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Types of Funding

To find funding, you first need to define your goal. Do you need to fund your own salary? Go abroad? Start up a collaboration? Buy equipment or do field work? Develop a company based on an invention that came out of the research? Next, find a match between your goal and the many funding opportunities.

Support needed?

For more information on the different types of research grants - and which would fit your research project and career - please contact your local grant advisor.

Individual research grants

Individual research grants usually provide funding for curiosity-driven, bottom-up topics. These grants are made based on the excellence of both the researcher and the research. They vary from small travel and visiting grants to large grants that cover the salaries and material budget for a whole research group. 

Prizes

Prizes and awards are given out to acknowledge demonstrated research achievements and impact. Sometimes self-nomination is possible. Prizes are cash payouts. They can be small or substantial (millions of euros). 

Collaborative research grants

Collaborative research project grants require cooperation between two or more applicants.  Depending on the call, they can be intended for top-down thematic or fixed topics, but may also offer opportunities for curiosity driven research. Collaborative research projects can focus on fundamental research, but can also have a more applied focus, having strong links to, or partly incorporating the making of research results available for economic development and/or societal benefit. 

Potential partners include other research organisations, governmental bodies (e.g., cities, provinces, government ministries), NGOs and museums. Collaborative research project grants can vary in size and complexity (from bilateral collaborations to pan-European consortia). Collaborative grants can be interesting for all career stages. In some cases, recipients may also need to contribute towards the costs of the research project, also called co-funding.

Research training grants

These focus on the personal career development of individuals (e.g., postdocs or visiting fellows) or groups. An example of a group would be a consortium of researchers applying to set up a program consisting of multiple individual grant opportunities for individuals (e.g., PhD networks).

Contract research

Research for companies is very narrowly defined. It involves research laid out in a specific project description, with exact deliverables set by the company. Furthermore, the contract usually specifies that the company owns the results of the research. For more information, please contact Luris Business Development

Funding for education development

The grants discussed above all focus on research. There are also grants that combine research, education and innovation, and offer opportunities for improving the quality of education or setting up international cooperation. For more information and support on education grants, such as Erasmus+ and Comenius, please contact the EduGrants team at the International Relations office.

Funding for valorisation and/or starting a company

If you have great research results that can be further developed for societal applications and/or commercial products, there are proof-of-concept and seed funds available. For more information and support on valorisation grants, please contact Luris.

Funding support and opportunities

This page is used to collect current and ongoing funding opportunities for researchers within the Leiden Law School. You can find a list of upcoming deadlines. The full list of relevant funding opportunities can be found in this document

Last updated on 13/02/2025

Current opportunities

ELS Academy | Small Grants for Early-Career Researchers (Empirical Legal Studies)
Netherlands Academy for Empirical Legal Studies offers small grants (up to €5,000) for early-career researchers to conduct research, organize workshop organisation, pursue impact activities, or do networking. Deadline: February 2025.

Distinguished NIAS-Lorentz Fellowship (DNLF)
The Fellowship is awarded annually to a researcher (at least 3 years after PhD graduation) to work on a topic that bridges the humanities and/or social sciences with the natural and/or technological sciences. The Fellowship consists of: a 5-month fellowship between Sept 2026 and Jan 2027 at NIAS, a personal stipend of € 2,500/month, and a workshop at the Lorentz Center with full organizational support and € 20,000 budget. For more information, see here: DNLF Fellowships – NIAS-Lorentz Program. Deadline: 17 March 2025, 12.00 (noon).

EC-JUST | Action Grants to Support Transnational Projects on Judicial Training covering Civil Law, Criminal Law or Fundamental Rights
Support for collaborative training projects promoting the digitalisation of national justice systems. Budget min. €100,000 (no maximum budget). Deadline 26 March 2025, 17.00.

EC-JUST | Action Grants to Promote Judicial Cooperation in Civil and Criminal Matters
Support for collaborative projects aiming to improve the effectiveness of national justice systems, and the effective enforcement of decisions, by facilitating and supporting judicial cooperation in civil and criminal matters, and promoting the rule of law, independence and impartiality of the judiciary. Budget € 75,000 - € 350,000. Deadline: 23 April 2025.

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