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Young Pacific Leaders Regional Workshop on Cultural Preservation and Storytelling

Apply for Public Diplomacy Small Grants Program - Romania

CHEJ Small Grants Tackling a Range of Concerns in the US

Deadline: 31-Jul-24

The U.S. Embassy New Zealand Public Diplomacy Section (PDS) of the U.S. Department of State announces an open competition for organizations to submit applications to carry out a program to develop and implement a Young Pacific Leaders (YPL) Regional Workshop on Cultural Preservation and Storytelling Advocacy to provide emerging Pacific leaders with skills, knowledge, and networks to preserve cultural heritage leveraging digital tools and technologies like AI to support these endeavors.

The proposed workshop will focus on building local capacity within Pacific nations to help participants develop storytelling as a tool for advocacy and a means to preserve cultural heritage leveraging digital tools and technologies like AI to support these endeavors. Workshop sessions should be designed to introduce and operationalize best practices in this space to elevate Pacific cultural heritage and sovereignty.

This workshop will bring together practitioners from all levels of society and administration including government, civil society, and experts to discuss challenges, develop action plans, and leverage opportunities for regional collaboration to foster the implementation of security practices.

YPL is the U.S. government’s signature initiative to engage with emerging leaders in the Pacific region. The program aims to create a network of young Pacific leaders who work across national borders and the four pillars of YPL – education, environment and resource management, civic engagement, and economic and social development – to solve common problems. Through a variety of programs and engagements, YPL seeks to build the leadership capabilities of youth in the region, strengthen ties between the United States and Pacific, and nurture a community of leaders who work across borders to solve shared issues.

This regional workshop on Cultural Preservation and Storytelling Advocacy, will advance the YPL themes of Education, Environment and Resource Management, Civic Engagement and Social and Economic Development. The workshop must be a minimum of 4 full program days, excluding travel days to the workshop site. The proposal should include workshop lead up and follow-on activities such as virtual collaborative work, projects funded through small seed grants, or ongoing mentorship that goes beyond the workshop’s program dates.

Funding Information
Participants and Audiences 
Priority Region 
Eligibility Criteria

For more information, visit Grants.gov.

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