Request For Proposal 2012 - RMYF: For Innovative Services to Benefit Underprivileged Youth

Posted by Unknown Friday, June 22, 2012 0 comments
Closing Date: July 18,2012.

The Ruddie Memorial Youth Foundation seeks to help underprivileged youth reach their full potential by supporting innovative youth-serving organizations. The foundation makes grants in the greater metropolitan areas of Baltimore, Boston, Los Angeles, Madison, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C. The foundation is accepting applications for its Innovation Grants program, which is designed to support untested, unusual, and otherwise unconventional services aimed at helping underprivileged youth reach their full potential. Through these grants, RMYF aims to help identify effective practices that can lead to breakthrough results in supporting underprivileged youth.

To be eligible, applicants must have nonprofit status, operate in one of the geographic areas served by the foundation, and offer innovative programs or services designed to help underprivileged youth reach their full potential. Examples of funded programs include a market-based entrepreneurial franchise system for delivering vital medications to children in developing countries; an intensive weekend tutoring program for at-risk students; an apprenticeship-based school; a hospital-based advocacy and community-based afterschool program to reduce obesity and improve overall health in children; and a program that provides talented, experienced teachers with support, incentives, and a professional environment to help make teaching in low-performing schools a viable long-term employment option.

The foundation gives preference to smaller nonprofit organizations with less than $1 million in annual revenue. Grants will range from $5,000 to $25,000. Funds cannot be used to support organizational efforts not directly related to the innovative service (e.g., salaries of staff not closely involved in such service delivery or capital expenditures for the overall organization).

Fellowship Programme 2012 - Open Society Foundations

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Closing Date: August 1,2012.

The Open Society Fellowship was founded in 2008 to support individuals pursuing innovative and unconventional approaches to fundamental open society challenges. The fellowship funds work that will enrich public understanding of those challenges and stimulate far-reaching and probing conversations within the Open Society Foundations and in the world.
A fellowship project might identify a problem that has not previously been recognized, develop new policy ideas to address familiar problems, or offer a new advocacy strategy. Project themes should cut across at least two areas of interest to the Open Society Foundations. Among these are human rights, government transparency, access to information and to justice, and the promotion of civil society and social inclusion.
Fellows are expected to take full advantage of the foundations' expansive reach and work to bring new people and fresh ideas into the organization's ambit. Successful projects should push the boundaries of current thinking and carry lessons that can be applied to a variety of settings. Fellows may produce a variety of work products, including publications such as books, reports, or blogs; innovative public-education projects; or the launch of new campaigns or organizations. They may also engage in activities such as hosting panel discussions, traveling to conferences, participating in policy debates, and aggressively promoting their ideas in public venues.

Eligibility Criteria
The Open Society Fellowship accepts proposals from anywhere in the world. Applicants should possess a deep understanding of their chosen subject and a track record of professional accomplishment. Past and current fellows have included journalists, activists, academics, and practitioners in a variety of fields. Successful applicants will be eager to exploit the many resources offered by the Open Society Foundations and be prepared to engage constructively with our global network. Ideal fellows are specialists who can see beyond the parochialisms of their field and possess the tenacity to complete a project of exceptional merit. Proficiency in spoken English is required.

Ineligibility Criteria:
The fellowship does not fund enrollment for degree or non-degree study at academic institutions, including dissertation research. This is a fellowship for individuals only; proposals from two or more applicants will not be accepted.

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Grant Fund - The Burma Project/Southeast Asia Initiative

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Southeast Asia Initiative:
The Southeast Initiative makes grants to organizations that promote human rights, independent media, and civil society development in Cambodia, East Timor/Timor Leste, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam as well as regional projects in Southeast Asia.  If you seek funding for Indonesia-specific projects, please visit the Yayasan TIFA website.
The following are the Southeast Asia Initiative's current grant making priorities:
§ Access to Justice;
   § Independent Media Development and Access to Information;
§ Civil Society Participation in Good Governance.

Burma Project:
The Burma Project, established by the Open Society Foundations in 1994, is dedicated to increasing international awareness of conditions in Burma and helping the country make the transition from a closed to an open society. To this end, the Burma Project prioritizes projects targeting marginalized communities including ethnic minorities, women and youth.
The following are the Burma Project's current grant making priorities:
§ Advocacy efforts that promote change in Burma;
§ Documentation of rights abuses that complement advocacy efforts;
§ Community empowerment and skills training that aim to strengthen civil society inside Burma and along its borders;
§ Support for media and information dissemination to people inside Burma, the diaspora, and the international community.

Ineligibility Criteria:
Ineligible projects include support for the following: governments or political parties, agriculture or rural development projects, social welfare projects (including schools, orphanages, and basic service provision) construction costs, microfinance loans, film production, individual education or research costs.  The Burma Project/Southeast Asia Initiative also does not support cultural or environmental projects, unless directly connected to the protection and promotion of civil and political rights.
Students from Burma, Cambodia and Laos seeking individual scholarships should contact the Open Society Scholarship Programs.  Other Open Society programs that support individuals include the Open Society Fellowship Program and the Documentary Photography Project.

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Grant Program 2012 - Berghof Foundation: For Innovation in Conflict Transformations

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Closing Date: July 7,2012.

The Berghof Foundation maintains a budget for grantmaking in order to support state-of-the-art conflict transformation projects that complement its operational activities in various synergistic ways. Our grantmaking and operational activities are therefore part and parcel of a single and coherent strategy. Decisions concerning the allocation of the grantmaking budget are the exclusive privilege of our Board of Trustees. In its decision-making, the board is guided by the following goals and principles.

This programme is designed for projects that relate to our Strategic Vision, while simultaneously being complementary to our operational activities. To that end, the programme is provided with a thematic focus that must be approved annually by the Board of Trustees. This allows us to tackle issues that we believe are of current relevance to the field of conflict transformation and that we hope can provide innovative perspectives and impulses for the work we do.

There are no geographic limitations for this programme. Both organisations and individuals are eligible to apply. There is no minimum grant request, and the maximum grant amount is 30,000 Euro per year. The maximum project duration is two years. Willingness on the part of the applicant to provide matching funds is regarded favourably.

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