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How can Native innovators in the US use traditional knowledge and technology to drive social, environmental, and economic impact in their communities?

2020 Indigenous Communities Fellowship

Closed

Submissions are closed

Timeline

  • Applications Open

    April 7, 2020 9:00am EDT
  • Solution Deadline

    April 7, 2020 9:00am EDT
  • Challenge Opens

    April 7, 2020 9:00am EDT
  • Deadline to Submit a Solution

    July 7, 2020 3:00pm EDT
  • Online Judging Begins

    August 16, 2020 3:00pm EDT
  • Fellow Announcement

    September 29, 2020 12:00pm EDT
  • Implementing Solutions

    October 1, 2020 2:53pm EDT

Challenge Overview

A $10,000 grant will be provided to each selected Fellow. Please note that all innovators own and retain the rights to their own work, technology, data, and intellectual property—the Indigenous Communities Fellowship serves to provide Native innovators with the support and resources they need to advance their work.


Native innovators are charting a bright future led by and for their communities. The number of Native-owned businesses in the US is growing—Native American women have started at least 17 new businesses a day since 2007. Native scientists are both analyzing environmental damage and developing new community-based solutions. A wave of language revitalization efforts is driving a new generation of fluent speakers. Lastly, a recent shift towards tribal control of healthcare aims to provide better access to care and a culturally integrated approach to healing.

Challenges still remain from centuries of exploitation, and a system that has led to high unemployment rates, language and cultural loss, the crisis of murdered and missing Indigenous women, and environmental injustice from both local pollution and global climate impacts. Native communities are equipped with Indigenous knowledge systems and new technologies to solve these contemporary issues. Whether it's closing the digital divide and creating new job opportunities, or leading a shift to renewable electricity and training a new generation of Native leaders, Indigenous communities have the answers. The COVID-19 pandemic has made existing challenges and the need for solutions even more visible.

Solve’s Indigenous Communities Fellowship seeks solutions by Native innovators across the US that consider both technology and traditional knowledge to support and scale positive impact. To that end, Solve welcomes Native-led solutions that:

  • Increase access to jobs, financial capital, and skill development opportunities

  • Support language and cultural revitalization, quality K-12 education, and support for first-generation college students

  • Provide healthy and sovereign food, sustainable energy, and safe water

  • Improve healthcare access and outcomes, including around mental health and substance use disorders 

Solve's 2020 Indigenous Communities Fellowship is made possible in part by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

If you would like to support the Fellows please reach out to Aaron Slater here and please consider donating to their efforts, which include Covid-19 direct relief in several cases. Reach out to Aaron to learn more!


Photo: 2018 Fellow Henry Red Cloud

FAQ

Eligibility Requirements

Who can apply to the 2020 Indigenous Communities Fellowship?

MIT Solve is looking for Native-led for-profit or nonprofit solutions that directly benefit indigenous communities within the United States. 

Requirements:

  1. Submitted solutions must include use of technology for practical and functional purposes. This can be high-tech or low-tech: examples include software (mobile app), hardware (computers, phones, connectivity), agriculture (seeds, irrigation), and manufacturing. This may encompass new technology like drones and artificial intelligence, or existing ancestral technology (like traditional home structures or food storage and preservation) applied in new and interesting ways.
  2. Strong preference will be given to tribal members and Native-led projects that directly benefit and are located within Native communities in the United States. Solve specifically looks for a diverse set of Fellows and projects.

Applicants can be anyone, such as individuals, students, community leaders, business owners, social entrepreneurs, makers, innovators, teams, or established start-ups. Individual applicants must be at least 18 years old. Teams must have at least one member who is at least 18 years old. If you have a relevant solution, we hope you’ll apply! 

How are we CrowdSolving the Indigenous Communities Fellowship?

  1. SOURCING SOLUTIONS Anyone who meets the criteria above can participate in the Fellowship and submit a solution. Whether you’re working on a prototype or have an existing product, we’re looking for innovators and entrepreneurs with the best solutions.

  2. SELECTING SOLUTIONS Once the submission deadline passes, judging begins. After an initial screening by Solve staff, Fellowship judges select the most promising solutions. As part of the partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Fellowship will select 3-4 Fellows who are current students or alumni of the Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership (SIGP) Program, and 4-5 from any affiliation. All applications will be scored using the same criteria and selected through the same process.

What type of solutions will be accepted to the Indigenous Communities Fellowship?

Solution applications must be written in English. The most important thing is that your solution addresses the focus of the Indigenous Communities Fellowship. Through open innovation, the Indigenous Communities Fellowship is looking for a diverse portfolio of solutions across stages of development and team members’ gender and background. We believe that there is no one solution to the world’s most complex challenges—and encourage people of all backgrounds to submit their applications.

The Indigenous Communities Fellowship considers solutions at various stages of development. Note: solutions in the concept stage are unlikely to be selected. You are still welcome to submit a concept stage solution to receive feedback from the Solve community through our platform.

  • Concept: An idea being explored for its feasibility to build a product, service, or business model based on that idea.

  • Prototype: A venture building and testing its product, service, or business model. Typically described as "Pre-Seed" if For-Profit.

  • Pilot: An enterprise deploying a tested product, service, or business model in at least one community. Hybrids and For-Profits would typically be in a "Seed" round and starting to generate revenue (whether or not they are cash flow positive).

  • Growth: An enterprise with an established product, service, or business model rolled out, which is poised for further growth in multiple communities or countries. Organizations at this stage should have a clear path towards financial sustainability whether they are nonprofit or for-profit. For-Profits at this stage would be "Seed" or "Series A.”

  • Scale: A sustainable enterprise working in several communities or countries and that is looking to scale significantly, focusing on increased efficiency. For-Profits in this stage would be "Series A" or "Series B." 

How will my solution be evaluated?

The judging committee for the Indigenous Communities Fellowship will be comprised of experts and leaders from across sectors. After an initial screening by Solve staff, the judges will score the screened solutions based on the following criteria:

  • Alignment: The solution addresses the challenge that has been set forth.

  • Potential for Impact: The planned solution implementation has the potential to impact lives and drive economic growth nationally.

  • Scalability: The solution can be scaled to affect the lives of more people.

  • Feasibility: Solution implementation is feasible, and the team has a plan for financial sustainability.

  • Innovative Approach: This is a new solution, a new application of a solution, a new business model, or a new process for solving the challenge, and the team clearly identifies its competitive advantages (e.g. intellectual property).

Selected Fellows will join a Regional Summit in Fall 2020 to showcase their work and kickstart connections.

Indigenous Communities Fellowship Timeline

  • April 7, 2020 - Indigenous Communities Fellowship opens

  • July 7, 2020 - Deadline for applicants to submit a solution

  • September 8, 2020 - Fellows announced

  • Fall 2020 - Regional summit

  • May 2021 - Solve at MIT

What will I receive if selected as a Fellow? 

All solutions selected for Solve's Indigenous Communities Fellowship will receive a $10,000 grant funded by Solve. In addition to grant funding, Solve conducts a detailed resource needs assessment with each Fellow and strives to match Fellows with additional resources. Fellows will also get the chance to showcase their work at both the 2020 Regional Summit in or adjacent to Indian Country, and the 2021 flagship Solve at MIT event, which takes place on the MIT campus in Cambridge, MA. 

Toolkit + More

Toolkit

  • The 2020 Indigenous Communities Fellowship Toolkit and supporting materials were built to assist Fellowship applicants in completing their solution submissions. Included in the Toolkit are resources about MIT Solve, the Fellowship, and application tools to help you successfully complete your online submission. Click here to download the Toolkit! 

Application PDF

  • At Solve we understand that having a stable connection to the internet isn’t always available in all of our communities. We have included a PDF copy of our application that can be used offline while drafting your solution. Our preference is that all solutions are submitted through our online portal—if this is not possible please reach out to us at help@solve.mit.edu and we will work to submit your solution by other means. Click here to download the Toolkit and find the application at the bottom!

Social Media

Twitter Posts

Native innovators are charting a bright future led by and for their communities. Have a solution that supports positive social or environmental impact? Apply to @SolveMIT’s #IndigenousCommunitiesFellowship today! $10k available. https://bit.ly/SolveFellowship

@SolveMIT’s #IndigenousCommunitiesFellowship seeks solutions by Native innovators across the US that consider both technology and traditional knowledge to support and scale positive impact. Apply today: https://bit.ly/SolveFellowship

Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram Posts

Native innovators are charting a bright future led by and for their communities. Have a solution that supports positive social or environmental impact? Apply to @SolveMIT’s #IndigenousCommunitiesFellowship today! $10,000 in funding support is available for all selected Fellows, in addition to a resource needs assessment and participation in a regional summit and Solve at MIT. https://bit.ly/SolveFellowship

@SolveMIT’s #IndigenousCommunitiesFellowship seeks solutions by Native innovators across the US that consider both technology and traditional knowledge to support and scale positive social, economic, and environment impact. Apply today for a chance at $10,000 in funding: https://bit.ly/SolveFellowship

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About

Fellowship History

In 2017, the Water Protectors of Standing Rock came to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as finalists for the MIT Media Lab Disobedience Awards, which recognize individuals and groups who engage in ethical, nonviolent acts of disobedience in service of society.

The Water Protectors of Standing Rock were honored for bringing together the largest gathering of Native Tribes in more than a century to protest the Dakota Access Pipeline near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.

In her acceptance speech, Water Protector Phyllis Young challenged MIT, saying “I know MIT is the brass ring of technology, and I’m seeking a partnership. I’m not content to go home with this [award] … The rhetoric is over in America; it’s time for action.”  

This call to action sparked the MIT Indigenous Communities Project led by MIT Solve and the Priscilla King Gray (PKG) public service center, in collaboration with shift7. In 2018, MIT Solve launched a pilot Fellowship with the Oceti Sakowin community focused on sustainability. Six Fellows were selected with projects ranging from renewable solar energy to community gardening courses. Fellows attended Solve’s flagship event, Solve at MIT, in Cambridge in May 2018 to share their work and network with potential partners across the Solve community.

Concurrently, the PKG center partnered with the MIT Terrascope Program, a first-year learning community, creating an indigenous-centered curriculum for student engagement, “Tradition, Technology and Transition: Water Security on the Navajo Nation.”

Utilizing these institute connections, MIT Solve was able to expand its Fellowship opportunity in 2019 to include Oceti Sakowin, Navajo Nation, and Hopi Tribe communities in the United States. In 2020, through a partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation's Sloan Indigenous Graduate Partnership (SIGP), Solve was able to expand the third year of the Fellowship across the entire US. 

First and foremost, Solve and our partners aim to establish a foundation of trust and partnership in the communities with which it works. Accordingly, each Fellowship theme must be informed by the communities it intends to support.

Judging Criteria

  • Alignment: The solution addresses the challenge that has been set forth using technology.
  • Scalability: The solution can be grown and scaled to affect the lives of more people.
  • Potential for Impact: The solution can be grown and scaled to affect the lives of more people.
  • Novelty: This is a new technology, a new application of a technology, or a new process for solving the challenge.
  • Feasibility: It is feasible to implement the solution, and the team has a plan for the solution to sustain itself financially.

Solutions

Selected

Protect Medicinal Plants

By Richelle Thomas
Richelle Thomas
Selected

ShockTalk

By Austin Serio
Austin Serio Sutton King Darby Galligher
Selected

International Wakashan AI Consortium

By Michael Running Wolf
Michael Running Wolf
Selected

Food from Fire

By Eva Burk
Eva Burk
Selected

EA Ecoversity

By Kū Kahakalau
Kū Kahakalau Krisha Zane
Selected

Indigikitchen

By Mariah Gladstone
Mariah Gladstone
Selected

Indigenous DC

By Elizabeth Rule
Elizabeth Rule
Selected

Sicangu Online Marketplace

By Matthew Wilson
Matthew Wilson
Finalist

Hale Unfolded

By Tiana Henderson
Tiana Henderson
Finalist

Decolonial Dream Lab

By Kimberly Robertson
Kimberly Robertson
Finalist

NARSS Montana

By Dana Comes At Night
Dana Comes At Night
Finalist

Water Connects Communities

By Derrick J. Slick
Derrick J. Slick
Finalist

Indigenous Wisdom Center

By Bryan Deans
Bryan  Deans
Finalist

Safeguarding Indigenous Genomics

By Keolu Fox
Keolu Fox
Finalist

Indigenous Wellness Marketplace

By Chelsey Luger
Chelsey Luger

Leadership

Larry Susskind

Larry Susskind

MIT Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT Professor of Urban and Environmental Planning
Susan Alzner

Susan Alzner

shift7, Co-founder
Denise Williams

Denise Williams

First Nations Technology Council, CEO
Wendolyn Holland

Wendolyn Holland

Holland Consulting, LLC, Director
Shelly Lowe

Shelly Lowe

Harvard University Native American Program, Executive Director
Jacob Moore

Jacob Moore

Arizona State University, Associate Vice President of Tribal Relations, Office of Government & Community Engagement
Prairie Bighorn-Blount

Prairie Bighorn-Blount

American Indigenous Business Leaders, Executive Director
Janelle Knox-Hayes

Janelle Knox-Hayes

MIT Department of Urban Studies and Planning (DUSP), Associate Professor of Economic Geography and Planning Head
Sam McCracken

Sam McCracken

Nike N7, General Manager
Luke Bastian

Luke Bastian

MIT Chapter of the American Indian Science and Engineering Society, President
Michele Yatchmeneff

Michele Yatchmeneff

University of Alaska Anchorage, Associate Professor of Engineering