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About the Grant Program


The University recognizes that slavery’s impact affects every aspect of American life and is often demonstrated through systemic racism. As a result, the Report of the Presidential Committee on Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery released a set of recommendations committing to mend harms due to the University’s ties to slavery. As a part of this commitment, the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Initiative launched the Reparative Grant Program in 2023 to implement Recommendation 1: Engage and Support Descendant Communities by Leveraging Harvard’s Excellence in Education and Recommendation 6: Honor, Engage, and Support Native Communities. This fund supports proposals that demonstrate innovative and achievable programs and ideas that address systemic inequities affecting local descendant communities (people who have suffered slavery-related harms). Central to the program is co-leadership of projects between community organizations and Harvard partners, including Harvard faculty, staff, students, and alumni. The program prioritizes communities local to Cambridge and Greater Boston and welcomes ideas that promote reparative work in various sectors, such as education, economic mobility, health, urban planning, and criminal justice. 

This grant fund cycle is currently closed.

Inaugural Reparative Partnership Grant Program Recipients

Seed Grants provide up to $25,000 for one year, and Impact Grants provide up to $350,000 for two years. For this round, a total of $2.3 million has been awarded, with 90 percent of the funds allocated to community-focused nonprofits. The remainder will support Harvard faculty who are coleading or participating in the funded projects. Learn more about the grant recipients’ project areas of focus below.

Details

Frequently Asked Questions

Contact Us

Please reach out to us with your questions at legacyofslavery@harvard.edu.