New Commons Incubator for Indigenous Languages and Cultures 2026: Fully Supported Six-Month Program for Indigenous-Led Teams Developing Data Commons Projects
The New Commons Incubator for Indigenous Languages and Cultures 2026 is now accepting applications from Indigenous-led teams seeking to transform innovative ideas into fundable and actionable data commons initiatives. Designed to strengthen Indigenous languages, cultures, and knowledge systems in the age of Artificial Intelligence (AI), this six-month capacity-building program provides participants with the tools, mentorship, networks, and technical support needed to develop viable data commons proposals.
Applications are open until 14 August 2026.
The initiative is led by the Open Data Policy Lab at The GovLab in partnership with Microsoft and New Commons Initiatives. It aims to support Indigenous communities in creating responsible and community-governed data ecosystems that can preserve, revitalize, and sustainably manage Indigenous languages, cultural heritage, and knowledge.
About the New Commons Incubator
The New Commons Incubator is a structured capacity-building program focused on helping participants transform early-stage ideas into fundable projects. Through training, mentorship, peer learning, technical guidance, and networking opportunities, the incubator supports teams in building strong foundations for impactful data commons initiatives.
For the 2026 cohort, the program specifically focuses on Indigenous Languages and Cultures, recognizing the urgent need to safeguard and strengthen Indigenous knowledge systems in an increasingly digital and AI-driven world.
Participants will receive support in developing proposals that can attract funding and partnerships while ensuring responsible stewardship of Indigenous data and cultural assets.
What Is a Data Commons?
A data commons is a collaboratively governed data ecosystem that pools and manages access to high-quality datasets in a responsible manner.
These data ecosystems can be used to support:
- Responsible Artificial Intelligence development
- Climate adaptation initiatives
- Biodiversity conservation
- Public health programs
- Pandemic preparedness efforts
- Sustainable agriculture
- Scientific research
- Disaster response and resilience
- Preservation of Indigenous knowledge systems
- Revitalization of Indigenous languages
- Protection of cultural heritage
- Development of Indigenous data economies
By bringing together diverse datasets under shared governance structures, data commons create opportunities for communities to generate social, cultural, scientific, and economic value while maintaining control over how their data is used.
Focus on Indigenous Languages and Cultures
The 2026 Incubator is dedicated to strengthening the pipeline of Indigenous-led data commons initiatives focused on language preservation, cultural revitalization, and responsible knowledge stewardship.
As Artificial Intelligence technologies increasingly rely on large datasets, many Indigenous languages and cultural resources remain underrepresented. This incubator seeks to address that gap by empowering Indigenous communities to shape how their data is collected, governed, preserved, and utilized.
The program supports initiatives that place Indigenous leadership, community priorities, and ethical governance at the center of data management and AI innovation.
Benefits of Participating in the Program
Selected teams will gain access to a comprehensive support system designed to accelerate the development of their projects.
Benefits include:
1. Six Months of Capacity Building
Participants will engage in an intensive learning journey that helps transform concepts into viable project proposals.
2. Expert Training
The program offers structured training sessions covering the design, governance, implementation, and sustainability of data commons initiatives.
3. Mentorship Opportunities
Participants will receive guidance from experts in data governance, AI, Indigenous data stewardship, and community-led innovation.
4. Technical Guidance
Teams will receive support in addressing technical challenges and designing practical frameworks for implementation.
5. Peer Learning Environment
The incubator brings together Indigenous-led teams from diverse backgrounds, creating opportunities for collaboration and knowledge exchange.
6. Networking Opportunities
Participants can connect with:
- Funders
- Potential partners
- Data governance experts
- Researchers
- Policy leaders
- Technology specialists
7. Support for Fundable Proposals
One of the program’s primary objectives is to help teams develop proposals that are attractive to funding organizations and strategic partners.
8. In-Person Kickoff During United Nations General Assembly Week
The first cohort will begin with an in-person kickoff event held during United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) Week in New York City, offering participants valuable exposure and networking opportunities.
Key Areas of Interest
The incubator welcomes projects that contribute to:
- Indigenous language preservation
- Language revitalization initiatives
- Cultural heritage protection
- Indigenous knowledge stewardship
- Ethical data governance
- Community-controlled AI development
- Indigenous data sovereignty
- Digital preservation projects
- Community-driven research initiatives
- Sustainable Indigenous data ecosystems
Program Partners
The New Commons Incubator is delivered through collaboration among leading organizations committed to responsible data governance and public-interest innovation.
Partners include:
- Open Data Policy Lab
- The GovLab
- Microsoft
- New Commons Initiatives
Together, these organizations support the development of innovative data commons projects that benefit communities while promoting ethical and responsible use of data.
Why Data Commons Matter in the AI Era
Artificial Intelligence systems increasingly depend on large and diverse datasets. Without deliberate efforts to include Indigenous voices and governance structures, many Indigenous languages and cultural assets risk exclusion from future technological developments.
Data commons offer a pathway for communities to:
- Maintain control over their data
- Establish community governance mechanisms
- Promote ethical AI development
- Protect cultural heritage
- Preserve linguistic diversity
- Create opportunities for future generations
By supporting Indigenous-led initiatives, the New Commons Incubator contributes to a more inclusive and equitable digital future.
Application Deadline
Applications close on 14 August 2026.
Interested Indigenous-led teams are encouraged to submit their applications before the deadline and begin the journey toward building impactful data commons initiatives that support Indigenous languages, cultures, and knowledge systems.
For more information about this opportunity, visit here.
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