Call for Concept Notes: Scaling Care Innovations in Africa (Available Grants)

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Call for Concept Notes: Scaling Care Innovations in Africa (Available Grants)

Scope

The Scaling Care Innovations in Africa initiative aims to address the problems and gaps in unpaid care by focusing on policy and program innovations connected to the “3Rs,” or recognize, reduce, and redistribute care work. Innovations may help to recognize the importance of care at the policy, community, and family levels, while also lowering the drudgery and time spent on unpaid care work and dispersing responsibility and cost fairly within homes and beyond. The goal is to use locally generated data and evidence to inform care policies and interventions that will help marginalized women and girls better their lives and livelihoods.

Work supported under this initiative will be guided by IDRC’s approach to scaling science, which focuses on impact in ways that maximize benefits to society. The approach promotes scaling impact rather than scaling specific actions or innovations. This means that scaling is not necessarily about pushing up or out, because bigger outputs or more actions do not always lead to better impact. The focus will be on scaling impacts that are important to women and girls in different socio-economic contexts, ensuring their voices are heard in the process.

Eligibility

This Call for concept notes is open to individual organizations or consortia with a lead organization based in sub-Saharan Africa. The initiative will require successful applicants to form coalitions involving research organizations, government and/or private sector entities, civil society organizations, and other key implementing partners that are essential to link research to action.  Active engagement of women’s rights organizations through project co-design is essential to ensure the relevance of the proposed work and its sustainability.

Funding

IDRC offers grants, funding, and awards to researchers and institutions to find solutions for global development challenges.

Through calls for research proposals, we fund projects that aim to foster climate-resilient food systems, global health, education and science, democratic and inclusive governance, and sustainable and inclusive economies in developing countries. Gender equality and inclusion are also central to our strategy and the research we support.

Types of grants

Contributory grants

Typically these grants are awarded only to institutions and on the condition that the grantee makes a financial or in-kind contribution to the overall cost of the project (for example, paying salaries or assuming overhead costs). Payments are made based on the achievement of predefined outputs or results.

Non-contributory grants

In some instances, IDRC grants may be provided to an institution or to an individual with no expectation of a financial or in-kind contribution. Payments are typically made up front or in annual installments. These grants include:

Grants-in-aid

Grants-in-aid include all grants awarded to an individual (for example, travel grants, fellowships, research internships, and scholarships, in addition to research-related awards) and grants awarded to an institution where progress reporting is minimal.

Core grants

Core grants are intended to provide financial support to cover the basic (or core) organizational and administrative costs of an institution such as salaries, office costs, IT, equipment, etc.

Program grants

Program grants are similar to core grants, but the funding is limited either to one specific program, a predefined set of activities within a program, or for a purpose common to several programs.

Deadline: Friday, June 23, 2023 – 23:59

Apply here

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