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PROGRAMME
REGIONAL DE L'AFRIQUE CENTRALE POUR L'ENVIRONNEMENT (CARPE) PHASE IIB.
About IUCN
Purpose of small grants
Domain of intervention
Technical
Financial
Who may submit proposals ?
When to submit proposals ?
Where to submit proposals?
Critiria for final approvalle
CONTACT
| About
IUCN |
The World Conservation Union (IUCN) was founded
in 1948. Its mission is to influence, encourage and assist societies
throughout the world to conserve the integrity and diversity of
nature and to ensure that any use of natural resources is equitable
and ecologically sustainable. |
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| Purpose
of small grants |
IUCN small grant program using CARPE fund has
the objective to strengthening civil society for sustainable forest
conservation in Central Africa. Detailed objectives are as follows:
1- Promote and build constituency for conservation
among civil society;
2- Foster partnerships between landscapes consortia and local
civil
society in the field;
3- Fill gaps in conservation’s analytical agenda including
the design of
a suitable mechanism to provide feedback to local communities
on
conservation strategies, exchanges of field experiences and
success stories between and within landscapes;
4- Facilitate the participation of Central African institutions
and
governments in CARPE activities;
5- Reinforce the capacities of local civil society in institutional
development and strategic planning;
6- Effectively integrate CARPE activities in the field with host
country
institutions;
7- Identify Natural Resources Management policies that require
country team advocacy for policy reform or development;
8- Raise local, national and regional awareness of CARPE objectives
and achievements;
9- Foster gender equity.
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| Domain
of intervention |
| To meet the objectives of this program, the
following domain of intervention will be given priorities:
- Capacity Building;
- Natural Resources Management Policy;
- Natural Resources Management governance;
- Capitalization and sharing of lessons learned;
- Gender equity;
- Landscape issues related to policy and to build constituency
for its
sustainable management;
- Bush meat management in term of Policy and regulation to set
forth
for advocacy.
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| Technical
Format for Grant Proposal |
Proposals must conform to the following format and can be submitted
in English, French or Spanish.
1. Cover page (2 pages).
Please list the following on a Cover sheet page
1:
a) Title of proposed grant (must not exceed 20
words);
b) Name of organization (and acronym, if applicable);
c) Estimated total project costs in CFA or US Dollars with specification
of the level of support requested from IUCN, and the level of
matching fund from the applicant organizations;
d) Duration (in months) ;
e) Proposed period for starting and ending of the project activity;
f) Name of organization’s Chief Executive Officer;
g) Organization’s address (telephone, fax numbers, e-mail,
etc.);
h) Name and full address of contact person for the proposal;
I) IUCN Tracking Number (If previously assigned).
On Cover sheet page 2:
a) List 3 references with name, position and contact details for
each
b) A one paragraph description of proposed work.
2. Title of the proposal (20 words maximum)
It must be concise and must provide an indication of the geographic
situation of the site of the project.
3. Executive summary of the project: (2 pages maximum).
It should include the objective and activities to be carried out
and specifically state how the project will contribute to the CARPE
Results.
4. Background and Justification (1page)
The proposal shall mention the management structures, all programs
and projects linked with biodiversity conservation in the area concerned.
Justification shall include and expose a clear analysis of the problems
or needs indicating, historical aspects, constraints, key opportunities
and others efforts to solve the problem.
5. Objectives and expected outputs (1 page)
Describe what the project aims at achieving and justify the importance
with regards to the sustainable use of the biodiversity.
The expected results have to be expressed in terms of output generated
by the project.
Concrete results have to be obtained in order to seek solutions
to the problems in the management of forest resources. There should
be a relationship between the project results and the objectives,
and also the link must be established between the expected outcomes
and CARPE IRs
6. Activities and Methods (5 pages)
Describe the activities planned to achieve project results. Each
result requires a series of specific activities. Describe the methodologies
that would be used to implement these activities and explain why
these methodologies are important. Explain who or what will benefit
from the activities, how the results will be applied to nation/regional
identified priorities.
7. Logical Framework
The proposal must provide a logical framework of the project with
clearly defined Indicators, sources of verification and hypothesis.
8. Sustainability of the project (1 paragraph)
The proposal must mention how the project will achieve sustainability.
It will also present some multiplier effect, by describing the possibility
for replication and extension of the project outcomes.
9. Implementation Plan (1 page)
It must describe how the project would be organised and managed,
and indicate who will be responsible for the financial and technical
management of each activity. Executing plan should provide the project
duration and briefly describe the different implementation phases
including planned activities and time frame (Chronogram of activities).
10. Monitoring and Evaluation Data management plan (1-2 pages).
This should indicate how the monitoring and evaluation of the progress
made towards reaching project objectives will be done and how the
results will be reported.
Describe which products will be generated by the project and detail
how these products will be made available to CARPE partners and
other stakeholders. Describe how the products of this project will
contribute to individual IRs.
11. Gender issues (1 paragraph)
Explain how the project will consider gender issues and promote
gender equity..
12. Environmental Risk Assessment
UCN require that unintended negative environmental consequences
be anticipated so that mitigating and environmental consequences
be incorporated in the development process early in the proposal
and activities planning stages. Therefore each proposal should include
a matrix on Environmental Risk Assessment (see Small Grant manual)
13. Expertise and operational capacity (1 page)
The proposal will clearly present the experience of the applicant
and its partner’s organizations in the issues to be addressed
and in project management.
14. Grant duration
Activities under each grant have to last for one year maximum. Beyond
this, an amendment has to be granted by IUCN.
15. Deadline for applications
Which deadline are you applying for? (Please note that proposals
are solicited two times a year with deadlines at the end of January,
and June).
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| Financial
Format for Grant Proposal |
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16. Budget
The maximum amount per grant award will be $30.000 and applicant
should provide a detail budgetary estimate comprising the following:
a) Salaries and benefits, b) Travel (Airfare)/travel (per diem),
c) Consultant/contract services, d) Audit fees, e) Other direct
costs (Communication products preparation, equipment and supplies,
publications and reports, other expenses, f) Other functioning expenses,
g) Administrative cost (if applicable)
Include a budget notes that explains the various costs indicated
in the budget. Specify who will have the spending authority and
how funds will be accounted for. In case of co-funding, please specify
in a column, level of contribution per item for other donors.
17. Bank Address
All application must include the address of the bank where funds
would be transferred in case of selection of the project, with the
following specifications: a) Bank Name, b) Bank address, c) Bank
account name, d) Bank account number, e) Swift code
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| WHO
MAY SUBMIT PROPOSALS ? |
| In general, Non profit organizations
(NPO) with sort of legal recognition such as Local NGO, Community
based organizations, Local associations, and Non Governmental Research
Centres, Independent researchers, university students, Women and
minor groups are especially welcomed.
Legal recognition refers to being officially registered with certified
receipt from official source or; have a country agreement with the
host country where the NPO operates.
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| WHEN
TO SUBMIT PROPOSALS ? |
| Proposals are accepted periodically
following established deadlines (See Deadline above) as per solicitations,
to allow time for their consideration by review panels that meet
periodically. Proposals must be received by the specified date.
If the deadline date falls on a weekend or on a holiday, it will
be extended to the following Monday or the following business day.
Applicants should allow up to three months for programmatic review
and processing. Only proposals that are time sensitive (Workshops,
conference, travel) will be accepted for review in an ad hoc basis
by the National Focal Points and IUCN Program Manager. Whether solicited
or unsolicited, until an award is made, IUCN is not responsible
for any costs incurred by the applicant. |
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| WHERE
TO SUBMIT PROPOSALS? |
| In countries where there is a IUCN
CARPE FP (Cameroon, Gabon, Congo and DRC), full proposals must be
submitted electronically to
these offices, together with applicant’s CV, personal references,
exhibits and other supporting information/documents by the established
deadlines.
In countries without IUCN CARPE FP, proposals should be submitted
electronically to Consultants hired by IUCN together with applicant’s
CV, personal references, exhibits and other supporting information/documents
by the established deadlines, who will now send them to the Program
Manager in IUCN.
Applicants are encouraged to submit electronic version and to the
extent possible hard copies.
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| CRITIRIA
FOR FINAL APPROVAL |
To be approved, Proposals should
respond to a number of criteria that include:
a) All grantees should have an agreed organization
structure; b) The proposal should have a result-based monitoring
and evaluation plans; c) The proposal must have an integrated
approach to local civil society capacity building; d) The activities
initiated under this project are sustainable, and grantee should
be effectively dealing with forest management and biodiversity
conservation; e) The entire proposal should be results oriented.
The proposal should be addressing any of the thematic areas and
clearly have explicit link to one or more CARPE PMP indicators
e.g good governance (Policy reform, advocacy) or Monitoring and
evaluation of forest resources; f) The project would have linkages
with other initiatives in the region; g) The activities should
have a national and regional implications (focused in CARPE geographic
area and landscapes); h) Partnering with CARPE international partners
that demonstrate a value added to strengthen oversight, mentoring
and leveraging is a bonus; i) The proposal must foster partnership
among civil society and promote transparency and promote gender
equity in forest conservation
The time limit of the project proposals will depend on the nature
of the activities and outputs required from the activities to
contribute to the program objectives, but it must not exceed one
year;
A proposal will be required to have a monitoring and evaluation
plan, which indicates benchmarks and impact indicators. The plan
will indicate how information will be collected to measure the
impact indicators;
Environmental risks should be well reviewed and mitigating action
well documented;
Reports will be submitted quarterly depending
upon the nature of the activity.
Counterpart contribution if applicable will be agreed upon and
endorsed in the grant agreement.
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| Contacts |
| For further details, contact:
Cameroon
Kenneth ANGU ANGU, Program Manager, CARPE Program
IUCN-The World Conservation Union
Regional Office for Central Africa
Tel: (237) 221 64 96; Fax: (237) 221 64 96
E-mail: Kenneth.angu@iucn.org
EYEBE Antoine Justin, CARPE Cameroon Focal Point
IUCN-The World Conservation Union
Regional Office for Central Africa
Tel: (237) 221 97 12 or 221 97 11, Fax: (237) 221 97 11
E-mail: Antoine.eyebe@iucn.org or aeyebe2004@yahoo.fr
Gabon
A M. Constant ALLOGO OBAME, CARPE Gabon Focal Point
BP 5496 Libreville, République du Gabon
Tél. 241 07 35 20 74
E. mail : allogoba@yahoo.fr
Congo Brazzaville
Marcelin AGNAGNA, CARPE Congo-B Focal Point
Brazzaville
Tél. : 00 242 532 56 44
E-mail :marcelinagnagna@yahoo.fr
Democratic Republic of Congo
M. Moïse OSODU OMBA, CARPE DRC Focal Point
Rue Bambili N° 21 C/ Ngiri-Ngiri, Kinshasa
République Démocratique du Congo
E. mail : ombaosodu@yahoo.fr
Tél. 243 081 05 29 860/0999463170
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