CJRF Grant Program:
Promoting Community-led, Rights-based Approaches to Resilience-building
Deadline: 21 December 2018
The Climate Justice Resilience Fund is inviting applications
to make grants for community-led, social justice approaches to climate change
adaptation and resilience-building.
CJRF gives grants to women, youth, and indigenous peoples to
create and share their own solutions for resilience.
For its initial grantmaking, the CJRF will focus on three
regions where climate change is already affecting landscapes and livelihoods:
East Africa, the Bay of Bengal, and the Arctic.
Pillars of Work
CJRF support flows to five “pillars” of work:
Advocacy: Building the advocacy skills of women, youth and
indigenous peoples, and securing their greater participation in climate change
decision-making at local, national and international levels.
Access to Information: Improving access to information so
that communities better understand how climate change affects their natural
resources, livelihoods, and cultural traditions.
Local Initiatives: Supporting community-driven
climate-resilient development solutions.
Movement Infrastructure: Providing general operating support
to community-led organizations in order to strengthen civil society structures
for networking, knowledge sharing, and community engagement.
Leadership Development: Increasing the skills of emerging
leaders among women, youth and indigenous communities so that they can enhance
collective action around climate justice.
Project Entry Points
CJRF grants focus on four inter-related issues through which
climate change may profoundly affect the lives and prospects of their selected
constituencies, namely:
Water Access
Food Security and Sovereignty
Sustainable Livelihoods
Migration and Relocation
Funding Information
The CJRF grantmaking strategic framework prioritizes
multi-year grants and grants larger than $100,000.
Regional funding is currently budgeted as follows: $5.5
million USD for the Bay of Bengal; $5.5 million USD for East Africa; $3.6
million USD for the Arctic; and $2.5 million USD for grants that are global in
scope.
Geographical Focus
Organizations that are more likely to be considered for a
grant
Operate in one or more of CJRF’s priority geographies:
Alaska, northern Canada, Kenya, Tanzania, Bangladesh, and the Indian states of
West Bengal and Orissa.
AND
Promote knowledge exchange and capacity building across the
CJRF regions.
Advocate for global climate finance policies and programs
that benefit women, youth, or indigenous peoples, with emphasis on adaptation.
Eligibility Criteria
Organizations that are more likely to be considered for a
grant:
Are registered with the local or national government as a
nonprofit organization
Have an annual budget greater than $500,000 USD.
Have already secured, or are in the process of securing some
level of co-funding.
Have a paid staff and/or Board that includes youth, women,
or indigenous people.
Organizations that are more likely to be considered for a
grant:
Have a track record of working with or regranting to grassroots
organizations.
Have local voices informing their strategy and vision.
Focus on issue areas that overlap with CJRF project entry
points.
Fit within the CJRF pillars of work.
Can demonstrate a vision for scaling their impact beyond
their organization’s direct beneficiaries.
How to Apply
Applicants must submit their applications via email at the
address given on the website.
For more information, visit https://bit.ly/2RbXzKJ
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