NIH Reorganizes Study Sections
*New* Center for Social Science Computation and Research (CSSCR) Offers Drop-In Office Hours
|
The Center for Social Science Computation and Research (CSSCR) offers drop-in office hours for computational and statistical issues in research and coursework. This service is offered M-F 8am-6pm in Savery 119. We have graduate student staff from the departments of Anthropology, Economics, Education, Geography, Political Science, Social Work, and Sociology. The Center supports R, Stata, Python, ArcGIS, QGIS, Matlab (limited), and Atlas.ti. The Center’s consultants can assist with data management, data wrangling, exploratory data analysis, regression, machine learning, text analysis, spatial analysis, and qualitative analysis. CSSCR also specializes in identifying and procuring data sets that can be used for research or course projects.
(read more)
|
 |
Populations is a New Journal Welcoming Submissions From You!
Seattle City Light Seeking Research Collaborators to Apply for NSF Funding for Wildland Fire Research and Education
*New* WA State Department of Housing Task Force Survey
|
The Washington State Department of Housing invites survey responses to inform recommendations for how to structure a new Department of Housing that will serve as the state’s coordinating and problem solving hub for ensuring adequate housing supply and housing stability for all Washingtonians. Your feedback will help inform the Task Force’s final report, due November 15, 2026, which will include recommendations on the mission, structure, programs, and goals of a new Department of Housing.
(read more)
|
 |
William T. Grant Scholars Program 2026 (03/18/26)
|
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)
|
 |
*New* IAPHS Annual Meeting: Call for Abstract Reviewers (03/20/26)
|
IAPHS is currently in need of additional abstract reviewers for the IAPHS Annual Meeting Program. The review period will run from March 20 through April 6, 2026. IAPHS membership is required to participate. Sign up to review abstracts here. Why Volunteer as an Abstract Reviewer? You will shape the annual meeting program, advance your professional profile, support equity and inclusion, access cutting-edge research–all in the context of a flexible, time-bounded commitment.
(read more)
|
 |
Population Health Applied Research Fellowship Program for UW Students (03/20/26)
|
The Population Health Applied Research Fellowship Program supports multidisciplinary teams of students to work on real-world population health challenges. Projects are sourced from external clients who play an important role in structuring project deliverables. Applications for this summer’s cohort will be accepted until 12 PM on March 20, from undergraduate and graduate students across all UW schools and colleges on all three UW campuses. The Summer 2026 Population Health Applied Research Fellowship team will work closely with stakeholders at the City of Seattle to research strengths and future recommendations to support children-friendly cities.
(read more)
|
 |
*New* Population Reference Bureau Webinar on The Fertility Gap: Why Wanting Children Doesn’t Always Mean Having Them (03/25/26)
|
Despite global fertility decline, many people still hope to become parents or have more children. Yet wanting kids doesn’t always lead to planning for them, and planning doesn’t always lead to having them. Why does this gap exist?
Join the Population Reference Bureau for a timely webinar featuring two new studies that examine different dimensions of unrealized fertility. Luca Badolato (The Ohio State University) will present on “The Fertility Desires – - Intentions Gap in the United States", and Ester Lazzari (University of Vienna) will share her research entitled "Infertility and Unrealized Ideal Family Size". This event is hosted by the Center for Public Information on Population Research (CPIPR) at PRB the Coordinating Center for the NICHD Population Dynamics Centers Research Infrastructure Program. Register here.
(read more)
|
 |
European Doctoral School of Demography (EDSD) 2026-2027 (03/27/26)
|
The European Doctoral School of Demography (EDSD) is an eleven-month, fully funded program that aims to provide students with a comprehensive and rigorous education in demography to pursue their doctoral studies. The EDSD provides students with a comprehensive understanding of the causes and consequences of demographic change, population data, statistical and mathematical demography, as well as modeling, simulation, and forecasting techniques. The program’s coursework, taught by leading experts in the field, emphasizes strengthening the quantitative and programming skills of its participants. Apply by March 27.
(read more)
|
 |
Apply to Investigations in Disasters and Emergencies: Advancing Applied Learning in Disaster Research Response (03/27/26)
The University of Washington’s Center for Disaster Resilient Communities is offering a hands-on training program in environmental and public health disaster research methods and skills for up to 25 advanced graduate students and early career hazards and disaster researchers from across the United States. This training program aims to provide a launchpad for scholars to build on and carry out their own disaster and hazards research projects as well as opportunities for interdisciplinary networking and mentorship. (read more)
|
 |
Call for Papers: Demog-Crazy 2026 Award (04/01/26) The Quetelet Journal warmly invites population scientists to submit an abstract for consideration for the Demog-Crazy 2026 Award by April Fools Day 2026. Authors of shortlisted abstracts will be required to submit their full paper by 1st July 2026.
Inspired by the spirit of Belgian surrealism, the Demog-Crazy Award celebrates and publishes a scholarly article in population sciences that initially amuses readers with its title and summary, but ultimately provokes thoughtful engagement and inspires further reading.
(read more)
Applications Open for Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) Data User Workshop (04/15/26)
The Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), begun in 1968, is the world’s longest-running multigenerational household panel study. It is used to investigate scientific and policy questions about life course trajectories in health and well-being, intergenerational social and economic mobility, income and wealth inequality, family investments in children, neighborhood effects on opportunity and achievement, and many other topics. This five-day, in-person only workshop–held from June 15 – 19, 2026 at the University of Michigan will orient participants to the content and structure of the core PSID interview, its special topics modules, and its supplemental studies, including the Child Development Supplement (CDS) and the Transition into Adulthood Supplement (TAS). The workshop is designed for graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, junior faculty, and research professionals. Applications are due by April 15. (read more)
|
 |
*New* UW Data Science & AI Accelerator Accepting Summer 2026 Proposals (04/26/26)
*New* Call for Papers: Northwest Preparedness and Resilience Conference (04/30/26)
The Northwest Preparedness and Resilience Conference brings together an interdisciplinary group of regional practitioners, researchers and other partners working across a range of disaster-related fields. This year’s conference will take place on the University of Washington campus in Seattle on September 16-17, 2026. Abstract submissions are now open for those interested in presenting at this year’s conference! We invite researchers and practitioners from all disaster science and preparedness-related disciplines to submit abstracts focused on topics related to preparedness and resilience. (read more)
|
 |
*New* Registration Now Open: UW Department of Global Health 2026 Implementation Science Summer Institute
The UW Department of Global Health is pleased to announce that registration is now open for the 2026 Implementation Science Summer Institute, taking place August 17–21, 2026, on the University of Washington’s Seattle campus. Click here for more information. Registration is open until filled. This intensive, week‑long training is designed for researchers, practitioners, public health professionals, and leaders seeking to strengthen their ability to apply implementation science methods in real‑world settings. (read more)
|
 |
William T. Grant Foundation Research Grants on Improving the Use of Research Evidence (07/29/26)
The William T. Grant Foundation invites proposals for research grants on improving the use of research evidence by July 29, 2026. The award amounts range from $25,000 -$1,000,000. This program funds research studies that examine strategies to improve the use of research evidence in ways that benefit young people ages 5-25 in the United States. Studies should advance theory and build empirical knowledge on ways to improve the use of research evidence by policymakers, (read more)
|
 |
Coefficient Giving: Funding for Programs and Events on Global Catastrophic Risk, Effective Altruism, and Other Topics (Rolling)
This is a wide-ranging call for applications, seeking to fund programs and events in a variety of areas of interest to Coefficient Giving — including effective altruism, global catastrophic risks, biosecurity, AI for epistemics, forecasting, and other areas. “Programs and events” include scholarship or fellowship programs, internships, residencies, visitor programs, courses, seminars, conferences, workshops, retreats, etc., including both in-person and online activities. (read more)
|
 |
|