Deadline: 14-Jun-2026
The Emergency Support Fund for LGBT is a small-grants initiative supported by ECOM with backing from UNAIDS. It provides rapid, short-term funding to LGBT organizations, activists, and community initiative groups in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The program is designed to strengthen safety, resilience, and rights protection in contexts of increasing legal, digital, and social pressure.
Program Purpose and Core Objectives
The fund focuses on helping LGBT civil society actors respond to urgent and evolving threats in restrictive environments.
Key objectives include:
- Strengthening the security of LGBT organizations and activists
- Supporting legal assistance and legal defense capacity
- Responding to restrictive laws and policy changes
- Countering stigma, discrimination, and disinformation campaigns
- Enhancing physical, digital, and organizational safety systems
- Protecting staff and activists through structured safety and psychosocial support
The program prioritizes crisis response and organizational survival in high-risk environments.
Context and Need for the Program
LGBT organizations in Eastern Europe and Central Asia face escalating challenges that directly affect their ability to operate safely and sustainably.
Key challenges include:
- Increasing criminalization and restrictive legislation
- Surveillance and state monitoring of civil society groups
- Anti-LGBT rhetoric and public stigmatization campaigns
- Digital threats and online harassment
- Reduced access to sustainable funding and security infrastructure
- Forced diversion of resources toward organizational survival
These pressures have created urgent demand for flexible, rapid-response funding mechanisms.
Eligible Countries
The program supports LGBT organizations and initiatives in selected countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
Eligible countries include:
- Azerbaijan
- Armenia
- Georgia
- Kazakhstan
- Kyrgyzstan
- Tajikistan
- Uzbekistan
Eligible Applicants
The fund is open to both formal and informal LGBT groups.
Eligible applicants include:
- Registered LGBT organizations
- Informal and unregistered initiative groups
- Community-based LGBT activist networks
Special provision:
- Unregistered groups may apply through a registered fiduciary organization acting on their behalf
Funding Structure and Grant Size
The program provides small, rapid-response grants designed for short-term crisis support.
Funding details:
- Total grants awarded: 9 grants
- Grant amount: USD 7,000 per award
- Implementation period: July to October 2026
- Project duration: Up to 4 months (may be shorter)
Key characteristic:
- Small, fast-disbursing, crisis-focused funding model
What the Grant Funds Support
Funding is focused on organizational safety, resilience, and legal protection rather than service delivery or infrastructure procurement.
Eligible activities include:
Security and safety:
- Physical security improvements for staff and activists
- Digital security strengthening and risk mitigation
- Development of safety policies and procedures
- Protection measures for vulnerable personnel
Legal support:
- Legal consultations on anti-LGBT legislation
- Legal audits and compliance guidance
- Support for organizational registration issues
- Development of legal and safety protection plans
Advocacy and communications:
- Responses to discriminatory laws and policies
- Countering stigmatizing narratives and media campaigns
- Strategic communication to address disinformation
Crisis response and wellbeing:
- Legal protection assistance for targeted individuals
- Emergency shelter-related support
- Psychosocial support for staff and activists
- Response to online harassment and digital threats
Non-Eligible Costs and Activities
The program has strict exclusions to ensure funding is used only for direct crisis and safety support.
Non-eligible items:
- Software purchases
- Equipment or hardware procurement
- Technology infrastructure acquisition
- Service delivery programs unrelated to organizational safety
Key implication:
- The grant is not for general programming or operational expansion
Application Requirements
Applicants must submit a complete application package including:
Required documents:
- Application form
- Self-Assessment of Readiness to Crisis Situation form
- Workplan and Budget form
Important requirement:
- The self-assessment is a critical part of the evaluation process and helps justify funding needs
How the Program Works
The selection process is structured and expert-reviewed:
- Step 1: Submission of application package
- Step 2: Eligibility screening
- Step 3: Review by independent expert committee
- Step 4: Evaluation based on SMART criteria
- Step 5: Final selection of 9 grant recipients
- Step 6: Implementation period (July–October 2026)
Evaluation Criteria
Applications are assessed using both technical and contextual criteria.
Primary evaluation factors:
- Eligibility compliance
- Quality and clarity of proposal
- Alignment between activities and budget
- Demonstrated community involvement
- SMART criteria (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound design)
Tie-breaker priorities:
- Groups facing the most severe threats
- Organizations not previously supported by similar ECOM grants
- ECOM member organizations
Key Concepts Explained
Crisis response funding:
- Short-term financial support designed to address urgent risks and instability
Organizational resilience:
- The ability of groups to continue operations under legal, social, or security pressure
Digital and physical security:
- Protection against cyber threats, surveillance, harassment, and physical risks
Fiduciary agent:
- A registered organization that receives and manages funds on behalf of an unregistered group
Why This Program Matters
This fund plays a critical role in maintaining LGBT civil society infrastructure in high-risk regions by:
- Supporting survival of organizations under legal and political pressure
- Strengthening protection for activists and community leaders
- Enabling rapid response to discrimination and targeted threats
- Improving legal readiness and safety systems
- Supporting psychosocial well-being in crisis environments
It is specifically designed to ensure continuity of LGBT rights work in restrictive and rapidly changing contexts.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Application mistakes:
- Weak or unclear crisis justification
- Missing required self-assessment form
- Lack of alignment between budget and safety objectives
- Overly general or non-crisis-focused proposals
Eligibility mistakes:
- Applying from outside eligible countries
- Submitting service delivery or development-focused projects
- Requesting funding for equipment or software procurement
Design mistakes:
- No clear safety or risk mitigation strategy
- Lack of SMART-defined objectives
- Poorly structured short-term implementation plan
Tips for a Strong Application
Strong applications typically include:
- Clear identification of immediate risks and threats
- Well-defined safety or legal protection interventions
- Strong alignment between crisis needs and proposed activities
- Realistic short-term implementation plan (≤4 months)
- Strong justification through self-assessment evidence
Best practices:
- Focus tightly on organizational survival and safety
- Clearly define threat environment and response strategy
- Ensure budget directly maps to security outcomes
- Demonstrate urgency and practical feasibility
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Who can apply for the Emergency Support Fund?
- Registered and unregistered LGBT organizations and initiatives in eligible countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
How much funding is available?
- Each grant is USD 7,000, with 9 grants awarded in total.
What is the project duration?
- Between July and October 2026, up to 4 months.
What can the funding be used for?
- Safety, legal support, digital security, advocacy, and psychosocial support activities.
Can funds be used for equipment or software?
- No, procurement of equipment or software is not allowed.
Can informal groups apply?
- Yes, through a registered fiduciary organization if needed.
What is most important in evaluation?
- Crisis relevance, proposal quality, SMART design, and urgency of need.
Conclusion
The Emergency Support Fund for LGBT organizations (ECOM + UNAIDS) provides rapid, targeted crisis funding to support the safety and resilience of LGBT communities in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. By focusing on legal protection, security systems, and psychosocial support, the program ensures that vulnerable organizations can continue operating in increasingly restrictive environments while protecting the rights and well-being of activists and community members.
For more information, visit ECOM.









































