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2022 TAP Funding and Support Call for Proposals

LAST UPDATED: 25 JANUARY, 2022

Information on TAP's 2022 Call for Proposals for Funding and Support
(For TAP Partners ONLY)

TAP Network is thrilled to announce an open call for proposals for two distinct funding and capacity support opportunities, exclusively for active TAP Partners to apply to!  Please see all relevant information about the application process and guidelines about the TAP Network Innovation Fund and TAP Network 2022 Capacity Strengthening Workshops below.

 UPDATE: Submissions for both opportunities will be accepted up until the EXTENDED DEADLINE 7 February 2022, at 11:59 PM EST (NY time).

If you are not yet a TAP Partner and are considering submitting an application to become eligible for this opportunity, your TAP Partner application must be submitted by 31 Janary, 2022 at 11:59 PM EST.  Once your TAP Partner application is submitted, please proceed in submitting your funding application before 7 February.

Applications only from active TAP Partners will be considered.  If your organization is unclear about whether or not you hold Partner status, please check our list of TAP Partners here.  If your organization is not yet a TAP Partner but is interested in becoming eligible for these two opportunities, consider submitting a TAP Partner application before applying for funding.  See instructions here.

For any questions or concerns, see the FAQ below, or please do not hesitate to send a message to [email protected].

Learn more about TAP Funding Guidelines here.

Click on the opportunities below to learn more.

Open Call for TAP Network 2022 "Innovation Fund

See the Call for Proposal, Overview and Application in English, French, Spanish and Arabic below.

Open Call for TAP Network 2022 Capacity Strengthening Workshops

See the Call for Proposal, Overview and Application in English, French, Spanish and Arabic below.

FAQ

Q: How much funding is available through these TAP opportunities?

A total of $20,000 USD is available for supporting Capacity Strengthening Workshops in early 2022, and a total of $15,000 USD is available for the TAP Network “Innovation Fund” opportunities. However, this funding may be allocated across multiple proposals, depending on the amount and strength of proposals received. Therefore, while proposals may include budgets up to these funding caps, applicants should ensure that proposal budgets are commensurate with proposed activities, and flexibility in your proposal is welcomed. Identifying co-funding for your proposal is also encouraged.

Q: Which kinds of organizations are eligible to apply for these opportunities?

Any independent civil society organizations or networks that are TAP Network “Partners” are eligible to apply for these opportunities, regardless of geographic location or organization size/budget. Funding cannot be allocated to individuals, and partnerships between organizations is also encouraged.

Q: My organization is not currently a TAP Network “Partner”. Can we still apply for these funding opportunities?

Yes, organizations that are not currently TAP Network “Partners” can apply for these funding opportunities, but must apply to become a TAP Network Partner in advance of submitting their proposal. Applying to become a TAP Partner is easy: simply fill out the application form here and outline your organization’s commitment and work related SDG16+ or SDG Accountability!  

You can find more information about becoming a TAP Network Partner on our website here.

Q: How are decisions made for these funding opportunities, and when can my organization expect to hear about the status of our proposal?

For more information on the decision-making process, please review the TAP Network’s overall Funding Support Guidelines on our website here. For specific selection criteria for each of these opportunities, please review the overviews and calls-for-proposals available on the TAP Network website here. Applicants can expect information about the status of their proposals by late February 2022.

TAP Network Innovation Fund

EXTENDED DEADLINE: 7 February, 2022, at 11:59 PM EST (NY time). 

The Transparency, Accountability & Participation (TAP) Network invites all current TAP Network Partners to apply for funding to support innovative projects that advance civil society engagement at the global, regional or national-level, with a focus on the TAP Network priority areas around SDG16+ and accountability for the 2030 Agenda. The TAP Network will look to support a wide-range of innovative ideas put forward by TAP Partners that advance any of the following areas:

  • Objective 1: Supporting innovative programmes from TAP Network Partners that advance SDG16+ or 2030 Agenda accountability
  • Objective 2: Supporting TAP Network Partners to enhance and strengthen existing TAP programmes or resources
  • Objective 3: Supporting TAP Network Partners to foster stronger engagement amongst Partners and Members and the TAP Network overall

Proposals that prioritize “outside-the-box” ideas to advance civil society engagement around TAP’s work are encouraged. This can be related to any of TAP’s current work programmes, or completely new ideas for maximizing impact!

TAP Network 2022 Capacity Strengthening Workshops

EXTENDED DEADLINE: 7 February, 2022, at 11:59 PM EST (NY time). 

The Transparency, Accountability & Participation (TAP) Network invites all current TAP Network Partners to apply for funding to support national CSO Capacity Strengthening workshops, with a focus on the TAP Network priority areas around SDG16+ and accountability for the 2030 Agenda. The TAP Network will look to support the hosting of capacity strengthening workshops at the national/local level, in partnership/led by TAP Network Partners. These workshops are intended to support TAP Network Partners in strengthening the capacity of national/local civil society to advance SDG16+ and 2030 Agenda localization, implementation and accountability. These workshops will be held in the Spring of 2022, in the lead-up to the 2022 High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF).

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TAP Storytelling: Guest Blog by The Civil Society Platform for Peacebuilding and Statebuilding

December 13, 2021

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Guest Blog: Protecting civic space in times of COVID-19 - CSPPS participation at the 2021 Paris Peace Forum

By The Civil Society Platform for Peacebuilding and Statebuilding (CSPPS), The Hague, The Netherlands

The Civil Society Platform for Peacebuilding and Statebuilding (CSPPS) is a member-led international network that brings together more than 800 civil society organisations from the Global North and the Global South, supporting conflict and crisis prevention, peacebuilding and statebuilding in over 30 fragile and conflict-affected countries. In addition, and in the context of the International Dialogue on Peacebuilding and Statebuilding (IDPS), CSPPS represents the civil society branch of the tripartite structure and has established a presence in 19 out of the 20 g7+ countries, as well as in other countries outside of g7+ who have manifestations of fragility or conflicts.  

CSPPS joined TAP Network as a Partner in 2015 and ever since, has been one of TAP’s closest collaborators.  CSPPS is now completing their 2020-2021 term on TAP’s Steering Committee and will continue on as a carry-over organization for the 2022-2023 Steering Committee term.  You can see more of CSPPS’s engagements with TAP, including a TAP Conversation, on their Partner profile.

Created in 2018, the Paris Peace Forum was launched by French President Emmanuel Macron, with the purpose of collectively discussing and finding solutions to some of the greatest global problems facing the world today. The Forum brings together heads of state, international organisations, the private sector, and civil society to work together towards global governance solutions to achieve peace. This year, the Forum was held once again in Paris in a hybrid format for its fourth edition between the 11th and the 13th of November. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has shown once again the interconnectedness of many of the challenges faced by humanity today, which renders international cooperation more important than ever. Against this background, this year’s edition aimed at addressing governance gaps, such as the North-South solidarity gap, and at finding solutions to recover and build back better from the pandemic, looking beyond just the public health impacts of COVID-19. The project “CSPPS Coordinated Response to Support Local Action during COVID-19” was selected as one of 80 projects to be showcased in this year’s Paris Peace Forum, as a result of the work implemented in Sierra Leone, Cameroon, and Somalia to face the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The impacts of COVID-19 on civil society and CSPPS’ response  

The activities implemented under the aforementioned project worked on two levels – namely, on the international level via the Platform’s lobby and advocacy work, and on the national level, via the project activities implemented by the CSPPS Country Teams. In early 2020, CSPPS quickly saw the pandemic having worrying effects on civil society organisations, their work, and their operating capacity, extending into the realm of rising gender inequality, shrinking civic space, and the spread of misinformation, to name a few. To raise awareness on this issue, the Platform began by chronicling the wider effects of the pandemic on peace and conflict in a series of interviews and articles, via consultations with members of the CSPPS Platform.   

On the basis of our discussions with our partners, we then published the first in our series of Covid reports, “Fighting COVID-19, Building Peace – What Local Peacebuilders say about COVID-19, Civic Space, Fragility and Drivers of Conflict”, a valuable advocacy resource used locally, regionally, and nationally by our members, and on the international policy level by the Platform as a whole. The published articles, interviews, and reports emphasised the importance of CSO-government collaboration for a well informed and effective response to COVID-19 in fragile settings.  

Most recently, upon seeing the continued and persistent impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the members of its network, we published the second report on the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, entitled “Persistent Impact: An Urgent Call for a Conflict-Sensitive Approach to the COVID-19 Pandemic”. The report is the result of a series of interviews aimed at identifying the pressing challenges faced by the CSPPS network one year into the pandemic. It was concluded that, one year into the COVID-19 pandemic, the voices of local peacebuilders are still not sufficiently heard by national and international decision-makers, and their lived experiences are not taken into account enough.  

CSPPS at the Paris Peace Forum 2021 

At the Paris Peace Forum, CSPPS was one of 30 projects present in-person and it was represented by Ms Fidèle Djebba, president of the Association Rayons de Soleil and country focal point of CSPPS in Cameroon. In a session entitled “Projects of hope: What expanding civic space looks like in practice”, civil society representatives shared the practical efforts that have been implemented in their contexts to deal with the shrinkage of civic space caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.  

In the context of Cameroon, Ms Djebba went as far as claiming that the restrictive measures have had a more significant impact on the civil society in Cameroon than the pandemic itself. However, hope stems from the fact that, albeit not sufficient, there has been collaboration between the Cameroonian government and the civil society to design and implement projects aimed at addressing the challenges posed by the COVID-19. Ms Djebba called for more inclusive collaboration and reinforced the need to build civic capacity and to provide them with the necessary tools and instruments for effective participation. Finally, Ms Djebba stressed the necessary attention needed for women and youth who need stronger support for effective participation in the COVID-19 response and for a meaningful extension of the civic space.  

In addition, CSPPS hosted an informative booth at the Grande Halle de la Vilette, this year’s venue for the Forum, which allowed for rich networking opportunities to discuss solutions for peace and how to build forward better from the COVID-19 pandemic. CSPPS members present at the venue further had the opportunity to attend in-person discussions, which counted with the presence of Emmanuel Macron, Kamala Harris, Muhammadu Buhari, Sheikh Hasina, among others.  

Future trajectory 

Almost two years into the pandemic, COVID-19 continues to sharply impact the work of CSPPS member organisations and local peacebuilders around the world. The Platform’s call for ensuring a conflict-sensitive response to the pandemic that safeguards peace and civic space is thus as important as ever; this was emphasised by CSPPS in our participation at the 2021 Paris Peace Forum, and we hope to continue to support our members efforts to tackle the impacts of the pandemic extending far beyond just public health, now and in the future.  

Stemming from CSPPS’ ambition to build forward better from the COVID-19 pandemic, CSPPS coordinator, Peter van Sluijs, affirmed: 

This year, CSPPS wishes to emphasize the cruciality of safeguarding and ensuring civil society’s involvement in their respective contexts’ conflict-sensitive COVID-19 response. We want to stress the importance of collaboration between all stakeholders in order to fully recover from the pandemic in a peaceful, just, and sustainable way. Inclusively, we can build forward better.” 

To stay updated on CSPPS’ future endeavours to address the COVID-19 pandemic and support civil society, visit our website, contact us at [email protected], and follow us on LinkedInTwitterInstagram, and Facebook
 

About TAP Storytelling: In 2021, TAP Network is launching the TAP Storytelling Initiative, which will aim to closely and frequently highlight the work of our Network through working directly with them to produce quality online content about their endeavors. Together in this initiative, we will aim to intimately spotlight the work of our Members and Partners and the challenges, successes, failures, processes and problem solving that comes with it, while also offering the chance for wide promotion through TAP’s outreach channels. We hope that these opportunities will not only offer heightened visibility of the work of our Network, but will also inspire and educate more commitments to SDG16 and transparency and accountability for the 2030 Agenda as a whole. If you are interested in spearheading this work with us, head to our TAP Membership Engagement Portal where you can find the Storytelling Form to submit your interest.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed on the TAP Network Blog Platform are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the TAP Network. Any content provided by our bloggers or authors are of their opinion.

Photo by CSPPS

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TAP Storytelling: Guest Blog by Curating Tomorrow’s Henry McGhie

December 13, 2021

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Guest Blog: Building capacity for SDG16+ through museums, libraries and other public institutions

By Henry McGhie, Curating Tomorrow, [email protected]

Curating tomorrow is a consultancy for museums, the heritage sector and anyone interested in creating a better future.  Combining curatorial skills (subject-specialist knowledge, selection, focus, creativity) with coaching skills, strategic thinking, planning, partnership working and delivery, the organization works to maximize the contribution that museums, the heritage sector and other organizations and sectors make to support a thriving society, economy and environment, with an overall vision to contribute to helping achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and Agenda 2030.  

As a TAP Partner since 2018, Curating Tomorrow is an active participant in TAP engagement opportunities, providing their unique perspective about increasing awareness and education about SDG16+ and accountability for the 2030 Agenda through mainstream medias such as galleries, libraries and museums.  Read the following guest blog below from Curating Tomorrow, as a part of the Storytelling Initiative, making the case for the crucial link between achieving SDG16+ and its incorporation these public spaces around the world.  See more on Curating Tomorrow using the links at the end or on their TAP Partner Profile here.

I worked in and with museums for 25 years, and became more and more interested in their potential to help accelerate activity for sustainable development agendas, including the SDGs, climate action, biodiversity conservation, Disaster Risk Reduction and human rights. The trajectory of this work was creating opportunities for more people to have access to information on local and global challenges and commitments made by authorities (whether local or national government), and to empower museums and similar institutions to help people have opportunities to contribute to sustainable development agendas. Latterly I have been working more with the SDGs, and of the public-facing aspect of the Framework Convention on Climate Change and Paris Agreement, which is referred to as Action for Climate Empowerment and consists of education, training, public awareness, public access to information, public participation and international co-operation: all topics relating to SDG16+. The more I have worked with international agreements and agendas, the more I have seen the same challenges: the conventions and treaties include a mention to the importance of public education, information and action; institutions, including museums and other types of public institution have either been unaware or not so interested in the aims of the conventions and treaties; consequently, there have been insufficient opportunities for people to take part in these; and as a result, the goals of the conventions and treaties fail to be achieved. We can see this pattern many times over. Of course, it was partly or this reason that the goal-based approach of the Millenium Development Goals and Agenda 2030 and Sustainable Development Goals was developed. The goal-based approach helps people and different sectors to quickly find fellow travellers interested in addressing topics of common interest and concern, and to develop shared and collective plans of action that lever the potential of each partner, and added value through partnership.

Agenda 2030 and the SDGs are firmly rooted in achieving a world where more people can enjoy their human rights, but where will these lofty goals become a daily reality? I am very struck by a famous quotation from Eleanor Roosevelt (1958), one of the chief architects of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. She asked a ‘great question:

“Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home, so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any map of the world. Yet they are the world of the individual person: the neighborhood he[/she] lives in; the school or college he[/she] attends; the factory, farm or office where he[/she] works. Such are the places where every man, woman and child seeks equal justice, equal opportunity, equal dignity without discrimination. Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning anywhere. Without concerted citizen action to uphold them close to home, we shall look in vain for progress in the larger world.”

We can only expect a world with universal respect for human rights if we have local respect for human rights, in communities and in the institutions that support them. Yet human rights play a small part in daily public discourse, or indeed in institutions, including museums. That means we need to find ways to empower institutions to understand their obligations, and be confident in understanding the big picture of conventions and sustainable development challenges. To take museums as an example, they are clearly identified with several of the rights from the Universal Declaration (right to own property, right to education, right to participate in cultural life), yet, as with rights more broadly, we cannot pick out one or a few rights: we have to acknowledge their interconnectedness and ensure that institutions, such as museums, fulfil all of their obligations, and not just the most obvious ones as ‘low-hanging fruit’.

My work aims to build awareness, ability and accountability for sustainable development in museums and other sectors by writing freely available guides exploring sustainable development agendas. One of these guides, Museums and the Sustainable Development Goals (2019) circulates in most countries and is on nearly 20,000 downloads. I wrote Museums and Human Rights: human rights as a basis for public service in 2019 to help museums better understand human rights and existing conventions, and how museums relate to human rights; and to have an understanding of human rights-based approaches. Museums and other public institutions often struggle to justify why they aim to make a particular difference. Human rights can help museums articulate their public value in terms of how they support particular, or all, rights. That is powerful as it helps museums avoid accusations that they only cater for elite interests or groups. Yet museums cannot stay the same – they are also enmeshed in the problems we see around us today, with inequality, poverty, intolerance and conflict. So how can they transform in ways that serve the public interest? Human rights-based approaches are an excellent blueprint for the transformation of public institutions to provide more transparent, effective and inclusive services for society. The approach helps narrow the gap between rights holders and duty bearers.

Using human rights and rights-based approaches as a basis for public service in public institutions helps build significant capacity for rights-based agendas, including SDG16+. Imagine if every community had effective ‘small places close to home’ – schools, libraries, museums and other public places – that protected and respected people’s rights, and fulfilled their potential to further support people to live in a world of local and universal respect for human rights. There are approximately 90,000 museums in the world, and 350,000 public libraries: unlocking their potential could be a powerful catalyst for the achievement of Agenda 2030 and the 17 SDGs.

Further information

www.curatingtomorrow.co.uk

McGhie, HA (2019). Museums and the Sustainable Development Goals. Curating Tomorrow, UK, available at https://curatingtomorrow236646048.files.wordpress.com/2019/12/museums-and-the-sustainable-development-goals-2019.pdf

McGhie, HA (2020). Museums and Disaster Risk Reduction: building resilience in museums, communities and nature. Curating Tomorrow, UK, https://bit.ly/3pcPh6O

McGhie, HA (2020). Museums and Human Rights: human rights as a basis for public service. Curating Tomorrow, UK, https://bit.ly/3E5qI1Y

McGhie, HA (2021). Mainstreaming the Sustainable Development Goals: a results framework for galleries, libraries, archives and museums. Curating Tomorrow, UK, https://bit.ly/3HOnFO2

McGhie, HA (2021). Mobilising Museums for Climate Action: tools, frameworks and opportunities for climate action in and with museums. Museums for Climate Action, UK, https://www.museumsforclimateaction.org/mobilise/toolkit

About TAP Storytelling: In 2021, TAP Network is launching the TAP Storytelling Initiative, which will aim to closely and frequently highlight the work of our Network through working directly with them to produce quality online content about their endeavors. Together in this initiative, we will aim to intimately spotlight the work of our Members and Partners and the challenges, successes, failures, processes and problem solving that comes with it, while also offering the chance for wide promotion through TAP’s outreach channels. We hope that these opportunities will not only offer heightened visibility of the work of our Network, but will also inspire and educate more commitments to SDG16 and transparency and accountability for the 2030 Agenda as a whole. If you are interested in spearheading this work with us, head to our TAP Membership Engagement Portal where you can find the Storytelling Form to submit your interest.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed on the TAP Network Blog Platform are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the TAP Network. Any content provided by our bloggers or authors are of their opinion.

Photo by Curating Tomorrow

Interested in publishing an article?