CSDE Launches Call for Applications to ‘Accelerating Policy and Research for Greater Impact’ Initiative (02/20/26)
CSDE Science Core – Upcoming Workshops
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Each quarter, CSDE offers 3-5 workshops on data sources, statistical and biomarker methodology, introductions to analysis programs, and more, all given by CSDE staff and faculty affiliates. These workshops can include hands-on training in novel methods and programming, lectures on innovative data sources, and discussions of important issues in research and data collection. Over the course of the academic year, CSDE will offer a diverse and exciting set of workshops, some of which will be offered in person and others remotely via Zoom.
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NIH Now Accepting International Proposals Under New Multi-Component Award Structure
*New* The Population Reference Bureau Can Help Publicize Your CSDE-Related Research
*New* Dataindex Launches New Site to Track Changes to Federal Data and Surveys
A new initiative that CSDE helped inform is now up and running. The Dataindex.us provides the public with information and updates about federally-based data and surveys. They also provide a sense of how much risk is associated with the provisioning and sustaining of these data through their assessment map. This is meant to be a resource for the broad community of the public research community and for feedback to them.
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*New* ICPSR Data Fair and Love Data Week 2026 Events (02/09/26 – 02/13/26)
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This year, the ICPSR Data Fair will take place during Love Data Week 2026, joining a global celebration of data, research, and open science. The ICPSR Data Fair offers tools, training, and inspiration for the worldwide data community. ICPSR’s events focus on data sharing, research methods, metadata, AI & privacy, scholarships, demos, and more!
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*New* SocSEM: Jack Goldstone on How Population Will Change the World in the 21st Century (02/12/26)
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The University of Washington Department of Sociology is pleased to host Jack Goldstone, the Virginia E and John T. Hazel Jr. Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University and a Senior Fellow of the Mercatus Center, to join us for a SocSEM event on Thursday, February 12, 2026 at 12:30 pm, in Savery Hall room 409.
Goldstone will focus on the seriousness of an aging population. Europe, the Americas and Asia will soon have the oldest populations known to humanity. Can we cope? He will lead a discussion on the changes that will be needed in the future to avoid disaster, including ways we thing about youth, women, immigration, and globalization. He will also discuss his new book 10 Billion: How Aging, Immigration, Women and Youth will Change the World in the 21st Century which will be published by Oxford University Press.
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*New* The New Wave of SRH Indicators: Where Do Fertility Goals Fit In? (02/12/26)
*New* CAPS Webinar: Moderated Discussion on Social Science Funding within NIH (02/13/26)
| Syracuse University is sponsoring a webinar on Feburary 13 at 9 AM PST on the funding landscape at NIH for aging and population health research. Since CSDE is part of the Association of Population Centers, along with Syracuse, UW affiliates are welcome to join. Two sociologists will be offering their insights on their understanding of the current landscape, given their experiences and current roles. Both are highly productive social scientists with longstanding, successfully funded research programs from NICHD, NIA, NIMH, NIAID, NCI, etc. Sarah Burgard is the University of Michigan’s population center director and Tara McKay is the co-founder of the LGBTQ+ Policy Lab at Vanderbilt University. The conversation and insights should be illuminating. Sarah Burgard is also President of the Association of Population Centers and actively engaged in interacting with NIH programs, other federal agencies, and with US Congress on health funding for population research.
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Applications Open for NIH Behavioral and Social Sciences Early Career Workshop (02/13/26)
*New* CSDE Computational Demography Working Group: Changjie Chen (02/18/2026)
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On February 18th from 10-11AM PST, the UW Computational Demography Working Group will host Dr. Changjie Chen (University of Florida). Dr. Chen will deliver a talk titled :Urban digital twins: An emerging computational framework for making sense of cities.” The talk will be held both in person at Raitt 223 and via zoom. A sign-up link is here for Dr. Chen to meet CSDE affiliated students and researchers 1 on 1 during his visit.
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NIH Requests Feedback on Research Participant Data Harmonization Proposed Policy by February 20
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The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is requesting public input on its proposal to establish harmonized and transparent policy requirements for protecting human participant research data. Specifically, NIH proposes to: (1) establish policy requirements for which data should be controlled-access under NIH data sharing policies, and (2) revise the NIH Genomic Data Sharing Policy to simplify and harmonize requirements. The full proposal can be found here. Stakeholders are invited to provide feedback on the policy proposals as described in the request for information.
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UW Civic Health Initiative (02/25/26)
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Organization: UW Civic Health Initiative
Award amount: $2,000-$25,000
Sponsor deadline: 02/06/2026
Description: The University of Washington Civic Health Initiative has released a funding call for three different categories of small grants. These grant programs are designed to foster new collaborations and innovations that strengthen civic health and democratic institutions nationwide. Innovations proposed for funding to these grant programs must align with one or more of the areas of focus for the Initiative’s work. (read more)
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*New* UW Royalty Research Fund Proposals Due to CAS by 02/26/26
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The Office of Research invites applications for the next round of the Royalty Research Fund (RRF) grant program. Proposals are due to RRF by Monday, March 2, at 5:00 PM. However, Departments and Colleges/Schools may have earlier deadlines, so all applicants are advised to check with their program’s administrative staff. The CAS Dean’s office requests proposals be submitted to their office by 5pm, Thursday, February 26th. Proposals that arrive to Office of Research 3-4 business days before the deadline guarantees that the RRF staff have time to review and provide feedback on proposals. The Office of Research will host Zoom Office Hours at 1pm on Friday, February 13; Wednesday, February 18; and Wednesday, February 25. PI Eligibility guidance is documented for the RRF Program and for the College.
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*New* ICPSR Summer Program: Scholarships Available (03/01/26)
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ICPSR is now accepting scholarship applications for the 2026 ICPSR Summer Program! These scholarships provide fee waivers for one of our General Sessions, a four week program that includes methods Courses plus math and computing Lectures. In addition to fee waivers, some scholarships also provide support for in-person participation, including on-campus housing and meals. For details on each scholarship and the application process, please visit ICPSR’s scholarship page. The deadline to apply for an ICPSR scholarship is March 1.
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*New* 12th Annual Workshop on Formal Demography: Apply by March 1
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The 12th Annual Workshop on Formal Demography will be held in person at UC Berkeley from June 1 – 5, 2026, with funding from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (R25HD083136) and co-sponsored by the Berkeley Population Center. Apply here by March 1, 2026.
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Call for Submissions: 2026 Annual IAPHS Conference (03/10/26)
2026 IAPHS Annual Meeting: Health & Social Justice Sessions (03/10/26)
The IAPHS Committee on Health & Social Justice invites abstract proposals for the 2026 IAPHS Annual Meeting that explore methodological approaches for conducting rigorous, ethical, and trust-building research with hypermarginalized populations. For this call,hypermarginalized populations refer to communities who experience intensified and overlapping forms of structural exclusion, including (but not limited to) criminalization, displacement or houselessness, immigration enforcement, state surveillance, and chronic institutional neglect. We encourage submissions that recognize the heterogeneity within these groups and avoid treating any community as monolithic. (read more)
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Russell Sage Foundation – Social, Political and Economic Inequality Research Grants (03/11/26)
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Award amount: $200,000
Sponsor deadline: 03/11/2026
Program description: The Russell Sage Foundation’s (RSF) program on Social, Political, and Economic Inequality supports innovative research on the factors that contribute to social, political, and economic inequalities in the U.S., and the extent to which those inequalities affect social, political, psychological, and economic outcomes such as educational and labor market access and opportunities, social and economic mobility within and across generations, and civic participation and representation. (read more)
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Call for Editors of Population & Development Review (03/16/26)
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The Population Council invites applications for Editors, Population & Development Review (PDR). Individual applications as well as applications for Co-Editor teams that pair senior scholars working with mid-career scholars are welcomed by March 16, 2026. Two Editors will be appointed for a three-year term, beginning January 1, 2027. The term can be extended to five years total at the discretion of the Council.
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William T. Grant Scholars Program 2026 (03/18/26)
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Organization: William T. Grant Scholars Program 2026 (Limited Submission Opportunity)
Award amount: Each Scholar receives exactly $425,000 over five years, including up to 7.5% indirect costs. Awards begin July 1 of the award year and are made to the applicant’s institution.
UW internal deadline: 03/18/2026
Description: The William T. Grant Scholars Program supports career development for promising early-career researchers. The program funds five-year research and mentoring plans that significantly expand researchers’ expertise in new disciplines, methods, and content areas. (read more)
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Russell Sage Foundation – Causal Research on the Criminal Justice System for Early-Career Scholars (04/01/26)
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Award amount: $100,000
Sponsor deadline: 04/01/2026
Program description: The Russell Sage Foundation (RSF), in collaboration with the Criminal Justice program at Arnold Ventures (AV) is pleased to announce its first annual grants competition for early-career scholars. Our goal is to cultivate a pipeline of researchers conducting causal research on the criminal justice system. Criminal justice policies and practices include the work of police, courts, jails, prisons, probation and parole, and immigration detention. Proposals must include causal research designs that can reliably isolate the treatment effects of a policy. (read more)
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Call for Papers: Demographic Perspectives on Migration, Vienna Yearbook of Population Research (05/15/26)
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The Vienna Yearbook of Population Research welcomes submissions for a Special Issue on “Demographic perspectives on migration”. Submit your manuscript until May 15, 2026.
The editors invite contributions expanding the state-of-the-art knowledge and methodological approaches across a broad range of migration topics, including trends and spatial patterns, innovative data and methods, socio-economic inequalities, drivers of mobility and immobility, climate-related and crisis-driven migration, and links between migration and family or health outcomes.
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Call for Papers: 11th International Conference of the Evolutionary Demography Society (05/17/26)
The Evolutionary Demography Society welcome you to their 11th International Conference to be held at Colorado State University from June 16–18, 2026. The Evolutionary Demography Society is a scientific organization dedicated to fostering conceptual integration across disciplines concerned with population processes, including human demography, population ecology, and evolutionary biology. Our aim is to advance understanding of how environmental, ecological, and evolutionary forces shape patterns of fertility, mortality, aging, and migration in humans and across the tree of life. (read more)
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Call for Papers: 2026 Special Issue on AI in Population Data Science (09/30/26)
Societal Impacts Interviews Four Associate Editors
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Societal Impacts interviewed their four Associate Editors to share more about their research background and motivations to join the journal’s editorial team. Societal Impacts is an open access, peer-reviewed journal, which publishes brief articles that describe the societal impacts of research projects. The journal serves as a platform for papers demonstrating steps towards resolving major challenges, like climate change and inequality, and delivering on global initiatives, such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
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Dewey Data Updates: TenderAlpha, Veridion Core Company Profiles, and LobbyingData
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Dewey Data is a research platform that provides access to third-party datasets across a variety of data categories including foot traffic, construction permits, healthcare, workforce, consumer behavior, and transportation.
Several new data sets have been added to the platform in the last few months. TenderAlpha features global government procurement data from over a dozen countries dating back to 2010. Veridion Core Company Profiles features comprehensive coverage of private companies and SMEs, populations typically underrepresented in public company datasets. LobbyingData provides federal U.S. lobbying data from 1999-present.
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Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Technology Program (Rolling)
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Organization: Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Technology Program
Award amount: Undisclosed; Most projects funded between 50K to 600K Sponsor deadline: Rolling deadline.
Description: The Foundation’s Technology grantmaking aims to leverage advances in technology to benefit the research community. This includes three sub programs: (1) Exploratory Grantmaking in Technology; (2) Open Source in Science; and (3) Scientific Collaboration. The RFP can be found here. Interested grantseekers should email a letter of inquiry of no more than two pages to technology@sloan.org. (read more)
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CSSCR Workshop Offerings Winter Quarter 2026
FemQuant Launches Spring Seminar Series
FemQuant is a network of researchers whose goal is to explore the use of feminist theory in current quantitive, empirical research across the social sciences, including sociology, economics, demography, social policy, psychology, health and international relations. They are hosting a monthly seminar series via zoom with scholars from around the world. The program of online FemQuant events for the coming term is now available,
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CSSS: Free Statistical Consulting for UW Faculty, Staff, and Students
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CSSS provides free statistical consulting to current UW faculty, staff, and students working on social science problems. They offer guidance at any stage of a project — from study design and planning through the selection and interpretation of statistical models. During Winter 2026 quarter, CSSS has two consulting options: scheduled appointments and drop-in sessions. See further details on the CSSS website.
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New Journal – Populations – Now in Directory of Open Access Journals
The newly established journal Populations has been accepted for inclusion in the Directory of Open Access Journals and is party of the MDPI suite of journals. Populations is seeking submissions on a range of substantive and methodological papers. You can visit their first volume (2025) and its four issues. (read more)
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