NGO Consultant

NGO Consultant
Odisha NGO Consultancy Services

Monday, June 30, 2014

Indian NGOs invited to attend Community Radio Workshops


Deadline: 31 July 2014

The Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, Government of India is inviting Indian NGOs to register their participation for the community radio workshops which will be organized in various parts of India during the current year.

In December 2002, the Government of India approved a policy for the grant of licenses for setting up of Community Radio Stations to well established educational institutions including IITs/IIMs.

The matter has been reconsidered and the Government has now decided to broad base the policy by bringing NGOs under its ambit in order to allow greater participation by the civil society on issues relating to development & social change.

The following can register to attend the workshops:

§ Organizations explicitly constituted as a ‘not-for-profit’

§ Societies, NGOs, trusts, voluntary organizations and CBOs registered under the Societies Act or any other such act relevant for the purpose

§ Organizations should have a proven track record of at least three years of service to the local community.

§ Organizations should be blacklisted by the Government or any other international organization/body

§ Organizations which have already attended community radio workshops are not eligible to register.

Only one person from each organization will be invited to participate in the workshop. Train fare, boarding and lodging will be provided by the Ministry.

To register your participation, you can apply to the Deputy Director, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, ‘A’ Wing, Shastri Bhawan, Room No, 116, New Delhi 110001 or visit http://www.cronlineindia.net



Applications invited for financial assistance under the “Community Radio Support Scheme”

Community Radio Stations and Letter of Intent (LOI) holders may apply for financial assistance under the scheme “Supporting Community Radio Movement in India”. The Ministry of Information & Broadcasting has invited application for the same.

Under the 12th Five Year Plan, Government of India has approved a scheme, namely, “Supporting Community Radio Movement in India”. The scheme seeks to provide financial assistance to LoI holders as well as operating Community Radio Stations under the component, “Community Radio Support Scheme” (CRSS) for equipment acquisition, upgradation and for emergency grants.

In this regard, detailed guidelines and prescribed application form are placed on Ministry’s website at http://www.mib.nic.in

Last date for submission of application for financial assistance is 31st July, 2014

For any query/assistance, please contact:
Assistant Project Director
CRS-PMU, Room No.124, First Floor, A-Wing, Shastri Bhawan,
New Delhi 110001Â
Email: crscell-moib@nic.in, pankaj.chhibber@nic.in, amit.dwivedi@nic.in
Phone: +91-11-23386653
For more information and application please follow this link: http://crfc.in/applications-invited-for-financial-assistance-under-the-scheme-supporting-community-radio-movement-in-india

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Happy Ratha Yatra


ISSRC-CSR’s Exclusive CSR Training and Workshop

(At Bangalore/Pune/Bhubaneshwar/New Delhi/Ranchi)

ISSRC-CSR Brings to you Exclusive CSR Training and Workshop on the National Mandate Sec 135 of the Companies Act 2013.

ISSRC-CSR committed to share its knowledge & expertise in leading CSR movement as a means of bridging the gap for inclusive growth.

Aligned to our commitment, we have introduced 2 day CSR Training and Workshop in five cities at a very nominal charge.
• Bangalore-4th- 5th July,
• Pune – 11th -12th July,
• Bhubaneswar – 18th – 19th July,
• New Delhi -25th-26th July &
• Ranchi-1st -2nd August 2014

We are endeavouring to assist in orienting & transforming potential for effective utilization of the mandatory 2% of net profit to prove corporate excellence in managing the social issues mentioned in schedule VII of The Companies Act 2013.

The training and workshop is customized of broader framework of social, legal & economic aspects of CSR along with implementation methodology. It will groom and shape the participant to achieve corporate goal of CSR.

The Training and Workshop focused on
• Understand expectations & applicability of Sec 135 of The Companies Act 2013.
• Governance & Reporting.
• Acknowledge responsibility & role.
• Designing framework, planning, strategizing, execution & management of the programs, projects and activities (In accordance of Schedule VII of the Act).
• Budgeting, Identification of programs & implementation methodology.
• Fundamentals for partnership & collaborations of CSR projects.
• Enable them to assist and provide requisite inputs to CSR committee & Board.
• Know how to bridge the gap for inclusive growth and establish your corporate leadership & Brand imaging.
• Make out innovative social business initiatives within the regulatory frame based on available resources matching with needs.

For More Details Please Visit http://bit.ly/1v0XVQW

Thanks & Regards
Alankar
Business Development
Innovative Solutions for Socially Responsible Corporate
Email : admin@issrc-csr.in , info@issrc-csr.in
Contact No : +91 8527275139, +91 9096858503

VGIF Small Grants Request for Funding - Letter of Intent 2015

VGIF provides small grants up to $7,500 USD to grassroots projects that are led by women and that help empower women and girls, in developing countries around the world. Funding for our project grants come from our members’ donations and bequests, and from our investment income. Over the years, VGIF has set up several board-designated funds to address specific challenges faced by women and girls. For more details, see VGIF Funds.

Empowering women to make a difference in their lives and communities is helping to change the world. To this end, VGIF has funded over 475 projects in 89 countries since 1969.

Letters of Intent for the 2015 Grant Cycle are accepted from: June 1 to July 31, 2014

We support women’s organizations based outside of the United States by providing small grants for an array of community needs up to $7,500 USD.

What VGIF supports:
Economic empowerment of women
Community development
Health and nutritional support
Literacy and leadership training
Educational seminars and workshops
Promoting education in the sciences for girls
Women’s human rights
Organizations that are governed and directed by women.

VGIF does not consider requests for the following:
Individual scholarships and tuition
Political organizations
Religious groups unless the proposed project contributes to the general good of the community
The construction of permanent buildings or the purchase of land
Salaries for board members and permanent staff but may include stipends/honoraria for external resource people/trainers.

VGIF will consider inclusion of an amount, not to exceed 10% of the total grant, for administration of the project to the executing organization in the country where the project is located.

How to Proceed

For full details see the following link: http://www.vgif3.org/projects2tier/index.asp

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Welcome to Odisha NGO Consultancy Services


Apply for a Young Feminist Fund-Grant


DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: 28th July 2014

FRIDA | The Young Feminist Fund is the only youth-led fund focused exclusively on supporting global young feminist activism to advance social justice movements and agendas. FRIDA was created to bring new resources and new opportunities to young women and trans* youth globally. We believe that supporting young feminists is key to the expansion, rejuvenation and sustainability of women’s movements and organizations, both now and in the future. To date, FRIDA has completed two grant cycles in 2012 and 2013, and cumulatively supported 32 different groups of young feminists in 28 different countries around the world and awarding a total of 196,000 USD in direct grants.

We are excited to be launching our third call for proposals and intend to support up to 18 new young feminist groups led by young women and transgender youth under 30 years of age.

DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: 28th July 2014

Who can apply?

§ Groups founded or led by young women or trans* youth (under 30 ykears) that are committed to:

§ Advancing and defending women’s rights from a feminist perspective;

§ Improving the lives of young women/transgender youth at local, national, regional or international levels;

§ Inclusive organizing, collective action and feminist movement building

§ Groups, networks, or collectives based in the Global South (Africa, Asia and the Pacific, The Middle East, Latin America and the Caribbean and Central, Southern, Eastern Europe and Caucuses and Central Asia).

§ Groups founded in the past 5 years (i.e. your group was formed between 2010 – 2014).

FRIDA uses the term ‘feminist’ broadly to refer to individuals working within women’s movements or in other social movements to promote and work towards the safety, equality, justice, rights and dignity of girls, women and other marginalized groups. Based on the understanding that fundamental discrimination occurs within patriarchal systems of domination in all societies, young feminists are determined to challenge, address and change the root causes of these existing inequalities, rights violations and injustice. We recognize that there are multiple feminisms and foster opportunities for expressing those principles in our work. FRIDA emphasizes feminist principles throughout all of its work. These principles include: non-hierarchy, collectivity, participation, diversity, and inclusion. We define young feminist activists as individuals from across the gender spectrum committed to advancing gender equality and women’s rights through explicitly feminist means. FRIDA focuses on activism led by feminists under 30 years of age.

Priority will be given to:

§ Small, emerging grassroots groups, networks, or collectives with little or no access to funding from larger donors.

§ Groups, networks, or collectives that are working on emerging or issues that have not received prior funding.

§ Groups, networks, or collectives located in remote underserved areas.

§ Groups, networks, or collectives that are diverse in their membership and made up of and/or working with socially marginalized young women especially: refugees, ethnic, national and caste minorities, rural women, urban poor, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, women living with HIV/AIDS, sex workers, women with disabilities, women living in armed conflicts and post conflict zones.

§ Groups using creative and innovative strategies to further their activism (including art, music, culture, poetry, social media etc).

What is NOT supported by FRIDA?

§ Groups or organizations that display an intolerant attitude towards others on the basis of age, religion, sex, race/ethnicity, disability, class or sexual orientation.

§ Organizations working with young women and trans youth but led by individuals over 30 years of age. We do not fund youth “programs” of existing organizations — we fund youth-led groups.

§ Scholarships, internship or school fees (including Doctoral or other research)

§ Groups with budgets over $25,000 USD

§ Proposals submitted by individuals, government institutions, political organizations or religious groups.

§ Groups that focus only on the provision of direct services (e.g. community literacy, formal education, technical training, craft or health care etc).

§ Groups that focus on income generating activities.

§ Groups based in the following highly-industrialized countries: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States

Funding Amounts & Length of Grant

FRIDA makes grants of up to $4,000 USD. They are flexible grants that can be used for general support and/or projects to be used over a period of 12 months and are open to renewal.

*Please Note: FRIDA recognizes the value of general support and encourages groups to prioritize resources according to their own needs. For example some groups may consider using FRIDA funds to cover staff, administration, or organizational costs while others may use funds to support establishing infrastructure or project related costs.

Be Part of the Selection Process…You Decide!

FRIDA is committed to engaging young feminist-led groups in the grant decision-making process. We view this as an empowering process that provides participants with greater accountability and investment. Applicants that meet FRIDA’s criteria must vote for their top propsal choices and give comments on their selections (groups may not vote for their own proposals). In voting, we ask that groups keep in mind what they think is important for the promotion and defense of the rights of young women in their region. After voting the results are tallied and grantees are selected.

For more information’s and application process please visits the link: http://youngfeministfund.org/apply-for-a-grant-2/



Friday, June 27, 2014

SBI Youth for India fellowship (2014-15)



rural development projects for one year. Please find below the details of the fellowships available for the youth. The applications for the SBI Youth for India fellowship (2014-15) will close on June 30, 2014.


Dear Members,

State Bank of India has started the 'SBI Youth for India fellowship' to enable young people to work for the development of India for one year.

The SBI Youth for India fellowship is a volunteering platform initiated, funded and managed by SBI in partnership with NGOs. The fellowship enables urban youth to work on rural development projects for one year. For the fellowship year 2014-15, the partner NGOs are MS Swaminathan Research Foundation, BAIF Development Research Foundation, Seva Mandir, Gram Vikas and Aga Khan Rural Support Program (India).

For more info: http://www.youthforindia.org/programme.php

The applications for the SBI Youth for India fellowship (2014-15) will close on June 30, 2014.

Resource Team

Microfinance Community of Practice

Solution Exchange, New Delhi

Course topics

Fundraising Fundamentals Communication technique

Building donor relations Fundraising techniques Fundraising strategy

Contact us

South Asian Fund Raising Group

Tel. – 011 41489060

Email – programs@safrg.org, course@safrg.org visit http://safrg.org/new/cc-fundraising

Apply for Scholarships and Bursary Support - Certificate Course in Fundraising & Communication by SAFRG


Scholarships available for individual participants

Grassroot NGOs Apply for Bursary Support

The SAFRG Institute of Fundraising offers a short term Certificate Course in Fundraising & Communication to help you become a more effective fundraiser.

Who should attend?

The course is suitable for new and aspiring fundraisers to learn a new skill or boost an existing one.

Why should you attend?

Certificate course modules are rigorously developed, regularly updated and delivered by top quality sector experts who understand the current fundraising climate and the challenges you face.

The emphasis is on class-room teaching so as to provide you with a highly interactive experience; group numbers are strictly limited to allow you the time and space to engage effectively with your peers and trainer.

Course dates

14 – 20 July, 2014, J-1, Udyog Nagar, Peeragarhi, New Delhi – 110 041

Course topics

Fundraising Fundamentals Communication technique

Building donor relations Fundraising techniques Fundraising strategy

Contact us

South Asian Fund Raising Group

Tel. – 011 41489060

Email – programs@safrg.org, course@safrg.org visit http://safrg.org/new/cc-fundraising

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Batch 5 for the online programme, NPO Governance.



Dear Friends,

Greetings from FMSF!

We wish to announce that the registrations are open for the next batch i.e. Batch 5 for the online programme, NPO Governance. “The 5th batch will commence in September 2014”.

With both the Government and international funding agencies emphasizing more and more on good governance, non-profit organizations has to tighten their reins and be vigilant and compliant to rules and regulations. A sense of complacency that prevails within the third sector needs to be addressed. The third sector which is the development sector is a field with many opportunities. However, to be able to tap these opportunities, organizations should be ready to face challenges. The foremost step in this direction would be to streamline the governance structure of the organization as they are the decision making authority of an organization.

Thus, the online programme on NPO Governance is formulated with the following objectives in mind:

§ To provide a basic understanding of the Governance mechanism in NPOs

§ To provide an overview of the Governance Structures & Processes

§ To develop an understanding on the Roles and Responsibilities of the Board Members

§ To provide basic understanding of the Governance Controls required for an NPO

§ To identify common myths and misconceptions in the Governance of NPOs

The course curriculum is completely web-based and comprises of four modules. The course materials on all four modules can be accessed online by the students. Further the program is open to participants across the globe.

Who should apply?

o Personnel working in mid-level, senior management level positions in NGOs, resource sharing agencies or any other development organization

o CEOs, CFOs or Executive Director of NGOs

o Individual serving in Board of NGOs, resource sharing agencies

o Consultants involved in the review and evaluations of NGOs

For further details on the course, kindly refer to the attached program brochure or visit our website www.fmsflearningsystems.org

For registering with us for the course, please visit our websitewww.fmsflearningsystems.org

Kindly Hurry!


Best wishes,

Sanjay Patra

Executive Director

FMSF

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

FCRA, 2010 Made Easy - 300 Q&A


Dear Friends,
Greetings!
I sincerely hope that you are all fine and your organisations are doing well to help the people for whom you work.

I am J.K. Chattopadhyay, former Deputy Secretary (FCRA), Ministry of Home Affairs, New Delhi. Some of you would kindly recollect about my earlier mails in November-December, 2012 requesting you to procure my book "FCRA, 2010 Made Easy ‒ 250 Q & A". The book has been sold out. I take this opportunity to convey my sincere thanks to all those who have evinced interest in the book and/or purchased it. Your enthusiastic response is a confirmation of my belief that such a book is needed not only for the NGOs across the country but also for the other practitioners of FCRA, viz., CAs and consultants.
Encouraged by your response, I have now come up with a revised and enlarged 2nd Edition of the book titled "FCRA, 2010 Made Easy ‒ 300 Q & A". In this 2nd Edition, I have added 50 new questions and rearranged certain questions & modified replies thereto in order to make the issues simpler. Further, all the latest procedural developments related to FCRA which were announced by the Ministry of Home Affairs (FCRA Wing) after publication of the first edition have been incorporated in this 2nd Edition.
I would like to reiterate that there is no other book like this because it provides answers to all the queries that are often raised about application of FCRA in various situations and issues not explained elsewhere and serves as a practical guidebook on FCRA and its applications.
From my experience as the former in-charge of MHA’s FCRA Wing, I know that apart from the organisations desirous of obtaining registration or prior permission under FCRA, even those who have got the same need guidance on various issues from time to time. Further, of late MHA is taking measures towards enforcing compliance of the Act by the organisations, e.g., cancellation of registration of a large number of associations for defaulting to file annual returns; recent notification for imposition of penalty for delay in submission of annual returns, even where no FC was received, and therefore, scrupulous compliance would be a deciding factor in the coming days, especially for renewal of registration. I can assure you that the book fulfills the aim of helping the NGO sector in this regard.
I request you to kindly go through the attached flier wherein I have indicated the highlights of the book and order a copy for your organisation. I also request you to kindly pass on this mail to the NGOs known to you.

Thanking you,

Sincerely yours,

J.K. Chattopadhyay

Residence

B – 343 (G.F.), C.R. Park
New Delhi – 110019
Mobile: +919868213579 / +919868208979
Landline: 011-26271788
E-mail: jkch22@yahoo.com / jkchat@gmail.com

P.S.
The price of the book is Rs. 600/- (Please add Rs. 70/- as courier charges if DTDC courier service is available at your place OR please add Rs. 100/- if you wish to receive the book by Speed Post). (Attractive discount on purchase of 5 and more copies).
The amount may be deposited in the following Bank Account and a scanned copy of the Bank receipt may be e-mailed to me:

Name of the Bank: Corporation Bank
Branch: Lodhi Complex
Address: Block 11, Ground Floor, C.G.O. Complex, New Delhi-110003
IFSC Code: CORP0000371
Name of A/c: J.K. Chattopadhyay
A/c No: 037100101014890 (To be quoted for RTGS/NEFT)

The amount may also be paid through Cheque/Demand Draft/Pay Order in favour of Mr. J.K. Chattopadhyay and sent to me at my residential address duly mentioning complete postal address and mobile number of the recipient. The book may also be collected from my residence.












The only Certificate Course in fundraising for aspiring fundraisers

The SAFRG Institute of Fundraising offers a short term Certificate Course in Fundraising & Communication to help you become a more effective fundraiser.


Who should attend?


The course is suitable for new and aspiring fundraisers to learn a new skill or boost an existing one.


Why should you attend?


Certificate course modules are rigorously developed, regularly updated and delivered by top quality sector experts who understand the current fundraising climate and the challenges you face.


The emphasis is on class-room teaching so as to provide you with a highly interactive experience; group numbers are strictly limited to allow you the time and space to engage effectively with your peers and trainer.


Course dates


14 – 20 July, 2014, J-1, Udyog Nagar, Peeragarhi, New Delhi – 110 041


Course topics


Fundraising Fundamentals Communication technique


Building donor relations Fundraising techniques Fundraising strategy


Scholarships available for individual participants


Avail early bird discount till 30th June 2014


Contact us


South Asian Fund Raising Group


Tel. – 011 41489060


Email – programs@safrg.org, course@safrg.org visit http://safrg.org/new/cc-fundraising

SAFRG fundraising and communication course

A pristine opportunity for all the Fundraisers to learn the formula of Fundraising..!!

South Asian Fund Raising Group brings you a unique training workshop. This course would last 7 days in which the participants would gain in-depth knowledge of Fundraising by professionals. It is also useful for the ones who are looking forward to their career in Fundraising.

So. if you want to improve your Fundraising skills and continue with personal development, register yourself as soon as possible. we have limited seats.

Registration link: http://www.safrg.org/ccfc-registration

For any further queries contact us at programs@safrg.org or nandita@safrg.org

01141489060

Website: http://www.safrg.org/

RT's Blog on the debate over IB report on NGO

Dear All,

The Intelligence Bureau has prepared a report on the foreign funded NGOs in India (FFNGOs) wherein they have alleged that several NGOs and activists are deliberately stalling the development process in India by their protests and activism against various development projects. The report states that the negative impact of these NGOs activism on the GDP growth is assessed to be 2-3% and therefore these NGOs have been called a threat to India’s national economic security.

This has started a serious debate in the Indian media. Does the timing of this planned leak of the IB report speak of new government’s intention to reign in independent and critical voices of NGOs? Is this report the first of its kind? What would be its impact on the new Government’s slogans like ‘Minimum Government, Maximum Governance’? Dr. Rajesh Tandon writes about these issues in his latest blog update “Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas” (Work with All, For Development of All)”

Please find below the link to the PDF version of the blog, shared on PRIA’s SlideShare account. Please read, give your valuable feedback and share with your networks.

http://www.slideshare.net/PRIAIndia/rajesh-tandon-views-ib-report-on-foreign-funded-ngos

With Regards,

President's Office
PRIA, New Delhi

Sunday, June 22, 2014

Arise, Awake and Stop Not till the GOAL is Reached


Permanent Lok Adalat


Good Thoughts


http://socialjustice.nic.in 

Source: http://epaper.prameyanews.com/  news paper: 22.06.2014

Cos use foreign money for political funding. Isn’t that influencing polls?



A recent Intelligence Bureau (IB) report has claimed that some well-known NGOs are working to stall economic development at the behest of their foreign donors. Activists and rights groups have been up in arms ever since the report was leaked. In an interview with Fawaz Shaheen, Colin Gonsalves, eminent Supreme Court lawyer, constitutional expert and founder of the Human Rights Law Network, discusses foreign funding and the fears of India's civil rights activists:

The leaked IB report claims that under the garb of "people-centric issues" certain NGOs are working to stall development projects, resulting in a loss of about 2-3 % of the GDP. Do you agree with this assessment?

Not at all, this is an issue of environmental protection. Let's take the nuclear energy issue. There are some sections of society that point out its adverse effects. These are not people who are anti-national . It is their point of view, in the nation's interest, that India should go towards renewable sources of energy and that nuclear power is dangerous. We must recognize that these activists are doing a public service, which many people may disagree with. But they don't have the state power to enforce their point of view, all they can do is they can write and talk. That is a constitutionally protected activity.

But isn't there a need for faster clearances of projects, which are often held up due to protests, so that the economy can be put back on track?

If you're saying decisions on environmental clearances should be taken quickly and without any bureaucratic delay I would agree with you. What seems to be the impression from this new government is that they will clear projects irrespective of what environmental law may say. That may not be entirely lawful.

The report effectively accuses organizations like People's Movement Against Nuclear Energy (PMANE) of espionage. Do you think these accusations are correct?

It is ridiculous. We have seen over the last years, many corporations are involved in cases of fraud and scams. Have you ever seen anyone accuse a company of espionage? These NGOs are credible associations internally and nationally, yet the state accuses them of espionage. Is there even a single piece of evidence?

Then why do you think the IB is making these allegations?

Because they get the mood of their political masters. First it was Manmohan Singh who said people who oppose nuclear energy are anti-national . And the present dispensation also seems to have the idea that if you're opposed to nuclear energy, you're opposed to the nation's development. The truth is to the contrary.

In the wake of this report, many activists have been alleging that the Foreign Contribution Regulation

Act (FCRA) is designed to target dissenting voices. Is this a valid claim, or a case of shooting the messenger?

It's absolutely valid. In our country, a corporation can bring into the country crores of foreign money, without any prior permission. On the other hand you have NGOs. There are three kinds of NGOs. First, there are a whole range o f Hi n d u t va NGOs. They're collecting money; they're using it for semi-political and political purposes, but nobody is doing any investigation or asking for any details. Secondly, there are police officials and retired bureaucrats who apparently have set up NGOs in their wives' names and are collecting money from companies, government and other sources. Thirdly, there are NGOs many of them with small funds which have closed down as the funds have dried up, and it is these NGOs that have not submitted their reports, about which such a huge hue and cry is being raised in the media. But of all the NGOs mentioned in the IB report , there is not a single one that has not filed its annual report and audited accounts.

When the FCRA bans foreign funding for "organizations of a political nature", do you not think this is a valid restriction?

This phrase must be interpreted as meaning using foreign funds for support of political parties and not to stifle legitimate criticism. Suppose you are criticizing the Congress or the BJP government, for legitimate constitutional concerns, that doesn't mean you're an "organization of a political nature". That is civil society criticism.

But don't you think that foreign funds bring with them foreign influence?

Many of the corporations in this country supported the NDA government. Now these companies are bringing in huge amounts of foreign money, and using some part of it for political funding. So it is foreign money influencing an election, is it not? The NGOs, by contrast, bring in relatively minuscule amounts of foreign money.

In view of all this, do you think the FCRA needs to be amended?

Yes it does. For commercial purposes there are no controls, but for social work NGOs are over regulated. This discrimination needs to be abolished. Under the existing law, every NGO submits its reports annually and they are put up on the home ministry website. If money is being misused, they should be prosecuted under the normal law. So we're not saying no to accountability.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/opinion/interviews/Cos-use-foreign-money-for-political-funding-Isnt-that-influencing-polls/articleshow/36992505.cms

India CSR Summit 2014 CSR Impact Awards and IdeaPitch


Dear Sir/Madam,

NGOBOX has emerged as the biggest development sector platform in India in last two years. Our two
flagship events ‘Better Healthcare through CSR’ and ‘Better Education through CSR’ have been landmark forums to bring together businesses, NGOs and Government Agencies to forge CSR partnerships.

Taking a step further, we present to you two days event ‘India CSR Summit 2014’ to be held on 17-18 September 2014. The event venue is India International Centre, New Delhi. (Know more)

India CSR Summit 2014
The four pillars of this two days event are:
• Conference
• Networking Sessions
• CSR Impact Awards (For CSR Implementing partners)
• IdeaPitch (CSR Project ideas)

Five Thematic Tracks (Sessions) in the Conference:
• Education
• Environment
• Healthcare
• Livelihoods
• Special Categories (Old Age, Women Empowerment, Specialy-abled etc)

Target Participants
• Overall 350+ participants
• 180+ Organizations
• 70+ CSR Heads/Managers
• 100+ NGO Leaders
• 170+ CSR Executives, top management of NGOs, Consultants, Communication persons, Fundraisers
• Government officials

Pitch Your CSR Idea to CSR Heads (IdeaPitch)
IdeaPitch is an initiative of NGOBOX to kindle innovative and impactful CSR project ideas under the ambit of the CSR rules as defined in the Section 135 and the Schedule VII of the Companies Act 2013. We invite CSR project implementing agencies (eligible under the provisions of the Companies Act 2013) to submit their CSR project ideas /concepts for the IdeaPitch. Ten best project-ideas will be selected as per the process mentioned below and will be presented to the CSR Heads/Managers and other participants in ‘India CSR Summit 2014’. Apply before 25th July 2014. (Know more)

CSR Impact Awards 2014 (For implementation partners)
CSR Impact Award 2014 is an initiative to encourage CSR project implementing agencies to deliver high impacts through CSR projects and adopt multi-stakeholder approach leading to excellence in project outcomes. This initiative will focus on identifying high impact CSR projects (already implemented or ongoing) in eight categories at Pan-India level.
We have partnered with institutions and organizations of repute to take collaborative steps to recognize CSR partners with excellence in delivering through partnership, persistence and project or programme-based approach. Apply before 25th July 2014. (Know more)

To explore association/partnership/registration and other opportunities get in touch with us.

Regards
Bhomik
Team NGOBOX
+91-9560352170
Email: bhomik@ngobox.org
http://www.ngobox.org/ics/
http://ngobox.org/

Friday, June 20, 2014

Helping each other


Road safety begins with self-discipline


10 Management Tips for Great Leaders


Free legal aid for poor and needy in odisha


Benefits of using latrine - Odia


FCRA a tool to gag critics: Activists


The Intelligence Bureau report on the economic impact of foreign funded-NGOs has set off a storm with its allegations of foreign interests working to sabotage the Indian economy through a handful of NGOs. The concerned organizations have claimed that the report is not only baseless, but also motivated by a desire to silence legitimate questioning of government policies.

The law at the centre of this controversy is the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA), 2010. Aside from the present affair, a growing number of activists and social workers have been alleging that the FCRA is being used to silence questioning of government policy on certain issues.

The FCRA is a law meant to regulate flow of foreign funds to individuals or organizations in India. It was first enacted in 1976, during the Emergency. The main concern cited then was to check the purported presence of "foreign hand" in the activities of opposition parties. After the law was passed, no individual or association could receive foreign funds unless they were registered under the FCRA.

In 2010, when the present law was being discussed in Parliament, the concern of most lawmakers seemed to be foreign funding of NGOs. As a result, a strong law was passed with strict regulation mechanism and severe penalties. Subsequently, the MHA was given the task of directly overseeing all operations under FCRA. Apart from prohibiting politicians, government officers, journalist and news organizations from receiving foreign funds, the law creates strict rules regulating the acceptance of foreign funding by NGOs.

At that time, concerns about misuse of the FCRA provisions were brushed aside, but subsequent events have reignited fears of selective targeting of NGOs involved in questioning or opposing government activities.

The first major outcry was raised in March 2012, with the cancelling of FCRA registration and freezing of bank accounts of four NGOs whose office bearers or members were involved in anti-nuclear protests in Kudankulam. These NGOs were Tuticorin Multipurpose Social Service Society, Tuticorin Diocese Association, Good Vision Charitable Tryst and People's Education for Action and Community Empowerment.

Harsh Jaitli, CEO of the Volunteer Action Network India, points to the fact that none of the four NGOs have yet been prosecuted according to the provisions of FCRA, but the suspension of their registration is regularly renewed. This in itself creates the suspicion that the authorities do not have any actual evidence to put up in a court of law, but merely want to curtail the NGOs' activities.

The reason given by the Home Ministry's FCRA wing on its website for these cancellations was simply stated as "On Violation". This vagueness is further compounded by the fact that the FCRA itself leaves much to the discretion of executive authority when it comes to the cancellation of registrations. Apart from the various grounds specifically mentioned in the Act, Section 14(c) allows the Central government to cancel a certificate of registration if in its "opinion" it is necessary in the "public interest" to do so. This effectively translates into absolute authority for the MHA to cancel FCRA registration without any real oversight.

Further, once an organization is declared to be of a "political nature", its bank accounts are immediately frozen and FCRA registration is cancelled by virtue of Section 5.

Apart from individuals or organizations involved in contesting elections, what constitutes "organization of political nature" is defined in Rule 3 of FCRA Rules 2011. It includes any organization that participates in "bandh or hartal, rasta roko, rail roko or jail bharo in support of public causes..." or has an ideology or objectives that may be called "political".

Kabir Dixit, a lawyer connected with the petition against FCRA regulations pending in the Supreme Court, claims that it is "...impossible not to violate the FCRA... Any organization, whose objective can be interpreted in the widest sense as 'political', can be booked under the law". Anil Choudhary of the Indian Social Action Forum (INSAF), the NGO which has challenged the validity of FCRA before the Supreme Court (and which is also named in the present IB report), believes that the law is just another "instrument for the State to contain or crush dissenting voices".

Although the law does require the Central government to give appropriate reasons in writing before cancellation of registration, including reasonable time to respond, such regulations are not always followed.

For instance, when INSAF's FCRA registration was suspended in 2013, it was set aside by the Delhi HC because of "... failure of the Central government to record the reasons which necessitated suspension of the certificate..." not only at the initial stage, but also before the court.

Harsh Dobhal of the Human Rights Law Network says that "NGOs are not merely foreign-funded entities, they are part of civil society. Any attempt to throttle them, whether by FCRA or any other law, is an attempt to criminalize the right to dissent."

While transparency in the functioning of NGOs is definitely a must, and foreign funds do need to be regulated, it is still doubtful whether an Emergency-era law that leaves too much to executive discretion without any mechanisms of oversight, is the way to do it.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/FCRA-a-tool-to-gag-critics-Activists/articleshow/36858592.cms

Wednesday, June 18, 2014


In a democracy, NGOs must be allowed to voice opposition to government policies


An Intelligence Bureau report accusing foreign-funded NGOs of instigating or assisting protests and demonstrations against development projects, especially those related to nuclear plants and coal-based power units, have provoked legitimate concern among civil society associations. The classified report is indicative of a siege mentality, suspecting international NGOs like Greenpeace India for penetrating and subverting Indian partner agencies in their alleged objective to stall development initiatives that require environment clearances.

Such suspicions — often based on incomplete or flimsy information that seeks to establish subversive linkages — stem from Soviet-style functioning. Orwellian methods have no place in a free and democratic society where NGOs are entitled to espouse views opposed to that of the government. These views are often one-sided and ideologically driven, while governments typically have to weigh a plethora of factors before arriving at a decision. Governments, therefore, have every right to reject recommendations made by NGOs. But they must allow them to make those recommendations, instead of seeing conspiratorial political activity and assuming a threat to national security in everything they do.

Intelligence agencies are mandated to keep watch over the flow of unauthorized funds and the manner in which they are utilised. Some degree of regulation of foreign monetary contributions is lawful and necessary. But curbing criticism of government policies and viewing all NGOs as having the potential to destabilise development is deplorable. By doing a cut-and-paste and apparently lifting passages from a Modi speech delivered many years ago, IB may be going overboard to please the new executive. It needs to do its job, rather than take the easy way out and curry favour with political masters. And if the NDA government wants to suppress NGOs, it should remember that RSS too is an NGO.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/36616847.cms?intenttarget=no

Why NGOs need to be brought down from their high pedestal


The brouhaha over the Intelligence Bureau (IB) report on non-governmental organisations (NGOs) may be overdone, but we must thank the IB for at least one thing: the debate on the role of NGOs has been opened up, and it needs to continue.

While the IB report needlessly paints them as villains - a point savaged by Surjit Bhalla in The Indian Express last week - we need this debate precisely because NGOs get by without detailed public scrutiny merely because they claim to represent people's interests. For anyone to claim legitimacy, they need this figleaf of representing civil society - though there is no way of verifying this.

In a democracy, the only people who can claim some degree of public legitimacy are the politicians, for they at least go to the people once in five years asking for their votes and get themselves elected. Even the losers can claim some public support for their stand. The rest of the people claiming to represent the people are merely private pressure groups or narrow interests - which includes you, me, the corporate sector and NGOs of various stripes.

In this article, I would like to make three points.

One, NGOs are no different from corporations. Merely because they are non-profits does not mean they are different. They have their own “profit motives” and vested interests.

Two, they deserve closer scrutiny just as corporations do. They should welcome it.

NGOs get by without detailed public scrutiny merely because they claim to represent people's interests. Representational Image. Reuters

Three, their claims to moral certainty in matters of environment and renewable energy need to be challenged. Whether it is Greepeace, or various organisations committed to rolling back coal and nuclear power, they cannot claim a right to the truth that is not self-evident. They claim to be "prophets" of people-based development, and this "prophet motive" may not stand on a higher pedestal than the corporate sector's "profit motive."

This is not to demonise them. NGOs are vital to a democracy, for they bring new ideas and challenge the status quo by organising the people and bringing their own “facts” to the table. But there is no need to put them on a pedestal and think they are beyond scrutiny. Today's Indian Express (16 June), for example, reports that even though NGOs received Rs 12,500 crore from abroad in 2013, barely two percent of them reported it. The money was often not used for the purposes for which it was meant. As Jay Mazoomdar wrote in Firstpost, this is what needs investigation. We certainly don’t need witch-hunts.

However, even without a witch-hunt, I believe it would be a good thing to look closely at what the NGOs are saying and doing, and challenge them on their positions. Democracy, after all, is not only about NGOs challenging government and those in power; it also means citizens, and even government, challenging the claims of NGOs. The challenge clearly must be on facts, issues and claims.

In India, we tend to privilege non-profits over profit-seeking enterprises, possibly because the former are "social workers", or selfless entities who do good without seeking anything in return. However, this is a myth.

In terms of basic intents and purposes, there is almost no moral difference between a corporation seeking profits for promoters and shareholders and a non-profit seeking to fight for a cause (environment, tribals) or doing charity.

A corporation seeks customers. It seeks to sell products to them above cost so that it can make a profit and share it with stakeholders - including government. In the process it creates jobs, a socially valuable service. While doing its job, it may also do damage - empty wastes into rivers, pollute the atmosphere, or exploit natural resources without regard to the environment.

An NGO is a corporation without a financial profit motive or promoters. But it has donors - the people who provide the resources for its work. It has customers, the people it claims to serve. Its workers may not receive much pay or may even work for free, but they get psychic incomes (the feel-good from contributing). We must not assume that if a work is done for free, it somehow is beyond scrutiny. Even work done in the name of god or the poor needs to be tested in broad sunlight – free from biases.

If we accept that NGOs and corporations are two similar types of organisations driven partly by self-interest, we need yardsticks to measure whether they are doing net good or harm.

When it comes to companies, we can put jobs, incomes, tax payments and community spends on the positive side of the ledger. Environmental damage, flouting of the law and ill-treatment of workers can appear on the negative side. Put both the positives and negatives together, and we have some idea about whether a corporation is doing more good than harm. Broadly speaking, the negative side – environmental damage, etc – is tougher to measure, unless one merely adds up the cost of cleaning up a polluted river, or the time and effort involved in planting the 10,000 trees cut to set up a factory or coal mine.

Greenpeace activists putting up a banner in the Taj Lands End hotel swimming pool in this file photo. Reuters

When it comes to NGOs, the positive side is tougher to measure. Here, one is not talking of NGOs that offer specific services like education, or healthcare, or distributing food packets after a flood. These simply need auditing and measurement, and the scrutiny must focus on whether the effort and money put in are worth it in terms of outcomes.

But the NGOs that the IB report talks about are basically into “causes” relating to environment and social issues, some bordering on the political. Here, the positive side is tougher to measure.

What, for example, is the damage to the environment from a new dam beyond the people displaced (who need to be rehoused and rehabilitated) and trees cut? What is the damage caused by a new coal mine?

Many NGOs oppose these kinds of development projects even though these projects have both beneficiaries and losers. The things we need to measure are whether there are more winners than losers, whether the losers are adequately compensated, and weigh the short-term gains against unknown long-term costs.

For example, stopping a coal-based power plant on the plea that it causes pollution and global warming is not an unchallengeable proposition. The coal mine provides jobs and incomes. It provides power to drive industry and even to villages. How do we measure these benefits against the future cost of environmental damage? Can the latter be mitigated by compensatory work?

Also, the moral certainties of NGOs trying to stop coal or nuclear projects and replacing them with renewable sources of energy need to be challenged, too.

While it is easy to point a finger at grimy coal, the downsides of renewable energy, including solar and wind power, are being seriously underestimated.

Take solar energy. It needs lots of land. Is land a cheap or abundantly available commodity in India, especially in the context of the UPA’s ill-thought-out Land Acquisition Bill? Matt Ridley, in his book The Rational Optimist, says that to replace conventional power in a country like America with solar power would require land equivalent to the size of Spain. As for wind power, Ridley writes: “Wind turbines require five to ten times as much concrete and steel per watt as nuclear plants, not to mention miles of paved roads and overhead cables.” Needless to point out, cement, steel and cables are all products of extractive industries that NGOs love to rant about.

As for global warming, even if we assume it is a certainty, it will bring an increase in sea levels and threaten coast-based habitations. But warming, if it happens, may reduce the global water shortage for it will increase evaporation from the oceans and bring in more rain, notes Ridley.

And solar power brings its own pollution. The photovoltaic cells have silicon, and toxic metals like mercury in them. No human activity is free from side-effects.

Germany, which had announced ambitious plans for generating 40 percent of its power through renewable sources by 2025, is now scaling back given the huge costs.The point for India is this: if rich Germany, with its negative population demographics, thinks it cannot over-subsidise renewable energy, what is the chance that India, with its exploding demographics, can quickly replace fossil fuels with renewable energy?

There is no way India can meet the needs of its growth without coal or nuclear or hydel energy. We have to emphasise renewable sources, but what we need is a rational debate and a balanced approach.

For those who things the greens have all the right answers, they should read The Skeptical Environmentalist by Bjorn Lomborg, a former greenie who got disillusioned with the untruths and exaggerations being peddled by the environmental lobby.

The NGOs have to redo their sums and not oppose every coal-based power plant or nuclear project blindly. It is upto them to prove that they are not anti-development. Right now, that’s not clear.

Source: http://www.firstpost.com/india/why-ngos-need-to-be-brought-down-from-their-high-pedestal-1572525.html

How India treats its NGOs



By: MAJA DARUWALA AND VENKATESH NAYAK

In a case of giving a dog a bad name and hanging him, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) has submitted a report damning foreign-funded NGOs for stalling development and giving to Western powers undue leverage over India. Notwithstanding that it is a confidential document, it has been widely reported in the press, though no official confirmation of its receipt has been made.

The report suggests that the activities of some not-for-profits account for a 2 to 3 per cent loss in the GDP. How the loss has been calculated is uncertain. Nor can we tell how this compares with, say, the losses incurred through environmental degradation, rampant corruption, crony capitalism or money stashed abroad. That aside, the report exploits a longstanding suspicion of NGOs and civil society organisations, a legacy of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s Emergency and her favourite defence for her failings, the covert “foreign hand”.

NGOs are legal entities, like companies and cooperatives. They are formed by like-minded individuals who come together to promote their ideas or products. The Constitution allows these collective activities under the right to associate and to follow one’s livelihood, as long as their aims and objectives are legal and non-violent. The right to associate isn’t limited to associating with fellow countrymen but extends to associating with like-minded groups all across the world. Just as companies do business with counterparts abroad, NGOs can receive funds and share aspirations across borders. There is nothing inherently wrong with that. Myriad laws require all associations to be transparent and report regularly. Each year, like everyone else, NGOs must provide audited accounts and submit to the discipline of the Income Tax Act, the Societies Registration Act and labour laws.

In fact, NGOs are unfairly overregulated. Every rule singles them out for extra restriction and scrutiny. In the 1990s, when the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act was repealed and the more liberal Foreign Exchange Management Act was brought in to benefit individuals and companies, NGOs were quite unjustifiably kept out of this liberalisation. An especially severe and more discretion-dependent regime was brought in under an inexplicably draconian Foreign Contribution Regulation Act, which allows for outright interference with internal management.

Licence raj forces NGOs to jump through hoops — they have to apply for fresh registration every five years, and it prohibits foreign funding for any activity dubbed “political” by the government and disallows the usual avenues of investment or equities so that they remain ever-dependent on charity. Despite scams and cheats, like Saradha, which have brought misery to millions and have held back decades of development, the goal of working for profit alone is deemed naturally laudable, while associating for a cause is seen as meriting suspicion. Profit-making companies are regulated by the registrar of companies but NGOs come under the home ministry, as if this sector is inherently a national security risk.

NGO voices can be a nuisance, for their dissent, their insistence on giving a voice to the poor, for pointing out inconvenient truths, challenging government action and insisting on accountability. But their work goes well beyond perceived pesky obstructionism.

It was civil society collectives like the Servants of India Society (founded by Gopal Krishna Gokhale), Dayanand Anglo-Vedic Education Society (founded by Lala Hansraj), the People’s Education Society (founded by B.R. Ambedkar) and the Mohammedan Anglo-Oriental College (founded by Syed Ahmed Khan) that fuelled the independence struggle and spread, beyond boundaries, the ideas of non-violence as a weapon against oppression. Today, NGOs, foreign-funded or otherwise, are deeply involved in the expansion of freedoms and improvements to quality of life. They implement huge government schemes, such as midday meal programmes, mobile health clinics and skills development for rural and urban youth. These are themselves supported by foreign aid routed through government. Organisations such as Sewa help hundreds of thousands of women and are the self-help model for other nations. The women’s empowerment movement, the push against bonded labour, against corruption, for reform of institutions like the police and other national campaigns for ordinary people’s right to information, right to work, housing, education and food security have been fuelled by NGOs working in partnership with progressives abroad. Their contribution to the GDP must surely be incalculable.

Undoubtedly, vociferous individuals and active associations sometimes step on bureaucratic toes, but the last 20 years under both the BJP and the Congress have seen a welcome growth of citizen participation in governance. Yet, the report allegedly castigates agenda-setting, drafting documents, writing in the media, highlighting scholars-turned-activists and lobbying diplomats and governments for a cause.

It resentfully points out that NGOs combine with outside interests to criticise the government at forums that look at child rights, labour laws, women’s issues and environmental protection. But these are international forums that the government has voluntarily submitted itself to. International evaluation of progress and shortfalls encourages change at home. How can this be bad for progress and development? For instance, it is thanks to civil society efforts at home and abroad that government is considering a much improved anti-torture law. Who but the most cruel and insensitive would think that to be meddling? All wisdom does not rest in government or at home. That is why governments seek aid and corporations financial infusions and technological know-how. Why deny this to others in civil society who work for public interest and not for profit?

Name-calling in the press has a ready audience, and insults like “anti-national” stick even when there is no evidence. It is unfair. It forebodes an intolerance that calls to mind Indira Gandhi’s Emergency. To see dissent, debate and critique as anti-national is too petty, especially for a new government that is powerful and unassailable. Its bureaucracy has been given the go ahead to repair, reconstruct, be decisive and been promised protection as it moves boldly forward. This should not be seen as an opportunity to steamroll inconvenient civil society associations that nevertheless command a legitimate space in our democracy and will populate the “inclusive” in the inclusive development promised. Suppression of legitimate voices and activities creates the space for underground and violent actors when this is the last thing a “civil” society wants or identifies with. To hold that a cry for justice is anti-development or anti-national is an affront to the mass of people who only want to be part of the benefits and not lose out into destitution.

India’s role in international forums as the leading voice demanding an end to Apartheid is written in golden letters across history. Today, India is lauded as a living example of a diverse, noisy, flourishing democracy even as it struggles to overcome poverty. This is a singular signifier of its legitimacy and leadership and what sets it apart from China in the finest possible way. Much of this is attributable to the presence of a vibrant civil society.

True democracies celebrate the involvement of citizens, deepen it at every level and make consultation a habit. Bureaucrats, law-makers and institutions alike should be working hard to include and protect civil society and NGOs rather than trying to bully and frighten people whose only weapon is words and the ability to openly organise while submitting to the regulatory regime imposed on them. As it seeks its rightful role in international affairs, India, as one of the leading democracies of the world will be judged, in part, by the way it treats its civil society.

The writers work at the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative, Delhi

Source: http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/how-india-treats-its-ngos/99

Monday, June 16, 2014

A 7-day Short Term Certificate Course in FUNDRAISING and COMMUNICATION



South Asian Fundraising Group is conducting a 7 day Course on Fundraising and Communication. The aim is to create fundraisers who can then strategise, plan and implement Fundraising in their organizations to realise the immense potential that exists.

The course is unique as it is based on:

v Indigenous experiences and case studies - it is an adapted model but fully indigenized.

v Region specific content.

v Focused on clear learning outcomes that can be assessed.

v It is systematic, comprehensive, practical and includes all that fundraisers need to know about fundraising.

v It is affordable, accessible and will be certified.

Clear Learning outcomes: When completed, participants will have specific tools, knowledge and skills which they can apply in a practical way when planning, developing strategy and implementing fundraising in their workplace. Participants will be:

v Able to critically analyse the strengths and weakness of their organizations existing resource base;

v Formulate a simple fundraising plan on how to diversify resources;

v Identify main funding sources and appropriate techniques to secure them;

v Understand communication and its importance to fundraising; and

v Set up effective systems for reporting and communicating with donors.

This intensive course is designed to educate, motivate, and inspire students to become an indispensable part of the organizational team. The course will cover five core modules on resource mobilisation - these are:

v Fundamentals of Resource Mobilisation

v Communication Techniques

v Building Donor Relations

v Fundraising Techniques

v Fundraising Strategy

Dates – July 14-20, 2014

Location – New Delhi

Venue – J-1, Udyog Nagar, Peeragarhi, New Delhi – 110 041, INDIA

For more information regarding the course, visit www.safrg.org or email programs@safrg.org or Nandita@safrg.orgor call +91 11 4148 9060

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Happy FATHER'S Day


Happy FATHER'S Day




Happy Father's Day


Applications are invited for schemes of Grant-In-Aid of the Ministry of Women & Child Development

DEPARTMENT OF WOMEN & CHILD DEVELOPMENT
GOVT. OF NATIONAL CAPITAL TERRITORY OF DELHI
INVITING APPLICATIONS FOR GRANT IN AID TO VOLUNTARY ORGANISATIONS

Applications are invited from eligible voluntary organizations for the year 2014-15 under various schemes of Grant-In-Aid of the Ministry of Women & Child Development, Govt. of India, which are processed by the Voluntary Action Cell of the Departments of Women & Child Development, Govt. of NCT of Delhi. The last date for submission of application is 15.07.2014.

The schemes are:
1. SWADHAR- A Scheme for Women in Difficult Circumstances.
2. Construction/ Expansion of Hostel building for working Women with a Day Care Centre.
3. Short Stay Homes for Women & Girls.
4. Education Work for Prevention of Atrocities on Women
5. Organizational Assistance to Voluntary Organizations for Women & Child Development.
6. Grant In Aid for Research & Publications.
7. General Grant In Aid for Voluntary Organizations in the Field of Women & Child Development.
8. General Grant In Aid for Voluntary Organizations in the Field of Women & Child Development.
9. Support to Training & Employment Program (STEP)

See more at: http://www.wcddel.in/pdf/GIA_VAC_02062014.pdf

https://www.facebook.com/ministryWCD

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Please visit for new NGO informations

Please visit new facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/indianngos  for new NGO News, Funding announcements and other NGO related information's regularly.

If you are not able to open or access  the page please past https://www.facebook.com/indianngos  this link to your brauser's search bar to assess Indian NGO face book

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Indo-Global Social Service Society (IGSSS) invites proposals from NGOs for its Urban Poverty Programme


Indo-Global Social Service Society is issuing a call for proposals for its Urban Poverty Programme for 2015-17. We are seeking proposals from interested Indian NGOs as implementing partners in the following cities namely Ranchi, Dhanbad and Jamshedpur cluster in Jharkhand, Kolkata and Asansol cluster in West Bengal, Guwahati in Assam, Patna and Muzaffarpur cluster in Bihar, Jaipur in Rajasthan, Bhopal and Indore cluster in Madhya Pradesh, Bhubaneswar in Orissa, Raipur in Chhattisgarh, Agra, Lucknow, Allahabad, Jhansi and Ghaziabad in Uttar Pradesh,Ahmedabad, Surat and Vadodara cluster in Gujarat, Faridabad and Gurgaon cluster in Haryana and Mumbai and Pune in Maharashtra.

Submissions will be accepted only until 06th July, 2014.

The Context

Cities in India have grown by nearly 2.6% in the decade between 2001 – 2011 with 31.16% of India’s total population living in urban areas according to the 2011 Census. With nearly 377.10 million people living in the urban areas, urban planning and development are emerging areas for engagement of civil society organisations that work for equitable and just development.

While cities are the engines of India’s economic growth, cities have also become sites of struggle, material deprivation, informal, insecure livelihood and exclusion for a large segment of the population. 93 percent of total workforce in India is engaged in the informal sector of which the urban informal sector workers constitute a significant mass. The contribution of urban informal sector workers is pegged at over 50 percent in the GDP of India. However, the urban poor informal workers’ group face residential, social and occupational vulnerabilities and are not reflected within the city’s formal governance and planning process.

IGSSS has worked intensively on the issue of shelter rights of homeless residents during the years 2008 until now. It now envisages a strong engagement on the overall rights of urban poor informal workers in cities. The key constituencies for IGSSS’ urban programme are Construction workers, Street Vendors, Rickshaw pullers, Rag pickers, Domestic help, Child labor, Sex workers, Homeless, Migrant labourers and Slum/Pavement dwellers.

Focus Areas for Proposal

IGSSS is interested in partnering with NGOs and institutions for developing and implementing projects for the above categories of urban poor at priority locations, in the areas of assertion of their Legal Identity, Migration, Housing/Tenurial security, Enhancing participation of informal sector workers and other excluded groups in Urban Planning, City governance and social accountability, Labour rights and legal aid, Livelihood and Social Security, Access to Entitlements and Organisation of workers.

1.Eligibility

IGSSS is seeking small to medium sized NGOs as implementing partners with experience of working in urban areas/strong conviction and vision in the above identified areas, understanding of advocacy and ability to work with several key stakeholders and Government systems.

IGSSS is also interested to work with knowledge/resource partners (institutions) with expertise on the above focus areas. The knowledge/resource partners IGSSS is seeking will contribute to strengthening the dialogue and advocacy with duty bearers and critical stakeholders on issues of workers’ rights, municipal governance and urban planning.

Eligible organizations must fulfil the following criteria:

•Organization must be registered under Society’s Registration Act or Trust

•It must be registered with the FCRA division of Ministry of Home Affairs

•Must possess 12A certificate of Income Tax exemption under the Income Tax Act, 1961

•Implementing organizations must be capable in resource mobilization as there is a component of raising local contribution in the project (minimum 10 percent of the total project cost).Local contribution implies funds raised through other grant making bodies, Government institutions, CSR and individual donors. It does not consider beneficiary contribution.

2.Duration of support

The overall project is for a period up to 23 months (starting from April 2015)

3.Submission Procedure

Interested NGOs can submit the proposal along with budget (in soft copy only) for 23 months in the format attached in Annex I to V. Organizations must submit the above documents through email in appropriate formats as shared, at the following email address: urbanintervention@igsss.net

4.Legal Documents

NGOs whose proposals are short-listed will be contacted for submission of the following mandatory documents (which has to be self attested).

•Society Registration Certificate

•FCRA Registration Certificate

•12A Registration Certificate

•Audited Financial statement for last three years

•Income tax return for last three years

•FCRA return for last three years along with FC audited statement of accounts

5.Minimum and Maximum Limit

•For implementing NGOs and institutions, the total project budget per city will be in the range Rs. 10,00,000-Rs. 20,00,000 for 23 months (this will cover support from IGSSS as well as minimum 10 percent local contribution in cash raised by the applying NGO)

•For knowledge/resource partners, IGSSS’ support will be up to 4,00,000/- for mutually agreed time-frame

6.Last date for receiving proposal: 06th July, 2014

7.Language of the proposal

The proposals have to be submitted in English (using Times Roman Font, Size 12). In exceptional case where the interested NGO is not able to make the submission in English, Hindi language will be considered.

8.Cost of Proposal

The applying organisation shall bear all costs associated with the preparation and submission of the proposal. IGSSS will in no case be responsible or liable for those costs, regardless of the conduct or outcome of call for proposal.

9.Screening of the Proposals

•Proposals will be screened by a Committee formed by IGSSS

•Submission of proposal does not guarantee that the proposal will be accepted

•Only organizations whose proposals are short-listed will be communicated with, and asked to submit the statutory documents

•Decision of the Screening Committee of IGSSS will be final. IGSSS is no way obliged to respond to the rejection of the proposals. IGSSS also reserves the right to accept or reject any proposal, and to annul the call for proposal process and reject all proposals at any time prior to screening and selection procedure, thereby incurring no liability towards the affected Organization or any obligation to inform the affected Organization or organizations of the grounds for the organization’s action

•IGSSS will inform the shortlisted NGOs in writing after the decision of the screening committee

•Personal canvassing is strictly prohibited

10.Visit to NGOs/Due diligence

IGSSS will visit shortlisted Organizations to verify the credentials of the Organization and its work in the field. An Organizations’ proposal can be rejected if any discrepancy is found during the visit.

11.Signing of Agreement

After the verification visit to NGOs, IGSSS and the selected NGO will enter into agreement as per the existing norms, rules and regulation of IGSSS.

Detail Form - Call For Proposal – Urban Poverty Programme,June 2014 : http://igsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Call-For-Proposal-Urban-Poverty-ProgrammeJune-2014.pdf

Budget Template – Budget Template_EOI.UrbanPoverty.June 2014. : http://igsss.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Budget-Template_EOI.UrbanPoverty.June-2014..xls

Source: IGSSS Website : http://igsss.org/currentvacancies/call-for-proposals-urban-poverty-programme





Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Foreign-aided NGOs are actively stalling development, IB tells PMO in a report



SUMMARY

The report is first step to fast-tracking development, which is high on PM Narendra Modi’s agenda.

As a first step to fast-tracking development high on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s agenda, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) has submitted a classified document identifying several foreign-funded non-governmental organisations (NGOs) that are “negatively impacting economic development”.

“A significant number of Indian NGOs (funded by some donors based in the US, the UK, Germany, The Netherlands and Scandinavian countries) have been noticed to be using people centric issues to create an environment which lends itself to stalling development projects,” says the IB report marked to the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO).

“The negative impact on GDP growth is assessed to be 2-3 per cent per annum,” says the June 3 report, identifying seven sectors/ projects that got stalled because of NGO-created agitations against nuclear power plants, uranium mines, coal-fired power plants, farm biotechnology, mega industrial projects, hydroelectric plants and extractive industries.

While detailing what it calls “anti-development” activities by the NGOs during 2011-13, the 21-page report highlights their plans for 2014 and the areas that would come under pressure. These include a campaign against palm oil imports from Indonesia and disposal of e-waste of Indian IT firms, organising construction workers in urban areas, protests against identified projects such as Gujarat’s Special Investment Regions, Par Tapi Narmada River Interlinking Project and the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor.

The report says that while caste discrimination, human rights and big dams were earlier chosen by international organisations to discredit India at global forums, the recent shift in the choice of issues was to encourage “growth-retarding campaigns” focused on extractive industries, genetically-modified organisms and foods, climate change and anti-nuclear issues.

According to the report, the funding for such campaigns came from foreign donors under charitable garb for issues ranging from protection of human rights, violence against women, caste discrimination, religious freedom etc or to provide a “just deal” to the project-affected displaced persons or for protection of livelihood of indigenous people.

The NGOs become the central players in setting the agenda, drafting documents, writing in the media, highlighting scholars-turned-activists and lobbying diplomats and government, it says. “These foreign donors lead local NGOs to provide field reports which are used to build a record against India and serve as tools for the strategic foreign policy interests of the Western government,” adds the report.

“The strategy serves its purpose when the funded Indian NGOs provide reports, which are used to internationalise and publicise the alleged violations in international fora. All the above is used to build a

Source: http://www.financialexpress.com/news/foreignaided-ngos-are-actively-stalling-development-ib-tells-pmo-in-a-report/1258034