Launched in 2018, the Henry Luce Foundation’s Indigenous Knowledge Fellowship supports knowledge makers and knowledge keepers serving Indigenous communities in the United States through a competitive program administered by First Nations Development Institute (FNDI).
Luce and our partners at FNDI believe that knowledge and ideas have the power to transform communities—at the local, national, and global levels—but only if it’s placed in the hands of passionate thinkers who want to build it and share it. By investing in intellectual leaders who are committed to spreading their work within the collective, we can empower the people that our fellows aim to address and serve.
In keeping with Luce tradition, we maintain an expansive definition of intellectual leadership which includes spiritual leaders, media makers, scientists, health professionals, academics, curators, artists, writers, and policy makers, among others. Their work may take many forms, such as journalism, visual art, film and video, speeches or sermons, educational curricula, music, theater, formal scholarship or research, public health strategies, legal arguments, fiction, and policy analysis.
The selection process for the fifth cohort of the Luce Indigenous Knowledge Fellowship is underway. We’ll kick off the application period for the sixth cohort in spring or early summer 2025.
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