> 
> On May 17, 2022, at 3:06 PM, Collin Schwantes 
> <schwan...@ecohealthalliance.org> wrote:
> 
> Hi All,
> 
> My organization was part of a major viral discovery research project funded
> by USAID ~3 years ago. The systems for making that data available need to
> be documented and updated and I'm wondering if there are any grants or orgs
> that commonly fund that type of work.
> 
> thanks!
> 
> Collin

I know that there are groups that fund ‘data rescue’ efforts, but they tend to 
be field specific, so you’d have to look within the research community that 
would want to use the data that was collected.  They also tend to find data 
that is most ‘at risk’ of being lost… so older data on antiquated storage 
systems, or where the PI is nearing retirement (or already retired).

You might also try searching for ‘data curation’ grants in the discipline, as 
they’re often scoped for documentation efforts and possibly format / media 
refreshes.  Sometimes you can find them in adjacent research communities if the 
data might have re-use potential, by documenting it for that other community to 
be able to use it.

Besides the research discipline that would use the data, also check the 
original funding body; they sometimes have data grants available to their past 
PIs (so that good research that they’ve funded doesn’t get lost).

And I don’t want to be rude about this, but I’m honestly surprised that the 
initial proposal didn’t have to spell out how they were going to handle this as 
part of the Data Management Plan for the initial proposal if it was only three 
years ago.  I thought most funding bodies were now requiring plans for data 
after it’s been collected.

If you don’t have continued funding to host it, I would look into getting it 
exported into some sort of static format and submit it to whatever archive will 
take it.  If your disciple doesn’t have an archive, you could try one of the 
more generic ones like Dryad or I think Figshare and Zenodo now take datasets.

… and if the researchers have no clue about any data / informatics efforts in 
their field, you can try the Research Data Alliance and see if they have a 
Community of Practice or an Interest Group that’s related to the discipline: 
https://rd-alliance.org/groups

(They don’t give grants; they’re more of a social infrastructure for data 
informatics folks to gather work on issues in their field; they have support 
from NSF, CODATA, EU, Australia, and others)

-Joe

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