Deadline: 12-Nov-21
The Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust is seeking applications for its Power and Accountability Grant Program.
Funding Priorities
- Strengthening corporate accountability
- Large corporations have significant power, and checks and balances are inadequately developed, particularly for trans-national corporations, including the largest digital platforms and intermediaries. They are interested in funding work which:
- develops and promotes mechanisms which increase the accountability and responsiveness of companies to shareholders, stakeholders, regulators and the long-term public interest, for example through improvements to corporate governance, corporate structures (including alternative corporate forms), company reporting or regulation
- develops and promotes mechanisms whereby those who suffer severely as a result of company actions, particularly marginalised groups, can gain access to justice
- promotes the application of the same standards of accountability to large digital companies as other commercial organisations, for example with respect to taxation, consumer protection, treatment of minorities and the protection of rights
- encourages a constructive dialogue across private, public and civil society sectors to define and develop values and norms of corporate accountability and transparency in relation to new digital technologies.
- Large corporations have significant power, and checks and balances are inadequately developed, particularly for trans-national corporations, including the largest digital platforms and intermediaries. They are interested in funding work which:
- Strengthening democratic accountability
- In a healthy democracy, government should be representative of the wider public and in touch with a wide range of groups, but not disproportionately influenced by any single interest. They are interested in funding work which:
- develops and promotes mechanisms which ensure an accountable, transparent and proportionate relationship between the private sector and government
- develops and promotes mechanisms which enable civil society and the general public, including marginalised groups, to engage appropriately and effectively with government policy making at all levels
- encourages government, parliament and other statutory agencies to be more representative of the wider public they serve, in terms of gender, ethnicity and other factors
- supports the modernisation of the democratic infrastructure to increase its accessibility, relevance and resilience in a digital age
- promotes greater transparency by digital intermediaries in relation to their impact on democracy and elections.
- In a healthy democracy, government should be representative of the wider public and in touch with a wide range of groups, but not disproportionately influenced by any single interest. They are interested in funding work which:
- Encouraging responsible media
- All forms of media play important roles in a healthy democracy, but media companies and platforms can themselves be powerful and unaccountable. They are interested in funding work which:
- encourages accurate and responsible media, with appropriate safeguards
- helps to develop a relevant and proportionate response to the risks of misinformation and disinformation in commercial media
- explores and promotes ways for all forms of media to play a constructive role in holding government, companies and other powerful actors to account
- helps to develop and strengthen infrastructure to support new forms of community journalism for the public benefit.
- All forms of media play important roles in a healthy democracy, but media companies and platforms can themselves be powerful and unaccountable. They are interested in funding work which:
- Responding to the dual harms of Covid-19 and systemic racism
- At this time of crisis, JRCT is keen to support work that responds to the dual harms of the 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 and/or corporations to account for systemic inequalities, injustices or abuses of power arising from their responses to Covid-19, including in relation to corporate bailouts, public procurement or worker support schemes
- Examines how the media (including social media) landscape has been affected by Covid-19 and its effectiveness in holding government and key actors to account during the pandemic
- Envisages how corporations could transform their purpose and practices to better address stakeholder concerns, sustainability imperatives and the long term public interest as part of recovery from the pandemic and seeks changes to support this
- Identifies ways in which to build upon the widespread community activism arising during the pandemic to reinvigorate their democratic governance and institutions.
- At this time of crisis, JRCT is keen to support work that responds to the dual harms of the 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:
Eligibility Criteria
- 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.
- Within its areas of interest, the Trust makes grants to a range of organisations and to individuals.
- 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 more information, visit https://www.jrct.org.uk/power-and-accountability