Deadline: 7 October 2018
Elrha is currently accepting applications for “Taking a Local Perspective on Measuring the Impact of GBV Programmes in Emergencies” with an aim to generate new context-based perspectives and insights to inform and progress the global agenda on measuring the impact of emergency programmes on GBV.
Elrha aims to open up a critical space for actors working on humanitarian GBV at community, national and/or regional level to reflect collectively on current impact measurement practices in their specific contexts and identify fresh lines of enquiry or approach.
This Funding Call is directly supported by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) and the Department for International Development (DFID).
This Funding Call aims to support the critical first stage of their innovation lifecycle
- Recognition– Recognition of a specific problem or opportunity.
- Search– Search for existing solutions to the problem.
- Adaptation– Adaptation of a solution from elsewhere that requires significant rethinking of certain elements.
- Invention– Invention of a solution through the generation of new ideas.
- Pilot– Testing a potential solution to learn whether and how it works in a complex real-world environment.
- Scale– Scaling the impact of an innovation to better match the size of the social problem it seeks to address.
The Challenge
To collectively review and analyse the practices used to measure the impact of GBV programmes in one specific humanitarian context and identify tangible opportunities for innovation.
Key Output: selected consortia will be expected to generate a Lessons learned and Opportunities document at the end of the grant-funded period, that will:
- Review and analyse current practices to measure the impact of GBV programmes in one specific humanitarian context, including:
- The key challenges to measuring the impact of GBV programmes in that context
- The key challenges to translating data into better programming
- Practices which are successfully measuring the impact of GBV programmes in context
- Identify up to 3 innovation opportunities for measuring the impact of GBV programming more effectively within the context identified, including:
- Presentation and documentation of these innovation opportunities
- Succinct presentation of applicant’s suggested approach for exploring these opportunities for innovation
Funding Information & Criteria
- Elrha is seeking to support up to five Consortia with grants of up to £50,000 each.
- The grant funding may be used for travel, building effective partnerships, coordination and convening of focus groups, synthesis of relevant information and perspectives and initial ideation processes.
Eligibility Criteria
To be eligible, proposals will need to meet all of the requirements below:
- Focus and context
- Elrha will only accept proposals that are looking at humanitarian response settings and GBV in emergencies, meeting the Global Humanitarian Assistance definition they use. There is no preferred geographic focus or particularly emergency settings prioritised for the call, as long as conforming with the above.
- Proposals need to clearly define the context for the grant-funded initiative.
- Expertise
- The Lead applicant should demonstrate a track record ofat least 3-5 years’ experience of working on GBV in emergencies in the chosen humanitarian context.
- The Consortium should be highly experienced in GBV as grounded in the identified humanitarian context.
- The Consortium should demonstrate excellent understanding of global GBV initiatives and standards influencing directly and indirectly in-country practice to address GBV.
- The Consortium should show an understanding ofand ability to adhere to International Humanitarian Principlesand the Code of Conduct for the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and NGOs in Disaster Relief.
- Each Consortium is welcome to bring any other relevant area(s) of expertise to better address the challenge . For example: design thinking, behavioural change…
- Type of Consortium
- A collaborative group of actors, newly formed or pre-existing, the majority of which are situated and led locally (E.g. INGO’s in-country offices, national NGO’s, NPO’s, government representatives, communities, academia…).
- Only consortium applications will be accepted, and applications from a single organisation are not eligible for this call. Only one application can be submitted per Consortium.
- An organisation can only be the Lead Applicant in one application/Consortium fora given context.
- Lead Applicant
- The Lead applicant must: Be a non-profit institution such as
- a non-governmental organisation/NGO,
- a Public or governmental institution, or
- an Academic or research institution
- Have legal status and be registered in the country of implementation
- Not act as an intermediary but be directly responsible for the preparation, management and implementation of the grant-funded project proposed.
- Applications will not be considered eligible if:
- The application is incomplete or submitted after the deadline
- Requested documents are not uploaded in full
- The proposed activity period/budget exceeds the maximum duration of the grant/maximum grant award allowed
- The applicant, project or costs are not eligible
- The Lead applicant must: Be a non-profit institution such as
How to Apply
Interested applicant scan apply online via given website.
For more information, please visit Elrha.