Voice.Global website

  • About

    Her Excellency, Lilianne Plouman, Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation for the Netherlands launched the Voice Programme and its first call for proposals for grant applications on September 1, 2016 

    No person – regardless of ethnicity, gender, geography, disability race or other status – should be denied universal human rights and basic economic opportunities. VOICE will give the people being left behind the opportunity to have a say in the policies that should make this ambition a reality. 

    Key Support Areas 

    Voice will focus on five marginalised and discriminated groups, selected based on a review of research and country analysis; these are:  

    1. People living with disabilities  
    2. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans-gender, intersex (LGBTI) people
    3. Women facing exploitation, abuse, violence
    4. Age discriminated vulnerable groups notably the young and elderly
    5. Indigenous groups and ethnic minorities    

     These groups are:   

    • most affected by poverty or making least progress towards development outcomes; 
    • most affected by social, economic, spatial and political exclusion; 
    • currently ignored or not reached by development actors; 
    • at risk of repression or violence for speaking out for their rights.  

    Projects funded by Voice will need to address one or more of the impact themes: 

    1. improving access to (productive) resources (finance, land and water) and employment 
    2. improving access to social services, health and education in particular
    3. fostering space for political participation: 

     

    Voice will work in the following countries and all funded projects must focus on at least one of these: 

    West Africa  East-Africa  South-East Asia 
    Nigeria  Kenya  Indonesia 
    Niger  Tanzania  Philippines 
    Mali  Uganda  Cambodia 
        Laos 

     

    Funding Information  

    Funding for the Learning Grant is for 12-months and for a grant of €25,000 to €200,000. 

    Focus Activity 

    The first call for proposals is designed to help Voice and its potential grantees learn from innovation. There exist many new, interesting and effective methods for supporting the Voice target group in participating in their own governance and improving access to resources and services.  Groups that are affected by more than one factor are more vulnerable to discrimination and an emphasis on learning from programming to address this phenomenon is encouraged.  Voice hopes to capture and stimulate learning of these methods so as to develop an evidence-base for future programming. 

    Has your organisation, or an organisation you are partnered with implemented such programming? If so, then Voice could fund a Learning Grant to document, review, analyse and test your programming.  An essential element of the project should be recommendations for scaling up the programme and an effective dissemination plan of the findings.  

    Grants
    From the numerous applications received the following grantees have been successful as part of this Call for Proposals. If you like to join Voice please see the current list of open Calls for Proposals
    • About

      Her Excellency, Lilianne Plouman, Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation for the Netherlands launched the Voice Programme and its first call for proposals for grant applications on September 1, 2016 

      No person – regardless of ethnicity, gender, geography, disability race or other status – should be denied universal human rights and basic economic opportunities. VOICE will give the people being left behind the opportunity to have a say in the policies that should make this ambition a reality. 

      Key Support Areas 

      Voice will focus on five marginalised and discriminated groups, selected based on a review of research and country analysis; these are:  

      1. People living with disabilities  
      2. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans-gender, intersex (LGBTI) people
      3. Women facing exploitation, abuse, violence
      4. Age discriminated vulnerable groups notably the young and elderly
      5. Indigenous groups and ethnic minorities    

       These groups are:   

      • most affected by poverty or making least progress towards development outcomes; 
      • most affected by social, economic, spatial and political exclusion; 
      • currently ignored or not reached by development actors; 
      • at risk of repression or violence for speaking out for their rights.  

      Projects funded by Voice will need to address one or more of the impact themes: 

      1. improving access to (productive) resources (finance, land and water) and employment 
      2. improving access to social services, health and education in particular
      3. fostering space for political participation: 

       

      Voice will work in the following countries and all funded projects must focus on at least one of these: 

      West Africa  East-Africa  South-East Asia 
      Nigeria  Kenya  Indonesia 
      Niger  Tanzania  Philippines 
      Mali  Uganda  Cambodia 
          Laos 

       

      Funding Information  

      Funding for the Learning Grant is for 12-months and for a grant of €25,000 to €200,000. 

      Focus Activity 

      The first call for proposals is designed to help Voice and its potential grantees learn from innovation. There exist many new, interesting and effective methods for supporting the Voice target group in participating in their own governance and improving access to resources and services.  Groups that are affected by more than one factor are more vulnerable to discrimination and an emphasis on learning from programming to address this phenomenon is encouraged.  Voice hopes to capture and stimulate learning of these methods so as to develop an evidence-base for future programming. 

      Has your organisation, or an organisation you are partnered with implemented such programming? If so, then Voice could fund a Learning Grant to document, review, analyse and test your programming.  An essential element of the project should be recommendations for scaling up the programme and an effective dissemination plan of the findings.  

    • How to apply?

      This call for proposals is closed, so application is no longer possible. If you wish to learn who the selected grantees of this call for proposals are, have a look at the grantee tab of this page.

      At this moment, we do not know if and when we will have future Calls for Proposals at a global or multi-country level. At national level Calls for Proposals for Influencing grants will be opened once a year, while for Empowerment, Innovate and Learn and Sudden Opportunity grants we accept proposals on a rolling basis. The current open calls for proposals can be found here.

  • How to apply?

    This call for proposals is closed, so application is no longer possible. If you wish to learn who the selected grantees of this call for proposals are, have a look at the grantee tab of this page.

    At this moment, we do not know if and when we will have future Calls for Proposals at a global or multi-country level. At national level Calls for Proposals for Influencing grants will be opened once a year, while for Empowerment, Innovate and Learn and Sudden Opportunity grants we accept proposals on a rolling basis. The current open calls for proposals can be found here.

  • GRANTEES
    From the numerous applications received the following grantees have been successful as part of this Call for Proposals. If you like to join Voice please see the current list of open Calls for Proposals

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