Grant Fund 2014 - GPF: For your Idea to Better the World

Posted by Unknown Thursday, September 11, 2014 0 comments
Closing Date: September 30,2014.

The Genesis Prize Foundation invites teams representing non-profits or for-profits around the globe to participate in the Genesis Challenge with their idea. This is an opportunity for total ten teams of Youth with ideas to win $100,000 USD each along with other benefits like connections to mentors, and opportunities to convene and learn from one another. The idea issues can vary from peace to human rights, to gender to children or any other. It should be a team effort to solve a communal or global problem.
Multi-disciplinary teams of young adults should propose big ideas to better the world. Each team must consist of approximately 10 individuals and must designate a team leader (age 20-36). Other team members must be 18 years or older.

The interested teams must register to the Genesis Generation Challenge by 30 September 2014 and submit complete application by 28 October 2014.

Eligibility Criteria

§  Any individual, organization and/or business entity can participate in the challenge.
§  Employees of the Competition Host, the Genesis Prize Foundation, RAMPIT and any of their subsidiaries and/or affiliates of those entities and immediate family members (spouse, parent, child, sibling and their respective spouses, regardless of where they live) or persons living in the same households of such employees from those entities, are not eligible.
§  Interested entities must register to participate in the challenge.
§  Individuals must be 18 years of age or older at the time of entry.
§  Applicants cannot reside in nor be governed by countries that are prohibited by law, regulation (including United States or other applicable export laws and regulations), treaty or administrative act from entering into trade relations (including export of technology) with the United States of America or its citizens.

§  Entrant may not register more than one true and uniform identity; multiple registrations for a participant using multiple identities are not allowed.


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Award 2015 - WFN: Wildlife Conservation

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Closing Date: October 31, 2014.

The Whitley Fund for Nature (WFN) invites biodiversity conservation leaders working in countries or regions that do not fall under high-income economy by the World Bank to apply for Whitley Awards 2015. The winners are each awarded £35,000 GBP to implement the proposed conservation project for maximum period of 12 months. The targeted grantees are those individuals who work in locations where international fund are hardest to raise, most needed, and will make the largest conservation impact.

Applications which give evidence that the project can become self-supporting or be able to attract further funds over time will be given priority.

Eligibility Criteria
§  Applicant must be biodiversity conservation leader working in and national of country/region that is not defined as high-income economy by the World Bank.
§  Applicant must be the leader of the project for which s/he is applying. Joint applications are not accepted.
§  Applicant must be able to communicate her/his ideas in English.
§  PhD projects, MSc dissertations and undergraduate projects are not eligible for the Award.
§  Expeditions, government work or government departments – are not supported.
§  Applicant must also send a separate email with no attachments following submission of the application form and supporting documents. This email should confirm that the applicant has attempted to submit an application.


Note: The application form should be attached as a Microsoft Word document and not a PDF. Please put WA 2015 in the subject heading and your full name.


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Grand Fund 2014 - CDKN: Climate compatible development Impact Research Fund

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Closing Date: September 26, 2014.

CDKN is pleased to launch the Climate compatible development Impact Research Fund (CIRF)which aims to fill priority research gaps and address key questions relating to climate compatible development, across four thematic areas.  The approximate total budget for the call is up to £3.35 million. We expect to fund around 8 to 16 projects of 12-20 months’ duration, depending on quality of applications and amount of funding requested. From this page you will be able to access all the relevant information, application forms, and guidance documents associated with the CIRF, as well as short articles introducing the thematic scope of the call.

Overview:

In this call, CDKN challenges the international research community to develop innovative research to provide a robust and accessible evidence base for decision-making and achieve maximum policy impact. The highest standards of theory and intellectual rigour are expected. Multi- or inter-disciplinary research collaborations are encouraged, where they improve research quality.

The four thematic areas were developed following a six month consultative phase with academics and policy-makers in developing regions; they are as follows:
§  Robust national plans for climate compatible development transitions
The next fifteen years provide the window of time in which the global economy must shift toward low-carbon development to avoid a global mean temperature change of greater than 2°C and climate change’s worst effects, a reality affirmed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report. Research commissioned through this package will look at: informing and operationalising national targets, strategies, or plans for low-carbon development; understanding the effects of green growth objectives on other policies; and identifying and resolving political economy constraints and enablers that affect the ambition and implementation of national plans.

§  Enabling conditions for urban climate compatible development
Urban areas are a crucial location for achieving climate compatible development. The urban population will swell to almost 5 billion by 2030 and with growth particularly concentrated in Africa and Asia. The second research area will examine the enabling conditions for implementation of climate compatible development in rapidly growing cities in developing countries, with a focus on infrastructure, peri-urban climate compatible development, innovative funding mechanisms, incentives, health, and women and marginalised groups.
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Climate-related disaster risk management and adaptation have been identified as priority areas by government stakeholders in many of CDKN’s deep engagement countries, and these sets of policies often provide a practical entry point for delivering climate compatible development. The scope of this thematic area includes understanding and measuring the social and economic impacts of disaster risk management and adaptation initiatives, and enhancing the resilience of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises, including those in the informal economy.

§  Climate Compatible Development and the Water, Energy and Food Security Nexus

Water, energy and food security are central to the pursuit of climate compatible development. The direct impacts of climate change on human development can be clearly seen in these sectors, for example, through changes in water availability and crop production. Policy formulation and implementation, however, tends to be on sectoral lines. The core premise of the WEF ‘nexus approach’ is that the policy objectives in one sector (water, energy or food) can interact with those in other sectors, because they are either preconditions for the realisation of a another sector’s objectives, or one sector (system) imposes conditions or constraints on what can be achieved in the other sectors. This research package will examine various elements associated with governance, equity, and transnational nexus resource management.


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