Emerge

Call for Applications: Emerge Summer 2024 Hybrid Disability Studies Workshop for Disabled Activists, Artists, Cultural Producers, Filmmakers, and Academics

Call for Submissions: Emerge Summer 2024 Hybrid Disability Studies Workshop for Disabled Activists, Artists, Cultural Producers, Filmmakers, and Academics (APPLICATIONS CLOSED)

Overview: 

The Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability at San Francisco State University proudly announces Emerge, a three-year initiative made possible thanks to a generous grant from the Mellon Foundation. This support will allow the Longmore Institute to lead a four-week workshop for 10 emerging Disability Studies scholar-activists, held three consecutive summers at San Francisco State University with an option for hybrid participation.

Why is this Fellowship program occurring?

Emerge seeks to promote scholar-activism, the bridges and relationships that allow academics, activists, and creatives to better support each other in the shared pursuit of social change. This initiative will cultivate relationships among the next generation of Disability Studies leaders, further diversify the conversation, and promote more scholar-activism in the field.

Who are we looking for in a prospective Fellow?

This Fellowship is designed to be fertile ground for early career, emerging leaders within disability studies. We are seeking people who have the passion and ideas to grow into the next generation of culturemakers and, due to access hurdles around connecting to community and/or mentorship, would benefit from this opportunity to help move in that direction. We want to ensure that prospective Fellows benefit from the structure and design of the program and that the professional experience and desired career growth are a match for what the Fellowship has to offer.

Broadly we are defining “early career, emerging leaders” as people who have engaged in 2-4 years** of work within disability studies and who are ready to elevate their work/practice to a new level. We believe strong applicants for this Fellowship have enough experience necessary to develop a project, write a budget, think about resources, and see it through. For more clarity, if you visit the Ford Foundation’s Disability Futures Fellows, we are looking for applicants who have the passion and ideas to grow into these sorts of leaders, but currently are a ways off from this level of impact and reach in their career and without the connections or structures of support to reach this level on their own. This means that we will turn away many incredible applicants who have brilliant proposed projects, but are deemed less in need of this catalyst for their journey. 

Some examples of people who we would most like to see apply for the Fellowship:

  • You are in a Master’s program at a university/institution where there is no disability studies program/scholars. 
  • You're an academic, pre-qualifying exams, and your advisor is not versed in disability studies
  • You have had the opportunity to facilitate a workshop or offer a guest lecture, but you aren’t established in that role, regularly offering paid trainings, consulting, etc.
  • You have performed a piece of work or had your art shown (in a gallery, exhibition, showcase), but you do not have regular access to those platforms.
  • Your work as an activist has largely been following someone else’s lead and you’re ready to play a bigger role. 

Some examples of people who may be overqualified for the Fellowship:

  • If you're in a PhD program and/or you’re in a higher education program with established, consistent mentorship.
  • If you currently have a mentor within disability studies or disability justice.
  • If you're coming from a non-profit background, having held a leadership role (i.e. significant institutional power within the organizational chart).
  • If you are well connected within your artistic practice and/or organizing work and regularly partner with disability justice rooted organizations/communities.

**Please note: All applicants must identify as disabled and be working in an area that centers on disability intersections with race, gender, sexuality, incarceration record, and/or immigration status. Additionally, we recognize that the lived experience of disabled people is an invaluable asset to the growth and expansion of disability studies. We are specifically quantifying the number of years worked in the field to determine “early career” because inviting in assessment of years of lived experience within disability will not reliably reflect the skills necessary to execute a proposed project for this program.

What does the Fellowship program entail?

Each Emerge cohort will consist of scholars, artists, filmmakers, or activists whose work enriches the field of Disability Studies with projects that explore disabled people’s experiences intersecting with further marginalization by race, gender, sexuality, incarceration, or immigration. Each group of ten will be invited to San Francisco on the basis of their 2-4 years’ experience in disability-related scholarship, arts/culture/filmmaking, and/or disability justice activism. The cohort will engage in an intensive summer workshop to collectively cultivate their respective projects and build community with other disabled scholar-activists. The summer will culminate in a virtual symposium presenting their finished works to the broader Disability Studies community.

They will receive financial support in the form of a $10,000 honorarium for associated costs with their proposed project and to compensate their labor of being in the workshop, as well as travel stipend/lodging/meals for the visit to San Francisco (If you cannot join us in person because of safety or accommodation needs, a digital means of participation will be provided). 

Additionally, Fellows will receive professional development support for working on new projects grounded in scholar-activism in three formats:

  1. Facilitated shared group learning, reflections, skill sharing, and co-working with cohort mates.
  2. An assigned project mentor for weekly meetings during the summer intensive workshop and monthly meetings for ten months following the summer session.
  3. Opportunities to connect with leaders in disability scholar-activism in arts, scholarship, and activism exploring what scholar-activism means to them and the challenges they face in their work today. 

Where does the Fellowship program take place?

We are currently developing a plan for the 2024 program format building off the experience of the 2023 cohort. The plan is to extend an invitation for the cohort to stay in San Francisco for one week the final week in June 2024 as a hybrid format, soft launch of the program, specifically for community building and orientation. Any Fellows who cannot attend in person will be included via Zoom and other remote access technology features.

When does the Fellowship program happen?

Fellows must be available for Monday - Friday, 1:00-4:30pm PT (plus 3 hours of independent work each day, determined individually by each Fellows’ chosen personal schedule), during the following times:

  1. June 24 - June 28 [Hybrid, in-person program orientation/soft launch]
  2. July 8 - August 2 [Virtual Summer intensive workshop]
  3. August 16 [Culminating Virtual Symposium]

This commitment will include time for independent work on your proposed project as well as frequent meetings with the Emerge cohort and invited guests. Once the workshop concludes, fellows agree to participate in monthly check in calls with Emerge cohort from August 2024 to May 2025, time TBD based on cohort availability. 

How do I apply to be considered for a spot in the Fellowship?

Fellows will be selected by a four-member, disabled, BIPOC selection committee bringing together people with disabilities who represent the similarly diverse fields that we are hoping our Emerge cohort will represent. Fellows will be selected based on their past accomplishments, proposed individual projects, expressed commitment to scholar-activist practice, and the perceived impact from participation in the Emerge opportunity.

If you’d like to discuss your specific needs before applying, contact alocust@sfsu.edu. We look forward to working with you to make this program accessible and have budgeted for ASL, live captioning, and partial financial support for personal care assistant support). 

Other questions?

Please see our FAQ answer sheet here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1gLYLpzb0BPpV4t-ddz4e6_u-UJuL56csItNzCrGRDrs/edit?usp=sharing 

A Live Q&A occurred on November 15. Access the recording here:

https://sfsu.zoom.us/rec/share/zrYPHVTuFDuMhJK1N15mXmgK_gOu3m6iiH6OJMLFrbLAZO-_uggXGGkrY2P96uwZ.zzLNrgxdmmyDs1f0
Passcode: Emerge2024!

View the transcript here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vRvoPlGYqnAikKi0fY-ti1fxMkElq6K8X7w3hAhIn94RhGGtQixsR_350O3OdOFazHmWVBZCTIFH3Yq/pub

APPLICATIONS FOR EMERGE 2024 ARE NOW CLOSED.

To be kept in the loop about Emerge 2025, please fill out this interest form: https://forms.gle/g5W8qGqsLXvZb6vU7

Inquiries, contact Emerge Program Director Alex Locust, alocust@sfsu.edu or 415-338-6010.

***Please do not contact our selection committee. Also, please note that Alex will not serve on the committee, so please refrain from reaching out unless you have a legitimate need for assistance with the application process. 

Call for Applications - NOW CLOSED FOR 2023 CYCLE: Emerge July 2023 Hybrid Disability Studies Workshop for Disabled Activists, Artists, Cultural Producers, Filmmakers, and Academics

Overview: 

The Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability at San Francisco State University proudly announces Emerge, a three-year initiative made possible thanks to a generous $1 million grant from the Mellon Foundation. This support will allow the Longmore Institute to lead a month-long July workshop for 10 emerging Disability Studies scholar-activists, held three consecutive summers at San Francisco State University with an option for hybrid participation.

Emerge seeks to promote scholar-activism: the bridges and relationships that allow academics and activists to better support each other in the shared pursuit of social change. This initiative will cultivate relationships among the next generation of Disability Studies leaders, further diversify the conversation, and promote more scholar-activism in the field.

Each Emerge cohort will consist of scholars, artists, cultural producers, filmmakers, or activists whose work enriches the field of Disability Studies with projects that explore disabled people’s experiences intersecting with further marginalization by race, gender, sexuality, incarceration, or immigration. Each group of ten will be invited to SFSU’s campus from across the U.S. on the basis of their 4-5 years’ experience in disability-related scholarship, arts/culture/filmmaking, and/or disability justice activism. They will receive support for working on new projects grounded in scholar-activism, an assigned mentor, and opportunities to meet with the Bay Area’s disability arts, rights, and justice organizations. Throughout the month, we will facilitate conversations for the Emerge fellows with local disabled changemakers about what scholar-activism means to them and the challenges they face in their work today. The summer will culminate in a hybrid-model symposium presenting the Emerge fellows' work to the broader Disability Studies community. 

Key details of Emerge fellowship: 

  • $10,000 July Stipend to support your own personal project in scholar-activism and associated costs with the fellowship. Additional funding for travel/lodging/meal plan for your stay at SFSU with accessible dorm accommodations provided. If you cannot join us in person because of safety or accommodation needs, a digital means of participation will be provided. 
  • Project mentor to be provided, including weekly meetings during July and monthly meetings for ten months following the Emerge workshop. 
  • For an example of who we are hoping to support, see the Ford Foundation’s Disability Futures Fellows and know that applicants with similar levels of accomplishments to the Ford Futures Fellows would likely be turned away. Rather, we are seeking people who have the passion and ideas to grow into precisely these sorts of leaders but aren't there yet and would benefit from the Emerge opportunity to help them move in that direction. 
  • Accommodation support for your participation (if you’d like to discuss your specific needs before applying, contact beitiks@sfsu.edu. We will look forward to working with you to make this program accessible and have budgeted for ASL, live captioning, and some financial support for personal care assistant needs). 
  • The schedule will be determined in collaboration with the selected fellows and their access needs. Fellows will be expected to be available each weekday for a 3-4 hour synchronous meeting, including a bio-break. In addition, this commitment will include time for independent work on your proposed project as well as occasional additional meetups for excursions (performances, museums, etc, alway hybrid participation possible). Once the workshop concludes, fellows agree to participate in monthly one-hour check in calls with Emerge cohort from August to May 2024, time TBD based on cohort availability. 
  • All applicants must identify as disabled and be working in an area that centers on disability intersections with race, gender, sexuality, incarceration record, and/or immigration status. 
  • Fellows will be selected by a four-member selection committee bringing together people with disabilities who represent the similarly diverse fields that we are hoping our Emerge cohort will represent. Fellows will be selected based on their past accomplishments, proposed individual projects, expressed commitment to scholar-activist practice, and the perceived impact from participation in the Emerge opportunity.

You can find a list of frequently asked questions and answers providing more guidance on the application questions and Emerge opportunity here. Please read through before applying: https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vTei9cS5xXu-_MGh1bf8N3KU2QwsP2rmKJQxbu-18seR2spV59iPDCZVnlmtqGz1Et0glhQh-rta_QF/pub

Attend watch a Q&A recording with the Longmore Institute’s Interim Director, visit:

https://sfsu.zoom.us/rec/play/w10deGnmKTmHtqlg9w0zTNbrduQ0qcG9Hqol9A-1FIVtMwIqe441HQgT4VjOTRxy-Y0XZiRmT16GHSHJ.D91GW4NX3us0yy4A

Passcode: R3mLj7!4

The recording has the auto captions, but this link has our live transcriber's much better transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vTyziWoyB0EAvbLmN7zey1TidrnFIG8zySGcLSskrBYn2zubpsN7ssdrMsYBI-KOOBUn6joihTATx_e/pub

Apply now at: https://tinyurl.com/EmergeApply

Other Inquiries: contact Interim Director Emily Beitiks, beitiks@sfsu.edu or 415-338-6010. *Please do not contact our selection committee. Also, please note that Emily will not serve on the committee, so please refrain from reaching out unless you have a legitimate need for assistance with the application process. She cannot review project ideas, CVs, etc. 

Emerge Project Announcement

Longmore Institute on Disability at San Francisco State University receives $1 million grant from the Mellon Foundation to support the emerging leaders in disability studies and scholar-activism. 

The Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability is proud to announce Emerge, a three-year initiative that will be made possible thanks to a generous $1 million grant from the Mellon Foundation as part of their new investment in disability studies. This generous support will allow the Longmore Institute to lead a month-long summer workshop for emerging Disability Studies scholar-activists, held three consecutive summers at San Francisco State University with an option for hybrid participation.

 Each Emerge cohort will consist of scholars, artists, or activists whose work enriches the field of Disability Studies with projects that explore disabled people and experiences intersecting with further marginalization by race, gender, sexuality, incarceration record, or immigration status. Each group of ten will be invited to campus from across the U.S. on the basis of their 5-7 years’ experience in disability-related scholarship, arts and culture, and/or disability justice activism. They will receive support for working on new projects grounded in scholar-activism, an assigned mentor, and opportunities to learn from and visit with the Bay Area’s rich disability arts, rights, and justice organizations, as we host open conversations with local disabled changemakers about what scholar-activism means to them and might support them in the future with the challenges they face. The summer will culminate in a hybrid-model symposium presenting their finished works to the broader Disability Studies community. 

Interim Director of the Longmore Institute Emily Beitiks shares, “Our work has prioritized creating bridges so that academics, artists, and activists can better support each other in the shared pursuit of social change. We dreamed up this project because we want to elevate our support for the development of new networks and relationships that support scholar-activism inside disability studies for the next generation of disabled leaders. We are so excited to use our reach to introduce these leaders to the broader international disability community.” For more information, click to join the mailing list for the Longmore Institute on Disability. 

Press Contact:

Dr. Emily Beitiks, Interim Director, Longmore Institute, 415-338-6010 (office) / beitiks@sfsu.edu