Deadline: 2 January 2025
The Greenwall Foundation is requesting proposals for the Spring 2025 cycle of its bioethics grants program “Making a Difference in Real-World Bioethics Dilemmas” to support research to help resolve important emerging or unanswered bioethics problems in clinical, biomedical, or public health decision-making, policy, or practice.
The Foundation’s vision is to make bioethics integral to decisions in health care, policy, and research. Their mission is to expand bioethics knowledge to improve clinical, biomedical, and public health decision-making, policy, and practice. Projects funded under the Making a Difference program should promote the Foundation’s vision and mission through innovative bioethics research that will have a real-world, practical impact.
In addition, the Foundation is committed to building a broad and inclusive bioethics that welcomes everyone, elevates many perspectives, asks a wide range of questions, and learns from diverse voices.
Topics
- While they welcome all innovative proposals that will have a real-world impact, they are particularly interested in proposals that address the ethical and policy issues raised by the following priority topics:
- Trust in science, medicine, and public health;
- Bias and discrimination in health care, which may be based on a broad range of characteristics;
- Public health crises (related to, for example, emerging infectious diseases, climate change, and the opioid epidemic), including their impact on mental health;
- Healthcare access, costs, and resource allocation
- Proposals for projects that address other real-world, practical bioethics problems are also welcome.
Eligibility Criteria
- Projects may be empirical, conceptual, or normative. All proposals should explain how they will help address a real-world bioethics dilemma. Projects to analyze the normative implications of already-completed empirical research are encouraged. The Foundation will support mentored projects in which a postdoctoral fellow or early-career faculty member works closely with an experienced bioethics scholar. The Foundation will also consider pilot or feasibility projects to evaluate an innovative intervention to resolve a bioethics dilemma, with the goal of obtaining funding from other sources for a larger evaluation or demonstration project. Some highly promising projects may be funded for an initial phase, with additional funding contingent on achieving clear milestones.
- The research team must have relevant and appropriate expertise to carry out the proposed project. Successful teams commonly involve a bioethics scholar and persons with on-the-ground experience with the bioethics dilemma, for example, in clinical care; biomedical research; biotechnology, pharmaceutical, big data, or artificial intelligence companies; or public service. Such collaboration can specify the bioethics problems that clinicians, researchers, policymakers, public health officials, and others face in their daily work, and facilitate practical resolutions to these problems. Applicants are also encouraged to engage with relevant lay or community stakeholders throughout their project.
- They expect grantees to disseminate their research through practical articles in peer-reviewed journals that reach the appropriate audience for the topic studied, presentations in relevant professional meetings, and in other ways that will increase real-world impact. Applicants should clearly describe, for example, how they will disseminate their results beyond academic audiences, such as to lay and community groups or to leaders of institutions who could implement the project’s recommendations or act upon empirical findings (e.g., leaders of clinical services, research programs, institutional review boards, or medical education).
- They encourage applications that align with the Foundation’s strategic priorities: shaping and supporting a broad, inclusive bioethics and increasing bioethics’ impact on policymaking. Applicants should think critically about how their project would move the field of bioethics forward in these areas. When applicable, include details in your submitted materials to highlight the relevance of the Foundation’s strategic priorities to your proposal.
Ineligibility Criteria
- Projects with the following characteristics will not be funded under this program:
- Projects for which bioethics is not the main focus;
- Projects that simply describe or analyze bioethics issues or provide a conceptual framework, without making practical recommendations for resolving the issues;
- Projects that implement or make incremental improvements in established approaches to bioethics problems, build institutional infrastructure, or provide bioethics education, training, or coursework;
- Projects that have predetermined conclusions or advocate for predetermined positions;
- Projects whose main goal is to convene or enhance a meeting, unless there is a well-developed plan to produce a major peer-reviewed publication with consensus recommendations, guidelines, or best practices that have a strong likelihood of real-world implementation. The applicant must have a strong record in convening similar successful impactful meetings;
- Projects to support or extend ongoing or core activities of an organization; and
- Projects with a principal investigator who does not have a PhD, JD, MD, or an equivalent doctoral-level degree.
Evaluation Criteria
- In evaluating proposals, the foundation will consider:
- The ways in which the project promotes the Foundation’s vision and mission and supports the Foundation’s strategic priorities. Importantly, projects that aim to impact public policy must not constitute advocacy projects with predetermined conclusions.
- The project’s approach, including its innovative nature, and how it relates to (and builds on) current scholarship.
- The appropriateness and rigor of the methods, analysis plan, and strategy.
- The likelihood that the project will impact policy or practice.
- The appropriateness and inclusiveness of the project’s planned approach to dissemination and implementation, including to stakeholder audiences beyond academia and key individuals who can change practice or policy.
- The professional backgrounds of the research team, including the team’s expertise in relevant disciplines and their familiarity and experience with the bioethics problems to be addressed, and their success in carrying out similar projects. Early-career investigators are advised to apply with a mentor who actively collaborates in all phases of the project.
- The success of the research team in publishing practical bioethics articles and disseminating the results of their research to relevant stakeholders outside of academia.
- The reasonableness of the budget and project timeline. Projects with smaller budgets and shorter timelines will receive priority.
For more information, visit The Greenwall Foundation.