Awards Database

The Haury Program is focused on advancing Indigenous Resilience through funding and supporting education, research and outreach, supporting Native American pathways, and building partnerships at the UArizona and beyond.

This Awards Database contains all of our grants awarded since our inception in 2014, including those from the 2014-2019 period when the program offered competitive grants and focused on multi-cultural scholarship and community building to promote and build capacity for wider social and environmental justice projects.

Indigenous Resilience Initiative Awards awarded after 2020 are tailored to the needs of a program, and can range from a few thousand to several hundred thousand dollars for multi-year projects. Our competitive Native Pathways Awards for Native American and Indigenous Resilience graduate students for their research are up to $20k per recipient per year.

Suggested Keywords: Indigenous Resilience, IRes, Native Pathways, Navajo Nation, Water, Seed Grant, Challenge Grant, Faculty Fellow.

Indigenous Correspondents Program

Lead: Dr. Kevin Bonine, Director, UArizona AIR Education Initiative

    • Award Date: Jun 2022
    • Duration: 2 years
    • Status: Ongoing

    The Indigenous Correspondents Program (ICP), a nascent partnership between UArizona and Planet Forward, aims to support journalistic, critical, and strategic storytelling to amplify the voices of Indigenous students and professionals working on finding solutions to the growing social and environmental challenges facing Indigenous communities, including water access/quality, health care inequality, education, and discrimination.

    Through short-form creative non-fiction, the ICP supports the co-creation of new resonant narratives of the human experience challenged by socio-environmental issues by bringing together Indigenous oral traditions and digital literature. In doing so, the program invites Indigenous scholars to defy mainstream discourses and propose new perspectives on how to elevate the dignity of all human beings - and how to connect all humans to the planet and ecosystems that support them.


    2022 Native Pathways Award - Research Assistant Support

    Lead: Dr. Benjamin Wilder, Director, UArizona Desert Laboratory on Tumamoc Hill

      • Award Date: May 2022
      • Duration: 1 year
      • Status: Ongoing

      Natasha Chantel Riccio is a PhD student at the UArizona Arid Lands Resource Sciences department. Natasha will work with Dr. Benjamin Wilder, Director of the UArizona Desert Laboratory on Tumamoc Hill. Natasha's research is at the nexus of ethnobotany, ecology, genetics, and agriculture, incorporating multiple perspectives to build a larger whole. In particular, Natasha's research explores climate-resilient agricultural models through a transdisciplinary approach to studying human-plant relationships grounded in cultural Knowledge. Natasha is especially interested in Agave murpheyi, a species of agave domesticated by the Hohokam and farmed throughout the Sonoran Desert by Indigenous peoples. Natasha has begun conversations with collaborators from the San Xavier District, the San Xavier Coop Farm, and the Akimel O'odham community to develop a network of sanctuaries for these bio-culturally significant plants.


      2022 Native Pathways Award - Research Assistant Support

      Lead: Dr. Karletta Chief, Professor, UArizona Environmental Science, Director, AIRES/Haury Indigenous Resilience Center

        • Award Date: May 2022
        • Award Amount: $10,000
        • Duration: 2 years
        • Status: Ongoing

        Nikki Tulley (Diné), is a PhD student in the Department of Environmental Science with a concentration in Hydroscience at the University of Arizona. Nikki is currently working on the project “Assessing Navajo COVID-19 Risks and Increasing Indigenous Resilience,” led by Dr. Karletta Chief, Professor at the UArizona Environmental Science department and Director of the Indigenous Resilience Center. Nikki will work during the summer conducting surveys to Navajo water haulers to identify water hauling, water quality, and water relief needs.


        2022 Native Pathways Award - Research Assistant Support

        Lead: Dr. Murat Kacira, Director, Controlled Environment Agriculture Center

          • Award Date: May 2022
          • Duration: 1 year
          • Status: Completed

          Chantel Harrison (Diné) is a Professional Science Master’s student at the UArizona Applied Biosciences program in the Controlled Environment Agriculture track and a student-trainee in the IndigeFEWSS (Indigenous Food, Energy, & Water Security and Sovereignty) project funded by the National Science Foundation. Chantel has experience developing research initiatives related to nutrition and nutrition education with a solid commitment to giving back to her community members. Chantel will be working with Dr. Murat Kacira, Director of the Controlled Environment Agriculture Center, to address food sovereignty, food insecurity, and the food-energy-water nexus in urban and rural Indigenous communities.


          2022 Native Pathways Award - Research Assistant Support

          Lead: Dr. Ronald Trosper, Professor, UArizona American Indian Studies

            • Award Date: May 2022
            • Award Amount: $18,000
            • Duration: 1 year
            • Status: Completed

            Jacelle Ramon-Sauberan (Tohono O'odham), PhD candidate from the San Xavier District, will be working with professor Dr. Ronald Trosper of the UArizona American Indian Studies Department. Jacelle is majoring in American Indian Studies with a minor in Journalism at the University of Arizona. Jacelle's research focuses on the San Xavier District's efforts to cope with the loss of water from the Santa Cruz River and the impact of applying the water allotment policy to the District. This community-based research argues that the Tohono O'odham people of San Xavier have demonstrated resilience by establishing two community organizations: the San Xavier Allottees Association and the San Xavier Cooperative Farm, which utilizes allotted lands.


            2022 Native Pathways Award - Research Assistant Support

            Lead: Dr. Ruth E Taylot-Piliae, Associate Professor, UArizona College of Nursing

              • Award Date: May 2022
              • Duration: 1 year
              • Status: Completed

              Dr. Ruth E. Taylor-Piliae, Associate Professor at the UArizona College of Nursing, will be working with Christine Hodgson, PhD candidate at the UArizona College of Nursing, to conduct the community-based research project Understanding the Resilience of Children Living on an Indian Reservation: A Mixed Methods Participatory-Social Justice Investigation with the Fort Peck Tribes in Montana. The study, approved by the UArizona and Fort Peck Tribes’ IRBs, aims to understand the resilience of children living on an Indian reservation to inform preventive health interventions by acknowledging tribal customs and beliefs and Indigenous Knowledge. In addition, the study will address health inequities and lay the groundwork for future research in other tribal communities. 


              Native SOAR, EAST Place of Beginnings – New Student Pathway

              Lead: Dr. Amanda Cheromiah, UArizona's College of Education, Native Student Outreach Access and Resiliency (Native SOAR)

                • Award Date: May 2022
                • Duration: 1 year
                • Status: Ongoing

                Native SOAR provides multigenerational mentoring and professional development services that center on the needs of American Indian/Alaskan Native (AI/AN) students throughout the K-20 educational system. Native SOAR does this by drawing upon asset-based AI/AN pedagogies to provide culturally responsive virtual and in-person mentoring and support services, which ultimately contributes to the University of Arizona's recruitment and retention efforts. In alignment with the University’s Native American Initiatives strategic plan, the project aims to provide Native students the tools to successfully navigate the University of Arizona experience before, during, and after college entrance. 


                Indigenous Resilience Center - Support for Program Manager

                Lead: Dr. Karletta Chief, Professor, UArizona Environmental Science, Director, AIR Indigenous Resilience Center

                  • Award Date: Jan 2022
                  • Duration: 3 years
                  • Status: Ongoing

                  Haury Program is honored to award an inaugural support for Program Manager for the newly established Indigenous Resilience Center housed within AIR, and welcomes Daniel "Danny" Sestiaga to the U of Arizona team! This award is a part of the ongoing support by the Haury Program to the AIR Indigenous Resilience Center at UArizona as the first of it's kind, centering Native voices, expertise and needs.


                  Research Assistant in support of the Native American Code Writers Program

                  Lead: Dr. Jeremy Garcia and Dr. Blaine Smith, UArizona College of Education

                    • Award Date: Dec 2021
                    • Duration: 2 years
                    • Status: Ongoing

                    Award to support the hiring of a Project Coordinator for the Native American Code Writers Program hosted at the UArizona College of Education.


                    Support for UArizona College of Law, Year 2

                    Lead: Williams, Robert A. Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy Program (IPLP) The UArizona College of Law

                      • Award Date: Dec 2021
                      • Duration: 1 year
                      • Status: Ongoing

                      Year 2 to fund an Administrative Assistant to the newly appointed United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, (UNSRRIP/Special Rapporteur), Francisco Cali Tzay. 


                      Native American Web Portal Research Database and Inventory of Programs, Year 2

                      Lead: Williams, Robert A. Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy Program (IPLP) The UArizona College of Law

                        • Award Date: Oct 2021
                        • Duration: 1 year
                        • Status: Ongoing

                        Funding support to complete the design and then launch the UArizona Native American Web Portal Research Data Base and Inventory of Resources and Programs (“Grand Challenges” pillar- identified in the overall 2019 Strategic Plan for the University of Arizona).


                        NNDWR Library Preservation Project, Phase 2

                        Lead: The Library Preservation Project, conceived to preserve and give public access to valued, one-of-a-kind documents, some dated back to the 1930s, involves three phases: Phase I consists of securing over 8,000 water resource documents, reports, and maps fr

                          Partners: Maurice Upshaw, NNDWR Water Management Branch and Teresa Miguel-Stearns, UArizona Law Library

                          • Award Date: Oct 2021
                          • Duration: 8 months
                          • Status: Ongoing

                          The Library Preservation Project, conceived to preserve and give public access to valued, one-of-a-kind documents, some dated back to the 1930s, involves three phases:

                          Phase I consists of securing over 8,000 water resource documents, reports, and maps from NNDWR Library at the Daniel F. Cracchiolo Law Library. For now, the only people who will have access will be researchers that will be pre-approved by NNDWR on a case-by-case basis and facilitated by the Daniel F. Cracchiolo Law Library.

                          Phase II consists of preparing and digitizing the collection. At this point, Daniel F. Cracchiolo Law Library plans to recruit and hire students to help with Phase II work, including preparing the collection materials for digitization, creating metadata, and performing quality control. Leads secured funding from CERES for phase II.

                          Phase III is a collaborative effort between the Daniel F. Cracchiolo Law Library and the UArizona’s Communication and Cyber Technologies to create a database to host the digitized library. Once the collection is digitized, most of the collection will be publicly available, with NNDWR determining which resources will require restricted access.

                          The Library Preservation Project honors the tribal and information sovereignty of the Navajo Nation and their data and resources while working with the NNDWR to provide access to essential information to improve all aspects of water resources in the Navajo Nation


                          Research Assistant Support for UArizona American Indian Studies Department

                          Lead: Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert, UArizona American Indian Studies

                            • Award Date: Sep 2021
                            • Duration: 1 year
                            • Status: Completed

                            The award supports the work of Dr. Tsosie-Paddock and will further advance faculty diversity at UArizona and strengthen education and equity for Navajo students. Dr. Tsosie- Paddock has been teaching the university’s only first- and second-year Navajo courses along with numerous Navajo-related courses in AIS.


                            Exploring the Health and Healing of our Rivers: Engagement Strategy Proposal Concept

                            Lead: Aleena M. Kawe, President, Redstar International

                              • Award Date: Jul 2021
                              • Duration: 1 year
                              • Status: Completed

                              The award will help Redstar develop and implement a strategy to utilize the film From the Mountains to the Sea to engage a national audience to explore the health and healing of our rivers through an Indigenous lens. This interactive campaign and materials will be developed to build conversations centered on diverse Indigenous worldviews, values and perspectives about the future of our nation’s rivers.

                              The aims of the engagement strategy will be: a) to highlight the interconnectedness between our health and the health of our rivers, b) to Share the learnings that emerged through Indigenous knowledge exchange, and c) to Explore Indigenous pathways to heal our rivers through sustainable, systemic change.


                              NAI Staff Support

                              Lead: Dr. Karen Francis-Begay, Assistant Vice Provost, Native American Initiatives

                                • Award Date: Jul 2021
                                • Duration: 2 years
                                • Status: Completed

                                Funds to support the hiring of a Program Coordinator for the UArizona Native American Initiative office led by VP Dr. Karen Francis-Begay.