Foundation Funding for the Humanities
Among the data needed to gauge the health of the humanities in American life is
a comprehensive, ongoing measurement of foundation support for humanities research
and activities. The Academy partnered with the Foundation Center, which annually
tracks U.S. foundation giving, to examine and analyze changes in U.S. foundation
support for the humanities between 1992 and 2002. An advisory committee of humanities
experts reviewed the Center’s humanities coding practices and developed a broader
definition of the humanities, including women’s studies, ethnic studies, and other
interdisciplinary fields. Using this broader definition, study participants reviewed
and analyzed the Foundation Center’s data. The 2004 resulting report, Foundation Funding for the
Humanities: An Overview of Current and Historical Trends, is the most
detailed examination available of contemporary trends in U.S. foundation funding
across the many humanities subfields and disciplines.
The report’s findings show that private foundation giving to the humanities more
than doubled between 1992 and 2002, but that this growth in humanities support was
smaller than the growth in overall foundation giving during the same period. Another
finding is that the share of giving for the humanities slipped from 2.5 percent
in the early 1990s to 2.1 percent in 2002. The report also lists the 25 U.S. foundations
that gave the most grant support to the humanities in 2002, and the major fields
and subfields of the humanities that received the most money. View press release.
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