Opportunity ID: 43401
General Information
| Document Type: | Grants Notice |
| Funding Opportunity Number: | RFA306-09-0500 |
| Funding Opportunity Title: | Afghan Women’s Empowerment through a Sub-Grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWESUM) |
| Opportunity Category: | Earmark |
| Opportunity Category Explanation: | – |
| Funding Instrument Type: | Cooperative Agreement |
| Category of Funding Activity: | Business and Commerce |
| Category Explanation: | – |
| Expected Number of Awards: | 01 |
| Assistance Listings: | 98.001 — USAID Foreign Assistance for Programs Overseas |
| Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: | No |
| Version: | Synopsis 5 |
| Posted Date: | Nov 25, 2008 |
| Last Updated Date: | Jan 13, 2009 |
| Original Closing Date for Applications: | Jan 15, 2009 |
| Current Closing Date for Applications: | Jan 29, 2009 |
| Archive Date: | Mar 29, 2009 |
| Estimated Total Program Funding: | – |
| Award Ceiling: | $26,300,000 |
| Award Floor: | $0 |
Eligibility
| Eligible Applicants: | Unrestricted (i.e., open to any type of entity above), subject to any clarification in text field entitled “Additional Information on Eligibility” |
| Additional Information on Eligibility: | – |
Additional Information
| Agency Name: | Afghanistan USAID-Kabul |
| Description: | Now living under a Constitution that codifies equal rights for women, Afghan women have an official framework to support their personal and professional development. With the exception of constitutionally mandated quotas for womens representation in Parliament, however, all indicators of womens status reveal that enforcement of constitutional rights lags far behind enactment. A combination of poverty and deprivation, ill health, illiteracy, discriminatory customary laws, harmful traditional practices, and physical and emotional abuse conspire to keep women at the bottom of society. To ensure they receive sufficient attention, womens civil society organizations (CSOs) are needed to advocate on behalf of women and help mobilize resources, deliver essential services, and implement useful development activities. However, womens CSOs cannot effectively undertake these tasks until they acquire a wide range of new skillsfrom assessing needs, designing responsive interventions, and implementing programs to managing operations, finances and people, building alliances and networks, planning strategically, and monitoring and evaluating performancein addition to building capacity in the technical sectors in which they wish to work. The three-year $26.7 million Afghan Womens Empowerment through a Sub-grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWE-SUM) program is designed to strengthen the capacity of women-led/focused CSOs to contribute to the social, economic, and political development of Afghan women through the provision of financial and technical assistance to support women-specific activities in the following areas:1. Implementing activities that improve the status, safety and well being, human and legal rights, and livelihoods of Afghan women and girls;2. Delivering services that directly address the social, political, and economic needs of Afghan women and girls;3. Undertaking efforts to increase the participation of Afghan women in development as implementers, change agents and beneficiaries; and 4. Creating or strengthening mechanisms and channels by which Afghan women can access information, network, and take advantage of personal and professional development opportunities. Applicants will propose approaches to implementing the following Activity Components and indicate how those approaches will help accomplish the Activity Objectives:1. Awarding sub-grants for technical and organizational capacity building of eligible organizations, including equipment, and for the activities of such organizations;2. Assessing organizational and technical capacity needs of eligible organizations and developing responsive interventions;3. Overseeing sub-grant implementation to ensure that in addition to successful implementation of activities, CSO institutional strengthening and technical capacity building within recipient organizations is achieved; and4. To support the above components, developing and implementing a comprehensive communications plan and strategy to generate widespread interest in the sub-grant program among womens CSOs and to develop and manage an information campaign about the program to inform other stakeholders. The following link will take prospective applicants who are interested in this high visibility program to the full solicitation. Click on #1, Download Application Instructions. http://apply07.grants.gov/apply/UpdateOffer?id=8833 |
| Link to Additional Information: | – |
| Grantor Contact Information: | If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:
Ousay Wahaj
Acquisition and Assistance Spec. Phone 202-216-6288, Ext. 4133 Gregory Taitt |
Version History
| Version | Modification Description | Updated Date |
|---|---|---|
| Opportunity Title has been changed from "Implementation of the small grants program for Afghan Women Civil Society Organization." to "Afghan Women’s Empowerment through a Sub-Grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWESUM)." | Jan 13, 2009 | |
| Opportunity Title has been changed from "Implementation of the small grants program for Afghan Women Civil Society Organization." to "Afghan Women’s Empowerment through a Sub-Grant Umbrella Mechanism." | Jan 13, 2009 | |
| Jan 13, 2009 | ||
| Dec 11, 2008 | ||
| Dec 06, 2008 |
DISPLAYING: Synopsis 5
General Information
| Document Type: | Grants Notice |
| Funding Opportunity Number: | RFA306-09-0500 |
| Funding Opportunity Title: | Afghan Women’s Empowerment through a Sub-Grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWESUM) |
| Opportunity Category: | Earmark |
| Opportunity Category Explanation: | – |
| Funding Instrument Type: | Cooperative Agreement |
| Category of Funding Activity: | Business and Commerce |
| Category Explanation: | – |
| Expected Number of Awards: | 01 |
| Assistance Listings: | 98.001 — USAID Foreign Assistance for Programs Overseas |
| Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: | No |
| Version: | Synopsis 5 |
| Posted Date: | Nov 25, 2008 |
| Last Updated Date: | Jan 13, 2009 |
| Original Closing Date for Applications: | Jan 15, 2009 |
| Current Closing Date for Applications: | Jan 29, 2009 |
| Archive Date: | Mar 29, 2009 |
| Estimated Total Program Funding: | – |
| Award Ceiling: | $26,300,000 |
| Award Floor: | $0 |
Eligibility
| Eligible Applicants: | Unrestricted (i.e., open to any type of entity above), subject to any clarification in text field entitled “Additional Information on Eligibility” |
| Additional Information on Eligibility: | – |
Additional Information
| Agency Name: | Afghanistan USAID-Kabul |
| Description: | Now living under a Constitution that codifies equal rights for women, Afghan women have an official framework to support their personal and professional development. With the exception of constitutionally mandated quotas for womens representation in Parliament, however, all indicators of womens status reveal that enforcement of constitutional rights lags far behind enactment. A combination of poverty and deprivation, ill health, illiteracy, discriminatory customary laws, harmful traditional practices, and physical and emotional abuse conspire to keep women at the bottom of society. To ensure they receive sufficient attention, womens civil society organizations (CSOs) are needed to advocate on behalf of women and help mobilize resources, deliver essential services, and implement useful development activities. However, womens CSOs cannot effectively undertake these tasks until they acquire a wide range of new skillsfrom assessing needs, designing responsive interventions, and implementing programs to managing operations, finances and people, building alliances and networks, planning strategically, and monitoring and evaluating performancein addition to building capacity in the technical sectors in which they wish to work. The three-year $26.7 million Afghan Womens Empowerment through a Sub-grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWE-SUM) program is designed to strengthen the capacity of women-led/focused CSOs to contribute to the social, economic, and political development of Afghan women through the provision of financial and technical assistance to support women-specific activities in the following areas:1. Implementing activities that improve the status, safety and well being, human and legal rights, and livelihoods of Afghan women and girls;2. Delivering services that directly address the social, political, and economic needs of Afghan women and girls;3. Undertaking efforts to increase the participation of Afghan women in development as implementers, change agents and beneficiaries; and 4. Creating or strengthening mechanisms and channels by which Afghan women can access information, network, and take advantage of personal and professional development opportunities. Applicants will propose approaches to implementing the following Activity Components and indicate how those approaches will help accomplish the Activity Objectives:1. Awarding sub-grants for technical and organizational capacity building of eligible organizations, including equipment, and for the activities of such organizations;2. Assessing organizational and technical capacity needs of eligible organizations and developing responsive interventions;3. Overseeing sub-grant implementation to ensure that in addition to successful implementation of activities, CSO institutional strengthening and technical capacity building within recipient organizations is achieved; and4. To support the above components, developing and implementing a comprehensive communications plan and strategy to generate widespread interest in the sub-grant program among womens CSOs and to develop and manage an information campaign about the program to inform other stakeholders. The following link will take prospective applicants who are interested in this high visibility program to the full solicitation. Click on #1, Download Application Instructions. http://apply07.grants.gov/apply/UpdateOffer?id=8833 |
| Link to Additional Information: | – |
| Grantor Contact Information: | If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:
Ousay Wahaj
Acquisition and Assistance Spec. Phone 202-216-6288, Ext. 4133 Gregory Taitt |
DISPLAYING: Synopsis 4
General Information
| Document Type: | Grants Notice |
| Funding Opportunity Number: | RFA306-09-0500 |
| Funding Opportunity Title: | Afghan Women’s Empowerment through a Sub-Grant Umbrella Mechanismfghan Women’s Civil Society Organizations |
| Opportunity Category: | Earmark |
| Opportunity Category Explanation: | – |
| Funding Instrument Type: | Cooperative Agreement |
| Category of Funding Activity: | Business and Commerce |
| Category Explanation: | – |
| Expected Number of Awards: | 01 |
| Assistance Listings: | 98.001 — USAID Foreign Assistance for Programs Overseas |
| Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: | No |
| Version: | Synopsis 4 |
| Posted Date: | Jan 13, 2009 |
| Last Updated Date: | – |
| Original Closing Date for Applications: | – |
| Current Closing Date for Applications: | Jan 29, 2009 |
| Archive Date: | Mar 29, 2009 |
| Estimated Total Program Funding: | – |
| Award Ceiling: | $26,300,000 |
| Award Floor: | $0 |
Eligibility
| Eligible Applicants: | Unrestricted (i.e., open to any type of entity above), subject to any clarification in text field entitled “Additional Information on Eligibility” |
| Additional Information on Eligibility: | – |
Additional Information
| Agency Name: | Afghanistan USAID-Kabul |
| Description: | Now living under a Constitution that codifies equal rights for women, Afghan women have an official framework to support their personal and professional development. With the exception of constitutionally mandated quotas for womens representation in Parliament, however, all indicators of womens status reveal that enforcement of constitutional rights lags far behind enactment. A combination of poverty and deprivation, ill health, illiteracy, discriminatory customary laws, harmful traditional practices, and physical and emotional abuse conspire to keep women at the bottom of society. To ensure they receive sufficient attention, womens civil society organizations (CSOs) are needed to advocate on behalf of women and help mobilize resources, deliver essential services, and implement useful development activities. However, womens CSOs cannot effectively undertake these tasks until they acquire a wide range of new skillsfrom assessing needs, designing responsive interventions, and implementing programs to managing operations, finances and people, building alliances and networks, planning strategically, and monitoring and evaluating performancein addition to building capacity in the technical sectors in which they wish to work. The three-year $26.7 million Afghan Womens Empowerment through a Sub-grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWE-SUM) program is designed to strengthen the capacity of women-led/focused CSOs to contribute to the social, economic, and political development of Afghan women through the provision of financial and technical assistance to support women-specific activities in the following areas:1. Implementing activities that improve the status, safety and well being, human and legal rights, and livelihoods of Afghan women and girls;2. Delivering services that directly address the social, political, and economic needs of Afghan women and girls;3. Undertaking efforts to increase the participation of Afghan women in development as implementers, change agents and beneficiaries; and 4. Creating or strengthening mechanisms and channels by which Afghan women can access information, network, and take advantage of personal and professional development opportunities. Applicants will propose approaches to implementing the following Activity Components and indicate how those approaches will help accomplish the Activity Objectives:1. Awarding sub-grants for technical and organizational capacity building of eligible organizations, including equipment, and for the activities of such organizations;2. Assessing organizational and technical capacity needs of eligible organizations and developing responsive interventions;3. Overseeing sub-grant implementation to ensure that in addition to successful implementation of activities, CSO institutional strengthening and technical capacity building within recipient organizations is achieved; and4. To support the above components, developing and implementing a comprehensive communications plan and strategy to generate widespread interest in the sub-grant program among womens CSOs and to develop and manage an information campaign about the program to inform other stakeholders. The following link will take prospective applicants who are interested in this high visibility program to the full solicitation. Click on #1, Download Application Instructions. http://apply07.grants.gov/apply/UpdateOffer?id=8833 |
| Link to Additional Information: | – |
| Grantor Contact Information: | If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:
Ousay Wahaj
Acquisition and Assistance Spec. Phone 202-216-6288, Ext. 4133 Gregory Taitt |
DISPLAYING: Synopsis 3
General Information
| Document Type: | Grants Notice |
| Funding Opportunity Number: | RFA306-09-0500 |
| Funding Opportunity Title: | Implementation of the Small Grants Program for Afghan Women’s Civil Society Organizations |
| Opportunity Category: | Earmark |
| Opportunity Category Explanation: | – |
| Funding Instrument Type: | Cooperative Agreement |
| Category of Funding Activity: | Business and Commerce |
| Category Explanation: | – |
| Expected Number of Awards: | 01 |
| Assistance Listings: | 98.001 — USAID Foreign Assistance for Programs Overseas |
| Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: | No |
| Version: | Synopsis 3 |
| Posted Date: | Jan 13, 2009 |
| Last Updated Date: | – |
| Original Closing Date for Applications: | – |
| Current Closing Date for Applications: | Jan 29, 2009 |
| Archive Date: | Mar 29, 2009 |
| Estimated Total Program Funding: | – |
| Award Ceiling: | $26,300,000 |
| Award Floor: | $0 |
Eligibility
| Eligible Applicants: | Unrestricted (i.e., open to any type of entity above), subject to any clarification in text field entitled “Additional Information on Eligibility” |
| Additional Information on Eligibility: | – |
Additional Information
| Agency Name: | Afghanistan USAID-Kabul |
| Description: | Now living under a Constitution that codifies equal rights for women, Afghan women have an official framework to support their personal and professional development. With the exception of constitutionally mandated quotas for womens representation in Parliament, however, all indicators of womens status reveal that enforcement of constitutional rights lags far behind enactment. A combination of poverty and deprivation, ill health, illiteracy, discriminatory customary laws, harmful traditional practices, and physical and emotional abuse conspire to keep women at the bottom of society. To ensure they receive sufficient attention, womens civil society organizations (CSOs) are needed to advocate on behalf of women and help mobilize resources, deliver essential services, and implement useful development activities. However, womens CSOs cannot effectively undertake these tasks until they acquire a wide range of new skillsfrom assessing needs, designing responsive interventions, and implementing programs to managing operations, finances and people, building alliances and networks, planning strategically, and monitoring and evaluating performancein addition to building capacity in the technical sectors in which they wish to work. The three-year $26.7 million Afghan Womens Empowerment through a Sub-grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWE-SUM) program is designed to strengthen the capacity of women-led/focused CSOs to contribute to the social, economic, and political development of Afghan women through the provision of financial and technical assistance to support women-specific activities in the following areas:1. Implementing activities that improve the status, safety and well being, human and legal rights, and livelihoods of Afghan women and girls;2. Delivering services that directly address the social, political, and economic needs of Afghan women and girls;3. Undertaking efforts to increase the participation of Afghan women in development as implementers, change agents and beneficiaries; and 4. Creating or strengthening mechanisms and channels by which Afghan women can access information, network, and take advantage of personal and professional development opportunities. Applicants will propose approaches to implementing the following Activity Components and indicate how those approaches will help accomplish the Activity Objectives:1. Awarding sub-grants for technical and organizational capacity building of eligible organizations, including equipment, and for the activities of such organizations;2. Assessing organizational and technical capacity needs of eligible organizations and developing responsive interventions;3. Overseeing sub-grant implementation to ensure that in addition to successful implementation of activities, CSO institutional strengthening and technical capacity building within recipient organizations is achieved; and4. To support the above components, developing and implementing a comprehensive communications plan and strategy to generate widespread interest in the sub-grant program among womens CSOs and to develop and manage an information campaign about the program to inform other stakeholders. The following link will take prospective applicants who are interested in this high visibility program to the full solicitation. Click on #1, Download Application Instructions. http://apply07.grants.gov/apply/UpdateOffer?id=8833 |
| Link to Additional Information: | – |
| Grantor Contact Information: | If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:
Ousay Wahaj
Acquisition and Assistance Spec. Phone 202-216-6288, Ext. 4133 Gregory Taitt |
DISPLAYING: Synopsis 2
General Information
| Document Type: | Grants Notice |
| Funding Opportunity Number: | RFA306-09-0500 |
| Funding Opportunity Title: | Implementation of the Small Grants Program for Afghan Women’s Civil Society Organizations |
| Opportunity Category: | Earmark |
| Opportunity Category Explanation: | – |
| Funding Instrument Type: | Cooperative Agreement |
| Category of Funding Activity: | Business and Commerce |
| Category Explanation: | – |
| Expected Number of Awards: | 01 |
| Assistance Listings: | 98.001 — USAID Foreign Assistance for Programs Overseas |
| Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: | No |
| Version: | Synopsis 2 |
| Posted Date: | Dec 11, 2008 |
| Last Updated Date: | – |
| Original Closing Date for Applications: | – |
| Current Closing Date for Applications: | Jan 15, 2009 |
| Archive Date: | Feb 14, 2009 |
| Estimated Total Program Funding: | – |
| Award Ceiling: | $26,300,000 |
| Award Floor: | $0 |
Eligibility
| Eligible Applicants: | Unrestricted (i.e., open to any type of entity above), subject to any clarification in text field entitled “Additional Information on Eligibility” |
| Additional Information on Eligibility: | – |
Additional Information
| Agency Name: | Afghanistan USAID-Kabul |
| Description: | Now living under a Constitution that codifies equal rights for women, Afghan women have an official framework to support their personal and professional development. With the exception of constitutionally mandated quotas for womens representation in Parliament, however, all indicators of womens status reveal that enforcement of constitutional rights lags far behind enactment. A combination of poverty and deprivation, ill health, illiteracy, discriminatory customary laws, harmful traditional practices, and physical and emotional abuse conspire to keep women at the bottom of society. To ensure they receive sufficient attention, womens civil society organizations (CSOs) are needed to advocate on behalf of women and help mobilize resources, deliver essential services, and implement useful development activities. However, womens CSOs cannot effectively undertake these tasks until they acquire a wide range of new skillsfrom assessing needs, designing responsive interventions, and implementing programs to managing operations, finances and people, building alliances and networks, planning strategically, and monitoring and evaluating performancein addition to building capacity in the technical sectors in which they wish to work.
The three-year $26.7 million Afghan Womens Empowerment through a Sub-grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWE-SUM) program is designed to strengthen the capacity of women-led/focused CSOs to contribute to the social, economic, and political development of Afghan women through the provision of financial and technical assistance to support women-specific activities in the following areas: 1. Implementing activities that improve the status, safety and well being, human and legal rights, and livelihoods of Afghan women and girls; 2. Delivering services that directly address the social, political, and economic needs of Afghan women and girls; 3. Undertaking efforts to increase the participation of Afghan women in development as implementers, change agents and beneficiaries; and 4. Creating or strengthening mechanisms and channels by which Afghan women can access information, network, and take advantage of personal and professional development opportunities. Applicants will propose approaches to implementing the following Activity Components and indicate how those approaches will help accomplish the Activity Objectives: 1. Awarding sub-grants for technical and organizational capacity building of eligible organizations, including equipment, and for the activities of such organizations; 2. Assessing organizational and technical capacity needs of eligible organizations and developing responsive interventions; 3. Overseeing sub-grant implementation to ensure that in addition to successful implementation of activities, CSO institutional strengthening and technical capacity building within recipient organizations is achieved; and 4. To support the above components, developing and implementing a comprehensive communications plan and strategy to generate widespread interest in the sub-grant program among womens CSOs and to develop and manage an information campaign about the program to inform other stakeholders. The following link will take prospective applicants who are interested in this high visibility program to the full solicitation. Click on #1, Download Application Instructions. http://apply07.grants.gov/apply/UpdateOffer?id=8833 |
| Link to Additional Information: | – |
| Grantor Contact Information: | If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:
Ousay Wahaj
Acquisition and Assistance Spec. Phone 202-216-6288, Ext. 4133 Gregory Taitt |
DISPLAYING: Synopsis 1
General Information
| Document Type: | Grants Notice |
| Funding Opportunity Number: | RFA306-09-0500 |
| Funding Opportunity Title: | Implementation of the Small Grants Program for Afghan Women’s Civil Society Organizations |
| Opportunity Category: | Earmark |
| Opportunity Category Explanation: | – |
| Funding Instrument Type: | Cooperative Agreement |
| Category of Funding Activity: | Business and Commerce |
| Category Explanation: | – |
| Expected Number of Awards: | 01 |
| Assistance Listings: | 98.001 — USAID Foreign Assistance for Programs Overseas |
| Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: | No |
| Version: | Synopsis 1 |
| Posted Date: | Dec 06, 2008 |
| Last Updated Date: | – |
| Original Closing Date for Applications: | – |
| Current Closing Date for Applications: | Jan 15, 2009 |
| Archive Date: | Feb 14, 2009 |
| Estimated Total Program Funding: | – |
| Award Ceiling: | $26,300,000 |
| Award Floor: | $0 |
Eligibility
| Eligible Applicants: | Unrestricted (i.e., open to any type of entity above), subject to any clarification in text field entitled “Additional Information on Eligibility” |
| Additional Information on Eligibility: | – |
Additional Information
| Agency Name: | Afghanistan USAID-Kabul |
| Description: | Afghan Womens Empowerment through a Sub-grant Umbrella Mechanism (AWESUM)
I. Background: Seven years after the overthrow of the Taliban, Afghan girls and women are starting to recover from the severe restrictions and mistreatment they were forced to endure under that notorious regime. Now living under a Constitution that ensures their access to education, employment, and legal rights, women have an official framework to support their personal and professional development. With the exception of constitutionally mandated quotas for womens representation in Parliament, however, all indicators of womens status reveal that enforcement of constitutional rights lags woefully behind enactment. A combination of poverty and deprivation, ill health, illiteracy, discriminatory customary laws, harmful traditional practices, physical and emotional abuse, and overall insecurity conspire to keep women at the bottom of Afghan society. With forced and early marriage, high fertility, the second highest maternal mortality rate in the world, and a life expectancy of just 44, Afghan women have little opportunity to develop themselves or participate in the development of their country. The international community is heavily engaged in supporting capacity building within the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (GIRoA) to improve its ability to address the many needs of its largely impoverished population. Governmental capacity is so weak and the challenges of development so great, however, that civil society organizations (CSOs) are needed to help the GIRoA meet the short- and long-term needs of the Afghan people. In other parts of the world, government agencies have found that partnering with CSOs is an effective means of delivering essential services to less advantaged citizens, carrying out needed social and economic programs, and achieving development goals. Citizens come to rely on CSOs as well to bring information about critical educational, political, economic, health, and environmental issues and to advocate on behalf of communities for resources to meet local needs. Like the GIRoA, CSOs in Afghanistan must also strengthen their ability to manage, implement, communicate, and advocate if they are to play a greater role as partners in development. As the GIRoA and donors make decisions about development priorities, the allocation of resources, and which populations to serve first, civil society organizations able to advocate effectively for their constituents will be able to influence those decisions. Moreover, because development resources available to CSOs are likely to be limited, CSOs able to compete successfully for funds by writing compelling proposals, delivering persuasive arguments and presentations, and tapping into established donor networks will likely carry the day. To ensure that issues facing women are sufficiently addressedand for development in general to be successful and sustainablewomen must play an active role as both change agents and beneficiaries. Yet research suggests they have a long way to go to be effective at either. Indeed, one study identified fundamental constraints facing womens organizations: There are still elements in Afghan society that are reluctant to let women gather in groups….Ordinarily, working on community issues is not considered normal behavior for women anyway Men generally see womens gatherings as trouble because of disputes arising from rivalry and because women may be exposed to polluting people or ideas . There are no grassroots womens organizations per se because family rivalries, social taboos, lack of spare time and so on override feelings of solidarity between women. Within womens civil society organizations, the technical and institutional maturity level is poor, and the needs are great. Many CSOs do not even recognize what their capacity building needs are. In general, womens CSOs need to improve their capacity to assess needs, design responsive interventions, develop, manage and implement/deliver programs, manage operations, finances and people, build alliances and network, make decisions, prioritize, plan strategically, establish input, output, outcome and impact indicators, monitor and evaluate performance against those indicators, communicate effectively, conduct outreach and advocacy, and mobilize resourcesin addition to building capacity in the technical sectors in which they wish to work. Moreover, womens CSOs that want to influence policy and decision-making processes still have much to learn before they become consistently effective organizations, since most lack the vision about how to influence policy. The vast majority of indigenous CSOs are limited in their ability to comprehend the political decision-making processes and do not know how to formulate a timely and opportune advocacy strategy capable of achieving its objective. Nevertheless, with very little assistance, few resources, limited capacityand at times formidable resistancewomens organizations have not only survived but continue to grow and contribute to development efforts. While the official number of Afghan womens civil society organizations is unknown due to insufficient record keeping, approximately 2,400 nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)both local and internationalare registered with the Afghan Ministry of Planning. Afghan women run many of these organizations and tackle development challenges such as basic literacy training, income-oriented vocational skills training, and very basic health services and health education. Some local organizations partner with international NGOs to implement micro-credit programs in addition to rights awareness and gender education to begin changing the harmful cultural practices that limit women. A number of factors support increased USAID assistance for womens CSOs in Afghanistan. These include the pronounced and pressing need, as articulated by the international community and Afghan women, and the growing number of womens CSOs seeking support. In the last two years, USAID/Afghanistan has received an increasing number unsolicited applications from womens organizations requesting funding for activities ranging from running small education and health initiatives to launching radio stations and producing feature films on issues important to women. The proposed umbrella sub-grant activity will enable USAID to support a greater number of these initiatives while, at the same time, building the capacity of the recipient organizations. |
| Link to Additional Information: | – |
| Grantor Contact Information: | If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:
Ousay Wahaj
Acquisition and Assistance Spec. Phone 202-216-6288, Ext. 4133 Gregory Taitt |
Related Documents
Packages
| Agency Contact Information: | Ousay Wahaj Acquisition and Assistance Spec. Phone 202-216-6288, Ext. 4133 Gregory Taitt |
| Who Can Apply: | Organization Applicants |
| Assistance Listing Number | Competition ID | Competition Title | Opportunity Package ID | Opening Date | Closing Date | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 98.001 | RFA306-09-0500 | Implementation of the Small Grants Program for Afghan Women’s Civil Society Organizations | PKG00008833 | Nov 20, 2008 | Jan 29, 2009 | View |
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