The Guiding Local Opportunities for Wellbeing (GLOWS) Grant Program 2024–26 offers research grants and scholarships to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students, community organisations and their partners for work relating to HIV and viral hepatitis over the next three years. 

Lowitja Institute aims to further increase health equity, address disparities that continue to drive disease transmission, and work towards elimination of HIV and viral hepatitis in all of our communities.  

Four different grant types and two scholarship streams are offered over the course of the program. These include large and medium research grants (focused on providing opportunities for research and community programs aimed at addressing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community needs). The program also includes incubator, seeding or demonstration grants, scholarships and education grants. Funding tiers range from $800,000 over two years, to seeding grants and scholarships of $30,000 and $25,000. 

GLOWS grant streams

GLOWS Large and Medium Research Grants

The aims of GLOWS Large and Medium Research Grants are:

  • to ensure that the research commissioned is of high impact for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
  • that it represents value for money
  • that it is led and owned by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
  • that it has direct benefit to Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander peoples and communities.

Research funded through these grants must address the overall goal of the program, being to increase health equity and address disparities that continue to drive the transmission of HIV/viral hepatitis within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and work towards elimination.​

GLOWS Large Grant

Value: up to $800,000
Duration: 2-year project

GLOWS Medium Grant 

Value: up to $300,000
Duration: 2-year project

Applications are now closed for these grants

 

GLOWS Seeding Research Grant

The GLOWS Seeding Research Grant aims to provide Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community controlled organisations the opportunity to identify or explore research priorities within their community related to HIV and viral hepatitis infections, diagnosis, and treatment.​

Funding is also available to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander early career researchers, to provide an opportunity to explore and strengthen community research priorities and to generate the evidence needed to develop a research proposal.​ This funding will contribute to bringing together key stakeholders and partners to develop a research project ready to be undertaken. Successful applicants will be required to develop a research proposal at the end of the grant period.

Please note: the grant time frame cannot be extended

Value: up to $30,000
Duration: 3 months

Applications are now closed for this grant

 

GLOWS National Gathering ​Grant 

The GLOWS National Gathering Grant is designed for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who are working at or in partnership with an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community controlled organisation in Australia. ​The two-day gathering is an opportunity to come together and share experiences and knowledge of working with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living with HIV/viral hepatitis and research into HIV/viral hepatitis. ​

This will be a chance to work alongside people with lived experience of HIV/viral hepatitis, people providing support to those living with HIV/viral hepatitis, and senior Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research leaders, to discuss topics such as developing research ideas, research ethics, and knowledge translation.

Value: up to $150,000
Duration: 1 year

Applications are now closed for this grant

GLOWS Scholarships

The 2025 round of GLOWS Scholarships will open on 29 November 2024

For all enquiries, please contact glows@lowitja.org.au

GLOWS Grant Program is delivered in partnership with Gilead Sciences

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Acknowledgement of Country

We acknowledge the traditional owners of the land across Australia and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this website may contain images, voices and names of deceased persons.

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