Deadline: 21-Oct-2024
AJ Muste Foundation for Peace and Justice has announced the Social Justice Fund for grassroots activist projects in the US, giving priority to those with small budgets and little access to more mainstream funding sources.
The Social Justice Fund is especially interested in funding efforts to:
- end the violence of borders and the criminalization of immigrants, shut down CBP and ICE
- abolish prisons and dismantle and redefine systems of policing and criminal justice
- confront institutionalized violence against racial, ethnic, gender-based, and LGBTQ communities
- put an end to economic exploitation, class stratification, systemic poverty
- stop the war machine, end state sponsored terrorism, expose the dangers of nuclear power
Priorities
- The Social Justice Fund’s priority is to support:
- direct grassroots activism and organizing
- groups with diverse, representative and democratic leadership structures
- groups that need additional support to carry out a project or build capacity
Funding Information
- The maximum grant award is $10,000. Occasionally they will consider requests for multiple-year funding.
Eligibility Criteria
- They seek proposals:
- from groups with limited access to more mainstream funding sources
- from groups which have not received Social Justice Fund grants in at least two years
- from groups with or without 501(c)3 status or a fiscal sponsor: the Social Justice Fund only requires a fiscal sponsor if the group receiving the grant does not have its own bank account. If you cannot receive a grant check made out to the name of your organization, you will need a fiscal sponsor. They cannot issue checks to individuals.
- For Projects Support: Projects expense budgets under $50,000 and organizational budgets of under 500,000 annually
- For General Operation Support: organizational budgets of $500,000 or less annually
Ineligible
- Although they value the work, they do not consider grant proposals for the following:
- individual efforts or scholarships
- schools or universities academic or research projects
- organizations with regular access to government, corporate or mainstream charitable funding
- art, theater, film or video projects that are not directly tied to activism or organizing
- sectarian religious purposes
- economic development projects
- capital campaigns or expenses
- direct social services
- legal defense or litigation
- lobbying or electoral campaigns
- projects geared toward participants personal improvement or business success
- conflict resolution or violence reduction projects, unless they directly promote activism
- projects that will have already taken place by the time the grant is received
For more information, visit AJ Muste Foundation for Peace and Justice.