Examples of Earmark Grants in the following topics:
-
- An example of an agency that oversees the administration of federal assistance is the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which uses grants to provide public affordable housing.
- Programs administer assistance by "granting" or "awarding" a portion of the assistance to recipients.
- These are called federal grants or awards.
- Given the enormous size of federal assistance provided, the Federal government has designed different types of grants, each with its own unique way of awarding and operating.
- These include project grants, formula grants, and earmark grants.
-
- Research funding comes from grants from private groups or governments, and researchers must be careful to avoid conflicts of interest.
- Research funding is often applied for by scientists and approved by a granting agency to financially support research.
- These grants require a lengthy process as the granting agency can inquire about the researcher's background, the facilities used, the equipment needed, the time involved, and the overall potential of the scientific outcome.
- The process of grant writing and grant proposing is a somewhat delicate process for both the granter and the grantee.
- However, most universities have research administration offices to facilitate the interaction between the researcher and the granting agency.
-
- Besides attesting to one's abilities, credentials may also grant the holder access to restricted areas, information, or activities.
- For example, security clearances and press passes are credentials that grant access to otherwise restricted areas.
- A medical license is a credential that grants the ability to practice an otherwise restricted activity.
- For example, security clearances and press passes are credentials that grant access to otherwise restricted areas.
- A medical license is a credential that grants the ability to practice an otherwise restricted activity.
-
- Harold Garfinkel demonstrated this situation through so-called experiments in trust, or breaching experiments, wherein students would interrupt ordinary conversations because they refused to take for granted that they knew what the other person was saying.
-
- A schoolteacher is an example of someone who experiences status inconsistency; he is granted respect by most members of society, but he do not earn a top income.
-
- Canada, the United States, and Mexico grant each other special privileges by not imposing tariffs.
-
- Chile grants both men and women the right to vote and had one of the first female presidents in the world.
- Women were granted the right to vote in 1946.
-
- Although no country has ever granted all its citizens (i.e. including minors) the vote, most countries today hold regular elections based on egalitarian principles, at least in theory.
- The right to vote has been expanded in many jurisdictions over time from relatively narrow groups (such as wealthy men of a particular ethnic group), with New Zealand the first nation to grant universal suffrage for all its citizens in 1893.
-
- Due to the First Amendment, which grants freedom of religion, there is a diversity of religious beliefs and practices in the U.S.
-
- DOMA defined marriage as between one man and one woman in federal law, meaning that the federal government would not confer benefits to same-sex couples granted marriage licenses by states.
- It additionally stated that states did not need to recognize same-sex marriages granted by other states.