Frank Prize

The Frank Prize in Public Interest research was established in 2014 by the University of Florida and named in honor of social change pioneer Frank Karel.[1] The award is given out annually for research that advances public interest communications around positive social change, including issues such as education, health, politics, and the environment[2]. According to the website,[3] the prize "celebrates peer-reviewed research that informs the growing discipline of public interest communications". Eligible disciplines include psychology, neuroscience, public relations, advertising, marketing, journalism, sociology, communications, public health, and political science. After two rounds of independent review by a panel of scholars and practitioners, three awards are made each year with a top financial prize of $10,000.[4][5] Recipients present their research at the annual Frank Scholar conference organized by the University of Florida. Notable behavioral science scholars such as Paul Slovic and Dan Ariely have presented at the conference[6][7].

Frank Research Prize
Awarded forOutstanding contributions in social change and public interest research
CountryUnited States
Presented byUniversity of Florida
Reward(s)US $10,000
First awarded2014
Websitefrank.jou.ufl.edu/prize/about-the-prize/

Recipients

2020

2019

2018

  • Chelsea Schein and Kurt Gray [10], University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

2017

2016

2015

2014

gollark: Loans are essentially intertemporal money transfer.
gollark: Or possibly the external network links.
gollark: Oh no, my server underwent apiomemes.
gollark: Probably? Depends on things.
gollark: Aaand my monitoring service just sent me an alert.

See also

References

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