothis need. Through its flagship initiative, the Defense Writers Group (DWG), PMNS enhances fact-based journalism by improving reporters’ access to senior leaders who offer essential context and insights into security challenges. This ensures more informed and truthful media coverage of these critical issues. Reporters use these interactions and conversations to craft articles and stories that are published worldwide. Beyond the DWG, PMNS also hosts seminars on topics for students and manages the archive of transcripts from the journalist convenings.

Website

Project Title

For project support to expand reach and services through their English as a Second Language program

Date

Jun. 05, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

The Education program has selected eleven public libraries from nine states for their impactful programs and broad reach as part of its Libraries as Pillars of Education and Democracy initiative, a two-year, $5 million grant program launched in December 2024. These libraries were chosen through a highly competitive process from over 1,400 expressions of interest, demonstrating a strong commitment to expanding English language proficiency programs for adults and enhancing college readiness and access for teens. With this support, the selected libraries will scale their impact, strengthen community partnerships, and create new opportunities for students. The Gwinnett County Public Library (GCPL) is among the selected libraries. With Corporation support, GCPL will expand its English language learning programs to better serve Gwinnett’s diverse and rapidly growing immigrant population, where nearly 40 percent of households speak a language other than English at home. The library will offer structured English language courses alongside digital literacy and workforce development training, ensuring adult learners gain the skills needed for economic mobility and civic participation. Additionally, GCPL will enhance its college readiness initiatives, providing teens with mentorship, test preparation, and resources to navigate higher education pathways.

Website

Project Title

For project support of The Team's athlete civic ambassadors high school expansion program

Date

Sep. 11, 2025

Duration

15 months

Description

Research from CIRCLE at Tufts University shows that peer-led, culturally relevant outreach—especially by athletes—can boost youth civic participation. The Team, a project of the Bridge Alliance Education Fund, is a national nonprofit that embeds year-round civic engagement into the culture of athletics and has reached more than 250,000 individuals nationally through their work with college athletes and coaches as trusted civic messengers. With Corporation support, The Team aims to bring their signature youth leadership development, peer-to-peer organizing, and civic storytelling programs to high schools nationally, ensuring that more young people are inspired and prepared to participate meaningfully in civic life. The Team will also engage students online through virtual events and youth-created media that promotes civic leadership and a pro-democracy culture. This high school expansion initiative aims to reach more than 5,000 students during the 2025-2026 school year.

Project Title

For project support of Theirworld’s Peace, Security and Education Task Team of Global Youth Ambassadors

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

18 months

Description

At a time of rising conflict and polarization, engaging young people as leaders in peacebuilding and civic participation is urgent. Theirworld, a global education nonprofit, runs the Global Youth Ambassador (GYA) program, the world’s largest network of youth campaigners for education, with 2,300 Ambassadors from 140 countries and more than 6,000 alumni. Ambassadors, ages 18–28, are selected for their leadership potential and trained in advocacy, campaigning, and community mobilization. With Carnegie support, Theirworld will launch a new Peace, Security, and Education Task Team within the GYA program. The grant will directly train ten to fifteenAmbassadors with lived experience of conflict, equipping them with skills in civic dialogue, conflict resolution, and leadership. Ambassadors will design community action plans and lead youth consultations with 500 peers worldwide, culminating in a published report. A digital storytelling and advocacy campaign will amplify youth perspectives globally. This project builds youth leadership for peace, security, and civic participation.

Project Title

For support of National Voter Registration Day

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

36 months

Description

As many as one in four eligible Americans are not registered to vote and every year, millions of Americans are unable to vote because of a problem with their voter registration, a missed deadline, an outdated or missing record, among other issues. Established in 2012, National Voter Registration Day (NVRD) is a day of coordinated, nonpartisan media and field events aimed at raising awareness of the registration process and empowering citizens to access their fundamental right to vote. Backed by a bipartisan coalition and embraced across sectors, the holiday remains a nonpartisan space for celebrating and fostering broad-based civic participation. To date, the partners in NVRD have registered more than six million eligible voters. With Corporation support, Nonprofit VOTE will continue to spearhead NVRD and collaborate with corporate partners, national nonprofits, election associations of both parties, and other civic institutions in engaging millions of voters in the democratic process.

Project Title

For one time funding for a project to develop an integrated, open-access model that simulates the full spectrum of the consequences of nuclear conflict as part of a Request for Proposals for the Consortium to Reduce Nuclear Dangers

Date

Dec. 11, 2025

Duration

24 months

Description

For the first time since the 1980s, the United Nations General Assembly has mandated a new scientific study assessing the effects of nuclear conflict. However, the UN Scientific Panel on the Effects of Nuclear War will rely on outside expertise to produce its results. While past studies have examined discrete elements of nuclear war effects, there is no integrated framework capable of simulating the full range of immediate and long-term impacts—from blast, fire, and fallout to disruptions of climate, agriculture, the global economy, and space infrastructure. To address this major gap in understanding nuclear dangers, the University of Wisconsin–Madison will develop a new open-access modeling capability that integrates nuclear weapons effects with macroeconomic, agricultural, and earth system models, and will produce a novel first-order model of nuclear detonations in space to assess risks to satellites and related infrastructure.

Project Title

For general support

Date

Mar. 07, 2024

Duration

24 months

Description

Despite China’s global rise, U.S. companies, government agencies, non-profit organizations, and academic institutions face a talent deficit of Americans with robust Chinese language capabilities and experience in China. Without a deep pool of China-knowledgeable professionals, Americans in both public and private sectors will continue to operate at a disadvantage. The American Mandarin Society (AMS) is dedicated to nurturing the current and future generations of China-focused professionals and creating meaningful channels for dialogue. With continued Corporation support, AMS will promote the career development of Americans across professions interested in China through a portfolio of unique programs, including fellowships for emerging bilingual American journalists and mid-career African-Americanprofessionals and multiple online Chinese-language learning tools.

Project Title

As a final core support of Springpoint

Date

Mar. 07, 2024

Duration

18 months

Description

The New Designs portfolio promotes innovative school models that personalize student learning and seeks to build knowledge about those new approaches. Springpoint, seeded over a decade ago as part of Carnegie Corporation’s Opportunity by Design initiative, partners with communities to transform student learning experiences so that they are personalized, mastery-based, student-driven, and integrate social-emotional development. Partnering with over 100 high schools and districts to date, Springpoint accomplishes its mission in part through its Transformative Learning Experiences (TLEs), rigorous, project-based curricular units focused on real-world problems and authentic learning experiences. TLEs are accompanied by implementation guidance designed to build educator capacity and reduce the time and energy educators need to create, use, and personalize project-based learning for their students. Support from the Corporation will allow Springpoint to gather data on current experiences of those using TLEs in order to measure the impact of the approach, which will in turn inform and improve model approach.

Project Title

As a final grant for general support

Date

Mar. 07, 2024

Duration

24 months

Description

Although it has been decades since the last major immigration policy reforms, the issue has historically enjoyed bipartisan support. However, with increasing global migration and anti-immigrant rhetoric, the topic has become increasingly polarized, blocking immigration reform policies from advancing. Founded in 2008 with Corporation support, America’s Voice Education Fund (AVEF) is a communications hub working to build public and political support for pro-immigrant policies in the United States. It works closely with national, state, and local advocacy organizations to develop unified messaging that advances pro-immigrant narratives across media platforms. These messages are disseminated through rapid response communications, traditional media events, and social media, with the aim of educating journalists, policymakers, and the public about the benefits of pro-immigrant policies. With Corporation support, AVEF will continue to develop and disseminate positive, pro-immigrant narratives.

Project Title

As a final grant for general support

Date

Mar. 07, 2024

Duration

24 months

Description

As the 2024 elections approach, issue campaigns and ballot measures offer the opportunity for direct participation on a range of matters, promoting more equitable and just governance structures. The ballot initiative process allows citizens to propose statutes or constitutional amendments, depending on the state, and collect signatures to place their proposals on the ballot for voters to decide. Twenty-six states allow for citizen-initiated ballot measures. Founded in 1999, the Ballot Initiative Strategy Center (BISC) is a primary source of research, information, expertise, and training on ballot measures and campaigns. In recent years, BISC has worked on initiatives on voting rights, election administration, immigrant integration, and economic inequality. In addition, BISC tracks legislation around referenda and ballot measures and conducts research on national and state-level trends. With Corporation support, BISC will educate the public on the power of ballot measures as effective tools to increase civic engagement and promote positive social and economic change.

Project Title

For general support

Date

Jun. 06, 2024

Duration

15 months

Description

Today, more than 5o million voting-eligible adults are not registered to vote in the United States. This population is disproportionately comprised of the young, the poor, and communities of color. This demographic also disproportionately utilizes medical emergency services for non-urgent care, due to a lack of access to standard healthcare channels. Founded in 2019, Vot-ER is a nonpartisan initiative dedicated to increasing civic engagement among a population underrepresented in political discourse. Its community of 30,000 healthcare professionals and organizers has expanded into over five hundred hospitals and clinics, helping more than 47,000 Americans register and prepare to vote to date. With Corporation support, Vot-ER will expand its infrastructure and capacity to support the growing number of healthcare professionals across the country who are interested in engaging Americans in the civic process.

Website

Project Title

As a final general support grant

Date

Mar. 07, 2024

Duration

24 months

Description

Students from historically marginalized communities face greater barriers to higher education and economic mobility and the schools that serve them often have the least capacity to bridge the gap, dual challenges that were exacerbated by the pandemic. As schools seek to address these challenges while also navigating teacher shortages, programs that personalize learning and reimagine the teacher role are needed more than ever. Throughline Learning (Throughline) has been focused on improving the educational experiences of underserved students for over fifteen years, helping schools implement personalized, culturally relevant teaching practices at scale. Based in Rhode Island, Throughline has built extensive relationships across the state by collaborating with every local school district and established itself as a national leader in the field of student-centered practices. With Corporation support, Throughline developed a school model and instructional toolkit, which they have equipped 3,000 educators to implement, reaching approximately 40,000 students. Recent Corporation support seeded Throughline’s Community Educator model, which is training a new generation of teachers to address staffing challenges and meet students’ academic, social, and emotional needs. This final grant will enable Throughline to expand the number of schools implementing this approach by working with in-service and aspiring educators within the teacher pipeline.

Project Title

For general support

Date

Mar. 07, 2024

Duration

36 months

Description

Recent global challenges have highlighted the need to revitalize and update the tools and processes of U.S. foreign policy bureaucracies. The innovative think tank, fp21, seeks to modernize these government institutions by helping build and support a culture of evidence-based decision-making. Rather than focusing on specific regions or topics, fp21 homes in on some of the key deficiencies in foreign policy decision-making mechanisms. Through a network of experienced governmental officials and non-governmental researchers and practitioners, fp21 leverages evidence of effective practices and deep understanding of government operations to design actionable recommendations for policy reform. Renewed support from the Corporation will help fp21 advance various strategic and operational reforms at the Department of State and in Congress, as well as further the broad dissemination of their work.

Website

http://fp21.org

Project Title

As a final grant for a project to support NextGenScience to review OpenSciEd high school instructional units

Date

Mar. 07, 2024

Duration

9 months

Description

High-quality instructional materials are an essential component of any meaningful effort to improve K–12 science outcomes at scale. The science instructional materials market, however, currently includes few high-quality, standards-aligned K–12 science programs, particularly curriculum for high school science courses. NextGenScience at WestEd provides formative feedback to instructional materials developers so they can improve the quality of their materials designed for the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS). Using a peer review panel of teachers and the EQuIP rubric for science, NextGenScience will complete their review of six OpenSciEd instructional units across three high school science courses in biology, chemistry, and physics.

Project Title

For general support

Date

Jun. 06, 2024

Duration

18 months

Description

Latinos are the largest minority group and the fastest growing demographic in the United States. There are 36 million Latinos eligible to vote in the United States and only half are registered to vote, which is one of the lowest voter registrations of any demographic group. Founded in 2004, the Voto Latino Foundation is a nonpartisan organization committed to engaging young Latino Americans around the civic engagement process using digital media and technology to close the voter registration gap. The organization provides culturally relevant resources across its digital platforms, reaching more than 22 million viewers a month on a broad range of issue areas. In 2020, it registered 600,000 voters. With Corporation support, the Voto Latino Foundation will continue to register, educate, and mobilize Latino voters around the 2024 elections to maximize civic participation.

Project Title

For general support

Date

Jun. 06, 2024

Duration

15 months

Description

Women are the majority of voters, volunteers, and donors in the United States. However, issues that impact women, especially young women 18-35 years of age, are often ignored or dismissed in national conversations. Additionally, young women comprise the larger part of groups most targeted for voter suppression, including voters of color, low-income voters, and college students. Founded in 2019, Supermajority Education Fund is a nonpartisan organization dedicated to research and public engagement around young women’s civic participation, utilizing a network of more than 75,000 women throughout the country. With Corporation support, Supermajority Education Fund will educate and mobilize women around civic issues, including nonpartisan voter participation and policy advocacy.

Project Title

For core support of its nonpartisan youth voter education and outreach program

Date

Sep. 12, 2024

Duration

15 months

Description

Founded in 2015, Civic Nation houses a number of national initiatives aimed at increasing voting among those least likely to vote, including youth. Among its initiatives are When We All Vote, a nonpartisan initiative with the mission to change the voting culture and to increase participation in each election. As the 2024 elections approach, When We All Vote will partner with the entertainment industry, Fortune 500 companies, nonprofits, and educational institutions, to engage and mobilize young voters, particularly in low-income communities and communities of color. With Corporation support, through its ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge, Civic Nation will recruit community colleges and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) to engage young voters and ensure they are ready to vote. In 2022, Civic Nation’s turnout data showed that sixty-fourpercent of its constituents voted, an eighteenpercent increase over the national turnout rate.

Project Title

For core support of its voting access and engagement work

Date

Sep. 12, 2024

Duration

12 months

Description

Voting is one of the nation’s most fundamental rights. Yet, access to the vote for people with disabilities continues to be a challenge. Founded in 1983, the National Disability Rights Network’s (NDRN), a leader in the disability rights movement, works to protect and engage the disability vote and advocates for federal support on behalf of people with disabilities. In 2016, forty percent of America’s polling places were found to be fully accessible by the Government Accountability Office, highlighting a significant rise from sixteen percent in 2000 with much more to improve. With Corporation support, National Disability Rights Network will provide training and technical assistance to member organizations nationwide to protect access to the vote and expand options for voters (including voting by mail, drop box, or curbside).

Project Title

As a final general support grant

Date

Mar. 07, 2024

Duration

15 months

Description

Parents have a unique and critical role in improving our public schools. In communities where parents are connected and deeply engaged, public schools tend to be more effective. Innovate Public Schools, a nonprofit whose mission is to build the power of parents and communities to demand and support the creation of world-class public schools, helps parents organize and advocate successfully for better schools in their communities and hold the system accountable to the needs of their children. Continued support from the Corporation will enable Innovate Public School to continue building their National Organizing program, through which they train and support other education organizations to build their capacity to organize parents. This includes a six-month Community Organizer Training Program (COTP) and three-day National Parent Leader Institutes (PLI). Through this renewal, Innovate will 1) continue the work of building the capacity of parents and families to organize, advocate, and demand high-quality schools for their children and 2) refine and launch their new strategy for national parent power-building.

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