Divisions
and Offices
 Challenge
 Grants
 Digital
 Humanities
 Education
 Programs
 Federal/State
 Partnership
 Preservation
 and Access
 Public
 Programs
 Research
 Programs
 The CDLI database with CDLI core data has been set up on an independent server. Courtesy Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative.
The CDLI database with CDLI core data has been set up on an independent server. Courtesy Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative.
 Leonard Nadel, "Braceros stand in a group at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico."  Courtesy National Museum of American History.
Leonard Nadel, "Braceros stand in a group at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico." Courtesy National Museum of American History.
Preservation and Access
Grant Program
Humanities Collections and Reference Resources (HCRR)
Humanities Collections and Reference Resources grants fund projects that preserve and create intellectual access to collections of books, journals, newspapers, manuscript and archival materials, maps, still and moving images, sound recordings, art, objects of material culture, and digital objects. It also provides support for the creation of dictionaries, encyclopedias, catalogs, and other reference works and research tools of major importance to the humanities. Because it is now possible to allow digital access, through a single entry point, to humanities materials housed in many different repositories and to use these materials in new ways, HCRR encourages projects that unite, integrate, or aggregate digital collections and resources.
Guidelines URL: www.neh.gov/grants/guidelines/HCRR.html
Projects
PI-50001, University of California, Los Angeles:
Online Catalog of Cuneiform Tablets in the Iraq National Museum
.
A grant to UCLA in 2007 supported the development of an online catalog of cuneiform tablets at the Iraq National Museum, documenting Mesopotamian civilization from 3300 BCE until the Christian era.
Project URL: http://cdli.ucla.edu/
PM-50062, George Mason University:
The Bracero History Archive: Collaborative Documentation in the Digital Age.

A grant to George Mason University in 2007 supported the development of a collaborative, bilingual, online archive documenting the Bracero Program, which brought Mexican guest workers to the United States between 1942 and 1964. The Bracero History Archive is a project of the Center for History and New Media at George Mason University, the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, Brown University, and the Institute of Oral History at the University of Texas at El Paso.
Project URL: http://braceroarchive.org/