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Health-Based Journalism Training deadline 2020

The current listed application deadline is May 27, 2020. Use this page to verify timing fast, then move into the full grant record for planning, comparison, and drafting.

Agency
U.S. Mission to Uganda
Award range
$50,000 to $50,000
Total funding
$50,000
Funding instrument
Grant
CFDA / ALN
19.029
Cost share
No

Deadline Status

This deadline has passed

Review the full grant record for updated cycles, archived guidance, and adjacent opportunities.

Quick facts

Opportunity number
Not listed
Last updated
April 27, 2020
Expected awards
1

Deadline summary

The Public Affairs Section of the U.S. Mission in Uganda announces an open competition for media training organizations interested in submitting applications for a grant to implement and manage training of both print and broadcast mid-level journalists on how to effectively and accurately report about health stories with a focus on HIV/AIDS, Malaria, Tuberculosis, and other key health issues as agreed by the U.S. Mission. The project aims to support one of the U.S. Mission’s central goals...

Key dates

Posted
April 27, 2020
Deadline
May 27, 2020

Before you apply

Confirm the official submission path and any portal requirements.
Review the close date carefully and account for agency timezone handling.
Validate fit against the listed eligibility groups before investing drafting time.
This program expects about 1 awards, which can help frame competitiveness.

Eligibility snapshot

Others (see text field entitled "Additional Information on Eligibility" for clarification)&#8226Entities should be duly registered as non-profit organizations in Uganda. &#8226Established track record of training journalists (special emphasis on rural-based journalists)Ability to network with other media training organizations in these trainingsOrganization must have the ability to promote and defend the right to freedom of expression through research

• Entities should be duly registered as non-profit organizations in Uganda. • Established track record of training journalists (special emphasis on rural-based journalists); • Ability to network with other media training organizations in these trainings; • Organization must have the ability to promote and defend the right to freedom of expression through research, documentation, analysis, advocacy, strategic collaborations, and capacity building initiatives.