Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal
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Purpose
Funding is intended to support scientific renewal and development in research that can help to advance the international research front. This call is therefore targeted towards researchers who have demonstrated the ability to conduct research of high scientific quality. Grant proposals will be accepted for projects within all disciplines and research areas.
About the call for proposals
Grant applications will be accepted for projects in all disciplines and research areas, and funding is available for both basic and applied research projects.
The call encompasses many topics. You will find a specified amount and priorities for the selection of projects to receive funding under each topic.
It will be possible to create and fill in an application form from 15 December.
You can select one topic in the application form. If you select Ground-breaking Research (FRIPRO), you do not need to submit the attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’. If you select another topic, this attachment is mandatory.
Applicants who have selected topics other than Ground-breaking Research, but who are not granted funding, will compete for the funding for Ground-breaking Research if they meet the qualification requirement: a mark of 6 or 7 for all the criteria assessed by the panel.
You can only be the project manager for one application submitted for either a Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal (this call), Researcher Project for Young Talents, Three-year Researcher Project with International Mobility (deadline 2 February 2022), Knowledge-building Project for Industry or Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges (deadline 9 February 2022).
The Norwegian-language call for proposals is the legally binding version.
Who is eligible to apply?
Only approved Norwegian research organisations may apply. See here for the list of approved Norwegian research organisations.
Who can participate in the project?
Requirements relating to the Project Owner
The organisation listed as the Project Owner in the application form must have approved the submission of the grant application to the Research Council.
Requirements relating to project managers
You must have an approved doctorate or similar qualifications before the date of the application submission deadline.
If you do not have an approved doctorate but are qualified at associate professorship level or have current or previous employment in a position as forsker 1 (research professor), forsker 2 (senior researcher) or seniorforsker (senior researcher) in the institute sector or a health trust, you are also qualified.
You can only be the project manager for one application submitted for either a Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal (this call), Researcher Project for Young Talents, Three-year Researcher Project with International Mobility (deadline 2 February 2022), Knowledge-building Project for Industry or Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges (deadline 9 February 2022).
Requirements relating to partners
Only approved Norwegian research organisations (see the section ‘Who is eligible to apply?’ above) and corresponding research organisations in other countries are eligible to be partners and to receive Researcher Project funding.
Other types of organisations, such as companies and other undertakings, may not be project partners in Researcher Projects.
Read more about partners here.
Subcontractors cannot be granted any rights to project results. Organisations that are subject to the regulations governing public procurements must, in the normal manner, select subcontractors in accordance with these regulations. R&D providers cannot be included in the project.
A project participant may not be assigned two different roles in the project. This means that a sub-contractor for the project may not have the role of Project Owner or partner in the same project.
What can you seek funding for?
You may seek funding to cover actual costs that are necessary to execute the project. The Project Owner is to obtain information about costs from each project partner. These costs are to be entered in the cost plan under the relevant category.
Funding may be granted for the following costs:
- Payroll and indirect expenses, related to researcher time (including research fellowship positions) at the research organisations participating in the project. For doctoral and post-doctoral research fellowships, this funding is limited to maximum three person-years.
- Equipment. This encompasses operating and depreciation costs for scientific equipment and research infrastructure necessary for the execution of the project.
- Operating expenses, which comprise costs for other activities that are necessary to carry out R&D efforts under the project. Procurements from subcontractors that exceed NOK 100,000 must be specified.
You will find detailed and important information about what to enter in the project budget on our website.
If the project includes doctoral and post-doctoral research fellowships and there are concrete plans in place for research stays abroad for the fellowship holders, the costs of such stays may be included in the grant application. The Research Council has also issued a separate call for funding for Research Stays Abroad for Doctoral and Post-doctoral Fellows. The project manager may seek funding under that call in the course of the project period for research stays abroad for research fellows affiliated to the project.
Scope of funding
The Research Council can provide NOK 4–12 million in funding per project under this call. There are no requirements for own financing. If our lump-sum rates do not cover all the costs associated with recruitment positions in the university and university college sector or the institute sector, or researcher positions in the university and university college sector, the difference must be covered through own funding. Reported hourly rates must be used for researcher positions in the institute sector.
Conditions for funding
The Research Council will not award funding that constitutes state aid under this call. This means that funding is only to go to your non-economic activity. We require a clear separation of accounts for the organisation’s economic and non-economic activities. Our requirements relating to allocation and disbursement of support for the first year and any pledges and payments for subsequent years are set out in the General Terms and Conditions for R&D Projects to be found on our information page What the contract involves.
If your project is awarded funding, the following must be in place before you submit your revised grant application:
- From 2022, all grant recipients that are research organisations or public sector bodies (Project Owners and partners) must have a Gender Equality Plan (GEP)available on their website. This must be in place when they sign the grant agreement for projects awarded funding from the Research Council. The requirement does not apply to the business sector, special interest organisations or the non-profit sector.
- The Research Council requires full and immediate open access to scientific publications; see Plan S – open access to publications.
- You must prepare a data management plan for any research data handled in the project. The data must be made available in accordance with the FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable).The Project Owner is responsible for selecting which archiving solution(s) to use for storing research data generated during the project.
- For medical and health-related studies involving human participants, the Research Council stipulates special requirements and guidelines for registration and disclosure of medical and health-related studies involving human participants.
Relevant thematic areas for this call
The call encompasses all disciplines and research areas, and grant applications will be accepted for both basic and applied research projects. The list of topics and their amounts of funding may be subject to revision until the call for proposals opens for applications from 15 December 2021.
Ground-breaking research
Funding is available to promote independent, bold and innovative research and scientific quality at the forefront of international research. Through FRIPRO, we will fund both basic and applied research with the goal of generating scientific renewal, where project ideas are initiated by the researchers themselves.
We do not require FRIPRO projects to have the potential for societal impact. We will only assess applications in relation to this point if such potential impacts are described in the application.
Ranking of applications
The competition for FRIPRO funding is tough. The number of worthy applications we receive each year far exceeds the amount of funding available, and only a small percentage of even the best applications are granted funding.
For applications to be considered for FRIPRO funding, they must therefore meet a mark requirement. Only applications awarded a mark of 6 or 7 by the panels for all of the assessment criteria are eligible for funding. In 2022, we estimate that around one out of six of these applications will be granted funding.
Among the eligible applications, we will place most emphasis on the criteria quality of R&D activities and potential for advancing the state-of-the-art when selecting which projects to grant funding to.
Applications with a project manager that does not have an ongoing project with FRIPRO funding will be prioritised above applications with a project manager that does, if the two applications are otherwise considered to be of similar quality. By ongoing project we mean all projects with an end date of 1 January 2023 or later in the original contract.
Funds subject to special guidelines
NOK 24 million for renewable energy and CO₂capture and storage (from here on called ‘energy funding’) forms part of this thematic area. These funds are from the Storting’s climate settlement. The funding is awarded to relevant applications submitted to FRIPRO under the three calls Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal, Researcher Project for Young Talents and Three-year Researcher Project with International Mobility.
If you would like your application to be considered for the energy funding, you must write the word ‘Energy’ in the field ‘Other relevant calls’ in the application form.
Administrative procedures
The energy funding will be awarded after the ordinary funding under FRIPRO has been allocated. Ranking of these applications takes place in the same way as for the ordinary FRIPRO funds, as described above.
Contacts
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Cross-cutting topics
Funding is available for projects that generate knowledge about opportunities and challenges relating to the economic transition as part of achieving Norway’s climate, nature and environmental goals and obligations. This will from here on be referred to as ‘the green transition’. The green transition must take place in a way that generates jobs, value creation, an energy transition, equitable distribution of the load and benefits, and good living conditions and quality of life for everyone, within planetary limits.
Projects must fall within one or both of the following priority areas:
Economic effects of measures promoting the green transition
The objective is to improve our understanding of the different economic effects of measures targeting the green transition, e.g. in relation to economic distribution, jobs, resource scarcity, international trade, nature, health and other welfare. Both adopted and proposed measures are relevant, as are measures at different administrative levels, i.e. municipal, regional and national.
Measures presented in public debate as contributions to the green transition, such as carbon taxes, network tariffs or changes in policy for the Norwegian continental shelf, as well as other measures where you can substantiate similar effects, such as working from home or accounting standards, are relevant.
A sustainable economy to accelerate the green transition
Several contributions have been made in recent years in the field of economics that have looked more closely at what a sustainable economic system entails. Economics as a discipline has also developed over time in many directions, both methodologically and theoretically, and in combination with other disciplines. The purpose of the funding is to develop and obtain knowledge about how different economic perspectives, methods and theories – both established and new – can help to realise the green transition.
Within both priority areas, we will accept:
- empirical projects, e.g. based on ‘natural experiments’ in relation to behaviour, consumption and work;
- method development, e.g. valuation methods;
- theory development, e.g. comparison of different forms of capital and the return they are expected to generate.
We encourage multi-, inter- and transdisciplinarity where this will strengthen the quality of the project.
When we assess the application’s relevance, we will also emphasise whether the project involves:
- research expertise in the economics discipline;
- expertise and plans for communication targeting areas other than academia.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Other relevant calls related to climate and the green transition:
- Projects concerning transition and adaptation to climate change can apply for the topic Up to NOK 83 million for projects on Norway's transition to a zero-emission society adapted to global climate changein this call.
- Projects concerning perspectives on the circular economy can apply for the topic Up to NOK 70 million for a circular economy in the production and consumption of finished goods in the call Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges.
- Projects dealing with perspectives on the consequences, use and/or conservation of marine/coastal areas can apply for the topic Up to NOK 105 million for research on marine and coastal areas under pressurein the call Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges.
Contacts
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Global development and international relations
Funding will be awarded to research targeting Asia in a Time of Change, as described in the Portfolio plan for Global development and international relations, in the appendices Asia in a Time of Change – Scientific and Thematic Priorities, and International Relations, Foreign and Security Policy and Norwegian Interests (UTENRIKS). Projects must be within the areas ‘Order and the International System’ and/or ‘Security’. However, projects that explore linkages between either of these two thematic areas and other areas described in the Asia in a Time of Change appendix, will also be relevant.
The funding has been allocated to the Research Council over the development cooperation budget, and grant applications must therefore satisfy the requirements regarding use of Official Development Assistance (ODA) funding. To comply with this, the grant application must seek to advance economic development or welfare in countries on the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) List of ODA Recipients. For more information please see the OECD website.
When we assess the application’s relevance, we will also emphasise whether the project involves:
- at least one international partner;
- communication and dissemination activities targeting relevant user groups.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contact
Funding is available for research on health improvements for disadvantaged populations in low- and lower-middle income countries (LLMICs). The research must be relevant to Sustainable Development Goal 3 ‘Good health for all’ and its targets. Applications for this topic under the calls Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal and Collaborative and Knowledge-building Project relating to Global Health will compete for total funding of NOK 80 million.
Applications for projects on antimicrobial resistance from a One Health perspective and implementation research on non-communicable diseases will not be prioritised. These should target other relevant calls with different deadlines in 2022; see links under ‘Other relevant calls with the same topic’ below.
The previously announced call for funding on climate, the environment and health through the Belmont Forum has been postponed until 2023. Therefore, applications for such projects are considered relevant for this call.
Proposals must demonstrate their potential to:
- contribute, directly or indirectly, to substantial reductions in disease burden in LLMICs;
- promote health equity in LLMICs;
- produce higher-level insights of relevance to policy and practice beyond the specific setting and context where studies are carried out.
These points are outlined in more detail in Section 2.1 of the appendix ‘New Priorities on Global Health’; see ‘Relevant plans’ below.
The project must involve partners from LLMICs, defined in the OECD DAC list as ‘least developed countries, low income countries, and lower middle income countries and territories which are not LDCs’.
Research organisations in high-income and upper middle-income countries may also serve as partners in the project, but may receive a maximum of 30 per cent of our total funding for the project.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ must provide a concrete and clear answer to how the project will fulfil the following requirements for equitable partnerships:
- equitable sharing of funds and institutional costs with partner institutions in LLMICs;
- plans for equitable sharing of credits, e.g. scientific analyses, authorship, intellectual property rights and dissemination;
- include concrete plans for how the project will contribute to strengthening both individual and institutional capacity in the collaborating institutions in LLMICs;
- demonstrate co-leadership of the proposed scientific agenda with project managers from LLMIC institutions.
In the attachment, you must also describe the degree of user involvement as outlined in Section 4.1 of the appendix ‘New Priorities on Global Health’.
If the application is relevant to the above, priority will be given to projects that include a doctoral and/or post-doctoral research fellowship position at a Norwegian research organisation and/or at an institution in an LLMIC.
Applications for a Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal may not include partners from outside academia/that are not research organisations, but user groups e.g. reference groups, can be included in the project. Projects where it is expedient and beneficial to establish collaboration outside academia must apply for the call Collaborative Project in Global Health.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contacts
Funding is available for research on food security and climate-smart agriculture in developing countries. Projects eligible for funding must target small-scale food producers.
The funding has been allocated to the Research Council over the development cooperation budget, and grant applications must therefore satisfy the requirements regarding use of Official Development Assistance (ODA) funding. To comply with this, the grant application must seek to advance economic development or welfare in countries on the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) List of ODA Recipients.
Projects eligible for funding must:
- contribute to food production in a well-functioning ecosystem;
- include small-scale food producers in the food systems;
- contribute to improving nutrition in developing countries, particularly among women and children;
- have active collaboration with at least one research organisation from a developing country;
- clearly include climate and biodiversity in the food systems;
- contribute to achieving the SDGs locally in the target developing countries.
You can read more about these areas in the Portfolio plan for Global development and international relations and in the document Norway – Global partner (NORGLOBAL2); see ‘Relevant plans’ below.
If we consider the application relevant to the points above, we will also emphasise whether the project:
- has a good communication plan;
- engages in research that involves one or more of the priority countries in Norway’s development policy.
When awarding marks for the relevance criterion, we will consider how well the application addresses the points above. The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contacts
Funding is available for social science research on issues of significance to policy-making and Norwegian interests in the Arctic region. This can be within topics such as international relations, institutions and management of the Arctic and non-Arctic states and institutions’ activities and interests in the Arctic.
Projects eligible for funding within this topic must fall within at least one of the following areas:
- international relations;
- institutions and management in the Arctic;
- non-Arctic states and institutions’ activities and interests in the Arctic.
When awarding marks for the relevance criterion, we will consider how well the application addresses the points above. The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contacts
Oceans
Funding is available for research on the occurrence and effects of pollution and other anthropogenic stressors on biodiversity, ecosystems, populations and species in the marine environment.
The objective of the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development, which started in 2021, is to increase knowledge about the ocean and ensure that society can use this knowledge to help achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals. In our portfolio plans (see ‘Relevant plans’ below), you can read more about the knowledge needs behind this funding that your research can help to solve.
The projects must address research in the open ocean or the Norwegian coastal zone and the research must be relevant to Norway.
The geographical areas for this topic are:
- the polar marine areas, as described in the Portfolio plan for Climate and polar research;
- Norway’s ocean, fjord and coastal areas.
Stressors and effects on marine species, populations or ecosystems
The projects must address stressors and their effects on marine species, populations or ecosystems in at least one of the following areas:
- transport of environmental toxins and other types of pollution from land or via ocean and/or air currents, and how they are distributed, dispersed and concentrated in marine ecosystems;
- inputs, transport and dispersion of other stressors than those mentioned above between coastal, fjord and ocean areas;
- effects of local discharges as a result of human activity in e.g. offshore petroleum activities, other industrial activities, aquaculture, agriculture and municipal waste water;
- combined effects of external stressors from e.g. climate change, environmental toxins, plastics, ocean acidification, freshwater inflow and/or various industrial activities;
- effects of changes in physical, hydrochemical and/or biogeochemical conditions as a result of e.g. temperature increase and freshwater inflow.
Stressors include pollutants, heat, cold, invasive species, freshwater inflow, climate change etc. that can have an impact on the marine environment.
Relevant applications must encompass one or more of the points above, address the geographical area defined in the call and be relevant to Norway. Applications that address more than one of the points above will not receive a higher mark for relevance.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Our goal is to fund at least one project within each of the following areas:
- coastal conditions
- polar conditions
- combined effects of external stressors
The projects that receive funding should preferably become involved in the UN Decade of Ocean Science. This should in such case be included in the communication plan and it will also be discussed in more detail with the projects that receive funding.
Contacts
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Funding is available under the call Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal in the areas Production biology, nutrition, breeding and genetics and Fish health and welfare, as described below.
Funding is also available for aquaculture research on the following topics with a deadline in February 2022:
- Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges: Production and processing technology (the page opens in a new window)
- Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges: Marine and coastal areas under pressure (the page opens in a new window)
To be eligible for funding, the application must fall within at least one of the two areas/thematic priorities described below.
Production biology, nutrition, breeding and genetics – thematic open call
Funding is available for research that contributes to increased knowledge about and understanding of aquaculture organisms’ production biology, nutrition, breeding and genetics. The research area is described in more detail in the Portfolio plan for Oceans and in the work programme for Aquaculture research, which you can find under ‘Relevant plans’ below.
Projects within this research area can encompass all aquaculture species. Funding is available for both a Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal (this call) and Researcher Project for Young Talents, and applications will compete for funding across these two calls. We expect to grant funding to five projects divided between the two calls.
Fish health and welfare – bacterial diseases
Funding is available for projects that contribute to increased knowledge and understanding of important bacterial diseases in the Norwegian aquaculture sector. In general, the situation is relatively good when it comes to bacterial diseases in Norwegian aquaculture and the use of antibiotics remains low.
Bacterial diseases are nonetheless a challenge, with winter wounds in particular contributing to welfare challenges and mortality in salmon. The number of facilities with outbreaks of pasteurellosis has increased in recent years, with the disease now ranked as the third most pressing problem in the marine grow-out phase in the Fish Health Report 2020. Francisellosis has previously been a serious problem in the cod aquaculture sector, and current expectations of increased production could cause the disease to re-emerge as a challenge. This call is restricted to bacterial diseases but encompasses all aquaculture species in all stages.
We expect to grant funding to two projects under the area Fish health and welfare.
Assessment of relevance
When awarding marks for the relevance criterion, we will also pay special consideration to:
- the thematic match in the research area (this is given most weight);
- whether you have concrete plans for international collaboration, for example participation in project work, co-publication or mobility;
- whether you have people in recruitment positions who will actively participate in the project work.
Applications for a Researcher Project for Scientific Renewal/Researcher Project for Young Talents may not include partners from outside academia/that are not research organisations, but stakeholders e.g. reference groups, can be included in the project
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contacts
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Health
Funding is available for research that aims to secure good healthcare services for everyone and reduce inequity in health. Projects can suggest research ranging from early diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation, to how healthcare and welfare services can best adapt to the needs of vulnerable groups.
In this call, vulnerable groups are:
- children and adolescents (0–25 years);
- minorities;
- people with reduced mental health;
- people with reduced functional ability and/or several chronic diseases;
- drug addicts;
- people with dementia.
There is a need for research that aims to generate knowledge about treatment and service pathways based on and adapted to vulnerable users/patients’ needs. Vulnerable patient groups are less represented and included in clinical studies evaluating the effect of treatment, diagnostics and rehabilitation.
We therefore need more research to ensure that these patient groups receive good and accurate diagnoses, treatment and rehabilitation. More clinical research is necessary, both in the primary care and specialised care services. Studies of home treatment, clinical studies and studies of integrated healthcare services at several levels are examples of how treatment and service systems can be adapted to vulnerable groups.
We will prioritise projects that target children and adolescents, but this does not exclude strong applications targeting other groups in the list above.
Requirements relating to user involvement
End users must be represented in all phases of the project. In the application, you must describe how partners, and if relevant, other users such as citizens, next of kin, patients and voluntary organisations, are involved in the planning and implementation of the project and utilisation of the results. Proper user involvement is important to achieve useful research results that can be translated into practice. The projects must relate to the users’ needs.
When performing research involving vulnerable groups, ethical aspects such as the capacity to give consent and data collection/processing must be taken into account. Projects concerning children and adolescents are to preserve and safeguard their perspectives, needs and rights.
Projects must fall within at least one of the following areas:
- quality, competence and efficiency in the healthcare and welfare services;
- diagnostics, treatment and rehabilitation of illnesses.
The areas are described in more detail in the Portfolio plan for Health.
If the application is relevant to the points above, we will also consider whether the project:
- addresses the coordination of services across sectors and service levels;
- is interdisciplinary and includes the humanities and social sciences, where relevant;
- includes Nordic and/or other international research collaboration;
- makes use of existing health data and/or personal data.
Contacts
Relevant plans
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Climate and polar research
Funding is available for research on the occurrence and effects of pollution and other anthropogenic stressors on biodiversity, ecosystems, populations and species in the marine environment.
See the comlete text on the topic under the thematic area Oceans.
Funding is available for projects that build knowledge about how adaptation solutions can reduce Norwegian society’s vulnerability to global and local climate change, and how Norway can make the transition to a sustainable zero-emission society. The research must build on knowledge of the climate system and consequences of climate change, and target the societal goals set out in the Portfolio plan for Climate and polar research.
Projects must fall within at least one of the following areas:
- sustainable solutions for adaptation to climate change, emissions reduction and/or increased greenhouse gas uptake/storage, including nature-based solutions;
- climate policy instruments, and their environmental, societal and cultural impacts, including how the burden is distributed;
- attitudes and cultural dimensions relating to climate change, climate adaptation and transition, such as understanding, acceptance and action among the population;
- knowledge-based measures that the public administration, industry and civil society can implement for transformation and/or adapting to climate change and its impacts, both within and beyond Norway;
- climate risk and how it is managed (physical risk, perceived risk, transitional risk and liability risk)
- prevention and preparedness to achieve good civil protection and public security in relation to climate change.
When awarding marks for the relevance criterion, we will consider whether and how well you:
- have explained how the objectives of the project will see the UN SDGs in context, and how the research results will help us as a society to achieve the SDGs;
- have included a reference group comprising the users of the results, e.g. municipal and county councils, directorates, non-profit organisations and industry;
- address problems with a background in policy-making processes, e.g. the work of the Climate Commission 2050;
- where you choose to include collaboration with international partners, you must demonstrate concrete ambitions for how this collaboration can be conducted with the smallest possible climate and environmental footprint.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
The call is open to applications within all fields and disciplines and methodological approaches, including multi- and interdisciplinarity. We will not give priority to pure technology projects or projects intended to culminate in commercial products and services for the market during the project period, i.e. projects with a high TRL level.
We will strive to achieve a balanced overall portfolio of projects that covers the breadth of the areas presented above, diverse fields and disciplines and different users groups’ need for the knowledge developed.
Other relevant topics also related to climate:
- Projects concerning perspectives on the circular economy can apply for the topic NOK 80 million for a circular economy in the production and consumption of finished goods in the call Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges.
- Projects concerning perspectives specifically related to consequences, use and/or conservation of marine/coastal areas can apply for the topic NOK 105 million for research on marine and coastal areas under pressure in the call Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges.
- Projects concerning the energy transition can apply for the topic NOK 50 million for the energy transition and impacts on society, climate and nature in the call Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges.
- Projects focusing on economic issues related to the green transition can apply for the topic NOK 60 million for research on economic issues related to the green transitionin this call.
Contacts
Relevant plans
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Petroleum
Funding is available for projects that build knowledge to accelerate implementation of low-emission technology in the Norwegian petroleum industry, or to improve safety and the working environment in the petroleum industry on the Norwegian continental shelf.
The project must fall within at least one of the following two areas:
- social sciences or interdisciplinary knowledge about the implementation of technology that can lead to substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions in upstream petroleum activities;
- major accidents and the working environment in the petroleum industry.
If the application is relevant to the points above, we will prioritise projects that can document that the research falls within at least one of the following two areas:
- areas where there are conflicts of interest, and where independent research without participation from the industry will benefit the research;
- areas where the research is of little interest to the industry itself, but where there are significant societal outcomes that are more important than the value creation effects and direct benefits to the industry.
Projects where it is expedient and beneficial to establish collaboration with the industry must apply under the call for Knowledge-building Projects for Industry. Research targeting a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions or energy efficiency in the petroleum industry can also apply for a Collaborative Project to meet Societal and Industry-related Challenges.
When awarding marks for the relevance criterion, we will consider how well the application addresses the points above. The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contacts
Relevant plans
Sámi society and culture
Funding is available for projects that contribute to generating new research-based knowledge that will enable the Sámi people to strengthen and further develop their own language, and their own culture and community life.
Applications concerning all areas of the work programme are relevant, but we would particularly like to strengthen research that falls under the area Language, as described in section 3.4 of the work programme. It will also count as positive if the project includes research on cultural resilience.
The areas are described in more detail in the Work programme for SAMISK III; see ‘Relevant plans’ below.
When we award a mark for the application’s relevance, we will also emphasise whether the project:
- includes collaboration between institutions and/or local or regional Sámi research groups;
- includes recruitment positions;
- looks at international comparative issues based on or in relation to the Sámi situation.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contacts
Relevant plans
Education and competence
Funding is available for research on and for the education sector and all levels of the educational system, from early childhood education and care institutions and primary schools, to higher education and learning in and outside working life. Projects that examine transitions between the levels of the educational system and the transition from education to working life are also relevant.
The goal is to generate knowledge of relevance to policy development, administration and the field of practice, and contribute to knowledge-based development. We encourage multi- and interdisciplinary projects.
Projects must fall within one or more of the following areas:
- learning processes, assessment forms and learning outcomes;
- praxis, professional practice and competence development;
- governance, management, organisation and achievement of results;
- education, society and working life.
If the application is relevant to the points above, we will also consider whether the project includes:
- active collaboration with at least one other national research organisation;
- active international collaboration;
- recruitment positions.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contacts
Relevant plans
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Welfare, culture and society
Funding is available for research that generates knowledge about and contributes to managing and resolving societal challenges relating to outsiderness, inequality and inclusion in working life, and for legal research on welfare issues. The goal is to generate knowledge of relevance to policy development, public administration and the field of practice.
Projects must fall within one or more of the following areas:
- inclusion of vulnerable groups in working life. This also concerns coordination across the health and welfare services aimed at inclusion in working life;
- preventing sickness absence, withdrawal and "outsiderness" from working life among people with health challenges. Of particular importance here are young people outside working life;
- pension, older people and working life, including measures that contribute to longer working lives;
- legal research in the areas working life, integration, children and families, and the significance of EEA law for Norwegian social security legislation.
The areas are elaborated in the Portfolio plan for Welfare, culture and society, and in the appendices ‘Welfare, working life and migration’ and ‘Good and efficient health, care and welfare services’.
We would like you to use different methodological approaches to assess the outcomes of measures and instruments aimed at increasing inclusion in working life and reducing inequality and exclusion. This does not apply to the point about legal research on welfare issues in the list above.
If the application is relevant to the points above, we will also consider it positive if the project involves:
- concrete plans for international collaboration;
- recruitment.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
Contacts
Other relevant calls with the same topic
Funding is available for research that challenges and expands current knowledge on societal and cultural dimensions of technological development. The objective of the research is to develop new knowledge that can help to increase understanding and management of key societal challenges related to technology use and development; cf. the appendix to the Portfolio plan for Welfare, culture and society (see ‘Relevant plans’ below).
To be relevant, the project must:
- explore issues related to how technological development has in many areas led to great progress and improvements, but also to new societal challenges, and frameworks and limitations in relation to human behaviour;
- be based on the challenges technological development poses for individuals and society.
The relevant research topics are described in more detail in the appendix to the portfolio plan ‘Cultural conditions underlying social change (SAMKUL)’, section 4.2.2. The applications must also reflect the SAMKUL perspective in general; see section 4.1 in the same appendix. Please note that issues related to material surroundings will not be given priority under this call.
To be considered highly relevant, the applications must, in addition to addressing the thematic priorities above, clearlyrelate to disciplines and perspectives within the humanities.
When finally awarding marks for the relevance criterion, we will also emphasise whether:
- the project is interdisciplinary;
- you include plans for concrete collaboration with at least one other national and one international research organisation or researcher.
The attachment ‘Relevance to the topic’ is mandatory if you select this topic. The template can be found at the end of the call.
We will not prioritise applications:
- where the project manager of the application deadline 2 February 2022 is already the manager of an ongoing project funded by SAMKUL;
- that thematically overlap with ongoing or recently concluded projects funded by SAMKUL.
Contacts
Practical information
Requirements for this application type
Applications must be created and submitted via My RCN Web. You may revise and resubmit your grant application form multiple times up to the application submission deadline. We recommend that you submit your application as soon as you have filled in the grant application form and included all mandatory attachments. After the deadline, it is the most recently submitted version of the grant application that will be processed.
The application must meet the following requirements:
- The grant application and all attachments must be submitted in English, except for the description of relevance to the selected topic in the call, which may be submitted in Norwegian or English.
- All mandatory attachments must be included.
- Requirements relating to the project manager and Project Owner (research organisation) must be satisfied.
- The project must start between 15 September 2022 and 15 February 2023.
- Funding must be sought from the Research Council for the year the project starts.
Applications that do not satisfy the requirements listed above may be rejected.
Mandatory attachments
The mandatory attachments must be prepared using designated templates found at the end of the call.
- A project description, maximum 11 pages.
- A CV for the project manager, maximum four pages.
- A description of the project’s relevance to the selected topic. This is mandatory for all topics under the call except for Ground-breaking research (FRIPRO). (To be uploaded under Attachments/Other items in the application form.)
Optional attachments
- CVs of key project participants not exceeding four pages each. You must use the CV template found at the end of the call.
- Applicants themselves are to decide which project participants are most important and in which cases it will be of significance to the review process to assess these participants’ qualifications.
- Applicants are free to enclose a short description of qualifications or propose up to three referees who are presumed to be qualified to review their grant proposal. The Research Council is not under any obligation to use the proposed referees, but may use them as needed.
Attachments other than the mandatory and optional attachments specified above, as well as any links to websites in the grant application, will not be included in the application review process.
Assessment criteria
We assess applications in light of the objectives of the application type in question and on the basis of the following criteria:
Excellence – potential for advancing the state-of-the-art
• Scientific creativity and originality.
• Novelty and boldness of hypotheses or research questions.
• Potential for development of new knowledge beyond the current state-of-the-art, including significant theoretical, methodological, experimental or empirical advancement.
Excellence – quality of R&D activities
• Quality of the research questions, hypotheses and project objectives, and the extent to which they are clearly and adequately specified.
• Credibility and appropriateness of the theoretical approach, research design and use of scientific methods. Appropriate consideration of interdisciplinary approaches.
• The extent to which appropriate consideration has been given to ethical issues, safety issues, gender dimension in research content, and use of stakeholder/user knowledge if appropriate.
Impact
• Potential for academic impact:
The extent to which the planned outputs of the project address important present and/or future scientific challenges.
• Potential for societal impact (if addressed by the applicant):
The extent to which the planned outputs of the project address UN Sustainable Development Goals or other important present and/or future societal challenges.
• The extent to which the potential impacts are clearly formulated and plausible.
Communication and exploitation
• Quality and scope of communication and engagement activities with different target audiences, including relevant stakeholders/users.
Implementation
• The extent to which the project manager has relevant expertise and experience, and demonstrated ability to perform high-quality research (as appropriate to the career stage).
• The degree of complementarity of the participants and the extent to which the project group has the necessary expertise needed to undertake the research effectively.
The quality of the project organisation and management
• Effectiveness of the project organisation, including the extent to which resources assigned to work packages are aligned with project objectives and deliverables.
• Appropriateness of the allocation of tasks, ensuring that all participants have a valid role and adequate resources in the project to fulfil that role.
• Appropriateness of the proposed management structures and governance.
Relevance to the chosen topic
Administrative procedures
We will assess the version of your application that you submit and will not take into account how an identical or almost identical application has been assessed in the past.
The applications are first considered through a common process by a set of referee panels composed on the basis of the research content of the applications. The applications are assessed regardless of which topic the applicant has selected from the call. After the panel has completed its assessment, the Research Council will conduct an assessment of the application’s relevance to the call.
Applications that, in principle, target topics other than Ground-breaking Research (FRIPRO), but are not granted funding, will compete for the funding for Ground-breaking Research if they meet the qualification criteria: a mark of 6 or 7 for all the criteria assessed by the panel. This strict requirement has been set due to the very low percentage of applications granted funding.
When we prioritise between applications when preparing our ranked lists for the portfolio boards, we carry out a portfolio assessment that takes account of the following:
- the applications’ assigned marks based on the assessments;
- a good distribution of projects in relation to the priorities set out for the specific topic;
- the relative volume and quality of grant applications within the same topic under other calls in 2022;
- any changes in the financial or scientific framework set by the ministries;
- that priority will be given to projects led by women project managers when the applications are otherwise considered to be on a par.
More information will follow later. Read more about the application review process here.
About the results of the application assessment process
- Total amount sought
- 16 650 025 000
- Amount awarded
- 1 183 520 800
- Total number of applications
- 1466
- Number of approved applications
- 109
Project no. | Organization | Project title | Subject | Sought | Published |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
334266 | INSTITUTT FOR SAMFUNNSFORSKNING | EU labor immigration and the organization of work | Arbeids- og velferdsforskning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334501 | NTNU SAMFUNNSFORSKNING AS | Norwegian labour inclusion of young people at risk: User pathways, street-level bureaucracies and interorganisational collaborations | Arbeids- og velferdsforskning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334628 | Universitetet i Bergen | Assessments about children's criminal insanity and violence risk: Exploring and advancing the recognition of children's development | Arbeids- og velferdsforskning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334711 | Universitetet i Oslo | The use of Expert Reports as evidence in Child Protection Decision-Making | Arbeids- og velferdsforskning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334866 | STIFTELSEN FRISCHSENTERET FOR SAMFUNNSØKONOMISK FORSKNING | Labor market inclusion and labor productivity | Arbeids- og velferdsforskning | NOK 11 981 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334972 | NORCE Samfunn/Helse VESTLAND | Health Deterioration and Risks of Labour Market Exits - Young Workers in Double Trouble? | Arbeids- og velferdsforskning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335194 | Universitetet i Bergen | Life and Work in Balance: Legal responses to working life in times of change and crisis (LaW-BALANCE) | Arbeids- og velferdsforskning | NOK 9 999 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335851 | STIFTELSEN FRISCHSENTERET FOR SAMFUNNSØKONOMISK FORSKNING | Refugee Settlement Locations and Long Run Outcomes | Arbeids- og velferdsforskning | NOK 7 986 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334428 | FRIDTJOF NANSEN STIFTELSEN PÅ POLHØGDA | Making use of Arctic science - The Case of the Arctic Council | Arktis | NOK 7 373 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335863 | NORSK UTENRIKSPOLITISK INSTITUTT | Next Arctic Rush? Critical Materials for the Energy Transition | Arktis | NOK 9 858 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334005 | NTNU | Visuopathy of Prematurity – Is Retinopathy of Prematurity just the tip of the iceberg? | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 10 931 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334086 | Stiftelsen Norsk institutt for luftforskning | Airborne Microplastic Detection, Origin, Transport and Global Radiative Impact | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 999 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334093 | Folkehelseinstituttet | Parenthood, childlessness, and mental health in times of falling fertility | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334119 | NTNU | Internet Gaming and Psychosocial Development from Childhood to Emerging Adulthood—An Ecological Process Model | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334148 | UiT - Norges arktiske universitet | Persistence or change? Lessons from the introduction of enhetsskolen in Denmark and Norway | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 10 106 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334202 | Universitetet i Agder | Ultra-Efficient Energy Harvesting with Antiferromagnetic Thermoelectrics | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334323 | Havforskningsinstituttet | Fishing-induced eco-evolutionary changes in coastal environments: Atlantic cod as a case study | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 759 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334326 | Universitetet i Oslo | Uncovering novel clinical characteristics, risk factors and brain phenotypes across the spectrum of adolescent psychosis. | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334361 | Universitetet i Oslo | Defective mitophagy in Alzheimer Tau pathology: Mechanistic studies and AI-based drug development (‘AM-AI’) | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334377 | Universitetet i Oslo | ARCREATE. An Archaeology of Creative Knowledge in Turbulent Times | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334411 | Arkitektur- og designhøgskolen i Oslo | Provenance Projected: Architecture Past and Future in the Era of Circularity | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 671 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334437 | Universitetet i Bergen | Epigenetic Control of Obesity-induced Tumor Initiation in Breast Cancer | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334466 | NTNU | Fourier Methods and Multiplicative Analysis | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334480 | Nasjonalbiblioteket | Made Abroad: Producing Norwegian World Literature in a Time of Rupture, 1900-50 | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 986 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334487 | Universitetet i Oslo | Machine Learning about the Economy: Labor, Macro and IO | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334585 | Veterinærinstituttet | Chronic wasting disease prions from Norwegian cervids: Assessing the pathogenesis, shedding, spillover and zoonotic potential | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 998 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334603 | NTNU | Religious and Secular Worldmaking: Narrative Cultures of Utopian Emigration and the Formation of Modern Regimes of Attention | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 10 776 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334652 | NTNU | Establishing next-generation pioneering models for interface mass transfer, breakup and coalescence in turbulent flow | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334654 | Universitetet i Oslo | BEYOND ELASTICITY - How inelastic properties of crustal rocks control the propagation of dykes and sills in volcanic plumbing systems | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334787 | NTNU | Decoding the intracellular complement system in inflammatory reactions | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334805 | Universitetet i Oslo | Unlocking molecular diversity in the brain-to-body gateway: spatial transcriptomics and proteomics of brainstem-to-spinal cord projections | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334817 | Universitetet i Bergen | The illusion of empty blind zones: How things may seem to appear out of nowhere in magic shows and road accidents | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334862 | Oslo universitetssykehus HF | Learning from Deep learning | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 958 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334953 | Universitetet i Oslo | Private knowledge, public issues: Digitalization and private economies of knowledge in criminal justice | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 986 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334965 | Universitetet i Oslo | Conditions for earthquake nucleation in the lower crust | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334977 | Institutt for fredsforskning - PRIO | The Uncertainty of Forecasting Fatalities in Armed Conflict (UFFAC) | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 997 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335017 | Universitetet i Stavanger | The machinery positioning chlorophyll in Cytochrome b6f | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 998 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335022 | Universitetet i Oslo | Diamond and Gallium Oxide Interfaces for Power Electronics Devices | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335029 | Norges miljø- og biovitenskapelige universitet | SPORE NANOFIBER: Exploring novel extremely heat and chemically resilient nanofibers expressed on bacterial spores | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335044 | Universitetet i Bergen | Paving the way for rational RNA-ligand design | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 999 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335093 | Universitetet i Bergen | Pathogenesis of autoimmune Addison’s disease and polyendocrine syndromes – identifying pathologies and pathways for future treatment | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335162 | Universitetsmuseet i Bergen | Gamma-ray-glow Effects on Atmospheric Electricity and Chemistry | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 997 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335204 | NTNU | Intestinal epithelial cells: Central coordinators in Inflammatory Bowel Disease and targets for treatment | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 907 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335230 | Universitetet i Bergen | The nutritional regulation of cellular quiescence in animals | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 9 886 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335244 | Norges miljø- og biovitenskapelige universitet | Boosting the bee: Leveraging the structural capabilities of the lipoprotein Vitellogenin to support honey bee (Apis mellifera) health. | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 985 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335255 | Universitetet i Bergen | Overturning circulation in the new Arctic | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 663 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335287 | Universitetet i Bergen | The People of Norway (Norges Befolkning) | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 10 500 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335324 | NTNU | Function of aberrant DNA methylation in shaping neuronal genome during neurodevelopment | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 996 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335381 | Norsk utenrikspolitisk institutt | Re-gendering diplomacy | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 996 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335448 | Samfunns- og næringslivsforskning AS | Management Practices and Gender gaps: Mechanisms behind the Gender Gap in Career Progression (MAP-GAP) | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335530 | Universitetet i Bergen | Understanding Male Gamers | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335582 | Universitetet i Bergen | Mapping the sensory processes underlying settlement and metamorphosis in a marine environment using the protochordate Ciona intestinalis. | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 8 121 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335600 | Universitetet i Oslo | DISTRIBUTE: Do Fundamental Resource Distribution Principles of Need, Effort & Coalition Size Manifest Even in the Infant Mind ? | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335700 | Universitetet i Agder | CaReLearner: Causal Reasoning with Logical Interpretable Learning | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335772 | Universitetet i Bergen | Life at the periphery: the workings of proteins at the surface of cell and organelle membranes | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335795 | Universitetet i Oslo | DJEMBEDANCE - Multimodal rhythm in music and dance from West Africa | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335832 | UiT - Norges arktiske universitet | A CubeSat formation for space debris characterisation | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335855 | Stiftelsen Frischsenteret for samfunnsøkonomisk forskning | Improving the monitoring, treatment and prevention of population drug abuse | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335901 | Universitetet i Bergen | FlickerPRINT for Monitoring Intracellular Droplet Organelles | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 998 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335940 | OsloMet | Virtual-Eye - Learning from human eye scanpaths for optimal autonomous search | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 11 840 000 | 02.09.2022 |
336050 | Universitetet i Oslo | The influence of experts on public policy | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
336078 | Universitetet i Oslo | Early Life SocioEconomic status, mental health, and educational performance: an evaluation of sensitivity to the environment (ELiSE) | Banebrytende forskning (FRIPRO) | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334552 | STATISTISK SENTRALBYRÅ | The green transition: Instrument design, employment and long-lived capital | Det grønne skiftet | NOK 7 063 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335043 | INSTITUTT FOR SAMFUNNSFORSKNING | Greening the economy- Facilitating Innovation, Economics and Labour Demand | Det grønne skiftet | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335878 | CICERO SENTER FOR KLIMAFORSKNING | Norway in the European green transition - Strategies and policy measures combining cost-effective emission reduction with high acceptability | Det grønne skiftet | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334097 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | Single Cell Data-derived European Study for Personalised Management of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) in Children and Adolescents | Diagnostikk, behandling og tjenestetilbud | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334750 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | Virtual darkness and digital phenotyping in specialized and municipal dementia care: The DARK.DEM randomized controlled trial. | Diagnostikk, behandling og tjenestetilbud | NOK 10 621 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335258 | OSLO UNIVERSITETSSYKEHUS HF | PrecisionCare: Improving pathways to care for children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorder | Diagnostikk, behandling og tjenestetilbud | NOK 11 995 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335731 | NTNU | FAMREUN Family Reunification and Unaccompanied Refugee Minors: Psychosocial Health, Integration and Support Services | Diagnostikk, behandling og tjenestetilbud | NOK 10 362 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335495 | Universitetet i Bergen | Effectiveness of peer counseling in addressing psychological distress and exposure to violence among LGBTI population in Nepal | Global helse | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335643 | Universitetet i Oslo | PRESHA Project - PREventing Severe Hypertensive Adverse events in pregnancy and childbirth | Global helse | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335788 | Universitetet i Oslo | Bits, bytes and bodies: Local innovation and digital healthcare in Tanzania | Global helse | NOK 7 643 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335889 | NTNU | Randomised controlled trial in Nepal: Implementing point-of-care-tests and identifying barriers to reduce antibiotics for vaginal discharge | Global helse | NOK 6 898 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335008 | Norsk institutt for bioøkonomi | Food security through better sanitation: the case of urine recycling | Global matsikkerhet | NOK 10 770 000 | 02.09.2022 |
336061 | STIFTELSEN RURALIS INSTITUTT FOR RURAL- OG REGIONALFORSKNING | Creating Inclusive and Sustainable Food Systems in Refugee Hosting Contexts in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) | Global matsikkerhet | NOK 11 993 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334327 | NORD UNIVERSITET BODØ | Priming as a kelp engineering technology to enhance yield and secure production under environmental challenges | Havbruk | NOK 10 575 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334333 | NOFIMA AS | Genetics of multi-pathogen resistance in Atlantic salmon | Havbruk | NOK 11 976 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335758 | NOFIMA AS | Regional adipose tissue depots in Atlantic salmon and their importance to fish health | Havbruk | NOK 8 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335990 | NOFIMA AS | Improving resistance of farmed Atlantic cod to francisellosis: interplay between host-pathogen interactions, environment, and genetics | Havbruk | NOK 11 996 000 | 02.09.2022 |
336037 | VETERINÆRINSTITUTTET | Microbial endocrinology as an instigator of bacterial fish disease | Havbruk | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
336112 | NORD UNIVERSITET BODØ | Novel insights into the epigenetic landscape of puberty onset in Atlantic cod | Havbruk | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334594 | Institutt for fredsforskning - PRIO | Developmental Peace? Perceptions of China’s Engagement in Pakistan and Afghanistan [AsiaPeace] | Internasjonale relasjoner, utenriks- og sikkerhetspolitikk | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334820 | FRIDTJOF NANSEN STIFTELSEN PÅ POLHØGDA | China’s changing role in global environmental governance. A prism for understanding its key role in other world order issues. | Internasjonale relasjoner, utenriks- og sikkerhetspolitikk | NOK 9 686 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335422 | NORSK UTENRIKSPOLITISK INSTITUTT | China and Evolving Multilateral Craftmanship in the Age of Digitalization (CHIMULTI) | Internasjonale relasjoner, utenriks- og sikkerhetspolitikk | NOK 11 975 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334541 | UiT - Norges arktiske universitet | Reproductive toxicity and transgenerational effects of petroleum mixtures in fish | Marin | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334596 | UiT - Norges arktiske universitet | MEltwater release of heavy meTALs from gLacIer to ocean in a Changing Arctic | Marin | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334739 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | Whales and polar bear in a petri dish: decoding marine mammal toxicology through in vitro and in silico approaches – Marma-detox | Marin | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335371 | HAVFORSKNINGSINSTITUTTET FORSKNINGSSTASJONEN FLØDEVIGEN | Kelp forests in the Anthropocene: unravelling impacts of warming and marine heatwaves from genes to ecosystems | Marin | NOK 11 141 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335391 | NTNU | Plastics as a potential vector for spread of antimicrobial resistance and pathogens from wastewater discharge in the marine environment | Marin | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335512 | NORSK POLARINSTITUTT | I-CRYME: Impact of CRYosphere Melting on Southern Ocean Ecosystems and biogeochemical cycles | Marin | NOK 11 993 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335549 | Naturhistorisk museum | The role of gene flow in the evolution of Antarctic icefishes | Marin | NOK 11 483 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335887 | NINA BERGEN | Understanding human-induced trophic cascades in coastal ecosystems | Marin | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334811 | CICERO SENTER FOR KLIMAFORSKNING | TRACKING RISKS IN FUTURE EMISSIONS, CLIMATE AND TECHNOLOGICAL ASSUMPTIONS | Nullutslippssamfunn | NOK 11 991 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335073 | Universitetet i Oslo | Accelerating Climate Action and the State: Getting to Net Zero (ACCELZ) | Nullutslippssamfunn | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335291 | CICERO SENTER FOR KLIMAFORSKNING | Flying less and well-being. Engaging Norwegians in reducing the flight intensity of social practices. | Nullutslippssamfunn | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335505 | CICERO SENTER FOR KLIMAFORSKNING | Governing under turbulence: The European Green Deal and implications for Norway | Nullutslippssamfunn | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335706 | NTNU | CLIMATE RIGHTS: Designing Visual Evidence for Climate Cases | Nullutslippssamfunn | NOK 8 921 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335927 | Idrettshøgskolen | From climate knowledge to climate action in sport | Nullutslippssamfunn | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
336041 | NINA TRONDHEIM | Nature-based solutions for end use of degraded peat – impacts on climate, biodiversity and policy (PEATWAY) | Nullutslippssamfunn | NOK 11 965 000 | 02.09.2022 |
336049 | Universitetet i Oslo | Exposure Assessment and Prevention of Death, Disease and Injuries among Offshore Petroleum Workers | Petroleum | NOK 10 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334659 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | How Norway Made the World Whiter | Samfunnsutviklingens kulturelle forutsetninger | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335129 | UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN | Extending Digital Narrative | Samfunnsutviklingens kulturelle forutsetninger | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335436 | NTNU | Non-safety assessments of genome-edited animals: ethical and regulatory challenges and solutions | Samfunnsutviklingens kulturelle forutsetninger | NOK 11 386 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335278 | Universitetet i Oslo | Indigenous language resilience: From learners to speakers | Samisk | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334443 | Velferdsforskningsinstituttet NOVA - OsloMet | Tomorrow’s inequalities in the making: Processes of life chance differentiation within and outside of education (LIFECHANCES) | Utdanning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334698 | Høgskulen på Vestlandet | TASTE Didactics - Food and Critical Thinking | Utdanning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
334854 | NTNU | Comparing the Organization of Durable Inequalities in Childhood: Inequality in childhoods, schools and associated welfare systems | Utdanning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335634 | Universitetet i Oslo | Why do educational difficulties run in families? Genetically sensitive observational and intervention research on home learning environment | Utdanning | NOK 12 000 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335687 | Nord Universitet | Learning across boundaries in elderly care (LABCare): Enabling expansive learning in and across vocational education and workplace practices | Utdanning | NOK 11 993 000 | 02.09.2022 |
335416 | Griegakademiet - Institutt for musikk | Sounding Relation: Use of music microanalysis to explore parental contributions to premature infant regulation in the neonatal context | Diagnostikk, behandling og tjenestetilbud | 15.09.2022 | |
334299 | VID Vitenskapelige høgskole | Transloyalties in Citizenship Education | Utdanning | 15.09.2022 | |
335647 | NTNU | Visualizing the Deep Sea in the Age of Climate Change | Samfunnsutviklingens kulturelle forutsetninger | NOK 12 000 000 | 28.11.2022 |
335373 | Universitetet i Oslo | Translatability of Oil: The Cultural Work of Critical Petroaesthetics | Samfunnsutviklingens kulturelle forutsetninger | NOK 12 000 000 | 28.11.2022 |
Messages at time of print 15 November 2024, 06:50 CET