USC faculty who want to integrate primary sources related to social justice into their teaching or research are invited to apply for the next round of Floyd Covington fellowships, with awards to be announced by the end of the Spring 2024 semester. Past fellows have included Li-Ping Chen, Natalia Molina, Maddox Pennington, Allissa V. Richardson, and Atia Sattar.
See the call for applications below for application guidelines and details.
Sources of Social Justice: The Floyd Covington Fellowship
A Faculty Fellowship Opportunity from the USC Libraries Collections Convergence Initiative
The USC Libraries are home to a significant and growing number of primary source collections on anti-racism, social justice, and allied topics such as civil and political protest and the histories of underrepresented communities, identities, and perspectives. These materials are housed within, to name but a few library collections, Southern California Regional History; East Asian Studies; Exile Studies; Latin-American and Iberian Studies; and the ONE Archives at USC Libraries. The USC Libraries, in consultation with faculty partners participating in the Collections Convergence Initiative (CCI), seek to encourage and support the use of the materials within these collections in teaching and research projects. The need for these unique materials to gain wider attention, use, and analysis has never been greater. The USC Libraries is pleased to announce this faculty fellowship competition named for the long-time head of the Los Angeles Urban League; the Floyd Covington Fellowships also mark the recent arrival at USC Libraries of the papers of this important civil rights leader.1 Covington Fellow applications can be made in one of two tracks. Each fellowship (two will be awarded) comes with a research-account award of $4,000. USC faculty across all ranks and title are encouraged to apply.
Application Process
Applicants are encouraged to consult with relevant library curators and other library colleagues as they prepare their application materials. Additional information, including examples of successful proposals, can be provided by CCI director William Deverell.
Track One: Innovative Instruction Using Primary Sources. Applicants will propose revision of at least two USC courses (undergraduate or graduate courses or a combination) in close consultation with instructional colleagues in USC to draw digital sources, exercises, assessments, and other course activities into their courses. The revisions should speak to issues of anti-racism and protest in the United States context, both in content and sources made available for student learning and research. Applications should include a c.v., current syllabi to be revised, and a one-page cover letter describing the applicant’s general approach to revision. Applications should also include the name(s) and title(s) of USC Libraries colleagues who will be consulted in regard to course/syllabi revisions
Track Two: Primary Source Research. Applicants will propose a research project or projects for which dedicated work within USC Libraries collections pertaining to anti-racism or civil rights is critical. Applications should include faculty c.v. and a one-page cover letter outlining the research project(s) to be undertaken and the specific sources or collections to be consulted.
Applications are due April 15, 2024 via email submission. Both fellowship awards will be announced by the end of Spring term, 2024. Applications should be submitted to Professor William Deverell.