Call For Application 2012 - Japan Water Forum (JWF) Fund

Posted by Unknown Wednesday, July 18, 2012 0 comments
Closing Date: July 25,2012.
The Japan Water Forum is pleased to invite grass-roots organizations in developing countries to apply for the Japan Water Forum Fund (JWF Fund) 2012. We are looking forward to receiving your applications.
Only projects planned and faithfully implemented to solve the current water and sanitation problems by grass-roots organizations in developing countries will be considered.
These projects include, for example:

- Installation of rainwater-harvesting tanks, ponds or digging wells;
- Development of small scale water supply systems;
- Building new toilets and upgrading existing sanitation facilities;
- Prevention of water-related disasters projects;
- Establishment and encouragement of water-efficient irrigation;
- Solving gender issues on water and sanitation;
- Water environment restoration activities.

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Award 2013 - TED Prize

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Closing Date: August 1,2012.

The winner of the TED Prize ("for a wish that can inspire the world") will receive US$1 million to implement a large-scale project that requires a global community, network, and significant resources. Nominees can come all fields -- culture, arts, technology, entertainment, design, business, science, and global issues. The winner will be chosen on the basis of his/her past accomplishments, and on the strength of his/her wish and execution plan. The TED Prize accepts open nominations and self-nominations.

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Grant Program 2012 - The PATA Foundation

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Closing Date: August 15,2012.

The PATA Foundation was set up to pursue new sources of funding and to develop working relationships with stakeholders and grantees. The Foundation’s long list of successful projectstestifies to its ability to produce results.

The PATA Foundation’s Objectives:
§ To contribute to the conservation of the environment and cultural heritage of Asia Pacific, and to encourage travel and tourism industry stakeholders to reinvest in Asia Pacific destinations 
§ To help people in Asia Pacific countries acquire the tools they need to become better stewards of their environment and cultural heritage, and to foster economic solutions to conservation problems 
§ To give PATA and the travel and tourism industry a stronger voice in the international debate on environmental and cultural heritage conservation 
§ To support educational initiatives that target travel and tourism stakeholders, including residents of destination communities, visitors and industry employees, to make all parties aware of their impact on cultural heritage and the environment.

What Kind of Projects Receive Foundation Grants?
§ Projects that are considered deserving of a PATA Foundation grant are those that seek to protect, conserve and/or educate. They usually have one or more of the following objectives:
§ Protect the natural environment, including wildlife 
§ Conserve cultural heritage, including arts and crafts, heritage sites and historic buildings 
§ Educate people on the importance of environmental and cultural heritage.
 Any project seeking the Foundation’s help must also have:
§ A potential positive impact on tourism
§ Contribute to the betterment of lives and provide job creation in tourism for local communities.
§ The support of their respective local PATA chapter and PATA divisional office 
§ Financial support from the local PATA chapter or other sources.

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Fellowship Programme 2012/2013 - Institute of Current World Affairs (ICWA)

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Closing Date: August 1,2012.

The ICWA fellowship program aims to nurture deep expertise in foreign countries and cultures by supporting a Fellow who carries out a program of self-designed, independent study abroad for a minimum of two years. We do not support degree programs at universities. Candidates are encouraged to browse the ICWA archives on this website to see the kind of projects that the Institute had previously supported.

The fellowships amount to a generous investment in the future of the Fellow. A primary selection criterion is whether a candidate is ready for the rapid personal growth that the fellowship makes possible. We look for candidates who are sufficiently prepared to take advantage of the opportunity we offer, but extensive professional experience in the proposed area is not always an advantage. Fellowships are aimed at developing knowledge and professional skills, not awarding research or reporting opportunities to those who already have them.

We are primarily focused on the potential of the candidate and secondarily on the project. That said, strong candidates will naturally propose and passionately pursue a project that’s topical and important. We’re a small organization with few hard-and-fast rules, but generally we will postpone consideration of a project in a country where we currently or very recently have had a fellow. Over time, we try to achieve a good geographic distribution of fellowships and are naturally drawn to areas of the world and topics that are less well understood and have strategic or other importance to the United States. These could include thematic fellowships, for example examining questions related to economic development or the environment that could be effectively pursued using the method of our fellowships.

We expect candidates to have the necessary language skills to allow to them to carry out their proposed project. Candidates proposing to go to China, Russia, Indonesia, India, or Brazil, for example, should have proficiency in Chinese, Russian, Bahasa, Hindi (or another relevant language) or Portuguese. It is too costly and time consuming to start from scratch, so we expect enough language proficiency so that candidates are able to function in the local language within a few months of arriving in the country. Exceptions have been made for unusual languages or situations, but these are rare.

Candidates must be under 36 years of age at the time of the due date for the initial letter of interest.
U.S. citizenship is not a requirement, but candidates must show strong and credible ties to U.S. society. A proposed fellowship must hold the promise of enriching public life in the United States by enhancing the understanding of foreign countries, cultures, and trends. Public service in the United States is our ultimate purpose, out of a belief that the United States needs the knowledge and wisdom that our Fellows acquire.
While we expect candidates to design projects of topical interest, the fellowships are not aimed at covering news events. We do not send fellows into war zones, or places where security concerns prevent fellows from interacting with the local populace.

Fellows are required to write monthly newsletters, which are distributed to Institute members and other interested parties, including family, friends and professional associates of the fellows. While the Institute has funded and will continue to fund artists, performers, and others who find various ways to participate in the societies they study, the immediate fruits of the fellows’ learning are communicated principally through writing. Fellows should be prepared to share their experience with a general, well-educated audience, and not only with specialists in their field. Fellows work closely with the Executive Director, who serves as writing coach, editor, and mentor.

Fellowships are not scholarships and are not awarded to support work toward academic degrees or the writing of books or for research projects, meaning focused projects aimed at answering specific questions, usually in a particular academic discipline. Applicants must have a good command of written and spoken English and must have completed the current phase of their formal education. We do not accept applications from currently enrolled undergraduate students.

While many fellows go on to pursue political or social causes at home and abroad, the purpose of a fellowship is to learn about other societies, not to change them. Fellows are not permitted to engage in overtly political activities during their fellowship. The Institute does not accept any government funds. Fellows must preserve that independence, in letter and in spirit.

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Call For Proposal 2012 - AUSAID: for the new Civil Society, Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)

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Closing Date: August 24,2012.

Grants will be allocated via a competitive funding round, which will be coordinated by AusAID's Infrastructure and Water Policy Section (IWP) in Canberra. Proposals will be invited from both accredited and non-accredited Australian CSOs, as well as suitably experienced international CSOs (partnerships with national CSOs will be supported). Proposals will be assessed primarily on program quality and organisational capacity, with consideration also given to the need to achieve a balance of funding across regions.
Successful applicants will be required to implement activities over two phases. Firstly applicants will enter an inception phase of approximately four months during which time they will be required to further define and document their activity designs and implementation plans. A team of monitoring and evaluation experts will be responsible for producing document templates and will also provide technical assistance during the inception phase. The resulting products will form the scope of services for an agreement with AusAID for the four-year implementation phase of the activity (February 2013 - February 2017).
The Fund will resource a mix of water supply, sanitation and hygiene behaviour activities. AusAID will favour activities that place an emphasis on sanitation, which globally is tracking poorly against Millennium Development Goal target 7c: to halve, by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.  Furthermore, to be considered eligible both water and sanitation activities must have a hygiene component.
In addition to delivering water, sanitation and hygiene activities, each CSO will be expected to contribute to the evidence base on effective practice in WASH. Activities should monitor and report on the cost effectiveness of WASH approaches, the success factors and risks associated with innovative approaches and lessons learned from taking proven interventions to scale.

CSO contributions to the evidence base will be enhanced by a Knowledge and Learning Component, which will have three parts:
1.  Innovation and pilot grants of up to AUD$100,000 per year for up to two years, available to CSO participating in the Fund, in collaboration with research organisations.
2. Two Australian Development Research Awards Scheme research grants of up to AUD $400,000 per year for up to 3 years for research organisations with recognised expertise in WASH (the grants will be linked to the work of the Fund).
3. Knowledge sharing and learning events such as regional workshops, webinars and an active website.

Grants for individual CSO programs are expected to be in the order of AUD$10 million across four years. The implementation period is expected to cover February 2013 to February 2017.
Note: CSOs will be resourced to participate in the inception phase. This will be considered a funded step towards signing of the full four year contract.
Interested organisations planning activities in a country where AusAID has a WASH program are encouraged to contact the relevant AusAID country or regional program area to discuss any potential points of complementarity between the proposed activity and the AusAID WASH program. 

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Scholarship Programme 2013/2014 - University of Central Asia

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Closing Date: July 31,2012.

The CAFDP of UCA offers support for Central Asian scholars to pursue doctoral studies, with the understanding that upon graduation they will work as UCA faculty for a minimum of five years at the Graduate School of Development and/or the undergraduate School of Arts and Sciences at UCA’s campuses in Khorog (Tajikistan), Naryn (Kyrgyz Republic) and Tekeli (Kazakhstan)

Eligible fields of study at UCA’s partner institutions include:

Natural and Applied Sciences:  Biology, chemistry, biochemistry, applied physics, geology/geosciences, applied mathematics, computer science,  engineering sciences (environmental engineering, complex systems analysis and design), environmental sciences and environmental earth sciences, rural development and natural resource management.

Social Sciences and Humanities: Archaeology, cultural anthropology/ethnography, economics, sociology, Asian and Middle Eastern studies, development studies (economics), ethnomusicology, mountain tourism, public policy and business (with a focus on entrepreneurship).

TO APPLY
Applicants from Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, and Tajikistan are strongly encouraged to apply.  Candidates from Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, northern Pakistan (only Gilgit-Baltistan and Malakand Division) and western China (only Xinjiang province) will also be considered.
Application for the CAFDP Scholarship is a two-step process:
1.  Eligibility for CAFDP – Applicants are required to first meet UCA’s  eligibility criteria;
2. Admission to Partner University – candidates considered eligible will then be invited to submit full applications to partner universities to secure admission. UCA will work with candidates to select the most appropriate programme and university, based on students’ field of study and available opportunities.

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