ESS26 - Resilience and Crises / Details of Chapters

Chapter "Basic Information"

This chapter contains basic information about the proposal, including title, scientific disciplines involved, keywords, duration, and type of project (i.e., regular WWTF Project or Joint Project). Fill out fields as required.

Please note:

Chapter "Personnel and Institutions"

This chapter contains information about the main parties in the project. Please see here how to invite PIs to the project. 

Before proceeding to the Chapter "Budget", please make sure that all PIs and CoPIs have been invited (and that they filled our the Profile and Role) and that all additional partner institutions are added. The Budget tool of the online form needs this information to allocate the cost lines to institutions. If this step has not been completed, the system might miscalculate the budget.  

Chapter "Project"

This chapter contains the main part of the scientific information regarding the project. 

Lay Summary
Abstract
Work Programme

The work programme comprises the following chapters:

1. Introduction and state-of-the-art

This section should outline the scientific background and current state of the art relevant to the proposed research. Applicants are expected to clearly demonstrate how the proposed topic addresses both scientifically and societally relevant questions within the scope of the call.
The proposal should explain the scientific importance of the chosen topic and articulate its relevance to societal challenges regarding resilience and crises. Applicants should justify the selection of the crisis or crises addressed, situating them within current scientific debates as well as broader societal needs and policy contexts.
Applicants are also expected to position their previous and ongoing work within the existing state of the art and to explain how this prior expertise underpins and informs the proposed work programme, demonstrating both continuity and added value beyond current knowledge (Please note that this call does not require applicants to be experts in crises or resilience studies; however, they should have expertise in the domain to which the chosen crisis relates to). 

2. Innovativeness and original contribution 

This section should identify the key scientific challenges and gaps in the existing body of research relevant to the proposed topic. Applicants are expected to clearly articulate how the project addresses these challenges and advances beyond the current state of knowledge.
The proposal should specify in which respects the project is innovative and novel, in particular regarding capacity building. The expected contribution of the research to the field should be made explicit. Given the nature of the funding (max. 100,000 € for a short-term funding period), a huge step is not expected.
Applicants should also briefly describe the interdisciplinary approach adopted in the project and explain how the combination of diverse disciplinary perspectives and expertise within the research team contributes to the project’s originality and innovative potential (see also subchapter 7). 
3. Conceptual considerations
This section should present the key conceptual/theoretical frameworks guiding the proposed research. Applicants should explain how these frameworks inform the analysis of the selected crisis or crises and address the main themes of the call, such as resilience and uncertainty.
The proposal should also outline the conceptual/theoretical basis for the project’s anticipatory aspects, including approaches such scenario building, and indicate how these support the analysis of future developments and uncertainties.
4. Research questions and objectives
This section should clearly and precisely define the research questions and objectives of the proposed project: Why are the selected crisis or crises suitable for the project? How will it be approached? Why are the chosen crisis or crises a suitable starting point for studying and strengthening societal resilience?
Furthermore, the proposal should explain how the research design enables the development of actionable, practice-oriented outcomes and how these are expected to generate tangible real-world impacts beyond academia (with a view on funding phase two).

5. Methodological approaches and workplan
Please provide a well-structured work plan (including work packages and key milestones). The work plan may also include a meaningful and self-explanatory visual representation. Include a description of the methodological approaches you aim to employ, in particular with regard to anticipatory approaches as well as how you aim to reach practitioners and how you aim to create and build networks both within academia and with societal actors. 

6. Expected outcomes and outlook for funding phase two 
Please explain what you intend to achieve with the project. What would be the potential next steps in case your project will be selected for phase two of the funding?

7. Project team and interdisciplinary collaboration
Describe how the project team collectively, based on their individual expertise and the disciplinary backgrounds, is able to achieve the overall goals of the proposed project. Describe the expertise and competences of the PI&C in the field of social sciences. Justify the disciplinary composition of the project team (in particular when both disciplines come from the social sciences). 
How is interdisciplinary collaboration organised within the project? Please ensure that this section is consistent with the information you have provided in the "Roles" section ("Specific scientific competences for the project" and "Roles and responsibilities within the project") in the online forms of the funding portal. 

8. References
The number of references is not limited. Please use a referencing style that is accepted by an interdisciplinary community. 

Formal requirements

Ethical considerations 
Use of generative AI

Chapter "Budget"

Please note the following guidelines for the budget:

Personnel costs

Make sure that all institutions are added before in the "Personnel and Institutions" chapter. Otherwise the system cannot assign additional persons to institutions and thus the budget overview is not correctly displayed. 

Non-personnel costs
Budget per region
Cost overview
Explanation of Cost Planning
Disclosure of other applications for funding

Chapter "Signatures"


Revision #16
Created 2025-12-30 13:12:00 UTC by Michael Strassnig
Updated 2026-01-12 10:50:01 UTC by Magdalena Wicher