Deadline: 3-Feb-23
Women and Gender Equality Canada has launched a call for proposals to address gender-based violence (GBV) through two separate streams: promising practices and community-based research.
Objectives
- There are two objectives for this call for proposals:
- For the Promising Practices stream: The objective is to fund projects to develop, put in place, and evaluate or to scale promising practices to strengthen the GBV sector.
- For the Community-based Research stream: The objective is to fund research projects that build knowledge to help address the needs of the underserved in the GBV sector.
Key Action Areas
For the Promising Practices stream
- Key actions will focus on promising practices that strengthen the GBV sector. They will also address gaps in prevention and supports for at-risk populations. The key action areas are:
- Develop, put in place, and evaluate a promising practice
- Scale a tested and successful promising practice
- Strengthen the GBV sector to better address the needs of at-risk populations
- Seek to understand the root causes and systemic factors that enable GBV and work on viable solutions
- Address barriers to accessing GBV supports and services
For the Community-based Research stream:
- Key actions will focus on community-based research that will help improve GBV services for at-risk groups:
- Produce knowledge to help improve services for at-risk groups: Black or racialized women, immigrant, refugee and newcomer women, women living with disabilities, Indigenous women, or 2SLGBTQI+ people
- Conduct research on GBV that is community-driven and action or change oriented
Funding Information
- Community-based Research Stream
- The maximum amount per project is: Up to $400,000 in total for a community-based research and data collection project
- For the Promising Practices stream
- For a project to develop, put in place, and evaluate a promising practice, you can apply for the maximum amounts below. These are total amounts for the whole project:
- Up to $650,000 in total to develop, put in place, and evaluate a promising practice within a local, provincial, or territorial context
- Up to $850,000 in total to develop, put in place, and evaluate a promising practice on a pan-Canadian scale. Project activities must have an impact in at least four WAGE regions and be carried out in both official languages (both official languages not required for Indigenous organizations)
- For a project to scale a successful promising practice in a new location or with a new population, you can apply for the maximum amounts below. These are total amounts for the whole project:
- Up to $650,000 in total for a project within a local, provincial, or territorial context Up to $2,000,000 in total for a project in multiple provinces or territories.
- For a project to develop, put in place, and evaluate a promising practice, you can apply for the maximum amounts below. These are total amounts for the whole project:
- Duration: Projects should aim to start no earlier than summer 2023 and must end by March 31, 2026.
Eligible Activites
Promising Practices Stream
- The call for proposals will support activities that:
- Engage key at-risk and underserved populations
- Engage and work with stakeholders
- Engage and mobilize men and boys as allies to prevent and end GBV
- Build evidence on promising practices to strengthen the GBV sector
- Design and test ways to address service gaps in the gender-based violence sector
- Develop products such as backgrounders or guides as part of a greater project and
- Scale a promising practice that has shown positive results. Scaling may include:
- Replication of an existing promising practice in a new location or with a new population
- Use of the promising practice to advocate for change in law and policy, or
- Work with partners to increase wrap-around supports in a community
- They will prioritize proposals that:
- Develop, put in place, and evaluate a promising practice for at-risk populations:
- That engages men and boys as allies in the prevention of GBV
- To prevent human trafficking, or
- To enhance supports for victims and survivors of human trafficking
- Scale a promising practice that has been tested and shown positive results
- Prevent and address GBV as experienced by Black or racialized women, immigrant, refugee and newcomer women, women living with disabilities, 2SLGBTQI+ people, or northern communities, and/or
- Address any other gap, such as geography, as deemed by the Department
- The activities must align with the following objective: To fund research projects that build knowledge to help address the needs of the underserved in the GBV sector.
- Develop, put in place, and evaluate a promising practice for at-risk populations:
For the Community-based Research Stream
- All projects in this stream must:
- Get ethics approval before research can begin. You can get research ethics approval from the following:
- An existing research ethics board within the applicant or its umbrella organization
- An academic institution could go through their usual process to get approval
- An organization that approves research, such as the Community-Based Research Ethics Office.
- Address one or more of the three pillars of the federal GBV Strategy:
- Prevent GBV
- Support survivors and their families
- Promote responsive legal and justice systems
- Be community-based
- Focused on GBV
- Focus on and involve Black or racialized women, immigrant, refugee and newcomer women, women living with disabilities, Indigenous women, or 2SLGBTQI+ people
- Include a way to share information with others as a key component. You will need to share your findings with affected communities in a way that is accessible and useful. For instance, you could share information on your project with the GBV Knowledge Centre.
- Get ethics approval before research can begin. You can get research ethics approval from the following:
- They will prioritize proposals that:
- Have a local or regional scope of work and/or
- Address any other gap, such as geography, as deemed by the Department
Eligibility Criteria
All applicants under this call for proposals must meet the following criteria:
- Be a Canadian organization
- Have proof of incorporation or registration or be created under an Act
- Have experience working on GBV issues, for example, if you propose a project on human trafficking, you must show your experience in this area
- For the Promising Practices stream
- Be one of the following organization types:
- Not-for-profit organizations
- Indigenous governments or their agencies
- Research organizations or institutes: They have a mandate to conduct research and have research staff and facilities – you must have proof of incorporation or registration as an independent body
- Centres of expertise: They provide leadership, best practices, support, or training in a given field – you must have proof of incorporation or registration as an independent body
- Universities, colleges, and CÉGEPs: For these applicants, the federal government will only fund up to 50% of the total project budget
- Be one of the following organization types:
- For the Community-based Research stream
- Be one of the following organization types:
- Not-for-profit or for-profit organizations that:
- Do not intend to generate a profit
- Have experience in community-based research or a current partner with that experience
- Are community-based and work with one or more of these population groups: Black or racialized women, immigrant, refugee and newcomer women, women living with disabilities, Indigenous women, or 2SLGBTQI+ people
- Research organizations or institutes that:
- Have a mandate to conduct research and have research staff and facilities
- Have proof of incorporation or registration as an independent body
- Have a partnership with a community-based organization that:
- Serves at least one of the at-risk groups
- Has experience working on GBV issues
- Centres of expertise that:
- Provide leadership, best practices, support, or training in a given field
- Have experience in research
- Have proof of incorporation or registration as an independent body
- Have a partnership with a community-based organization that:
- serves at least one of the at-risk groups
- has experience working on GBV issues
- Have a partnership with a community-based organization that:
- Universities, colleges, and CÉGEPs: For these applications, the federal government will only fund up to 50% of the total project budget. They must:
- Have experience in research
- Have a partnership with a community-based organization that:
- Serves at least one of the at-risk groups
- Has experience working on GBV issues
- Not-for-profit or for-profit organizations that:
- Be one of the following organization types:
For more information, visit Government of Canada.