U.S. Department of State
Mobile

FY 2009 Funding Opportunity Announcement for NGO Programs Targeting the Prevention Of and Response To Gender-Based Violence (GBV), Including Sexual Abuse and Exploitation (SEA)

Back to previous page

Funding Opportunity Announcement
Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration
May 5, 2009


Announcement issuance date: Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Proposal submission deadline: Thursday, June 4, 2009, at 12:00 p.m. (EDT).
Proposals submitted after this deadline will not be considered.

ADVISORY: Grants.gov is expected to experience higher than normal volume of activity in the near future. PRM strongly recommends submitting your proposal early to allow time to address issues that may arise due to system delays.

Proposed Program Start Dates: August 1, 2009-September 15, 2009 for new projects; continuing projects should follow the existing program end-date.

Duration of Activity: No more than 12 months.
Applicants with multi-year programs must continue to re-compete for PRM funding each year. Furthermore, in funding a project one year, PRM makes no representations that it will continue to fund the project in successive years and encourages applicants to seek a wide array of donors to ensure long-term funding possibilities.

I. Current Funding
II. Funding Limits
III. Proposal Submission Requirements
IV. Proposal Content, Formatting and Template
V. General PRM NGO Guideline Requirements
VI. Proposal Review Process
VII. PRM Points of Contact

I. Current Funding Priorities for: NGO GBV Prevention and Response Activities for refugee, returnee, and certain IDP populations specified below.

PRM will prioritize currently available funding for proposed non-governmental organization (NGO) activities that best meet the Bureau’s GBV and SEA prevention priorities as identified below. Proposals that do not meet the priorities and requirements outlined in this funding announcement and the FY 2009 General PRM NGO Guidelines will not be considered.

(a) Priority countries and populations:

PRM’s central mandate is to provide assistance to refugees, returnees, and certain internally displaced persons (IDPs). Applicants must clearly show how their planned projects will benefit PRM’s primary target populations as identified below.

1) Africa: refugee and returnee assistance in the following locations (PRM will not consider IDP projects in this region):

a. Horn of Africa: Refugees in Kenya and Ethiopia, refugee returnee populations in Sudan;

b. Central Africa/Great Lakes: refugee returnees in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo; refugees in Chad and Rwanda.

2) Europe, Central Asia and the Americas: refugee, returnee, stateless, and certain IDP populations as noted:

c. Russian Federation: IDP population in the North Caucasus.

d. Americas:

i. Colombian refugees and programs that complement ongoing PRM-funded IDP programs;

ii. Dominican Republic: stateless persons, refugees and asylum-seekers.

3) Asia and the Near East – refugee and returnee assistance in the following locations (PRM will not consider IDP projects in this region):

e. East Asia: Burmese refugees in Thailand, Bangladesh, or Malaysia;

f. South Asia: Afghan refugees in Pakistan, and Afghan returnees in Afghanistan.

(b) GBV activities should focus on one or more of the following (in no particular order):

Applicants should carefully consider which activities will be most appropriate and effective in the given context. Proposals need not include all of the above activities.

(c) Given funding constraints, competition for FY2009 PRM funding will be rigorous. If supplementary funds become available later in the fiscal year, we may have the opportunity to provide additional support to organizations that submit a proposal in response to this announcement but that do not receive funding in the initial round. Priority will be given to proposals from organizations that can demonstrate:

(d) GBV Specific Instructions

Prevention and response to GBV should begin at the onset of every emergency. PRM funds targeted GBV prevention and response projects to help our partners develop strong, effective GBV interventions. Whenever possible, these targeted GBV projects should complement existing programs with the goal of becoming mainstreamed into multi-sectoral assistance activities. PRM strongly encourages its partners to include GBV programming in both multi-sectoral and function-specific projects.

GBV prevention and response programs should address GBV, including sexual abuse and exploitation (SEA) amongst refugees and refugee returnees, in a manner that respects the dignity of the individual and the culture in which s/he lives. To the extent possible, proposals should be developed in consultation with beneficiaries, communities, local authorities, and the larger humanitarian community.

Common GBV Indicator:
As organizations put together their objectives and indicators for proposals in response to these guidelines, we would like you to include the following indicator as part of your basket of indicators (other indicators should be customized to measure the results of the specific program proposed). Indicators should be informed by data gathered in baseline surveys:

Percentage of survivors of GBV who have received or been referred for psychological, medical, legal or any other form of support.

Measurement:
Numerator: Total number of survivors reporting GBV who have received or been referred for psychological, medical, legal or any other form of support.

Denominator:
Total number of survivors reporting GBV

(e) International Organizations:

International Organizations (IOs) that are engaged in programs relevant to the assistance addressed by this PRM funding announcement should ensure that these programs are made known to PRM on or before the closing date of this funding announcement so that PRM can evaluate all IO and NGO programs for funding consideration.

II. Funding Limits:

PRM will only consider proposals in the range of $100,000-$400,000 of PRM-requested funding; any submission over this amount will automatically be disqualified. The budget for the proposed program should identify not only PRM requested funding, but also those portions of the program to be funded by the NGO itself, UNHCR or other UN/IO agencies, USAID, or other donors.

As stated in the FY 2009 General PRM NGO Guidelines, PRM looks favorably on cost-sharing efforts and seeks to support projects with a diverse donor base and/or resources from the submitting organization. Proposals that receive co-funding are highly encouraged and will be weighted higher during the panel review.

III. Proposal Submission Requirements:

See “Applicant FAQs” section on Grants.gov (http://www.grants.gov/help/applicant_faqs.jsp#applying) for complete details on requirements, and note the following highlights below:

IV. Proposal Content, Formatting and Template:

Please refer to the “Proposal Submission and Review Process” section in the FY 2009 General PRM NGO Guidelines. PRM strongly encourages organizations applying for PRM funding to use the PRM recommended proposal and budget templates. Templates can be requested by sending an email to PRM's NGO Coordinator. Please include “PRM NGO Templates” in the subject line.

V. General PRM NGO Guideline Requirements:

PLEASE TAKE SPECIAL NOTE OF THE FOLLOWING REQUIREMENTS OUTLINED IN THE GENERAL PRM NGO GUIDELINES.


For more details regarding PRM’s reporting requirements please see FY 2009 General PRM NGO Guidelines.

VI. Proposal Review Process:

PRM will conduct a formal competitive review of all proposals submitted in response to this funding announcement. A review panel will evaluate submissions based on the above-referenced proposal evaluation criteria and PRM priorities in the context of available funding.

In order to provide NGOs with timely feedback, PRM will inform applicants of the panel’s decision to recommend or not recommend funding proposed activities, and may request revised proposals and/or budgets based on feedback from the panel. PRM will follow up with formal notifications to NGOs of final decisions taken by Bureau management.

VII. PRM Points of Contact:

Should NGOs have technical questions related to this announcement, they should contact the PRM staff listed below prior to proposal submission. (Note: Answers to technical questions from PRM do not indicate a commitment to fund the program discussed.):

[This is a mobile copy of FY 2009 Funding Opportunity Announcement for NGO Programs Targeting the Prevention Of and Response To Gender-Based Violence (GBV), Including Sexual Abuse and Exploitation (SEA)]