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Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance

NSF

closed
OpenLast verified: 2026-06-17

About This Grant

The Sub-national Nonstate Actor Governance (SNAG) project introduces a new measurement strategy and public dataset to measure territorial control at the local level within conflict zones, tracked over time. Understanding how groups gain or lose territorial control, and thus how conflicts begin, evolve, and end, is essential to national security and preparedness. Yet scholars, policymakers, and military strategists lack reliable and accessible techniques to measure and monitor territorial control within conflict zones. Existing empirical research is focused on a limited number of conflicts for which there happen to exist reliable measures of local-level territorial control over time. This limits ability to understand conflict more generally, and to apply knowledge to new threat environments. This research draws upon open-source information to ensure a transparent process that is easily replicated across contexts and adapted to new measurement challenges. The project uses machine learning and natural language processing (NLP) tools to automatically detect mentions of belligerent activity and control in a corpus of open-source texts, which are then used to produce spatially and temporally disaggregated estimates of rebel and government territorial control. The Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance (SNAG) project measures nonstate actors’ territorial control and governance at the local level, capturing temporal variation throughout conflict, comparable across contexts. This project makes both substantive and methodological contributions, generates new publicly available data capturing nonstate actors’ territorial control, uses an approach that translates across contexts to facilitate comparative analyses. The PIs annotate text from a corpus of news reports from conflict zones, identifying indicators of rebel and government territorial control with location and time information. These annotations are then used to train a new natural language processing pipeline, which is applied to the remainder of the corpus to automate the process of extracting relevant information from the full corpus. The information produced by this process is incorporated into a measurement model to produce fine-grained spatio-temporal data on conflict belligerents’ territorial control within conflict zones, facilitating systematic comparison of these phenomena within and across conflicts. The subnational territorial control data are used to investigate basic research questions related to the causes and consequences of territorial control and governance, fundamental to understanding the security risks in “differently governed” spaces, the efficacy of counterinsurgency aid, and the consequences for state-building after conflict. Methodologically, SNAG contributes new tools for generating geospatial data from text and for developing spatial latent variable models adaptable for additional social science applications. This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.

Grant Summary

Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance is a NSF grant providing up to $129K for university, nonprofit, small business. Applications are due 2028-06-30 (open). Check eligibility and apply with FindGrants.

Focus Areas

machine learningsocial science

Eligibility

universitynonprofitsmall business

How to Apply

Funding Range

Up to $129K

Deadline

2028-06-30

Complexity
Medium
  1. 1Confirm your organization is eligible for Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance from NSF, checking organization type, location, and any population or project requirements.
  2. 2Gather the required documents and information, including your organization details, project plan, and budget figures.
  3. 3Draft your application narrative and budget addressing the funder's priorities and review criteria. FindGrants can draft each section for you to review and edit.
  4. 4Review every section against the requirements checklist, then export a submission-ready application pack and submit it to NSF before the deadline.
This record is a past award, contract, or funder profile — useful for research, but not an open grant application. Check the original source for current opportunities from this funder.

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Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance: Frequently Asked Questions

Who is eligible for the Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance?

Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance is offered by NSF and is generally open to university, nonprofit, small business. It is open to organizations nationwide unless the funder specifies otherwise. Review the specific eligibility terms before applying, since funders set their own requirements around organization type, location, and the population or project being served.

How much funding does the Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance provide?

Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance provides up to $129K per award from NSF. Actual award sizes depend on the scope of your project, available program funds, and the number of applicants, so build a budget that reflects realistic, allowable costs rather than the maximum figure.

When is the Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance deadline?

Applications for Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance are due 2028-06-30 (open). Because deadlines can change, verify the date with the funder, NSF, and give yourself enough time to prepare a complete, competitive application before the close date.

How do you apply for the Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance?

To apply for Collaborative Research: Subnational Nonstate Actor Governance, confirm your eligibility, gather the required documents, and prepare a narrative and budget that address the funder's priorities. FindGrants guides you step by step and can draft each section, then exports a submission-ready application pack for this grant from NSF.