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1 - 20 of 42

Conflict, Stability and Security Fund (CSSF)

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office

Conflict, Stability and Security Fund (CSSF)

Programme Id GB-GOV-3-CSSF
Start date 2017-4-1
Status Implementation
Total budget £1,168,915,063

Negotiations and Peace Processes (NPPD) Conflict Resolution Programme

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

The programme primarily funds key mediation organisations delivering against the UK’s negotiation, mediation and peace process ambitions, specifically on bringing about negotiated political settlements that govern and end violence and refocusing peace processes as a central tool for conflict resolution, working with a range of national and international partners.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-400035
Start date 2023-8-15
Status Implementation
Total budget £1,853,456

Ethiopia – Human Rights and Peacebuilding Programme (HARP)

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

The Human Rights and Peacebuilding (HARP) programme will support the UK’s strategic response to conflict in Ethiopia. The programme will support peacebuilding initiatives in areas where the UK has a comparative advantage. This will build the capacity of local peace actors (particularly women and youth), provide safe spaces for dialogue and engage with government to respond to community needs. The UK has proven success in investing in these areas in Ethiopia – particularly through the CSSF Funded work of Conciliation Resources in Somali Regional State. HARP will look to continue this activity, as well as supporting further peacebuilding activity in other conflict areas.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-301191
Start date 2022-1-21
Status Implementation
Total budget £40,999,907

Conflict Prevention and Peacebuilding Programme

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

Preventing violent conflict and building peace are UK international priorities that cannot be addressed alone. FCDO support will to the international system supports communities and regions to better develop and manage change and conflict peacefully - contributing to poverty reduction, and UK national security objectives. Supporting an effective approach to conflict and fragility by investing in areas of the multilateral and international system that are prioritising conflict prevention. This programme aims to achieve this through support to - the Peacebuilding Fund which is the UN Secretary-General’s only dedicated peacebuilding resource; the Joint UNDP-DPPA Programme on Building National Capacities for Conflict Prevention aims to ensure that Resident Coordinators have the political advice and support they require to engage meaningfully on peacebuilding across the UN Country Team and Secondments to increase UK influence of the conflict prevention agenda.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-301051
Start date 2021-3-16
Status Implementation
Total budget £26,683,334

Programme d’Appui pour la Consolidation de la Stabilité en RDC (PACS-RDC)

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

The programme will support our objective to build peace in eastern DRC. It will focus on the three provinces in eastern DRC (Ituri, North and South Kivus) worst affected by violent conflict leveraging our comparative advantage by deploying HMG expertise from Kinshasa, Goma, London and New York to influence the DRC government, MONUSCO and other donors. The Concept Note includes a multi-donor stabilisation programming alongside targeted UK bilateral support on DDR, conflict prevention and conflict sensitivity.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-300899
Start date 2023-1-25
Status Implementation
Total budget £349,998

Tackling Serious and Organised Crime in Ghana (SOCG)

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

This programme will seek to reduce the negative impact that SOC has on Ghana’s development, by improving governance and raising awareness, commitment and capacity to address it within government, civil society and business. In doing so, it will address direct threats to the UK, and support wider UK security objectives.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-301282
Start date 2021-9-27
Status Implementation
Total budget £3,355,415

UK-Jamaica Violence Prevention Partnership

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

To assist the Government of Jamaica to manage extreme levels of violence to stem gang violence using the public health model.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-300973
Start date 2023-6-5
Status Implementation
Total budget £5,239,995

Somalia Security and Justice Programme II

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

The Somalia Security and Justice Programme aims to promote more affordable, accountable, able and acceptable policing and justice systems in targeted areas that provide a visible security presence and facilitate the peaceful resolution of disputes with lessons from these informing the development of the federal architecture

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-300860
Start date 2021-10-8
Status Implementation
Total budget £56,719,521

Security and Justice Programme 2

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

To achieve better security and access to justice. It will help improve the justice and rehabilitation experience of women who have survived violence. While a focus on GBV will run through the programme, other systemic reform initiatives will also impact on how other forms of violence, such as political violence, are prevented and managed.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-300955
Start date 2022-4-12
Status Implementation
Total budget £25,750,003

Reducing Insecurity and Violent Extremism in the Northern Territories (Re-INVENT)

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

To improve safety and security institutions at national level and in 6 counties that provide more effective, accountable and responsive services to a public that is actively engaged in improving safety and security in Kenya.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-300147
Start date 2018-2-19
Status Implementation
Total budget £20,999,646

Strengthening Peace and Resilience in Nigeria (SPRiNG)

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

SPRiNG is to support a more stable and peaceful Nigeria in which citizens benefit from reduced violence, and increased resilience to the pressures of climate change (Impact). It will do this by supporting, and shifting incentives of, Nigerian stakeholders so they are more willing and able to respond to conflict, security, justice and natural resource management challenges in target areas (Outcome). SPRiNG is 15-20% International Climate Finance (ICF) eligible.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-300203
Start date 2023-3-16
Status Implementation
Total budget £38,231,427

Global Security Rapid Analysis

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

To produce research analysis and best practice guidance that will help to inform global policy on how development programming and policy can have the greatest impact on stability and security overseas.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-300358
Start date 2017-2-8
Status Implementation
Total budget £12,249,857

Humanitarian Protection in the Liptako-Gourma region

DEPARTMENT FOR BUSINESS, ENERGY & INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY

The proposed 2-year project (2020-2022) by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), the Danish Refugee Council (DRC) and local research partners, namely the Centre for Democratic Governance (CGD) in Burkina Faso, Point Sud in Mali and the Laboratoire d'Etudes et de Recherche sur les Dynamiques Sociales et le Développement Local (LASDEL) in Niger, focuses on the Liptako-Gourma region, encompassing Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger. Since 2015, this border region has become the epicenter of the Sahel crisis and both state and non-state armed groups have committed serious violations of International Humanitarian Law (IHL). Despite several national and international initiatives, the number of conflict-related victims has increased from 199 in 2012 to 1 464 in 2018, with a significant increase of IDPs, food insecurity, school closures, and gender-based violence. Several factors are at play, such as the absence of the state, the competition over natural resources, violent extremism, or the proliferation of self-protection militias and climate change. The project will focus on impact of restraint (theme 3) and impact of local protection mechanisms (theme 4), with diversity/gender as a crosscutting theme. The project will be structured around the following research questions: What are the protection threats, risks and vulnerabilities across the different groups of the population of Liptako-Gourma? What local protection mechanism do they use? On which social norms and rules are they based? What is the relation between local protection mechanisms and restraint from violence? Are there risks for people to protect themselves? How do humanitarian protection responses interact with local protection mechanisms (positive, neutral or negative)? How do the different groups of the population assess the impact of humanitarian responses on their own protection and safety? How can humanitarian protection optimally complement and support local protection mechanisms, without having any possible unintended negative consequences? The project aims to address the knowledge gaps and identify perceptions, priorities and needs of local populations in order (i) to document the situations at the grass-root level, (ii) to improve the effectiveness of DRC cycles of humanitarian protection programmes, and (iii) to support all relevant stakeholders through evidence-based analysis in better understanding the priorities of affected communities. To do so, the project will use a mixed research approach of quantitative surveys and qualitative studies led by networks of trained facilitators and researchers in each country to (a) better understand security and humanitarian issues at the micro-local level and; (b) measure the relevance and impact of humanitarian protection interventions in the region. Dedicated publications, regional events (validation/national sharing workshops, regional conference, practitioner meeting) and outputs (press conferences, video films) will allow a large dissemination of the findings and contribute to maximise the overall impact of the project. To ensure a long-term impact and sustainability of the project, the proposal also develops a capacity-building component for facilitators and researchers in the three countries in order to develop a local ownership of the methodology and working relations between partners in the three countries.

Programme Id GB-GOV-13-OODA-AHRC-C4WCAGQ-R6SBCMZ-ENQPUNK
Start date 2020-6-1
Status Implementation
Total budget £255,874.44

Peacekeepers As Soldiers And Humanitarians: The Impact Of Contradictory Roles And Responsibilities On The Protection Mandate of Peacekeepers

DEPARTMENT FOR BUSINESS, ENERGY & INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY

The project conducts research on the currently two largest African peace operation, the UN peacekeeping mission in the DRC (MONUSCO) and the AU peacekeeping mission in Somalia (AMISOM). Both missions have complex mandates and combine military (combat), political (stabilisation/statebuilding) and humanitarian goals. The protection of civilians became a cornerstone of both missions. Military peacekeepers are often required to straddle combat and pacific responsibilities, combining military, diplomatic and humanitarian roles. They fight violent actors who are often not easily distinguishable from civilians, patrol roads and convoy humanitarian deliveries, while they are simultaneously requested to develop relations with communities affected by violence, to mediate conflicts and often also to provide humanitarian goods. The project explores how UN and AU peacekeepers in the DRC and in Somalia fulfil their protection mandate from the perspective of protection providers and protection recipients: military peacekeepers (provider), civilians (recipients) and humanitarian worker (recipients and ideally partners of peacekeepers). It will provide an in-depth and differentiated account on how military peacekeepers navigate their increasingly complex roles, swap between combat and pacific responsibilities and how their protection efforts are experienced at the recipients' end. This knowledge is crucial in improving protection efforts. The findings of the research will be shared in round tables with all three actor groups. The round tables aim at receiving feed-back on the research. More importantly, they also aim at providing a platform for communication and at stimulating dialogue between military peacekeepers, civil humanitarian actors and civilians. Round tables will be organised by local civil society organisations who partner in the research project, and it is expected that they will uphold communication links even after the research ended. The findings, i.e. the experiences of the providers and recipients of protection, will feed into a peacekeeping training module. The module will be developed in cooperation with the International Peace Support Training Centre (IPSTC) in Nairobi. The training will be piloted during a workshop with AU and UN trainers and representatives of military headquarters and military trainers of troop contributing countries. The evaluation of the participants will help to fine-tune the training and to finalize a training handbook that will be made publically available and shared with peacekeeping training centres and military headquarters of troop contributing countries.

Programme Id GB-GOV-13-OODA-AHRC-C4WCAGQ-R6SBCMZ-NM37SSZ
Start date 2020-7-1
Status Implementation
Total budget £145,939.24

Participatory research to support the development of culturally sensitive mental health and wellbeing services for the Kankuamo people of Colombia

DEPARTMENT FOR BUSINESS, ENERGY & INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY

Deliver signficant reseach funding for internationally competitative and innovative collaborative projects between researchers from Colombia and United Kingdom that will allow the pursuit of shared research interests.

Programme Id GB-GOV-13-NF-ES_CO_MH-2020-TCM9ZSW
Start date 2022-9-14
Status Implementation
Total budget £188,133

Strengthening Africa's Science Granting Councils Phase II

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

The programme will deepen ongoing work with the African Science granting Councils in the same thematic areas as those covered by the first phase of SGCI research management; monitoring learning and evaluation; knowledge transfer to the private sector; and enhanced networks and partnerships amongst councils and with other science system actors. It will extend focus into two new cross cutting dimensions; research excellence and gender equality and inclusivity. It will strengthen national Science Technology and Innovation systems and contribute to socio economic development in sub Saharan Africa by enhancing more effective and inclusive management of research and innovation by Councils in sub Saharan Africa.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-301049
Start date 2022-2-28
Status Implementation
Total budget £9,753,782

Corridors for Growth

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

To increase Tanzania’s infrastructure for trade in three ways (i) Co-financing the Dar Port expansion together with the World Bank and Tanzania Port Authority will double port capacity and enable Tanzania’s entire trade volume to increase by two thirds. (ii) Project preparation funding for six more major regional transport projects are expected to catalyse up to £600m of development finance incorporating climate resilent design. (iii) Launching a new approach to Public-Private Partnerships will improve infrastructure in municipal areas and build capacity for larger PPP’s in the future.The programme is expected to reduce the costs of doing business in Tanzania, contributing to growth, more jobs and lower poverty. The short-term beneficiaries will be users such as traders, logistics providers and public citizens. International business including from the UK will benefit from better access to trade.In the medium to long run employment is expected to increase from indirect effects.

Programme Id GB-1-204369
Start date 2016-9-23
Status Implementation
Total budget £61,745,400

National Governance Programme

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office’s aims to support Pakistan’s national level institutional reforms agenda through this programme. The programme will take a whole-of-government approach to addressing the coordination deficit between levels of government. This means providing technical assistance to the Prime Minister’s Office to focus political leadership on prioritised policy areas; ensuring decisions are evidence-based and are supported by effective monitoring frameworks and feedback loops. This work will enhance coordination between ministries including for anticipating and responding to crises. Collective problem solving will be strengthened through support to the Council of Common Interest, which is a key coordination mechanism between the federal and provincial governments. Reforms to ensure progressive inter-governmental fiscal transfers will be influenced by leveraging World Bank financing to the National Finance Commission.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-301304
Start date 2023-11-28
Status Implementation
Total budget £500,002

Security and Stabilisation Programme

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

OCSM’s Security and Stabilisation Department will increase the UK’s effectiveness in preventing or reducing conflict through a) the application of stabilisation principles and b) applying security sector reform (SSR) best practice. This includes developing a UK unique selling point (“USP”) on state reconstruction and acting as a convening power for HMG on all aspects of SSR policy and practice, including disarmament, demobilisation and reintegration (DDR) and defection. The Programme will deliver a facet of the UK’s conflict prevention, management, and resolution agenda, as set out in the Integrated Review to reduce the frequency and intensity of conflict and instability, to alleviate suffering, and minimise the opportunities for state and non-state actors to undermine international security. The SSD incorporates two important areas of the conflict agenda where we can bring significant added value for HMG and internationally: Stabilisation, and Security Sector Reform.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-301575
Start date 2022-10-3
Status Implementation
Total budget £359,992

Serious Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Programme

UK - Foreign, Commonwealth Development Office (FCDO)

To counter serious and organised crime, build the investigative capacity of select partners and close the loopholes in the justice system that hinders the prosecution of cases.

Programme Id GB-GOV-1-300970
Start date 2020-3-25
Status Implementation
Total budget £15,150,111

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