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Request for Applications: Pathogens Pathway Study for Children under Two Years Old in Southeastern Madagascar

Apply for Choova Njinga Innovation Challenge (Malawi and Zambia)

Deadline: 12-Aug-20

PRO – WASH has launched a Request for Applications for the Pathogens Pathway Study for Children under two years old in Southeastern Madagascar.

PRO-WASH is calling on the WASH community – non-governmental organizations, research institutions, private-sector firms—to see where they can bring proven practices together with new research, innovative technologies, creative policies, and other approaches to develop affordable, sustainable solutions to meet the WASH needs of the vulnerable populations assisted by USAID’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (BHA) programming.

This RFA is designed to provide innovative, context-specific research on strategies for interrupting fecaloral transmission and reduce overall environmental contamination for BHA partners in South-eastern Madagascar. The resulting strategy from this RFA will be critical to supporting implementing partners to be able to validate which transmission pathways are most important in the specific context of Madagascar and to begin the process of piloting potentially promising, multi-sectoral WASH interventions.

Objectives

Funding Information

Final funding levels for each award will depend on content and needs of the proposed activity, with a ceiling of $100,000 USD.

Duration of Applied WASH Sub-Award

The duration of the award provided under this RFA for a duration of six months from the start date of the award with the possibility of extension at the discretion of the PRO-WASH Director. Extensions to the timeline for this sub-award will be jointly considered by the PRO-WASH and FIOVANA teams. PROWASH, Save the Children Federation, Inc. and/or USAID/BHA reserve the right to cancel this RFA at any time for cause.

Eligibility Criteria

The following are not eligible to apply for grants under this RFA:

For more information, visit https://www.fsnnetwork.org/request-applications-pathogens-pathway-study-children-under-two-years-old-southeastern-madagascar

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