Grants Database
Year
Programs
Amount
Location
Tides Center
To support the Alliance for Safety and Justice's campaign to redirect federal grant dollars towards violence prevention programs at the state and local level
$100,000
Tides Foundation
To support the Community Justice Reform Coalition's speakers' bureau and Policymakers for Peace coalition
$50,000
Trace Media Inc.
For continuation of its reporting project on gun violence in the Great Lakes region
$300,000
True Star Foundation
For Dion's Chicago Dream to continue its response to the COVID-19 pandemic
$10,000
Twelve Literary Arts Inc.
To cover additional, COVID-19-related costs necessary to execute its current Joyce Award
$8,300
UnidosUS
To convene a series of roundtable discussions with national advocacy organizations focused on Latino students and develop a shared agenda and messaging around support for state assessments
$25,000
United Way of Metropolitan Chicago
To support the Bridging the K-12 Digital Divide effort in Chicago
$250,000
United Way of Metropolitan Chicago
For the Chicago Community COVID-19 Response Fund
$250,000
United Way of Metropolitan Chicago
To support planning for a new Community Leadership Fellows program that seeks to identify and invest in overlooked talent from the West Side of Chicago
$25,000
University at Albany
For research to examine the justice system response to illegal gun possession in the state of New York
$142,287
University of California-Los Angeles
To purchase a data set from the National Association of Medical Examiners to conduct research on toxicology data in NVDRS
$1,320
University of California, Davis
To study the short-term effects of the coronavirus pandemic on firearm violence in the United States
$66,710
University of California, Davis
For a study of community violence prevention specialists
$230,000
University of Chicago
To study how the COVID-19 school closures are changing the relationship between educators, parents and students and what that means for the future of K-12 education
$75,000
University of Illinois at Chicago
To study "gig" employers and their relationship with the state's unemployment insurance system
$30,000