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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF FEBRUARY 1,1995 PSA#1274International Inc. 2000 M Street, N.W., Suite 200, Washington, D.C.
20036 B -- ALC GRANTS PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENT Grant proposals are now being
solicited under the U.S. Agency for International Development's
(USAID's) Central Asian Republics Rule of Law (CAR ROL) Project
(Contract No. CCN-0004-C-00-4004-01), as administered by the American
Legal Consortium (ALC) on behalf of Chemonics International, Inc. The
ALC is endeavoring to assist the Central Asian Republics in
establishing a political, legal and regulatory environment that
supports democratic governance and respect for human rights. The
Central Asian republics include Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan,
Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan. An essential component of ALC's project
is the ROL Small Grants Program, which is designed to support local
nonprofit organizatons (operating alone, or in partnership with a U.S.
organization) working on programs supportive of the project's goals
and contributing to the sustainability of the Rule of Law in the
region. Priority will be given to programs and activities that:
strengthen core legal institutions and processes, as well as civil
society as it relates to legal development; promote democratic legal
reforms; support an orderly transition to a market-based economy;
protect human rights; and promote democratic governance and limitations
on the arbitrary exercise of governmental power. Grants should support
educational and action-oriented programs with the potential to
mobilize other organizations and resources in the deveopment of ROL
activities. Qualified nonprofit organizations may include: private
voluntary organizaions (PVOs) non-governmenta organizatons (NGOs), and
official public institutions involved in research and educational
activities supportive of the Rule of Law. In the case of U.S.-local
partnerships, either party may submit the Grant Application forms, but
for administrative purposes, ALC will designate the U.S. partner as
responsible for discharging the grantee's obligations under the Grant
Agreement. Documentation of the partnership will be required. A grantee
organization must be legally registered and recognized as a nonprofit
or charitable entity under the laws of the country in which it
operates, or must have taken steps toward registration. Applications
from U.S. organizations must include documentary evidence of 501(c)(3)
status. The following are not eligible to receive ROL grant awards:
for-profit entities; political parties, groupings or institutions, or
their affiliates or subsidiaries; organizations that advocate, promote
or espouse anti-democratic policies or illegal activities. The
proposed activities to be funded under the Grants Program may be the
sole or primary work of a organization, or a special dimension or
function of an organizaton largely dedicated to other types of work.
Although support is not limited to any fixed categories of activities,
the following are illustrative: Helping citizens understand and gain
access to laws and legal information, Helping NGOs and civic
organizatons strengthen their rights and operate more effectively;
Helping citizens organize to advocate changes to the legal system and
promote public accountability of governmental agencies; Helping
citizens protect their individual and property rights; Helping citizens
utilize the legal system for the resolution or adjudication of
conflict; Helping citizens monitor legal developments affecting human
rights; Developing systems of private and quasi-public alternative
dispute resolution; Helping the public remove legal and regulatory
constraints on private sector commercial activities and property
ownership. Approximately $1.5 million is available under the Grants
Program over the course of the Contract Period (through December,
1996). Applications should be submitted for grants of more than $5,000
and less than $25,000; grants in excess of $25,000 will be considered
as an exception by the ALC Grants Committee. It is not anticipated
that the ALC will award any multi-year grants (i.e., grants spanning
more than one calendar year). The grantee must contribute at least 25%
of the total project budget from its own or other non-grant resources.
This contribution may be met through cost-sharing (internal) or
co-funding (external), or some combination of the two. The nature and
amount of this contribution must be clearly defined in the Grant
Application and the Grant Instrument, and the applicant must identify
the means to verify this contribution. The applicant must also
distinguish between co-funding that is already committed, and
co-funding that is only anticipated. Until June 30, 1995, grant
applications may be submitted at any time. Thereafter, applications
will be solicited and grants awarded on a quarterly basis, in
accordance with a schedule that will be advertised and shared with all
potential grantees that have inquired regarding the Grant Program. For
more information about application requirements and an official
application package, please contact: In Almaty: Grants Manager,
American Legal Consortium, 187 Furmanova Street, 3rd Floor, 480013
Almaty, Kazakhstan Fax 7-3272-507-662. In Washington, D.C. CAR ROL
Project Chemonics International, Inc., 2000 M Street, N.W., Suite 200,
Washington, D.C. 20036, Fax 202-955-3400. (026) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0025 19950131\B-0001.SOL)
B - Special Studies and Analyses - Not R&D Index Page
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