Grants for projects in the area of migration and integration

The European Commission is currently seeking proposals for its programme entitled “Integration of Third-Country Nationals” under the Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund (AMIF). AMIF was set up for the period 2014-20, with a total of EUR 3.137 billion for the seven years. It will promote the efficient management of migration flows and the implementation, strengthening and development of a common Union approach to asylum and immigration.

Projects under this call for proposals must address at least one of the following priorities: 

  1. Promoting active participation in society overall – innovative actions to increase third country nationals’ participation in educational and social activities, including for children. Proposals empowering women or creating conditions for their active participation will be considered favourably.
  2. Pre-departure and post-arrival support for the integration of persons in need of international protection who are being relocated within the EU or resettled from a third country –  funding will be available for the following activities to integrate persons in need of international protection who have been relocated from another Member State or resettled from outside the EU:

               – for people resettled from outside the EU – clearly linked pre-departure and post‑arrival activities;
               – for people relocated from another Member State – post‑arrival activities building on pre‑departure information activities; 
               – activities to prepare host communities for the arrival of relocated or resettled people.

Objectives

The AMIF Regulation sets out four specific objectives, respectively to:

  • Strengthen and develop all aspects of the Common European Asylum System, including its external dimension;
  • Support legal migration to the Member States in accordance with their economic and social needs, such as labour market needs, while safeguarding the integrity of the immigration systems of Member States, and to promote the effective integration of third-country nationals; 
  • Enhance fair and effective return strategies in the Member States which contribute to combating illegal immigration, with an emphasis on sustainability of return and effective readmission in the countries of origin and transit; 
  • enhance solidarity and responsibility-sharing between the Member States, in particular towards those most affected by migration and asylum flows, including through practical cooperation.

Eligible activities

Project applications submitted under Priority 1 should include the following activities:

  • Concrete initiatives fostering the active participation of third-country nationals in the receiving society (information dissemination, awareness-raising, training, diversity management plans and measures, mentoring programmes);
  • Promotion, dissemination and sharing of successful practices, experiences and mechanisms in the field of active participation of third-country nationals in the receiving society.

Proposals submitted under Priority 2 could include activities such as:

  • Language training;
  • Providing basic information on the receiving society’s legal framework, systems and social and cultural norms, rights and responsibilities;
  • Workshops on living in a multicultural and multi-religious environment;
  • Guidance on access to services, money management, etc.;
  • Skills training;
  • Training officials, volunteers and service-providers on working with resettled or relocated people (e.g. sensitising them to vulnerability and experience of trauma);
  • Establishing volunteering opportunities in the host community;
  • Socio-cultural orientation (e.g. information about countries of origin);
  • Preparing the relevant administrative bodies (schools, etc.).

Eligibility Criteria

In order to be eligible for a grant, the Applicant and the Co-applicants must be: 

  • Legal persons; applications from natural persons are not eligible;
  • A public body (including local authorities, public employment services, youth services and education institutions), a non-profit-making private entity, or an international organisation.
  • A for-profit entity may only participate as co-applicant and not as coordinator. Its participation must be strictly on a non-profit basis;
  • Established in a Member State of the European Union participating in the AMIF instrument.
  • International organisations may be established outside of the EU Member States participating in the AMIF instrument.

In order to be eligible for a grant, applications must be:

  • Transnational, i.e. involving at least three (3) entities established in at least two (2) different EU Member States participating in the AMIF instrument; 
  • Seeking funding of between EUR 450 000 and EUR 750 000. 
  • Activities must not have started prior to the date of submission of the grant application. 
  • Maximum EU-contribution: 90 %
  • Union agencies can be neither Applicants nor Co-applicants.

Deadline

28 February 2017

How to apply 

Applications must be submitted using the Electronic Submission System of the Participant Portal originally developed for the Horizon 2020 Research programmes. For further details please visit the call for proposals.

If you need help with your application or have questions, please do not hesitate to contact us for a free consultation.

 

Grants from the Scottish Government and ESF to tackle poverty and disadvantage

The Social Economy Growth Fund is aimed at established organisations whose primary social purpose is to tackle disadvantage, poverty and social exclusion. The Fund is supported by the European Social Fund (ESF) and the Scottish Government.

Organisations applying for grants are expected to:

  • support people to move into better paid employment;
  • increase household income;
  • improve people’s skills;
  • empower people to find and own solutions to poverty themselves.

Eligibility criteria

All applicants must meet the following eligibility criteria:

  • be a formally constituted organisation;
  • operate on a non-profit-distributing basis or have a governance structure which primarily does not allow for profit distribution;
  • have strong social as well as business objectives stated in their governing documents;
  • be independent from national and local government;
  • have a base and beneficiaries in Scotland;
  • have at least 3 people on the Board of Directors or equivalent;
  • have a bank account in the name of the organisation requiring at least 2 unrelated signatories;
  • not be insolvent, facing insolvency or be unable to trade or operate.

Grants

Grants of between £100,000 and £250,000 are available to support actual costs of delivery and will require a full and verifiable audit trail.

Application process

Electronic applications and supporting evidence must be submitted by 5pm on the 17 February to ApplicationsGrowingtheSocialEconomy@gov.scot.

Deadline

5pm on Friday 17 February 2017

Full details including eligibility criteria and the application process are available from https://beta.gov.scot/publications/social-economy-growth-fund-guidance/

 

If you need help with your application or just need some advice and guidance, do not hesitate to drop us a line at info@edinetwork.eu.

Grants to help you get your social enterprise off the ground in Scotland

So you’ve had this great idea of making your local community a better place and improving the quality of life of those living in it. You’ve decided to put your idea in practice and starting a social enterprise looks like the best option for you. It’s because you want to achieve your social purpose, but you also need to make money to make it sustainable, so you’ve chosen to reinvest your future profits in furthering your social aims. But wait, you also need money to get your social enterprise started. On top of the time that you will dedicate to your cause, there will be other expenses to cover to get the social enterprise off the ground.

To give you a starting point, we have compiled a list of grants and awards for social enterprise start-ups in Scotland. This is not an exhaustive list by no means, as such sources of funding often change.

Fund Details
 The Social Entrepreneurs Fund

http://www.firstport.org.uk/funding

Firstport’s Award Programme supports individuals to turn their ideas into thriving social enterprises. The Awards Programme is funded by the Scottish Government’s Social Entrepreneurs Fund (SEF) and offers two different levels of start-up awards – Start It and Build It, together with business support from a dedicated team of advisors. 

With Start It you can apply for up to £5,000 start-up costs to pilot your idea. With Build It funding of up to £20,000 is available to cover an individual’s salary/living costs for one year, so that they can begin running the business full time.

Shackleton Foundation Leadership Award

http://shackletonfoundation.org/

The Shackleton Foundation Leadership Award is an early stage venture capital funding for social entrepreneurs. They provide up to £10,000 of seed funding to allow social entrepreneurs to establish their own endeavours to help the disadvantaged and socially marginalised in society. They look for projects with high impact and wide reach that provide solutions to difficult social problems.
Scottish EDGE

https://scottishedge.com/

Scottish EDGE consists of four competition categories:

  • Scottish EDGE
  • Young EDGE
  • Wild Card EDGE
  • Higgs EDGE

Social enterprises can take part in all 4 competitions and will be assessed against the same criteria as all other Ltd Company applicants. Please note that as the Scottish EDGE and Higgs EDGE prizes now consists of a 50% element that will need to be repaid, applicants will need to ensure that the constitution of their organisation allows them to borrow money. 

If you haven’t started trading yet, then the Wild Card Competition might be the most suitable to you, with a grant of up to £10,000 and access to a non-financial support package.

Foundation for Social Entrepreneurs

https://unltd.org.uk/path/

UnLtd distributes funds specifically aimed at individual social entrepreneurs or informal groups. They offer a few different types of awards from helping convert ideas into projects to supporting individuals to devote more time to developing existing ideas. 

Recommended awards:

  • Do It Award – grants of up to £5,000 to start developing the idea.
  • Grow It Award – grants of up to £15,000 for individuals who have an established social venture or community project or who have the potential to develop rapidly.
  • Spaces 4 Change – from 2016-2019 100 awards will be available for young leaders aged 16-24 consisting of up to £5,000 project funding, a dedicated award manager providing tailored support, cohort support, and peer to peer networking opportunities for sharing knowledge and learning.

If you can’t manage to get a grant but you are still keen to pursue your social endeavours, then considering a loan specifically designed for social entrepreneurs could be the answer for you. Here are only a few examples:

Social Investment Provider Details
Social Investment Scotland

http://www.socialinvestmentscotland.com/looking-for-investment/

Social Investment Scotland (SIS), a social enterprise and registered charity itself, is the largest provider of business loans to the third sector in Scotland. They provide loans from £10,000 to £1 million to organisations who are unable to raise any or all of the loan finance they require from banks and other sources.
Start & Grow / Resilient Scotland http://resilientscotland.org.uk/investment-packages/start-and-grow/   Start & Grow is an investment package from Resilient Scotland and offers investment packages of between £10,000 and £60,000 to social enterprises, community organisations and charities to start-up, develop and expand their enterprising activities.  Start & Grow investments are always made up of one third grant and two thirds loan, and are unsecured.  Loans are repayable over up to 5 years (flexible terms can be agreed) and are charged at a fixed interest rate of base rate (currently 0.25%) plus 6%.
Big Issue Invest

www.bigissueinvest.com

Big Issue Invest provides finance of between £20,000 and £3 million to social enterprises and charities that prevent and tackle poverty and create opportunities for people across the UK.
Charity Bank

http://www.charitybank.org/ 

Charity Bank provides loans of £50,000 to £3.25 million to small and large charities, social enterprises and organisations tackling social and environmental issues.

UK based charities can apply for grants to protect tropical rainforests

The Waterloo Foundation is seeking applications for its environment grant programme entitled “Tropical Rainforests” to support initiatives working to protect tropical rainforests for their value to the climate, communities and biodiversity, principally through avoided deforestation.

The Foundation will support two types of projects:

Local Projects

  • Exposing, addressing and overcoming the local drivers of deforestation;
  • Management of the specified area;
  • Methods to measure and monitor the protected area;
  • Sustainable livelihoods for forest-dependent communities.

Strategic projects

  • Working on international or regional forest policy;
  • Campaigning for improved practices in commerce;
  • Innovative ways of reducing deforestation e.g. financial systems or solutions based on the value of forest ecosystem services.

Grant Size

The majority of the grants in this programme will be for a total of £50,000 – £100,000.

Eligibility Criteria

UK-based charities, many of whom work in close partnership with smaller local NGOs based in the countries in which they operate, are eligible to apply.
For tropical rainforest local projects applicants should be able to evidence previous successful tropical rainforest projects, with outcomes including:

  • Demonstrable protection of an area of tropical rainforest specified by hectare and cost;
  • Implementation of a management plan;
  • Improved livelihoods and income levels of forest-dependent communities;
  • The area of tropical forest the project will protect in hectares.

For tropical rainforest strategic projects:

  • Evidence of previous successful strategic programmes e.g. an attributable change in policy or improved supply chain. The Foundation may ask to see a full copy of the supporting data and evaluation at a later stage.
  • For your proposed programme, the specific measurable outcomes that you expect the programme to achieve, and the methods you will use to monitor these outcomes.
  • The strategy put in place to ensure the sustainability of the programme’s objectives for the long term.

Deadline 

1 June 2017

How to Apply

Applications must be submitted via email to applications@waterloofoundation.org.uk. For more information, please visit the Tropical Rainforests Programme.

Europe for Citizens call for proposals

The Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA) is seeking proposals for its “Europe for Citizens Programme” under the Civil Society Projects 2017 with an aim to promote peace, its values and the well-being of its peoples by stimulating debate, reflection and development of networks.

Objectives

  • to contribute to citizens’ understanding of the Union, its history and diversity;
  • to foster European citizenship and to improve conditions for civic and democratic participation at Union level.

Types of Grants

The Programme is implemented through two Strands and a horizontal Action:

  • Strand 1: European remembrance: Raise awareness of remembrance, common history and
    values and the Union’s aim.
  • Strand 2: Democratic engagement and civic participation: Encourage democratic and civic
    participation of citizens at Union level.

Measures in this strand are:

  • Town Twinning
  • Networks of Towns
  • Civil Society Projects

Grant Information

  • Maximum eligible grant for a project: 150 000 EUR
  • Maximum project duration is 24 months.

Eligibility Criteria

  1. Legal status

The applicants and partners must be either public bodies or non-profit organisations with legal
personality.

2. Established in a participating country

The applicants and partners must be established in one of the countries participating to the Programme (the 28 EU countries). At least one EU Member State must be involved.

Potentially participating countries: the Programme is potentially open to the following categories of countries provided that they have signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Commission.

  • acceding countries, candidate countries and potential candidates, in accordance with the general principles and general terms and conditions for the participation of those countries in Union programmes established in the respective Framework Agreements, Association Council Decisions or similar Agreements;
  • the EFTA countries party to the EEA Agreement, in accordance with the provisions of that Agreement.

Deadline

1 March 2017.

How to Apply

Interested applicants must apply online via the provided eForm. For further details please read the Guide for Applicants.