Instructions on funding applications for two- and three-year projects in 2024

02/11/2023

Project grants provide support for researchers, either individuals or small groups. The recipients themselves formulate the research problem, decide on the method and implementation, and conduct a well-defined research task within a limited period.

Eligible to apply: an individual researcher or a small group of researchers. All the researchers must have obtained doctorates by the date of application.

Project period: two or three years.

Amount of grant: a maximum of SEK 6 million for a three-year project or SEK 4 million for a two-year project.

Grant administrator: Södertörn University.


Key dates

  • The call for applications opens on Monday 8 January 2024 at 9:00 am.
  • Stage 1 applications must be submitted not later than on Wednesday 31 January 2024 at 3:00 pm.
  • Notification of whether applications have been approved to proceed to Stage 2 will be sent in March 2024.
  • Stage 2 applications must be submitted not later than on Wednesday 24 April 2024 at 23.59 p.m.
  • Decisions on whether to approve applications will be taken by the Board of the Foundation on Tuesday 8 October 2024.

Applications are submitted in the Foundation’s application system.


Instructions and conditions

A. General

1. Please note that the whole application must be written in English. Incomplete applications and/or applications written partly in Swedish will not be considered. Neither will applications that clearly fail to meet the Foundation’s basic requirement of relevance to the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe.

2. On this occasion, the application relates to funding from 1 January 2025.

3. The project description, references and CV(s) are uploaded as separate PDF files. No appendices may be attached, other than the PDF files requested in the application system.

4. From Stage 1, the project manager must secure approval, from the grant administrator (usually head of department, prefekt, in charge), for a funding application to the Foundation.

5. In Stage 2, applications must have the grant administrator’s approval. This is obtained by means of either digital signatures in the Foundation’s application system or a form signed by the project manager and the grant administrator’s authorised representative (usually the head of department, prefekt). The form is downloaded from the application system. The digital signatures or the undersigned scanned form must be enclosed with the application form not later than the end of the application period on 24 April 2024 at midnight. Applications that have not been signed by the project manager and the grant administrator’s authorised representative will not be processed. See more about signing and what it involves under the heading ‘Stage 2 of the application’, subheading Signatures’.

6. The project manager is responsible for ongoing project work. The project manager is also the contact person for the project vis-à-vis the Foundation and the grant administrator when the application is generated, during the assessment period and after a funding decision has been made.

7. If funds for the same or a similar project are also applied for from another funder, this must be stated in the application. If funding is received from another funder for the project, the Foundation’s secretariat must always be notified of this fact. The project manager may then choose which of the grants to utilise.

8. The Foundation does not normally approve co-funding of research projects with another research funder.

9. Projects funded by the Foundation must be based at Södertörn University, which must accordingly be the grant administrator.

10. If a project is approved, a data management plan is required for data generated in the research for which the Foundation has approved funding. This plan must describe how data collected and/or created will be managed in the course of the research, and how the data will be dealt with subsequently. The plan need not be submitted to the Foundation, but the signing of the form by the project manager and authorised representative of the grant administrator mean that the latter also certifies that a data management plan will be in place by the time the project commences, and that it will be maintained. See the Swedish Research Council’s website for examples of how to configure central parts of a data management plan.

11. The project manager is responsible for ensuring that ethical review is carried out, and that approval is granted before the research commences. An account of ethical considerations regarding the proposed project must be given in a special space on the application. The applicant should comment on, and explain the reasons, why the project entails no ethical problems if this is the case or, if it requires certain ethical issues to be considered, whether it is to be assessed by the Swedish Ethical Review Authority or has already obtained ethical approval.

12. If any part of the research is to be conducted outside Sweden, the project manager needs to find out whether the country concerned imposes requirements over and above those in relevant Swedish law. Any permits or approvals must be in place before the research begins.

The Foundation does not support research carried out abroad that would clearly not get a permit to be conducted in Sweden.

13. Researchers with grants from the Foundation must publish their research results online, with open access. This applies to peer-reviewed journal articles and to conference publications.

14. When an application is submitted to the Foundation, particulars are collected and processed to enable management of the application. If the project involves more than one project participant, the project manager is in charge of ensuring that all the participants are informed that the Foundation collects personal data required for the processing. See also the Foundation’s Data Privacy Policy. Confirmation in the application system that the project manager has read the Foundation’s Data Policy is obligatory before the application is submitted.

15. On its website, the Foundation publishes details of grants awarded. This information is taken from the application and may include the registration number, project manager’s name, project title, department, amount of grant awarded, project period and summary of the project. The scientific part of the final report on the project will also be published on the Foundation’s website.

16. The Foundation sends information on grants it has awarded for publication in SweCRIS, a national database of grant-funded research. The Swedish Research Council is a data controller for the purpose of data management in SweCRIS.

B. Applicants: project manager and participants

1. All participating researchers must have obtained a doctorate by the application date.

2. All participating researchers must be named in the application and their CVs attached.

3. In a given year, participation in only one grant application for funding of a research project by the Foundation is permitted, irrespective of whether the researcher applies as project manager or participant. Thus, taking part in both a project application and an application for a grand project, for example, is not allowed. For exceptions, see overview ‘Which grants may I apply for and have simultaneously?’.

4. A project manager for an ongoing project (that is, one on which no final report has been issued) funded by the Foundation may not apply for funding of a new project as project manager until after the final report on the ongoing project has been submitted. This includes projects involving doctoral students where the student’s part has not yet been completed. Thus, it is not possible to manage two research projects supported by the Foundation at the same time. For exceptions, see overview ‘Which grants may I apply for and have simultaneously?’.

5. A project manager for an ongoing project on which no final report has yet been submitted by the application date may apply as a project participant in one new project at the most.

6. A project participant in an ongoing project may apply as participant or manager in one new project at the most.

7. Researchers who are, at the time of application, included in the Baltic Sea and Eastern Europe Programme (professors and associate senior lecturers) funded by the Foundation may apply for funding, but not for their own personal salaries during any part of the project period.

8. There is no age limit for anyone applying for funding from the Foundation. For eligibility to receive salary in the project, the researcher may not be in full-time retirement during the project period. The project manager must hold an appointment throughout the project period.

9. Neither the project manager nor the participants need to be employed by the grant administrator at the time of application. During the project period, the project manager must be employed at Södertörn University, while the other participants must normally spend some time there.

10. The Foundation is complying with the Government’s request to ensure that contacts and collaborations with Russian and Belarusian state institutions cease immediately and no new ones are initiated. The Foundation will not fund research collaborations linked to the state in Russia or Belarus.

C. Amount of grant and costs

1. The budget for a project may not exceed SEK 2 million a year. The budget may be allocated differently from year to year but may not, for a three-year project, exceed SEK 6 million altogether for the entire project period.

2. Funds may be applied for to cover costs related to the project, such as salaries, payroll overhead in the form of social security contributions (lönekostnadspålägg, LKP), indirect costs (overheads), costs of premises and operating costs (such as investigation costs, costs of conferences and travel, other costs and costs for dissemination of project results in a form of a standard amount).

3. Funding to hold conferences may be applied for separately in form of support: conference grants.

4. Assistants and technical staff may be included in the budget for ‘other costs’.

5. The Foundation funds the costs of disseminating results from the project with a standard grant of SEK 120,000, which is automatically added by the application system. Costs of printing, language editing, translation, publication with open access etc. may therefore not be included in the application apart from the standard grant. Once a final report on the project has been submitted, publication funds may be applied for separately, in form of support: publication grants.

6. The project manager’s working time in the project must comprise at least 20 per cent of a full-time annual position. This working time may be distributed differently from year to year. 

7. A project grant application may not include doctoral students in any function. Thus, it may not contain any costs (including operating costs) for them.

8. It is the project manager’s responsibility to ascertain the grant administrator’s attitude towards funding of research that is to be conducted partly in countries other than Sweden. It is the administrator for the grant concerned who decides on and is responsible for, where necessary, appointing foreign staff or paying for activities and services carried out in other countries.

D. Project period, grant availability period and monitoring

1. Project funding for either two or three years may be applied for.

2. The Foundation adds an extra year of grant availability to the duration of an approved project, counting from the approved project start.

3. Halfway through the project period, as a rule, the Foundation reviews the project. See further information on the mid-term review.

4. Within four months after expiry of the grant availability period, a final report comprising two parts, financial and scientific, must be sent to the Foundation. The final research report is published in unedited form on the Foundation’s website. Other forms of project follow-up may also occur.

E. Assessment

Applications to the Foundation for funding of new research projects undergo assessment by the Foundation’s research committee, which comprises a group of researchers with a broad composition in terms of subject expertise. See the research committee’s composition.

Multi-stage application assessment

The research committee reviews applications on the basis of the set criteria for assessment. A number of applications are selected for further review and approved to proceed to Stage 2, while the others are rejected. The project manager is notified by email. No reasons for the rejections are given.

For an application selected for further review in Stage 2, the project manager submits an in-depth application for assessment by external experts (at least two per application), who provide written statements. The experts are appointed by the research committee. Appointees are academically qualified people with knowledge relevant to the application. The committee does not accept applicants’ nominations for experts.

The committee then assesses the in-depth applications and uses the external experts’ statements as supplementary documentation. The experts’ statements are also assessed by the committee. After ranking the applications in order of priority, the committee proposes to the Foundation’s Board which applications should be rejected and approved respectively.

When the Board has made its decision, the applicants are notified by email, and also receive the external experts’ statements. No reasons for the decisions are given. For every application that is approved, a contract for the project is signed by the project manager, the grant administrator’s authorised representative and the Foundation.

Assessment criteria

The criteria for assessing applications are:

  • scientific quality
  • relevance of the research to the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe
  • relevance to society.

These criteria are specified in more detail below.

Scientific quality

Research funded by the Foundation must be of consistent highest scientific quality. The research must make an overall contribution to theoretical and methodological development, and display originality and depth.

Relevance of research to the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe

Under the Statutes, the Foundation for Baltic and East European Studies funds research related to ‘the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe’. The ‘Baltic Sea Region’ is the Baltic Sea itself and the surrounding areas. ‘Eastern Europe’ refers to post-communist Central, Southern and Eastern Europe (see further information on the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe). The Foundation does not fund research relating exclusively to Sweden or Swedish conditions. However, support may be provided for research that concerns Sweden, or countries entirely outside the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe in comparative studies when this is scientifically justified.

For the research to be judged highly relevant to the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe, it must make a specific contribution to our knowledge of this area. Research within the area involving collaboration with researchers, research institutions and other stakeholders in the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe is particularly relevant. Research with a more theoretical main question, in which the importance of the Baltic Sea Region or Eastern Europe is not explained in terms of the main question, or where the link to the region is indirect, is judged less relevant.

Relevance to society

The relevance of the research to society, where it can be applied, is another key criterion in the assessment of a funding application. The findings from such research may bring practical benefits to the communities or societies under investigation and/or help to solve current problems there. Alternatively, the results may provide a background theoretical or empirical explanation for these problems.

Overall assessment

Based on the criteria specified above, the Foundation’s research committee reaches an overall assessment of which applications can be approved. In doing so it assesses, first, every individual application on its own merits and every individual project in relation to the other applications. Also assessed is how the application relates to current international research and the feasibility of the project. Where applications are assessed as being of equivalent scientific quality, the committee considers gender composition and the distribution of disciplinary research domains in selecting the projects for which it proposes support.

F. Application instructions

1. Applications are submitted in the Foundation’s application system.

2. The whole application must be written in English.

3. The project manager must have an account in the Foundation’s application system Apply and submit the application. The account must be registered to the project manager’s email address. No other person than the project manager has access to the application in the application system.

4. In the application system, it is important to choose the application form for the correct category of support. Otherwise, there is a risk of the application being rejected without consideration.

5. All the information filled in is saved automatically in the application system. A project manager who stops working in the system for 60 minutes is automatically logged out (with the information saved automatically).

6. Once the application has been sent in, the project manager personally cannot change it. If changes in the application are necessary, please contact the Foundation’s secretariat.

7. The application system does not send confirmation that an application has been submitted. To verify its submission, log in to the application system and check that the space under ‘Status’ in the application shows ‘Submitted’. There, the application sent in can also be downloaded as a PDF file.

8. For a person with no Swedish Personal ID number, write ‘-XXXX’ after the date of birth, as follows: YYYYMMDD-XXXX.

Stage 1 of the application

Summary 

The summary may be up to 1,500 characters, including spaces, in length. It must describe and justify the research task, and report on its theoretical, methodological and empirical basis. The summary must be written in a way that people with other research specialisations, too, can understand. If the application is approved, the summary of the project is published in unedited form on the Foundation’s website.

Project description

In Stage 1, the description of a project involving either one or more participants must comprise a maximum of four pages of text (Times New Roman 12 points, line spacing 1.5).

The project description must give a clear account of:

  • purpose and research question
  • contribution(s) to new knowledge and the international research frontline
  • theory and method
  • materials
  • time schedule and design
  • research relevance to the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe, and usefulness of the project for overall knowledge building in the area
  • relevance to society
  • the researchers’ functions and responsibilities in the project
  • collaboration with guest researchers, if any, and any other research contacts within the Baltic Sea Region and Eastern Europe, and also both in Sweden and internationally.
References 

References are listed in a separate file, and complete references must be given for the sources referred to in the project description. The references may not exceed five pages in length. They must relate to the academic literature that is cited in the project description, and not to letters of recommendation or other testimonials, for example.

CVs

CVs may not exceed two pages in length per participant. Every CV must contain the following information: date of doctorate; employment position; the participant’s maximum five most important academic publications, preferably with reference to the proposed project; previous external research grants; project management and supervision experience; international research stays; and language skills relevant to the project.

Project costs 

Here, a budget in SEK for the whole project period must be provided. All the research staff must be named in the budget.

a. Project costs are classified as direct and indirect. Direct costs comprise (full-time, monthly) salaries, including payroll overhead in the form of social security contributions (lönekostnadspålägg, LKP), for project participants; costs of premises; costs of investigations; travel and conferences; and other costs. LKP is a general mark-up on total salary costs.

b. For project participants whose salaries will not be funded by grants from the Foundation, SEK 0 and the participants’ employment level should be specified.

c. For project participants who are not employed at Södertörn University at the application date, the salary and LKP payable by agreement with the grant administrator’s authorised representative (usually the head of department, prefekt) should be specified.

d. Non-research staff, such as assistants and technical staff, can be included in the budget for ‘other costs’. Salary and LKP should then be included for these employees in the amount specified. However, non-research staff need not be named at the time of application: instead, these positions fall within the authority of the heads of department concerned. In the budget commentary, the duties of the non-research staff must be specified, as must the scope of their functions.

e. Indirect costs (overheads) for all participants in the project are specified at the percentage for indirect costs stated for the department that will host the project or according to an agreement with the grant administrator’s authorised representative (usually the head of department, prefekt). This addition is calculated on total payroll costs including LKP. According to the filled-in percentage, the total of indirect costs is automatically calculated in the application system.

f. Costs of ethical review may be included in the budget for ’other costs’.

Budget commentary

Please note that all direct costs, and also the resource requirements for non-research staff and costs of travel and material collection, must be specified and justified in detail in the space for ‘Budget commentary’. This means, first, that a realistic calculation of individual costs must be provided, and they must be stated precisely at a level of detail that enables assessment of how reasonable they are in relation to the purpose of the project. Second, it means that the costs must be justified, and arguments for them presented, in terms of the purpose and implementation of the individual project. Unspecified or unjustified costs are not approved.

Note that the commentary, too, must be written in English and that it is obligatory. The budget commentary may be up to 4,000 characters, including spaces, in length.

Stage 2 of the application

Project description 

The project description must contain the same information as in Stage 1 but in more detail, and also include a plan for how to communicate both information about the project and the research results, not only within the discipline but also to society at large. The project description in Stage 2 must also give a clear account of an assessment of potential risks, limitations and challenges involved in implementing the project, together with alternative strategies for ensuring the feasibility of the project.

In Stage 2, for projects with two or more participants, the project description may not exceed ten pages (Times New Roman 12 points, line spacing 1.5) in length. For projects with one applicant only, the project description may not exceed six pages (Times New Roman 12 points, line spacing 1.5).

Between Stages 1 and 2 of the application, the project description must be developed. Only minor changes may be made in the other parts of the application. Stage 2 of the application may not diverge substantially from Stage 1 in terms of study design and the amount of funding applied for.

Signatures

The application must be signed by the project manager and the grant administrator’s authorised representative, who is usually the head of the department (prefekt) where the project is intended to be based. The Foundation processes signed applications only.

The application is digitally signed with BankID in the Foundation’s application system Apply. If BankID is not available a special signature form is downloaded from the application system. The signature form must be signed by both parties manually, on paper, scanned and uploaded to the application system.

The project manager’s signature represents confirmation that:

  • the information in the application is correct and in line with the Foundation’s instructions
  • necessary permits and approvals, for example regarding ethical review, are in place by the start of the project
  • a data management plan will be in place when the project starts, and this plan will be maintained (see also A.10)
  • the project manager will comply with all the conditions applying to the grant.

The grant administrator’s signature represents confirmation that:

  • the research, appointment and equipment described, including employment positions, remuneration and assignments for researchers who are not, at the application date, employed by the grant administrator can be accommodated at the department during the period and on the scale specified in the application
  • the applicant will be employed by the grant administrator for the period to which the application relates
  • the grant administrator approves the cost calculation in the application
  • the research carried out in the project will be conducted in accordance with Swedish legislation
  • a data management plan will be in place by the project start and the plan will be maintained (see also A.10)
  • the grant administrator will comply with all the conditions applying to the grant.

The parties must have discussed the above points before the project manager and the grant administrator’s representative approve and sign the application.

Contact

Patricia Vilchis Tella, patricia.v.tella@ostersjostiftelsen.se