A philosopher elsewhere writes:
I've been wrestling with my office of sponsored research on the issue of IDC rates for federal grants, in my own case for a translation proposal for the NEH.
My university has a newly negotiated rate with the federal government of 39%. In previous years, they were willing to reduce the existing rate (I think it was closer to 30%) to 10%, on the reasonable assumption that research in the humanities costs the institution considerably less than research in the hard sciences. But they are no insisting that the rate should be fixed across disciplines and projects. I've tried to make the case that a scholarly project in the humanities is in no way comparable to a scientific investigation of, say, the role of platelet-derived growth factor in carcinogenesis. The latter requires maintenance of lab equipment, payment of post-doctoral researchers, etc. that have no real equivalent in humanistic inquiry. But the current administration appears to be operating under the assumption that the value of grants is not to make scholarship possible but to put money in the university's purse.
I wonder if other philosophers have encountered similar issues, or if my own institution is comparatively unique in asking the NEH (in this case) to give the university a sizeable cut of the money that won't contribute in any meaningful way to the scholarly project at hand. And in a way that (in my own case) will make the grant application itself less competitive.
Curious to hear how other universities handle this. If you do not want to post your name, at least say something about your school (public/private, R1, SLAC) and the project (e.g., translation project, humanities research, interdisciplinary research [with psychology, law etc.]).



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