Today we launched a call for proposals for Antipode Foundation “Right to the Discipline” grants: https://antipodeonline.org/a-right-to-the-discipline/ We are looking to fund 10-12 projects, and will be accepting applications until 10 April 2026.
Last year we received 169 applications and made 10 grants—a success rate of 5.9%. It has been a pleasure to work with the grant recipients so far, and we look forward to hearing more as their projects come together in the coming months.
Resisting Carceral Capitalism: Disposal, Containment, and Extraction in the Middle Eastern Frontier — Myriam Amri (University of Cambridge), Harry Pettit (Radboud University), and Katharina Grueneisl (University of Nottingham)
Exposing and Combating the Political Economy of Border Violence in the Aegean — the Feminist Autonomous Centre for research (FAC) and Legal Centre Lesvos with Geoff Boyce (University College Dublin), Lauren Martin (Durham University), and Aila Spathopoulou (University of Stirling)
Memory in Movement Against State Violence: 10 Years of the Osasco and Barueri Mothers’ Movement, São Paulo, Brazil — Maria Clara Minussi, Juan Rodrigues, Acácio Augusto and Joana Barros (Federal University of São Paulo), Gabriella De Biaggi (University of São Paulo), and Zilda Maria de Paula (August 13 Association)
The Africa Charter and Critical Reflections of Africa-Based Early-Career Researchers on International Research Partnerships — Eyob Gebremariam (University of Bristol), Divine Fuh (University of Cape Town), Puleng Segalo (University of South Africa), and Isabella Aboderin (University of Bristol)
Lessons Against the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex: Building an Online Course to Demilitarise Education — Zsuzsanna Ihar (University of Cambridge), Jo Sweeney (University of Liverpool), and Jinsella Kennaway (Demilitarise Education [dED])
Voices of Places: Creative Dialogues with Doreen Massey — Metroland Cultures and the OpenSpace Research Centre (including Colin Lorne, Carry van Lieshout, and Ben Newman [Open University])
Infra Metropolitan Systems: A Platform for Music as a Socio-Spatial Mode of Conjunctural Analysis and Urban Activism — Louis Moreno, Janna Graham and Edward George (Goldsmiths, University of London) with Ultra-red, Deptford People’s Heritage Museum, and DJ Lynnée Denise
Hope is Home: Mapping against Spatial and Cartographic Erasure of the Rohingya Community — Sahat Zia Hero (Rohingyatographer Collective, Bangladesh) and Vishnu Prasad (London School of Economics and Political Science)
Tracing the Tower Block Campaign: An Activist Archive for Contemporary Housing Justice — Tower Blocks UK, On the Record, and Holly Smith (University of Cambridge)
Cuerpo-Territoriality of Alternative Water Infrastructures: Critical Cartographies of Women’s Resistances to Urban Water Financialisation in Mexico City — Grace Wright-Arora (University of Oxford), Paula Soto Villagrán (UAM-Iztapalapa), Delmy Tania Cruz Hernández (Centro de Estudios Superiores de México y Centroamérica), and James Morrison (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
