Deadline: 15 May 2019
Arts & Humanities Research Council (AHRC) has announced the Nahrein Network Research Grant Awards 2019 to support interdisciplinary research to enable universities, museums, and community groups to better serve local, post-conflict needs.
Aims
The Nahrein Network fosters the sustainable development of antiquity, heritage and the humanities in the post-conflict Middle East. They have five clearly defined aims:
- To better understand the current situation
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- They aims to develop a fuller historical understanding of the current exclusion of local experts and audiences from the production and consumption of knowledge about Middle Eastern antiquity. To do this they will:
- Conduct focus groups to scope current interests and expertise, obstacles and opportunities for work on history, culture and heritage in Middle Eastern universities, museums and archives, NGOs and community groups.
- Carry out and fund historical research on the current deracination of ancient Middle Eastern history and archaeology, through archival research and oral histories of the politics of the region’s past. They will cover Ottoman times, through the Mandate era, independence, Baathism, to the present, and focus especially on the exclusions of women and minority social groups.
- They aims to develop a fuller historical understanding of the current exclusion of local experts and audiences from the production and consumption of knowledge about Middle Eastern antiquity. To do this they will:
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- To raise the profile of local expertise
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- They aims to facilitate Middle Eastern humanities academics in re-engaging with regional and global academic communities, as producers of research for international consumption. To do this they will:
- Develop training programmes, bespoke visiting scholarships, and peer-mentoring groups on relevant research methodology, grant writing and academic leadership. They will offer particular support for participation and leadership from women, minorities, and Early Career Researchers.
- Offer funding opportunities for the current generation of Middle Eastern humanities academics to undertake collaborative, transregional research projects, with support to disseminate their methods, findings and outputs.
- Trial new university-level pedagogies of Mesopotamian history in Arabic and other local languages, in order to produce the next generation of local researchers on local Middle Eastern antiquity. In this way they will widen access to the core research skills of post-excavation identification, decipherment and analysis of archaeological finds, through ancient languages and scripts, images, and objects.
- They aims to facilitate Middle Eastern humanities academics in re-engaging with regional and global academic communities, as producers of research for international consumption. To do this they will:
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- To improve the job prospects of the region’s youth
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- They aims to improve employability and leadership potential for humanities graduates from Middle Eastern universities, by:
- Initiating dialogue between teachers, students, ministries and employers to identify the most needed and valued humanities-based skills and attributes in the region’s modernising economy.
- Funding research projects to develop locally effective university-level teaching of transferable humanities skills.
- Contributing to UNESCO Iraq’s advisory work on humanities curriculum reform in schools for the Iraqi Ministry of Education, helping to better prepare school leavers for university.
- They aims to improve employability and leadership potential for humanities graduates from Middle Eastern universities, by:
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- To help heritage organisations better serve local needs
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- They aims to enable Middle Eastern museums, archives, cultural heritage sites to contribute to local tourism and knowledge economies. To do this they will:
- Bring together ancient historians, educators, cultural heritage professionals, local NGOs and community groups to better understand needs and interests, obstacles and opportunities.
- Carrying out and funding research to develop re-usable, adaptable case studies in public education, whether in museums, on UNESCO World Heritage sites, or other cultural centres, whether for use on location and/or in print, broadcast, and online media.
- Working with UNESCO Iraq to advocate for the social and economic importance of cultural institutions in local and regional development.
- They aims to enable Middle Eastern museums, archives, cultural heritage sites to contribute to local tourism and knowledge economies. To do this they will:
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- To help post-conflict healing and reconciliation
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- They aims to promote ancient Middle Eastern history as a ‘safe’ space for public debate around sensitive social, and political matters of current concern. To do this they will:
- Fund research projects on themes of common interest to antiquity and modernity, such as: exile, diaspora and return; cultural memory and forgetting; local, national, and regional identities and interactions; living in the landscape; legal systems and personal rights.
- Use these findings to help the UN Assistance Mission to Iraq (UNAMI), local NGOs and community groups use antiquity as a channel for public discussion of issues around post-conflict reconciliation and change.
- They aims to promote ancient Middle Eastern history as a ‘safe’ space for public debate around sensitive social, and political matters of current concern. To do this they will:
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Funding Information
- Small grants of up to £30,000 (FEC) for projects led by Iraqi researchers, or collaborations between Iraqi and UK researchers.
- Large grants of up to £100,000 (FEC) for collaborations between Iraqi, Lebanese or Turkish and UK researchers.
Eligibility Criteria
- They invite applications from postdoctoral researchers (or equivalent) who are employed by, or have an official connection with:
- UK or Iraqi, Lebanese or Turkish Higher Education Institution (i.e., a university or similar organisation).
- Non-academic organisation (e.g. cultural heritage organisation, NGO, community group) in the UK or Iraq, Lebanon or Turkey with a demonstrated capacity to conduct research.
- Applications for small grants must be led by an Iraqi, Lebanese or Turkish researcher and do not need UK collaborators.
How to apply
Applicants can download the applications form via given website.
For more information, please visit https://ahrc.ukri.org/funding/apply-for-funding/current-opportunities/nahrein-network-research-grant-awards/