LSA is investing nearly $4.5 million in grant funding for four innovative new faculty research projects. The four winning proposals address climate change, the carceral state, systemic racism, and the impact of microplastics on the environment.
The grants are part of the Meet the Moment Research Initiative, a new program focused on faculty research and scholarship across the liberal arts that address todays most pressing societal issues with the intention of creating real, lasting change.
These projects showcase the breadth and depth of LSAs research capabilities and represent a monumental investment in an internal research competition by a liberal arts college.
We are thrilled to announce the first round of winners of our new Meet the Moment Research Initiative, said LSA Dean Anne Curzan. The liberal arts and sciences inform so much of how and why we navigate our own lives socially, economically and politically in the past and present, and help explain the mysteries of the natural world.
There are so many challenges our society is facing right now that have long-term effects for generations to come. With this research initiative, we can address these issues in a way that will encourage and empower people to make positive, purposeful change.
The project teams are led by LSA faculty and will include undergraduate and graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, staff and other colleagues across the humanities and social and natural sciences, as well as community members.
After the initial announcement of the programs launch, faculty members spent months preparing and developing proposals for grant funding.
Proposals fall into two grant categories:
All four projects will begin between July 1 and Sept. 1, 2022. The inaugural Meet the Moment research projects are:
As conversations around anti-racism continue across the country, this project investigates and exposes the historical and current state of the U.S. carceral system, including mass incarceration, police brutality, wrongful convictions, racial criminalization and immigrant detention.
The team will partner with community organizations and affected individuals to center the voices and lived experiences of incarcerated people and criminalized communities, to bring transparency and democratic accountability to law enforcement, and to change the narrative around the carceral state in an effort to dismantle systemic racism and promote social justice.
Project team: Heather Ann Thompson, Christian Davenport, Matthew Lassiter, Kentaro Toyama, Jesse Hoffnung-Garskof, Melissa Borja, Ruby Tapia, and William Lopez
Total award: $1,999,834
The harmful effects of microplastics in water and on land have been the topic of many scholars research in recent years, but little is known about its impact in the air.
This team will research how microplastics pollution in the atmosphere has impacted residents in Michigan, and how racial, economic, and geographic disparities have played a role in exposure levels. The research will help inform how to better address this issue and promote environmental justice.
Project team: Anne McNeil, Andrew Ault, Ambuj Tewari, Paul Zimmerman, Allison Steiner and Mary Starr
Total award: $2 million
This project explores wild rice restoration in the Matthaei Botanical Gardens Willow Pond at the University of Michigan.
The team will evaluate water, sediment and biodiversity by examining the Mnomen plant. The project will be an inclusive partnership with Michigans tribal communities, as the Mnomen is an at-risk native plant and traditional food for the Anishinaabek community.
Project Team: Selena Smith, Kerstin Barndt, Nathan Sheldon, Tony Kolenic, David Michener, Michael Kost and Roger LaBine
Total award: $249,572
Climate change is one of the most challenging issues the world faces today. This project examines how to improve communication about the effect of climate change on municipal water supplies.
To do this, the team will study Californias Mono Lake, one of Los Angeles main water supplies. They will combine hydrology and geochemistry research with community engagement to help make projections of Mono Lakes future water levels and translate those results into everyday language for the public.
Project team: Naomi Levin, Benjamin Passey, Andrew Gronewold, and Arya Harp
Total award: $249,855
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