skip to main  |
      skip to sidebar
          
        
          
        
Preservation and Access Research and Development grants support projects  that address major challenges in preserving or providing access to  humanities collections and resources. These challenges include the need  to find better ways to preserve materials of critical importance to the  nation’s cultural heritage—from fragile artifacts and manuscripts to  analog recordings and digital assets subject to technological  obsolescence—and to develop advanced modes of searching, discovering,  and using such materials. Applicants should define a specific problem,  devise procedures and potential solutions, and explain how they would  evaluate their projects and disseminate their findings. Project results  must serve the needs of a significant segment of humanists. Eligible  projects include the development of technical standards, best practices,  and tools for preserving and creating access to humanities collections;   the exploration of more effective scientific and technical methods of  preserving humanities collections;  the development of automated procedures and computational tools to  integrate, analyze, and repurpose humanities data in disparate online  resources; and  the investigation and testing of new ways of providing digital access to  humanities materials that are not easily digitized using current  methods.  NEH especially encourages applications that address the following  topics:  Digital Preservation: how to preserve digital humanities materials,  including born-digital materials, for which there is no analog  counterpart;  Recorded Sound and Moving Image Collections: how to preserve and  increase access to the record of the twentieth century contained in  these formats; and   Preventive Conservation: how to protect and slow the deterioration of  humanities collections through the use of sustainable preservation  strategies.
Amount: $350,000
Date due: May 19, 2011