Past External Grants

CSWS External Grants Received 1998-2008

Women of Color, Borders, and Power (2008)
ncrwsite-1 Prioritizing leadership development of junior faculty women of color with a retreat and workshops.

Lynn Fujiwara

 

Funding Source: National Council for Research on Women Principle Investigators:Lynn Stephen and Departments:Center for the Study of Women in Society / Women's and Gender Studies Amount Funded:$8,000 Links: Project website

 

Mesoamerican Cultures and their Histories (2008)
picture-2A four-week summer institute for school faculty (grades 6-12) of Social Studies and History selected from applicants around the United States. It was designed to facilitate the expanded integration of Mesoamerican cultural heritage materials – new discoveries and the latest research interpreting the same -- into curricular units or lesson plans that will appeal to a variety of learners and bring greater multicultural depth and understanding into the classroom. Lady Four Death Gives Birth from a Mixtec Group Codices. Photo by John Pohl, courtesy of FAMSI.

Funding Source:National Endowment for the Humanities Directors:Stephanie Wood and Judith Musick Department:Center for the Study of Women in Society Amount Funded: $175,000 Links: Project website

 

The Kislak Techialoyans at the Library of Congress (2006-2007)
picture-1
A two-year grant to digitize, translate, and annotate four manuscripts in Nahuatl that were recently donated to the Library of Congress. Ultimate aim: a large manuscript digitization project that would increase access to details about gender.

Two indigenous women standing from Mapa de Iztacapan, Book V, Folio 01v

Funding Source:National Endowment for the Humanities, Collaborative Research Grant Principle Investigators:Stephanie Wood and Judith Musick Department:Center for the Study of Women in Society Amount Funded: $100,000 Links: Project Website

 

Women’s Acceptability of the Vaginal Diaphragm (2001, 2002)
Sandra Marie Harvey received funding to study whether women are willing to use a diaphragm not just to prevent pregnancy but also to protect them from sexually transmitted diseases. The U.S. National Institutes of Health awarded a $1 million grant to the three-year project, which interviewed current and former diaphragm users and try to get young women at risk of contracting STDs to use the device.
Diaphragm Study Poster
Funding Source: National Institutes of Health Principle Investigator:Marie Harvey Department:Center for the Study of Women in Society Amount Funded: $1,000,000

 

PARTNERS: Partners Against Risk-Taking:  A Networking, Evaluation and Research Study (2000, 2001)

partners-poster

This study was funded to assess the contraceptive outcomes of the Partners Against Risk-Taking: A Networking, Evaluation and Research Study (PARTNERS). The PARTNERS project developed and evaluated a 3-session intervention to help young women and their male partners reduce their risk for unintended pregnancies, and HIV and other STDs.

Funding Source: Centers for Disease Control/Public Health Institute Principle Investigator:Marie Harvey Department:Center for the Study of Women in Society Amount Funded: $129,795

 

Oregon Families Diverted from or Leaving TANF and Food Stamps: Self-Sufficiency and Family Well-Being (1999, 2001)
Policy Matters, Volume 2

The CSWS Welfare Research Team spent three years surveying and interviewing former welfare recipients and analyzing their experiences. They found that many former clients found work, but most of the jobs were low-wage, and few provided benefits. With Oregon's souring economy, things have become even worse for low-income families.

Funding Source: Oregon Department of Human Services Principle Investigator:Sandra Morgen Department:Center for the Study of Women in Society Amount Funded: $239,000 Links: Project Website

 

Ecological Conversations: Gender, Science, and the Sacred (1999–2002)
Ecological Conversations Logo

This three-year project focused on contributions to the conversation from visiting scholars chosen from a pool of applicants from across the United States and internationally. Each year five visiting scholars focused on a different theme for the conversations.  The first year's theme was issues of gender and ecology, environmental justice, or ecofeminism.  The second year's theme was the cultural analysis of scientific concepts, practices and policies.  The last year focused on ways in which scientific and sacred epistemologies were integrated and how this integration (or lack) influenced our sense of place.  The final feature was a week of conversations with all fifteen scholars weaving together the previous themes in an effort to identify ways in which the integration of gender, science and the sacred are practiced and understood. Three outside speakers also contributed to that last week of conversations.

Search in the UO Knight Library under "videos and films" with the key words "Ecological Conversations" to find the talk titles of the fifteen presenters and the three invited guest speakers to the program.

Funding Source: Rockefeller Foundation Principle Investigators:Irene Diamond and Sandra Morgen Department:Center for the Study of Women in Society Amount Funded: $281,650