Grieving academic grant rejections: Examining funding failure and experiences of loss

Author:

Borgstrom Erica1,Driessen Annelieke2,Krawczyk Marian3,Kirby Emma4,MacArtney John5,Almack Kathryn6

Affiliation:

1. School of Health, Wellbeing and Social Care, The Open University, UK

2. Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, UK

3. School of Social and Environmental Sustainability, University of Glasgow, UK

4. Centre for Social Research in Health, University of New South Wales, Australia

5. Warwick Medical School – Health Sciences, The University of Warwick, UK

6. School of Health and Social Work, University of Hertfordshire, UK

Abstract

Bidding for research funding has increasingly become a main feature of academic work from the doctoral level and beyond. Individually and collectively, the process of grant writing – from idea conceptualisation to administration – involves considerable work, including emotional work in imagining possible futures in which the project is enacted. Competition and failure in grant capture are high, yet there is little discussion about how academics experience grant rejections. In this article we draw on our experiences with grant rejections, as authors with diverse social science backgrounds working with death and bereavement, to discuss how grant rejection can be conceptualised as a form of loss and lead to feelings of grief. We end by considering what forms of recognition and support this may enable.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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