Awards Database

The Haury Program is focused on advancing Indigenous Resilience through funding and supporting education, research and outreach, supporting Native American pathways, and building partnerships at the UArizona and beyond.

This Awards Database contains all of our grants awarded since our inception in 2014, including those from the 2014-2019 period when the program offered competitive grants and focused on multi-cultural scholarship and community building to promote and build capacity for wider social and environmental justice projects.

Indigenous Resilience Initiative Awards awarded after 2020 are tailored to the needs of a program, and can range from a few thousand to several hundred thousand dollars for multi-year projects. Our competitive Native Pathways Awards for Native American and Indigenous Resilience graduate students for their research are up to $20k per recipient per year.

Suggested Keywords: Indigenous Resilience, IRes, Native Pathways, Navajo Nation, Water, Seed Grant, Challenge Grant, Faculty Fellow.

2023 Support for Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy Program (IPLP) - Administrative Assistant to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, (UNSRRIP/Special Rapporteur),

Lead: Robert A. Williams, Jr. Faculty Chair, Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy Program (IPLP), The University of Arizona Rogers College of Law

    • Award Date: Jun 2023
    • Duration: 1 year
    • Status: Ongoing

    This award will support or a third year of funding for an Administrative Assistant to the appointed United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, (UNSRRIP/Special Rapporteur), Francisco Cali Tzay. This represents partial funding for the work.


    2023 Support for Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy Program (IPLP) - Pascua Yaqui Tribe-University of Arizona (PYT-UA) Microcampus

    Lead: Robert A. Williams, Jr. Faculty Chair, Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy Program (IPLP) The University of Arizona Rogers College of Law

      • Award Date: Jun 2023
      • Duration: 1 year
      • Status: Ongoing

      This award will support the development of a dedicated website/student resource portal for the Pascua Yaqui Tribe-University of Arizona (PYT-UA) Microcampus and a UA Virtual Tribal Microcampus website network platform.


      2023 Support for Justice Advocates Coalition

        • Award Date: Jun 2023
        • Duration: 1 year
        • Status: Ongoing

        This is an annual award to James E Rogers College of Law to support an important program, the Justice Advocates Coalition (JAC). JAC was founded in 2017 and is a student-led initiative committed to empowering marginalized communities and nurturing law students interested in public interest law careers. Since its inception, JAC has sponsored 49 fellowships, valued at an impressive $140,750, with fellows working at esteemed organizations such as the ACLU, EarthJustice, Southern Arizona Legal Aid, and Lambda Legal Education and Defense Fund.


        Indigenous Resilience Center - Executive Assistant for Dr. Chief, IRes Director

        Lead: Dr. Karletta Chief, Professor, UArizona Environmental Science, Director, AIR Indigenous Resilience Center

          • Award Date: Jun 2023
          • Duration: Ongoing
          • Status: Ongoing

          A part of a successful center is sufficient support staff and as the UArizona Indigenous Resilience is growing, the Haury Program commits to providing a continuous annual support for an Executive Assistant to Dr. Chief, IRes Director. This position will assist Dr. Chief in her administrative duties and outreach.


          Indigenous Resilience Center - Faculty Startup Funds for Dr. Cherie DeVore

          Lead: Dr. Kim Ogden, Chemical and Environmental Engineering University of Arizona

            • Award Date: Jun 2023
            • Duration: 3 years
            • Status: Ongoing

            The Haury Program is pleased to provide startup funds for the third new member of the UArizona Indigenous Resilience Center, Dr. Cherie Devore, a member of the Navajo Nation. Dr. DeVore is Assistant Professor at the Department of Chemical & Environmental Engineering, University of Arizona and a core faculty of the UArizona Indigenous Resilience Center.

            This support is a part of the larger ongoing commitment of the Haury DAF Board to establishment of the UA Indigenous Resilience Center. Dr. DeVore is a part of cluster hire for the new center, along with Dr. Hoover and Dr. Johnson. With the support of the Haury Program and through the Strategic Priorities Faculty Initiative (SPFI) through the Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost, along with the AIR Indigenous Resilience Center, the planning team designed a strategic hiring plan for stage one of the faculty expansion for IRes. It identified three strategic hires. In year one, two of these strategic hires, i.e. Dr. Hoover and Dr. Johnson accepted the UArizona offer for full time faculty positions and joined UArizona in fall of 2022. Dr. DeVore came to the UArizona in the Fall of 2023.


            Indigenous Resilience Center - Remodel of N592 - IndigePOD

            Lead: Dr. Karletta Chief, Professor, UArizona Environmental Science, Director, AIR Indigenous Resilience Center

              • Award Date: Jun 2023
              • Duration: 1 year
              • Status: Ongoing

              Under the direction and guidance from Dr. Jojola, a Visiting Scholar, IRes has designed a new space for professional staff and community. Haury Operational funds that were provided to IRes initially have played a key component in this initiative and could not be possible without the support. In addition to CatCard access, the Center will have a major overhaul of all furniture, including the new aesthetics, semi-private meeting space, and student/community workspace. The grand opening will occur in 2024.


              Summer 2023 – Indigeponics: Indigenous Greenhouse Research Project and the Community Food Resilience Project Continuation

              Lead: Dr. Hooks, Biosystems Engineering, U of Arizona

                • Award Date: Jun 2023
                • Duration: 1 year
                • Status: Ongoing

                This award supports continuation of the Indigenponics: Indigenizing Controlled Environment Agriculture project by 2022 Native Pathways Awardee Chantel Harrison (Dine) and Jaymus Lee (Dine) at the UArizona of Biosystems Engineering.


                Indigenous Resilience Center (IRes)– Visiting Fellows Funds - FY23 and FY24

                Lead: Dr. Karletta Chief, Professor, UArizona Environmental Science, Director, AIR Indigenous Resilience Center

                  • Award Date: May 2023
                  • Duration: 2 years
                  • Status: Ongoing

                  IRes will host distinguished indigenous scholars, and provide opportunities for UArizona faculty, staff and beyond to participate in knowledge sharing.


                  Support for Indigenous-Centered Mini Grants, granted by UArizona Campus Sustainability Fund

                  Lead: Emily Haworth, Campus Sustainability Fund Coordinator

                    • Award Date: May 2023
                    • Duration: 1 year
                    • Status: Ongoing

                    With the generous support of the Agnese Nelms Haury Program, the CSF has two Indigenous-Centered Mini Grant opportunities for the 2023 – 2024 school year. Each Mini Grant is $5,000 and is reserved for funding Indigenous-focused projects that are oriented toward environmental and/or social sustainability.

                    The opportunity is broad and can support a project related to art, science, community engagement, the built environment, and so much more. Preference will be given to projects that are student-led. Proposals must be led by an Indigenous campus community member or, preferably, that they are led by someone that is part of an Indigenous-centered group, center, club, or organization on campus. The proposals should support an Indigenous-centered program, project, group, club, center, or initiative on campus.

                    This opportunity is open until filled and applicants have until June 30, 2024 to complete their project.

                    If you need some inspiration, please review the "Indigeponics - Community Food Resiliency Project" webpage to see what this student-led project accomplished. 


                    UA AISES Student Chapter Region 3 Conference 2024 Support Award

                    Lead: Christian Jimmie, UA AISES Student Chapter President

                      Partners: Dr. Karletta Chief, Director, UA Ires

                      • Award Date: May 2023
                      • Duration: 1 year
                      • Status: Ongoing

                      UArizona AISES Student Chapter was awarded support by the Haury Program to help with hosting the 2024 AISES Region 3 Conference in March of 2023 at the University of Arizona in Tucson, AZ. 


                      Advancing Indigenous Language Technologies

                      Lead: Jane Zaviska, Associate Dean, Research and Graduate Studies College of Social and Behavioral Sciences

                        • Award Date: Apr 2023
                        • Duration: 2 years
                        • Status: Ongoing

                        Indigenous languages are critical components of Indigenous systems of knowledge and practice and are vital to Indigenous resilience. Yet state-of-the-art language technology is primarily built for English and a few other languages. The Indigenous Language Technologies (ILT) working group has been established to advance curriculum and collaborative research on language technologies for Indigenous languages at UA. This project will support: (1) a symposium inviting representatives of Indigenous language communities to share their technology needs and challenges; (2) development of a new course on equitable technology development for Indigenous language communities; (3) a pilot project to develop a scalable approach to inventory existing open-source software libraries and develop practice data sets that better meet the needs of Native language communities. Haury funds will support the costs of the symposium and a GRA to assist with project activities. This work will provide proof of concept to enhance competitiveness for larger external proposals (e.g. National Science Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities) to scale up Indigenous language technology infrastructure.

                        This project is a revision to SBS request to redirect Haury Castro House grant to SBS.


                        Challenges of Energy Transition Among the Navajo Nation

                        Lead: Jane Zaviska, Associate Dean, Research and Graduate Studies College of Social and Behavioral Sciences

                          Partners: Diné Center for Research and Evaluation (DCRE)

                          • Award Date: Apr 2023
                          • Duration: 2 years
                          • Status: Ongoing

                          As the Navajo Nation phases out coal, new energy technologies are proposed to replace this form of energy production. This project documents the challenges of energy transition among the Navajo Nations, in partnership with the Diné Policy Institute (Tsaile, AZ) to organize focus groups, surveys, and interviews about the future of energy and the status of energy transition for the tribe. Based on prior research, the legal, political, and cultural understandings of Diné bikeyah, Navajo access to land and water are fundamental to the practices of tribal governance and development. This project links questions of water access and water security to future development projects, to the degree these developments are impacted by water. This project will link literatures on sovereignty, land tenure, water security and energy transition to expand our geographic understanding of energy transition. The project has partial support from the Sloan Foundation to support field research (currently ongoing). Haury funds will support extending research collaborations the Diné Center for Research and Evaluation (DCRE); enhancing tribal engagement activities via chapter house presentations and meetings; and research assistance to expedite data analysis, writing, and dissemination.

                          This project is a revision to SBS request to redirect Haury Castro House grant to SBS.


                          Horses Connecting Communities Across the Navajo Nation

                          Lead: Jane Zaviska, Associate Dean, Research and Graduate Studies College of Social and Behavioral Sciences

                            • Award Date: Apr 2023
                            • Duration: 2 years
                            • Status: Ongoing

                            The Horses Connecting Communities (HCC) project will extend the HCC conference series, founded by Dr. Kelsey John in 2018, into a sustaining community learning and mentoring space. HCC centers the sacredness of the horse in Navajo traditional knowledge systems, in conversation with Western One Health scientific frameworks on the interconnection between people, animals, plants, and their shared environment. Haury funds will support planning, implementation, and evaluation of events to be held on the Navajo Nation in summer 2023 and summer 2024. Programming will be developed by Navajo tribal members, in collaboration with UA partners from SBS, the College of Veterinary Medicine, and Tribal Extension. Based on evaluations from prior meetings, the community wants more hands-on demonstrations, opportunities for kids and families, and emphasis on traditional knowledge. Summer 2023 programming will include presentations of traditional horse songs and stories; experiential learning and demonstrations on horse training and care; One Health resilience dialogues on horses connecting people and environment; and mentoring panels led by Navajo equine professionals and students on navigating Western education. Evaluation feedback from the 2023 events will guide development of expanded mentoring programming in 2024 for Navajo high school students on One Health-related degree programs and careers.

                            This project is a revision to SBS request to redirect Haury Castro House grant to SBS.


                            Indigenous Resilience Center - Faculty Startup Funds for Dr. Michael Johnson

                            Lead: Dr. Michael Johnson, Assistance Specialist, UA School of Natural Resources and the Environment

                              • Award Date: Apr 2023
                              • Duration: 3 years
                              • Status: Ongoing

                              The Haury Program is pleased to provide startup funds for a new member of the UArizona Indigenous Resilience Center, Dr. Michael Kotutwa Johnson, a member of the Hopi Nation. Dr. Johnson holds a Ph.D. in Natural Resources from the University of Arizona, a Master of Public Policy from Pepperdine University, and a B.S. in Agriculture from Cornell University. Dr. Johnson is a faculty member and Assistance Specialist within the School of Natural Resources and the Environment, and a core faculty of the UArizona Indigenous Resilience Center.

                              This support is a part of the larger ongoing commitment of the Haury DAF Board to establishment of the UA Indigenous Resilience Center. Dr. Johnson is a part of cluster hire for the new center, along with Dr. Hoover and Dr. DeVore (coming in 2023). With the support of the Haury Program and through the Strategic Priorities Faculty Initiative (SPFI) through the Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost, along with the AIR Indigenous Resilience Center, the planning team designed a strategic hiring plan for stage one of the faculty expansion for IRes. It identified three strategic hires. In year one, two of these strategic hires accepted the UArizona offer for full time faculty positions and joined UArizona in fall of 2022.


                              SBS - Startup Funds for Dr. Tessa Provins

                              Lead: Lori Poloni-Staudinger, Dean, College of Social and Behavioral Sciences

                                • Award Date: Apr 2023
                                • Duration: 3 years
                                • Status: Ongoing

                                Haury Program is providing startup funds for a new UArizona College of Social and Behavioral Sciences faculty member, Dr. Tessa Proving, who will start in 2024.