With generous support from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Social Science Research Council is pleased to invite U.S. R1 research universities in SSRC’s College and University Fund for the Social Sciences to apply to join the Public Exchange Network. Public Exchange is a new network that turns university research expertise into real-world action and impact. Founded at the University of Southern California in 2020 and expanded to Washington University in St. Louis in 2025, Public Exchange connects researchers with government, nonprofit, and industry partners to tackle pressing challenges—from disaster recovery and climate solutions to food insecurity and homelessness prevention. Since its founding, Public Exchange has developed high-impact collaborations between 48 partners and 142 researchers including:

  • CLEAN LA and CLEAN STL: One of the largest free soil testing programs for lead in Los Angeles County following the January 2025 wildfires, and a related program in St. Louis to test soil and air for contaminants following the May 2025 EF-3 tornado;
  • The California Solar Canal Initiative: An ambitious public-private research collaboration to advance solar panel infrastructure along California’s 4,000 miles of open aqueduct, conserving water and generating renewable energy;
  • Food Base LA: LA County’s first food systems data dashboard, helping LA County and non-profit partners target distribution of millions of pounds of food and related resources to families experiencing food insecurity;
  • ShadeLA: A people-powered campaign to cool Los Angeles ahead of the 2028 Olympics and Paralympics by advancing natural and built shade cover in the region.

Partners have included the City and County of Los Angeles, the State of California, the City of St. Louis, Yelp, Solar AquaGrid, the United Nations Foundation, Keck Medicine of USC, the Southern California Association of Governments, Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency, the Sustainable Entertainment Alliance, the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank, Department of Angels and many more. In addition to real-world impact positively affecting millions of lives, Public Exchange collaborations have resulted in over $18m in research funding, some helping to incubate new centers or areas of research, more than 40 academic journal publications, hundreds of media hits, and dozens of student career opportunities. 

The Public Exchange Model 

Public Exchange is a partner-driven program, working collaboratively with external partners to: (1) define a research scope, timeline, and deliverables; (2) identify the right team of multidisciplinary academic experts to analyze the problem; (3) provide project management from concept and strategy development to project outputs and tools delivery; and (4) manage the public and stakeholder engagement related to the project, as well as communications and design needs. Public Exchange staff are not researchers, but come from government, industry, and non-profit backgrounds, uniquely equipping project teams to understand partners’ needs and lead projects to action. Staff oversee activities including partnership and proposal development, funder cultivation, research translation, dissemination, and communications, impact and scaling strategy, administrative support, cross-sector convening, and more, to maximize the real-world impact of university expertise. Public Exchange builds results-driven teams that deliver measurable impact and lasting solutions for partners.

How the Public Exchange Network Works

No single university – even a large R1 – has enough faculty expertise available to meet the needs of every partner. The Public Exchange Network was designed to help universities work together seamlessly to build robust partnerships and generate more collective impact. Universities joining the network are independent but affiliated members, with full control over their own program and project portfolios. As a national network with local, on-the-ground capacity, Public Exchange Network members can also share approaches that work, scale solutions to common problems, and build cross-regional partnerships together. 

As an institutional partner in the Public Exchange Network, universities will build capacity to develop, test and implement solutions to the most urgent problems in their regions and beyond. Universities joining the Public Exchange Network get:

  • The tools, templates and training they need to start right away;
  • A shared brand they can plug into on day one;
  • A network of faculty, past and potential partners and philanthropic relationships, benefitting everyone in the network. 

SSRC Public Exchange Network Expansion Grants

Public Exchange Network Expansion grants will cover 75-80% of the minimum estimated annual costs for two years to launch a new Public Exchange. To launch a Public Exchange, universities must have the following in place: (1) a staff executive director with experience launching and leading social impact partnerships, (2) a project seed fund, and (3) a modest operations budget. We also recommend some in-kind project management support from an existing university staff member. The grant includes a two-year Public Exchange Executive Director (ED) compensation subsidy of $300,000 to launch the Public Exchange on campus, and a 2-year license to use the Public Exchange brand. New Public Exchange Network members will also receive ongoing support and guidance from current Public Exchange leadership and staff at USC and WashU, including recruitment support and intensive training for hiring and onboarding an executive director, a sub-site on the Public Exchange website, incubation and project management support from current Public Exchange staff, and a suite of tools for developing and implementing Public Exchange projects.

In addition, every university in the Public Exchange Network benefits from central communications support (currently housed at USC), and access to a collaborative network of project partners, researchers, and funder relationships. Separately, SSRC will select a local research fellow to study and document how the Public Exchange model develops within and between host institutions during the grant term, and how the Public Exchange Network universities work together to effect larger-scale change. 

Eligibility

To participate in this Public Exchange Network Expansion, eligible universities must:

Expectations

Institutions selected to join the Public Exchange Network are expected to:

  • Hire an Executive Director who can launch and lead efforts to incubate social impact projects with public and private sector partners;
  • Have in place before public launch: (1) an executive director, (2) a seed fund, (3) a modest operations budget, and (4 – recommended) some in-kind project management support. 
  • Develop and sustain at least three high-impact research partnerships during the two-year grant tenure;
  • Invest modest resources during the grant term that demonstrate commitment to continuing the Public Exchange model after the end of philanthropic support. This is estimated at approximately $85-$90k annually (with some variation considering local labor markets) to support an operations and project seed fund and any additional capital needed for the Executive Director hire beyond the subsidy. 
  • Coordinate with the SSRC research fellow who will examine the impact of Public Exchange at their university and across the network. 
  • Work with faculty across their university. Public Exchange can live anywhere within a university at the school or central level. The majority of Public Exchange projects to date at USC and WashU have included researchers from two or more schools, and grantees must be able to work with faculty university-wide. 

How to Apply

To apply for this award, interested institutions must submit a Letter of Interest (LOI) via the SSRC application portal, to be followed by interviews between SSRC, Public Exchange Network leadership at USC and WashU, and the applicant. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis, and must include:

  • Application cover sheet
  • Institutional letter of support: This letter should come from university leadership at the Dean level or higher, and detail the institutional or school-level commitment to joining the Public Exchange network, including any material support the institution is willing to provide.
  • 2-5 page LOI (double-spaced, 11pt font) describing:
    • Reasoning for wanting to join the Public Exchange Network, including how launching a Public Exchange would impact your institution and your institution’s public impact strategy or goals;
    • Several areas where your institution is most interested in building an initial portfolio of Public Exchange projects (a few examples: food insecurity, homelessness prevention, water conservation, urban greening, economic mobility, disaster mitigation and response, early childhood education). The Public Exchange website’s current projects at both Washington University and the University of Southern California may be a useful resource;
    • Brief overview of existing key initiatives, centers, faculty, and partnerships engaged in public impact research;
    • Description of why your university is a good fit for the Public Exchange model.

The Public Exchange Network is an inherently collaborative undertaking. Initial interviews will enable both Public Exchange leadership and potential grantee universities to assess mutual fit and discuss goals and outstanding questions, before additional information is requested. The Social Science Research Council and Public Exchange will review applications on a rolling basis, after which invitations for follow-up interviews will be sent. 

SSRC and Public Exchange will host a webinar about the Public Exchange Network and this opportunity on June 9 at 12:00 ET. Register here to attend.

For additional questions about the Public Exchange Network and this opportunity, you may also contact Maya Chandrasekaran at chandrasekaran@ssrc.org.

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