ACLS Awards 2026 Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Innovation Fellowships

The American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) is pleased to announce the 2026 Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Innovation Fellows, made possible by the generous support of the Mellon Foundation.
The Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Innovation Fellowship Program supports doctoral students in the humanities and social sciences as they pursue innovative approaches to dissertation research, including new methodologies, formats, and collaborations with community partners beyond the academy. ACLS launched the program in 2023 to expand and recognize a wider range of research methods, modes, and subjects in dissertation research.
“The 2026 Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Innovation Fellows present some of the most exciting and forward-thinking scholarship happening today in the humanities and social sciences,” said Alison Chang, ACLS Senior Program Officer in US Programs. “ACLS is proud to support their scholarship, and we look forward to following their impact in the academy and beyond.”
This year’s cohort of 50 fellows was selected from a pool of over 1,000 applicants through a rigorous, multi-stage peer review process that drew on the expertise of more than 170 scholars across the country. Each fellow receives an award of up to $52,000, consisting of a $42,000 stipend; up to $8,000 for project-related research, training, professional development, and travel; and a $2,000 stipend to support external mentorship that offers new perspectives on the fellow’s project and expands their advising network.
The 2026 awardees will pursue a range of approaches to the dissertation, incorporating trans- and inter-disciplinary research, mixed methodologies, and non-traditional scholarly formats. Their wide-ranging research includes a study of female scribal practices in Medieval Europe; a project that explores the weaponization of sound in the anti-abortion movement in the United States; an analysis of female-centered forms of resistance against ecological and state violence in the Niger Delta; and a multi-sited ethnography of sonic de/militarization in East Asia, incorporating spaces and events where sound intersects with competing ideas around peacebuilding and militarism.