Bolivia USAID-La Paz Grants





Department of Health and Human Services
 $62,853,680,968 Department of Transportation
 $56,443,571,981 Environmental Protection Agency
 $35,751,587,496 Department of Energy
 $24,661,368,000 National Aeronautics and Space Administration
 $14,032,768,821 Department of Homeland Security
 $13,986,266,741 Department of Labor
 $10,348,285,755 Department of Defense
 $10,111,366,675 Department of the Interior
 $9,806,569,960 Department of Agriculture
 $8,296,397,040 Agency for International Development
 $7,754,781,106 Department of Commerce
 $6,871,103,950 Department of Housing and Urban Development
 $6,642,477,476 Department of State
 $6,042,701,916 Department of Justice
 $5,571,395,802 Department of Education
 $2,642,831,221 Department of the Treasury
 $1,019,380,000 Other Agencies
 $724,036,487


Bolivia USAID-La Paz
USAID/Sudan seeks to work with the MoE and SMoEs to comprehensively address the needs of the teacher professional development and support system for basic education. The objectives of the TPDI...more
Posted On - 2011-02-02


Bolivia USAID-La Paz
USAID/Sudan seeks to develop innovative alliances that strengthen agricultural organizations in both the public and private sectors and including areas related to crop production, harvesting,...more
Posted On - 2010-08-23


Bolivia USAID-La Paz
The USAID/Bolivia Mission intends to support communities throughout Bolivia in meeting their basic needs. The purpose of this CA will be to assist underdeveloped communities to resolve specific,...more
Posted On - 2009-08-03




Bolivia USAID-La Paz
Subject to the availability of funds, USAID/Bolivia intends to provide between $20-25 million in total USAID funding to be allocated over a five-year period. Funding in the total amount of...more
Posted On - 2008-07-28


Bolivia USAID-La Paz
USAID/Bolivia intends to continue to support activities in the water supply and sanitation sector through the development and sustainable management of new systems, and by incorporating hygiene...more
Posted On - 2008-04-17




In the world of social enterprises, failure is a cringe-worthy moment nobody wants to talk about. But, social entrepreneurs can benefit from their failures.






More Federal Domestic Assistance Programs


Promotion of the Humanities_Public Programs | Health Program for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry | Peace Corps Global Health and PEPFAR Initiative Program | Congressionally-Identified Projects | Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases Research |  Site Style by YAML | Grants.gov | Grants | Grants News | Sitemap | Privacy Policy


Edited by: Michael Saunders

© 2004-2025 Copyright Michael Saunders