FY 2014 Funding Opportunity Announcement for NGO Programs Benefiting Burmese and Other Urban Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Malaysia, Thailand and Region

Current Funding Priorities for Assistance to Burmese and Other Urban Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Malaysia:(1) Healthcare:a.

Improve primary healthcare (including reproductive health), medical services, mental health, and psychosocial support to the urban refugee and asylum seeker populations

credit:


in Kuala Lumpur and Klang Valley, including the implementation of mobile health clinics; b.

Provision of nursing facilities and caretakers for refugee patients requiring recuperation and post-hospitalization nursing care; andc.

Health-based training and education focusing on general health care, communicable disease prevention, treatment adherence, reproductive health, and nutrition.(2) Gender-Based Violence (GBV):a.

Improve knowledge of and changes in attitudes toward GBV within refugee and host communities;b.

Improve capacity of target communities to identify and effectively respond to GBV through healthcare (including reproductive health), psychosocial, safety, justice, and other services that involve refugee and host community members in their design and implementation; andc.

Improve capacity of service providers to implement GBV prevention and response activities, including multi-sectoral referral services.Current Funding Priorities for Assistance to Urban Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Thailand:(1) Healthcare:
a.

Improve access to primary healthcare (including reproductive health), medical services, mental health, and psychosocial support to vulnerable urban refugee and asylum seeker populations in Bangkok, including to facilitate access to public clinics and hospitals.(2) Education:
a.

Facilitate access to schools, including working with local school administrators to overcome barriers for refugee children and promote student enrollment; b.

Teach Thai language courses to facilitate refugees’ and asylum seekers’ ability to pursue formal education in Thai schools; andc.

Promote official certification of their schooling applicable to when they decide on voluntary return or are resettled to a third country.(3) Protection:
Proposal should bear in mind existing refugee protection mechanisms as well as informal community-based protection efforts.

Proposals should be designed to support and strengthen existing protection mechanisms rather than develop parallel systems that may not be sustainable over time.

Key components of protection programs may include:
a.

legal assistance and counseling, b.

prevention and response to gender-based violence, c.

child protection, andd.

dissemination of information to promote enhanced refugee access to protection mechanisms and programs.
Related Programs

Overseas Refugee Assistance Programs for East Asia

Department of State


Agency: Department of State

Office: Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration

Estimated Funding: Not Available


Relevant Nonprofit Program Categories



Obtain Full Opportunity Text:
FY 2014 Funding Opportunity Announcement for NGO Programs Benefiting Burmese and Other Urban Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Malaysia, Thailand and Region

Additional Information of Eligibility:
(1) International Organizations.

International Organizations (IOs) should not submit proposals through Grants.gov in response to this Funding Opportunity Announcement.

Rather IOs such as UN agencies and other Public International Organizations (PIOs) that are seeking funding for programs relevant to this announcement should contact the relevant PRM Program Officer (as listed below) on or before the closing date of the funding announcement.

Full Opportunity Web Address:
http://www.state.gov/j/prm/funding/index.htm

Contact:
Grants.gov Contact CenterPhone Number: 1-800-518-4726Hours of operation are 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The contact center is closed on federal holidays.support@grants.gov

Agency Email Description:
Grants.gov Customer Support

Agency Email:
support@grants.gov

Date Posted:
2014-05-02

Application Due Date:
2014-06-05

Archive Date:
2014-07-05


Melbourne social enterprise Who Gives A Crap sold nearly 3 million rolls of toilet paper in 2014/15 and gave half the proceeds to WaterAid Australia, but co-founder Simon Griffiths says the donation would have been less had the startup adopted a non-profit model when it launched two years ago.






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