Deadline: 25-Mar-24
The Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust (JRCT) has announced the Peace and Security Programme to support people who address the root causes of conflict and injustice.
As a Quaker Trust, they believe that peace and security are built on values of equality, human rights, justice and environmental sustainability. They believe that sustainable peace cannot be achieved through the use of armed violence, which results in countless deaths, long-term physical and mental injury, human rights violations and curtailment of civil liberties, displaced populations, economic damage and impoverishment, and environmental harm.
They seek a shift in the UK defence and security paradigm away from highly militarised and “securitised” responses towards a new approach based on participatory and accountable governance, human rights, non-violence, diplomacy and mediation, and environmental sustainability.
They wish to support a transition towards:
- the use of ‘soft’, rather than ‘hard’ power as a first line of response to conflict within their society and around the world
- the de-legitimisation of violence as a tool for responding to conflict, securing interests or projecting power
- a culture of human rights and non-violent problem-solving, promoted at all levels of society.
JRCT is also keen to support work that responds to the dual harms of the Covid-19 pandemic and systemic racism. They have amended their funding policy below to reflect this.
Funding Priorities
- JRCT wishes to prioritise support for charitable work on the following issues:
- Challenging militarism
- They are interested in funding work which:
- highlights and holds the UK government to account for the human, economic, environmental and security costs of militarised responses to conflict
- scrutinises and challenges the use of new technology for warfare
- exposes and challenges the economic drivers of war, especially the arms trade
- highlights and challenges the culture and values of militarism in the UK
- promotes conscientious objection to military service as a globally recognised and applied human rights.
- They are interested in funding work which:
- Scrutiny of counter-terrorism measures in the context of human rights and peacebuilding
- They are interested in funding work which:
- promotes greater transparency and accountability in relation to government counter-terrorism policy
- challenges state abuses of power in relation to counter-terrorism
- advocates policy responses to the use of terror tactics which address their underlying causes
- challenges the use of counter-terrorism policies which foment conflict or undermine opportunities to build peace.
- They are interested in funding work which:
- Building support for alternative approaches to defence and security
- They are interested in funding work which:
- articulates and builds support for models of defence and security which address the root causes of conflict and injustice, and which are based on non-violence, dialogue and mediation, human rights and environmental sustainability
- addresses the risks of nuclear weapons and articulates options for non-nuclear security
- offers ideas and action on the re-shaping of violent masculinities which underpin the military system
- promotes the understanding and effective practice of non-violence in social change.
- They are interested in funding work which:
- Responding to the dual harms of Covid-19 and systemic racism
- JRCT is keen to support work that responds to the dual harms of the impact post Covid-19 pandemic and systemic racism. Specifically, they wish to encourage work that scrutinises the responses and policies of powerful institutions and actors, and which envisions and builds support for transformative social change based on justice, peace and sustainability, including work which:
- Scrutinises and holds the government to account for the short, medium, and long term consequences of its security and counter-terrorism policies in response to the Covid-19 pandemic
- Explores the consequences of UK government’s security and counter-terrorism responses to the Covid-19 pandemic on people and communities of colour
- Enables the development of alternatives to securitised responses to Covid-19 in particular from the perspectives of people and communities of colour and/or through the lens of systemic racism.
- JRCT is keen to support work that responds to the dual harms of the impact post Covid-19 pandemic and systemic racism. Specifically, they wish to encourage work that scrutinises the responses and policies of powerful institutions and actors, and which envisions and builds support for transformative social change based on justice, peace and sustainability, including work which:
- Challenging militarism
Eligibility Criteria
- They wish to support organisations or individuals who promote values similar to their own when working towards peace and security. They do not fund those who advocate aggressive military responses to conflicts.
- JRCT understands the interconnected, global nature of issues of peace and security. However, as a UK-based Trust with modest resources, it is primarily interested in supporting work which is focused on achieving impact in the UK context. Work which is focused on European or other international institutions (such as the UN and NATO) will only be considered if it is capable of resulting in significant impact in the UK context.
- JRCT is interested in funding work which:
- is about removing problems through radical solutions, and not simply about making problems easier to live with
- has a clear sense of objectives, and of how to achieve them
- is innovative and imaginative
- and where the grant has a good chance of making a difference.
- If your organisation is a registered, excepted or exempt charity based within any of the four jurisdictions of the UK and all of your work fits within their published programmes, they encourage you to consider applying for unrestricted or core support, although you may apply for programme or project funding if you prefer.
- If you are based outside the UK and you are registered as a charitable organistion in your local jurisdiction, you may apply for general support if all of your work fits within their published programmes, and the following criteria are also met:
- your organisation is governed by an unpaid board
- your organisation is not for profit
- your organisation’s formal purposes fall within the list of charitable purposes recognised within English law.
- For all other organisations or individual applicants, you may apply for a specific project or defined programme of work that would provide public benefit and further their aims as set out in their published policies.
- They cannot fund organisations or work that is party political (eg supporting or opposing a political party) or which is commercial in nature or otherwise intended for private benefit.
Ineligible
- In addition to this the following types of work will not be funded:
- work focused directly on interpersonal violence, domestic violence, or violence against children
- work focused solely on specific local or regional conflicts in the UK or overseas (with the exception of work funded through their Northern Ireland programme)
- work which focuses directly on the recovery of people affected by violent conflict
- academic research, except as an integral part of policy and campaigning work that is central to their areas of interest
- work focused more exclusively on other governments’ policy than on that of the UK, unless the work is on pacifism or conscientious objection to military service
- work which seems only to ‘preach to the converted’.
For more information, visit JRCT.