American Association of Geographers American Association of Geographers

The Anne U. White Fund


Deadline: 31 December, yearly

In 1989, Gilbert and Anne White donated a sum of money to the Association of American Geographers to establish the Anne U. White Fund. Gilbert White and other donors have subsequently added substantially to the original gift. The Fund's income is to be used to encourage field research conducted by a member of the Association jointly with her or his partner.

Anne Underwood was a native of Washington, D.C. who attended Madeira School and Vassar College, class of 1941. At Vassar she studied American history and economics. She met Gilbert White in Washington and they decided to marry, but only after the uncertainty of his service as a conscientious objector was resolved. That came after he returned from detention in Germany in 1944.She meanwhile had held posts with the Program Surveys of the U.S. Department of Agriculture under Rensis Likert, Director of the first of the national opinion surveys, and then as a field investigator for the National Labor Relations Board.

Following their marriage in 1944, they lived in Philadelphia (1944-46), Haverford College (1946-55), the University of Chicago (1956-69), and the University of Colorado (1970-89). After their youngest child went off to boarding school, Anne joined with Gilbert in field studies of domestic water use in East Africa. Out of this came a monograph they authored with David J. Bradley of the London School of Tropical Hygiene and Medicine. Then followed a series of studies on water supply and health that she completed independently or in collaboration with others. She consulted with government agencies in that field and took part in scientific gatherings.

She was the co-editor of the Natural Hazards Observer during its first two years. In later fieldwork she was especially interested in the complex relationships among water supply, household behavior, and health. She was active in community planning in Chicago and Boulder, including the setting of managed urban growth policies for Boulder, the defeat of a plan to build underground nuclear war shelters for officials only, and the initial design of the Boulder County open space program. In recognition of her role in that effort, the County Commissioners named a hiking trail of striking beauty for her along Fourmile Canyon Creek a few months before her death.Typical of her life is that after she heard a cancer probably would make her next year terminal she chose to spend parts of it in an International Geographical Union field trip in Australia, and in giving her grandchildren their first experience of camping in a wilderness area.

Purpose: The Fund will serve the purposes Anne White held dear if it enables people, regardless of any formal training in geography, to engage in useful field studies and to have the joy of working along side their partners. Copies of any of the items listed below are available by loan from the AAG office.

Curriculum Vitae:

With Gilbert F. White and David J. Bradley. Drawers of Water: Domestic Water Use in East Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972.

"Toward a Global Summary of Natural Hazards". In M. Pecsied., Man and Environment, Studies in Geography, No. 11, Budapest: Geographical Research Institute, 1974.

"Water Supply and Income Distribution in Developing Countries". In J. Powelson and W. Loehr eds., Economic Development, Poverty and Income Distribution. Boulder: Westview Press, 1977.

With Gilbert White. "Potable Water for All: The Egyptian Experience with Rural Water Supply", Water International 11, 1986, pp. 54-63.

With Samiha E. Katsha. "Woman, Water, and Sanitation: Household Behavioral Patterns in Two Egyptian Villages", Water International 14, 1989, pp. 103-111.

Eligibility: You are eligible to apply if you have been an AAG member for at least two years at the time you submit your application.

Criteria: The evaluation committee will select for support proposals that in its judgment best meet the purposes for which Anne and Gilbert White contributed the funds that endow the awards.

Awards: In the past, two awards have been made each year of approximately $1,500 each.

Applications:. Digital submissions are encouraged. Please submit complete application in an email attachment to grantsawards@aag.org with Anne U. White Fund as the subject line. Alternatively, nine copies of the the completed application can be sent to:

Association of American Geographers, attn: Anne U. White Fund, 1710 Sixteenth Street NW, Washington, DC 20009-3198.

Proposals should contain an application form and a field research project proposal of no more than three pages. The proposal should contain three sections:

  • a description of the proposed research and research location(s);
  • a procedure, or an outline of research methods to be used; and
  • a statement explaining the significance of anticipated results, including why what you expect to learn is important and deserving of AAG support.

  • Reports and Acknowledgment: By accepting an Anne U. White grant you agree to submit to the AAG Executive Director a two-page report that summarizes your results and documents the expenses underwritten by the grant. You should submit your report no later than twelve months after receiving an award. Please acknowledge AAG support in presentations and publications of your research results.

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