AgentSkillsCN

grant-proposal

每当用户需要帮助撰写、起草、修改或梳理人类学研究的资助提案、资金申请,或论文提纲时,均可使用此技能。触发条件包括:任何提及 NSF、温纳-格伦、富布赖特、ERC、SSHRC、惠康,或其他与人类学或民族志研究相关的科研资助机构时;请求撰写项目描述、研究叙事、预算论证、广泛影响声明,或具体目标页面;请求起草或修改论文提纲或田野调查资助提案;询问如何为资助委员会阐述民族志方法;请求将研究计划转化为符合资助方特定格式的文本。当用户提到“资助写作”、“提案写作”、“资金申请”或“奖学金申请”时,也适用此技能,尤其是在人类学、社会学、STS,或其他社会科学田野研究的背景下。切勿用于一般的学术写作(请使用学术论文技能)、未针对特定资助方的研究计划写作(请使用研究计划技能),或 IRB/伦理协议(请使用伦理同意技能)。

SKILL.md
--- frontmatter
name: grant-proposal
description: >
  Use this skill whenever a user needs help writing, drafting, revising, or
  structuring a grant proposal, funding application, or dissertation prospectus
  for anthropological research. Triggers include: any mention of NSF, Wenner-Gren,
  Fulbright, ERC, SSHRC, Wellcome, or other research funders in the context of
  anthropology or ethnographic research; requests to write a Project Description,
  research narrative, budget justification, broader impacts statement, or
  specific aims page; requests to draft or revise a dissertation prospectus or
  fieldwork grant; questions about how to frame ethnographic methods for a
  grant committee; requests to translate a research plan into a funder-specific
  format. Also use when the user mentions "grant writing," "proposal writing,"
  "funding application," or "fellowship application" in the context of
  anthropology, sociology, STS, or other social science fieldwork research.
  Do NOT use for general academic writing (use academic-paper skill), research
  plan writing without a specific funder (use research-plan skill), or IRB/ethics
  protocols (use ethics-consent skill).

Anthropology Grant Proposal Writing

Write grant proposals and funding applications for anthropological research that are funder-compliant, methodologically rigorous, and rhetorically persuasive to multidisciplinary review panels. Proposals should read as evidentiary contracts — specifying what data will be produced, how it will be analyzed, and how claims will travel beyond a single site — while preserving the interpretive depth and epistemic commitments that distinguish anthropological research.

Quick Reference

Funder / GenreReference File
NSF Cultural Anthropology (BCS, CA-DDRIG)Read references/nsf-cultural-anthro.md
Wenner-Gren (Dissertation Fieldwork, Post-PhD, Hunt)Read references/wenner-gren.md
Fulbright (IIE, Fulbright-Hays DDRA)Read references/fulbright.md
Dissertation prospectus (committee, not funder)Use the general workflow below; no funder-specific reference needed
Applied / consulting proposalUse the general workflow below; adapt formality register to client

For funders not listed above (ERC, SSHRC, Wellcome, etc.), use the general workflow and cross-cutting principles below. The architectural patterns — evidentiary contract structure, methods as feasibility signal, ethics as design — transfer across funders even when specific formatting rules differ.

Workflow

Step 1: Identify Funder and Genre

Determine which funding mechanism the user is targeting. This shapes everything downstream: page/word limits, required sections, evaluation criteria, budget rules, and rhetorical conventions.

Ask the user if not immediately clear:

  • Which funder and program? (e.g., "NSF CA-DDRIG," "Wenner-Gren DFG," "Fulbright IIE")
  • What career stage? Dissertation, postdoctoral, early career, senior. This affects eligibility, budget scale, and how "capability" is demonstrated.
  • Is this a new submission or a revision/resubmission? Resubmissions have distinct rhetorical requirements (responding to prior reviewer feedback).

If a specific funder is identified and a reference file exists, load it now. The reference file contains funder-specific section requirements, page limits, evaluation criteria, budget rules, and common pitfalls. Follow those constraints as hard requirements — they override the general guidance below.

If no funder is specified, proceed with the general workflow. The user may be at the "exploring options" stage, in which case help them identify suitable funders based on their project, career stage, and timeline.

Step 2: Gather Project Context

Collect the information needed to write a compelling proposal. Not all of this is needed upfront — gather what you can and note gaps for the user to fill.

Essential context (proposal cannot proceed without these):

  • Research question(s) — the specific empirical puzzle the project addresses
  • Field site(s) and population/community
  • Core methods (what data will be produced and how)
  • Epistemic stance (see Parameters below) — this shapes methods language, theoretical framing, and what counts as "contribution"
  • Timeline and duration of proposed research

Important context (strengthens the proposal significantly):

  • Theoretical framework and key interlocutors in the literature
  • Preliminary data, pilot work, or prior fieldwork experience at the site
  • Access pathway — how the researcher will gain and maintain field access
  • Ethical considerations — consent approach, risk posture, community relationships
  • Intended outputs — publications, community deliverables, data deposits

Helpful context (improves tailoring):

  • The user's disciplinary subfield and home department
  • Advisor(s) and committee composition
  • Prior submission history with this funder (resubmission context)
  • Whether the user has drafts of any sections already

Step 3: Set Parameters

Configure the proposal based on user context. These parameters shape the language, structure, and emphasis of the output.

Epistemic stance — Determines how methods are described, what theoretical vocabulary is appropriate, and how "contribution" is framed. A critical medical anthropologist writing for NSF needs different methods language than an STS scholar or a linguistic anthropologist, even if the proposal structure is identical. Ask the user to identify their primary stance; most researchers work at intersections, so a primary + secondary is common.

Funder register — Each funder has implicit expectations about writing style. NSF panels expect clear, sometimes quasi-positivist framing even for interpretive projects ("testable expectations" rather than "hypotheses" can thread this needle). Wenner-Gren values concise, integrated narratives that foreground the research question's anthropological significance. Fulbright panels include non-specialists and country experts, requiring accessible language and strong country-specific justification. Match the register to the funder.

Risk posture — Projects involving vulnerable populations, politically sensitive contexts, or high-surveillance environments need enhanced ethics framing, explicit safety protocols, and often a Plan B for disrupted access. Wenner-Gren requires Plan B explicitly; other funders reward it implicitly.

Field configuration — Single-site, multi-sited, digital, archival, hybrid, or comparative. This affects how methods are described, how the timeline is structured, and what feasibility concerns reviewers will anticipate.

Compression level — Determined by the funder's page/word limits. A 2-page doctoral fellowship narrative requires radical compression; a 15-page NSF Project Description allows methodological depth. Internal word budgets should be allocated proportionally (see Step 4).

Step 4: Structure the Proposal

Use the funder-specific reference file for exact section requirements. When no funder-specific reference is available, use the following general architecture. This structure reflects how winning proposals across major anthropology funders organize their narratives — a "why-what-how" macro-structure that minimizes reviewer cognitive load.

General proposal architecture (adapt to funder constraints):

  1. Aims and research question (~10-15% of narrative)

    • State the central research question in one sentence
    • Present 2-3 linked aims, each with a defined evidentiary output
    • Frame aims as an evidence-production sequence: each aim produces a concrete product that constrains the next
    • End with a sentence that tells the reviewer what this project delivers
  2. Significance and state of the art (~20-30% of narrative)

    • Identify the specific analytic tension or gap in the literature
    • Position the project relative to named interlocutors (not a literature review — a strategic argument about what's missing)
    • Articulate why this matters now and for whom
    • For NSF: this maps to Intellectual Merit; connect to generalizable scientific contribution, not just ethnographic description
  3. Conceptual framework (~10-15% of narrative, often integrated with #2)

    • Name the theoretical tools the project deploys
    • End with analytic expectations — what the theoretical framework predicts or makes legible about the empirical situation
    • These expectations should be specific enough that the methods section can be organized around producing evidence to adjudicate them
  4. Research design and methods (~30-40% of narrative)

    • Describe data production as a chain of invariants that survive field contingencies: sampling/access → data types → collection procedures → analysis workflow → interpretive discipline
    • Specify what counts as a datum (fieldnotes, interviews, recordings, archival materials, surveys, material culture)
    • Describe sampling logic and recruitment pathway
    • Include the analysis plan: how raw data become claims (coding, triangulation, comparison, model fitting)
    • Address positionality as part of analytic rigor, not as confession
    • Address feasibility: access, permissions, language competence, safety, timeline, and contingencies
  5. Ethics, community engagement, and data governance (~10-15% of narrative, unless externalized into separate form sections)

    • Consent approach appropriate to the field context
    • Pathway to ethics approval (home IRB + host country)
    • Community engagement model coherent with the project's epistemology
    • Data management: storage, anonymization, sharing, and governance
    • For Indigenous or community-based contexts: address CARE principles and shared governance
  6. Broader impacts / dissemination / knowledge mobilization (~10-15%)

    • Funder-specific: NSF requires a labeled "Broader Impacts" section; SSHRC requires a knowledge mobilization plan; Wellcome embeds engagement in application prompts
    • Specify concrete outputs: publications, community reports, policy briefs, workshops, data deposits
    • Connect dissemination to the project's epistemological commitments — who benefits and how
  7. Timeline, milestones, and risk management (~5-10%)

    • Three levels: administrative milestones (approvals, visas, agreements), fieldwork milestones (site entry, recruitment, data collection modules), synthesis milestones (codebook stabilization, writing, dissemination)
    • Include contingency planning (Plan B) — what proceeds if access is disrupted, what evidence streams can substitute
    • A Gantt chart or table is often more effective than prose here

Internal word budgets by proposal scale:

ScaleTotal lengthTypical funders
Short (fellowship/small grant)900-1,200 words / 2 pagesSSHRC doctoral, some internal fellowships
Medium (standard research)3,000-5,000 words / 6-15 pagesNSF standard, SSHRC Insight, Wenner-Gren
Large (multi-year)5,000-10,000 words / 14-20 pagesERC Starting/Consolidator, Wellcome Discovery

Step 5: Draft the Proposal

Generate proposal text that follows these principles:

Write for the review panel, not the discipline. Many funders explicitly instruct applicants to write for broad audiences. Even specialist panels include members from adjacent subfields. Avoid unexplained jargon. Define theoretical terms on first use. Make the research question legible to a political scientist or sociologist, not just another ethnographer of your specific region or topic.

Methods are a credibility device. Reviewers use the methods section as a proxy for competence and feasibility. Specificity builds trust: name the number of interviews (approximate ranges are fine: "n≈30-40"), describe sampling logic, specify analytic steps. Vague methods ("I will conduct participant observation and interviews") are the single most common reviewer red flag in anthropology proposals.

Frame theory as generating analytic expectations. The theoretical framework should end with predictions or discriminating questions that the methods section is organized to answer. This is what funders mean by "empirically driven" research — not that you must test hypotheses, but that your theory does work by directing attention and specifying what evidence would look like.

Treat ethics as design, not compliance. Do not relegate ethics to a paragraph at the end. Integrate ethical considerations into the methods description — consent procedures, data protection, community relationships, and reciprocity should appear where they're relevant in the workflow, not as an appendix.

Budget should shadow the work plan. Each cost line should answer: which activity requires this, why this rate, and what happens if it's reduced. Separate participant compensation from personnel costs. Justify local collaboration labor (research assistants, translators, transcribers) with roles, estimated time, and deliverables.

Epistemic stance shapes everything. An interpretivist proposal emphasizes meaning-making, lived experience, and thick description. A critical proposal foregrounds power relations, structural constraints, and ideological formations. A decolonial proposal centers community governance, reciprocity, and Indigenous knowledge systems. The same methods (e.g., semi-structured interviews) are described differently depending on stance — what you're looking for in the data, how you'll know you've found it, and what kind of claims you'll make.

Step 6: Quality Check

Before presenting the draft, verify:

  • Funder compliance: Does the output respect page/word limits, required sections, and formatting rules? Does it include all mandatory components?
  • Internal coherence: Do the aims align with the methods? Does the theoretical framework generate expectations that the research design can adjudicate? Does the timeline match the proposed activities?
  • Evidentiary specificity: Can a reviewer trace from research question → data types → analytic steps → expected contribution? Are methods specific enough to evaluate feasibility?
  • Audience appropriateness: Would a reviewer from an adjacent discipline understand the research question and why it matters? Is jargon explained?
  • Ethics integration: Are consent, data governance, and community engagement woven into the design, not bolted on?
  • Budget-narrative alignment: If a budget is included, does every major cost line connect to a described activity?
  • Red flag scan: Check for the seven common reviewer red flags: over-breadth, theory without evidentiary stakes, methods vagueness, ethics as box-check, funder mission misfit, budget incoherence, and unreadable writing.

Parameters

  • Epistemic stance: All 42 stances are relevant — the stance shapes methods language, theoretical framing, and contribution claims. Most proposals draw on a primary stance with one or two secondary influences. See DESIGN.md for the full stance list. Common in grant writing: interpretive, phenomenological, critical, political economy, feminist, decolonial, STS, applied, mixed-methods, and computational/digital.
  • Genre/audience: Grant proposal (NSF, Wenner-Gren, Fulbright, ERC, SSHRC, Wellcome, other), dissertation prospectus, applied/consulting proposal.
  • Compression: Determined by funder page/word limits (2-page fellowship through 20-page ERC B2).
  • Risk posture: Standard, enhanced (vulnerable populations), high (politically sensitive, high-surveillance, conflict zones).
  • Formality register: Funder-specific. NSF/ERC lean formal-scientific; Wenner-Gren values concise disciplinary prose; Fulbright expects accessible narrative; applied proposals match client register.
  • Field configuration: Single-site, multi-sited, digital, archival, hybrid, comparative. Affects methods description and feasibility framing.

Guardrails

Hard stops — refuse to proceed without these:

  • Do not generate a full proposal draft without knowing the target funder (or confirming it's a general/exploratory draft). Funder constraints are not optional formatting — they determine what reviewers evaluate.
  • Do not generate budget figures without a basis. If the user hasn't provided cost estimates, generate a budget template with line items and notes on what to research, not fabricated numbers.
  • Do not fabricate citations or preliminary data. If the user mentions pilot work or literature, incorporate it. If not, flag where citations and evidence should go with clear placeholders.
  • Do not produce consent language or ethics text that contradicts the stated risk posture. High-risk projects require explicit safety protocols and cannot use boilerplate consent paragraphs.

Soft warnings — flag but proceed:

  • If the research question is very broad (trying to answer too many things), note this as the most common reason proposals fail at Wenner-Gren and NSF, and suggest narrowing to 2-3 linked aims.
  • If methods are described only in general terms ("ethnographic methods," "qualitative research"), flag that reviewers will read this as a feasibility gap and push for specificity.
  • If the theoretical framework doesn't generate analytic expectations that the methods can adjudicate, note the disconnect — theory and methods should be interlocking, not separate sections.
  • If the user's timeline seems unrealistic for the proposed scope, flag it. Reviewers treat timeline credibility as a feasibility indicator.

Common Failure Modes

Generic social science prose. The most common failure. The proposal reads like it could be from any discipline — no ethnographic specificity, no attention to positionality, no thick description of the field context. Anthropology proposals should make the reader feel the site, the stakes, and the researcher's relationship to the community, even within tight page limits.

Methods section as wish list. "I will conduct participant observation, semi-structured interviews, and archival research" — with no sampling logic, no analysis plan, and no account of how these methods produce evidence that bears on the research question. This is the single most common reviewer complaint. Specify what you'll observe and why, who you'll interview and how you'll select them, what you'll look for in the archives and how you'll analyze it.

Theory-method disconnect. The literature review discusses three theoretical frameworks, and the methods section describes generic qualitative procedures. The frameworks should generate specific analytic questions that the methods are designed to answer. If the theory doesn't do work in the methods section, it's decorative.

Ethics as afterthought. A single paragraph at the end saying "I will obtain IRB approval and informed consent." This fails because ethics review is increasingly a feasibility and design question — reviewers want to see that the researcher has thought through consent modalities appropriate to the field context, data protection, community engagement, and reciprocity.

Overclaiming significance. "This project will transform our understanding of X." Reviewers are skeptical of grandiose claims. Be specific about what the project contributes: what analytic uncertainty it resolves, what evidence it produces, who can use the findings and how.

Ignoring the funder's evaluation criteria. Each funder tells you exactly what reviewers are asked to evaluate. NSF's two merit criteria (Intellectual Merit and Broader Impacts), Wenner-Gren's emphasis on well-developed questions and feasible plans, ERC's focus on "beyond the state of the art" — these are not suggestions. Structure the proposal so reviewers can easily find answers to their evaluation questions.

Examples

Example 1: NSF CA-DDRIG proposal Input: "I'm writing an NSF cultural anthropology DDRIG about how climate refugees in coastal Bangladesh negotiate relocation decisions. I'm an interpretivist doing 12 months of fieldwork in two villages." Output approach: Load references/nsf-cultural-anthro.md. Set parameters: epistemic stance = interpretive (primary), political ecology (secondary); field configuration = comparative (two sites); risk posture = enhanced (displaced populations); compression = 10 pages single-spaced (DDRIG limit). Structure around NSF's required components: problem, intellectual merit, broader impacts, training, positionality, research design. Frame "relocation decision-making" as a generalizable process (not just a description of one community's experience) to meet NSF's scientific contribution requirement. Methods section specifies participant observation protocols, interview sampling (household heads, community leaders, government officials, NGO workers — ~40-50 interviews), and comparative analytic strategy across the two villages.

Example 2: Wenner-Gren Dissertation Fieldwork Grant Input: "I need to write a Wenner-Gren DFG application. My project is on the everyday ethics of AI-assisted medical diagnosis in urban India. I'm working from a critical medical anthropology perspective." Output approach: Load references/wenner-gren.md. Set parameters: epistemic stance = critical medical (primary), STS (secondary); field configuration = single-site; risk posture = standard (clinical settings require care but are not high-risk); compression = strict per-question word limits (Q1=1000w, Q2=1000w, etc.). Structure each question response as a self-contained mini-argument ending with a sentence that tells the reviewer what to conclude. Include Plan B for disrupted clinical access (pivot to telemedicine consultations, remote interviews with practitioners). Budget under $25,000, no overhead, following Wenner-Gren's explicit exclusions.

Example 3: Fulbright IIE research grant Input: "I'm applying for a Fulbright to Japan to study how aging communities use social robots. Where do I start?" Output approach: Load references/fulbright.md. Set parameters: epistemic stance = STS/actor-network (primary), phenomenological (secondary); field configuration = multi-sited (likely multiple care facilities); risk posture = enhanced (elderly populations); compression = per Fulbright format requirements. Fulbright panels include country experts and non-anthropologists — write the research narrative in accessible language. Emphasize cultural exchange dimensions and host institution relationship (Fulbright's distinctive priority). Address Japanese research ethics requirements and institutional affiliation logistics.

Example 4: Dissertation prospectus (no external funder) Input: "My committee wants a 20-page prospectus. I'm studying gig economy labor organizing in Mexico City from a political economy perspective." Output approach: No funder-specific reference needed. Set parameters: epistemic stance = political economy/Marxian (primary), practice theory (secondary); field configuration = multi-sited (multiple platforms, worker collectives, regulatory spaces); risk posture = enhanced (labor organizing in politically sensitive context). A prospectus is a proposal to the committee: demonstrate command of the literature, justify the methods, and show the project is feasible within the degree timeline. More space for theoretical depth than a typical grant, but the evidentiary contract structure still applies — the committee needs to see that the research design can produce the evidence needed to make the theoretical contribution promised in the framing.