UNDERLYING
CAUSES INITIATIVE
MICRO-GRANTS FACILITY FUNDING CRITERIA AND OUTLINE FOR PROJECT
PROPOSALS FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF CAPACITY-BUILDING WORKSHOPS
GOAL AND
OBJECTIVES OF THE MICRO-GRANTS FACILITY
The overall goal
of the micro-grants facility is to promote the implementation of specific
activities, which lead to accumulative actions to address the underlying
causes of deforestation and forest degradation. Specific objectives
of the micro-grants facility are:
- To raise public
awareness on the importance of addressing the underlying causes of
deforestation and forest degradation;
- To build capacity amongst all relevant actors in analyzing and addressing
the underlying
causes of deforestation and forest degradation;
- To develop and implement, in an open and participatory manner, solution-oriented
approaches towards addressing the underlying causes of deforestation
and forest degradation;
STRUCTURE
OF THE MICRO-GRANTS FACILITY
The facility is
managed by Sandy Gauntlett, Oceania focal point of the Global Forest
Coalition (GFC).
A technical committee will evaluate the project proposals received.
The technical committee will
have at least 5 standing members, representing a regionally balanced
group of different
stakeholders and rights holders and one or two ad-hoc members. The
ad-hoc member(s) will be
the GFC regional focal point from the region where the proposal originates,
or, when applicable, the Indigenous Peoples’ focal point(s).
The technical committee will take decisions by
consensus or, if that is not possible, by simple majority. Project
proposals will be accepted or
rejected within two months after the day they are received by the
Global Secretariat.
AREAS OF
FUNDING
Two types of activities
can be funded:
- National workshops
and seminars to raise awareness on the underlying causes of deforestation
and forest degradation amongst policy-makers, the media, NGOs, Indigenous
Peoples and other actors;
- Regional workshops and seminars organized by Indigenous Peoples’
Organizations to raise
the awareness amongst Indigenous Peoples and other stakeholders on
the importance of
addressing the underlying causes of deforestation and forest degradation.
WHO CAN APPLY?
The application
should be submitted by an NGO, IPO, Government department of other
non-profit actor based in the country where the workshop or seminar
is held. Regional/IPO focal points of the Global Forest Coalition
will provide assistance in the organization of the workshop when necessary.
LIMITATIONS
AND ADDITIONAL CRITERIA
Workshops or seminars
should comply with the overall approach of the Underlying Causes Initiative.
This implies that they should be:
- organized in a
transparent and participatory manner;
- allow for equitable and balanced participation of women, Indigenous
Peoples and other relevant stakeholders at all levels of the workshop
or seminar;
- the workshop or seminar should have a clear focus on outreach to
policy-makers, the media
and the public in general;
- the selection committee will strive towards regional balance amongst
the proposals accepted;
- priority will be given to workshop or seminar proposals that focus
specifically on macroeconomic
policies like trade liberalization and their impact on forests and
forest peoples.
MAXIMUM
ASSISTANCE
The maximum assistance
for a project will not exceed Euro 5000.
OUTLINE
FOR PROJECT PROPOSALS
Project proposals
may be submitted in English, Spanish, or French
1. Name, organization, address, telephone no., fax and email of applicant.
2. Name, organization, address, telephone no., fax and email of the
main organizer (if different) of the workshop.
3. Name and organization of other stakeholders and rightsholders involved
in the organization of the workshop.
4. Name and organization of the members of the advisory committee
(/steering committee/ advisory board) that will
oversee the implementation of the project. 5. Overall goal of the
workshop.
6. Specific objectives of the workshop.
7. Proposed preparatory case studies and additional research on national
underlying causes of deforestation and forest degradation that will
feed into the workshop.
8. Name and organization of proposed lead author of the background
documentation/ compilation of case studies for the workshop.
9. Tentative dates and venue of the workshop.
10. Tentative number of participants.
11. Information on the major groups and other stakeholders that will
be invited as speakers
and observers to the workshop.
12. General outline of the proposed agenda for the workshop.
13. Expected outputs from the workshop, including reports (full report,
summary report, in which languages).
14. Outreach and communication plan.
Please include information
on:
- which media will be invited;
- whether specific policy-makers who could be responsible for the
implementation of
the results of the workshop are invited;
- whether any special publications on basis of the results of the
workshop are being planned;
- whether any publications targeting schools or youth in general are
being planned;
- any other outreach and communication activities planned to disseminate
the results of the workshop within the country/constituency concerned.
Project proposals should be submitted, preferably through email, to:
Mr. Sandy Gauntlett, General Manager
Underlying Causes Initiative
Global Forest Coalition
2/7 Kotuku Street
Te Atatu North, Auckland, New Zealand
Tel: +64 09 834 9529
sandyoceania@yahoo.com
And copied to
Simone Lovera, Campaigns coordinator
Global Forest Coalition
Bruselas 2273, Asunción, Paraguay
Tel/fax: +595-21-663654
simonelovera@yahoo.com
MICRO-GRANTS FACILITY
GLOBAL FOREST COALITION
Global Forest Coalition
www.wrm.org.uy/gfc
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
The project applicant should report back to the global secretariat
within four months after the workshop or seminar is held, with a financial
report and a summary report on the workshop in English, Spanish or
French and the full report in the language in which it has been published.
The summary report should
include information on the activities carried out, the conclusions
of the workshop and the proposals for follow-up to these conclusions.
It should also include a full report on the outreach activities undertaken.
For more information, please contact Sandy Gauntlett of the Underlying
Causes Initiative:
sandyoceania@yahoo.com