Frequently asked questions
Do you have questions about the Kiem grant? You can find answers to frequently asked questions on this page.
Yes. To promote collaboration among faculties, only applications can be submitted where applicants from at least two faculties are taking part. It is, of course, permitted to have several of the applicants working at the same faculty if there are more than two applicants.
No, while it is a requirement that a proposal involves applicants from at least two faculties, it should also demonstrably promote interdisciplinary education, research and/or organisation through encounters, connections and partnerships between faculties.
If this is a new proposal within an existing collaboration, an application may be submitted. In the section of the application form on the aim of the project it should be described clearly to what extent it is a new initiative and how this relates to any existing collaborations of the applicants involved.
Once the proposal has been honoured, the applicant can ask for an advance via the coordinating faculty. Once awarded, the funding will be paid in one lump sum to the SAP number provided by the applicant.
Both material and personnel costs (only hiring student or management assistants,support at meetings and events) are eligible for subsidy. Using the grant to exempt from teaching or research (buy out) is not permitted. Exact costs should be budgeted in the application form (without faculty mark up).
Certainly! Academics who are at the start of their (academic) career are encouraged to work in interdisciplinary partnerships.
You certainly may!
The Kiem grant is inclusive, and is available for interfaculty partnerships relating to both teaching and research, as well as the organisation required.
The start date is between 1 July 2025 and 31 December 2025; the project must be completed within 12 months of the start date.
There is no extension scheme for this application, because the applicant’s career stage is of no consequence to one’s eligibility to apply for a Kiem grant.
Based on our ambitions regarding openness and the recognition and rewards for academic work (Academia in Motion), we work with so-called 'open proposals'. In this case, this means that the names, affiliations and abstracts of the admissible projects will be made publicly available (online) - regardless of whether the proposals are awarded or excluded by lottery. We do this to give attention to good ideas, so that we can learn from each other and to promote cooperation (for example, on adjacent proposals).
Proposals can focus on building networks, organising seminars and workshops, conducting a pilot study, producing publications, creating research proposals, etc. Funding under the Kiem grant is not intended to exempt the researcher from teaching, but can be used for other staff-related expenses, such as hiring student or management assistants and support staff for meetings.
You may, provided you are affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine. It does not matter whether you are WP or OBP but because this is an internal call for Leiden University, applicants must be affiliated with Leiden University.
You may, but each application must involve at least two staff members from different faculty/interfaculty institutes.
Involving external partners is allowed, as long as there are at least also two applicants from different faculties. Further, the proposal must demonstrably promote interdisciplinary research, teaching and/or organisation through encounters, connections and partnerships between faculties. Resources of the Kiem grant may not be used to cover participation of external partners.
Yes, you may. If you have received another internal or external grant previously, you may submit a Kiem application. Even if you received a Kiem grant in 2023 or 2024 and that project has now fully concluded, you may submit a new application. Please do note your application should involve a completely new initiative, so, for instance, continuation or scaling up of a previous project is not eligible for Kiem.
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