Sanofi is pleased to partner with One Young World to offer the Future Women in Tech Scholarship. This global program will enable five women leaders to participate in the One Young World Summit 2022 as part of Sanofi’s global delegation; have a fast-tracked opportunity to join Sanofi’s early careers program and receive 1:1 mentoring to support their first career steps in Sanofi.
What does the Scholarship provide?
Eligibility Criteria
You should apply for this programme if you:
For more information, visit
https://www.oneyoungworld.com/scholarships/sanofi/2022
The ARM Labs Lagos Techstars Accelerator Program is now open for applications to invest in early -stage fintech and proptech companies based in Africa. Techstars accelerators have one goal: to help entrepreneurs succeed. During each three-month program, they surround companies with the best mentors and an unrivaled network of corporate partners, investors, and fundraising opportunities, workshops and curated resources, not to mention countless moments where you can learn from your peers. It is a proven model that has helped build thousands of successful companies, all over the world.
Benefits
Eligibility Criteria
For more information, visit
https://www.techstars.com/accelerators/arm-labs-lagos
The Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism is pleased to launch the Tuition-free Product Immersion program for journalists and staff inside small to midsize news organizations who have little to no experience with product development and management but have an interest in adopting a product approach. Product Immersion for Small Newsrooms, an online, tuition-free training program for journalists by Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY, welcomes three new cohorts in 2022 – 2023, thanks to the support by partners News Product Alliance (NPA) and the Google News Initiative. Applications are open for the first cohorts, which will train 25 journalists from Europe, the Middle East and Africa from September to November, 2022.
Eligibility Criteria
For more information, visit
https://www.journalism.cuny.edu/2022/06/applications-open-for-new-product-immersion-cohorts/
The Global Soil Biodiversity Initiative (GSBI) is inviting researchers/research groups from the group of SoilBON collaborators, for projects and processes related to digital data mobilization of already collected soil biodiversity data. This initiative aims to substantially increase the amount of species distribution data openly available at GBIF and, with that, improve the capacity of soil ecologists around the world to address key ecological questions. These funds are made available through a collaboration between SoilBON and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF). All data submitted through this initiative should make use of available standardization tools provided by GBIF and uploaded though the SoilBON GBIF node. Attribution of the data, as well as the credits for the dataset remain with the data provider.
Funding Information
Up to $5,000 USD per project; 5-7 projects funded
Criteria
For more information, visit
https://www.globalsoilbiodiversity.org/soilbon-call-2
The Harvard Radcliffe Institute Fellowship Program is now open for applications. The Radcliffe Fellowship Program awards 50 fellowships each acidic year. Applicants may apply as individuals or in a group of two to three people working on the same project. They seek diversity along many dimensions, including discipline, career stage, race, and ethnicity, country of origin, gender and sexual orientation, and ideological perspectives. Although their fellows come from many different backgrounds, they are united by their demonstrated excellence, collegiality, and creativity. They welcome applications from a broad range of fields and perspectives. The strength of their fellowship program is its diversity.
Focus Area
They welcome proposals relevant to the Institute’s focus areas, which include:
Funding Information
Fellows receive a stipend of $78,000 plus an additional $5,000 to cover project expenses.
Eligibility Criteria
For more information, visit
https://www.radcliffe.harvard.edu/radcliffe-fellowship/become-a-fellow
The Global Health Advocacy Incubator has announced the applications for the Healthy Food Policy Advocacy Fund. The Advocacy Fund provides critical support to help advance promising legislative or regulatory efforts on healthy food policy. These policy priority areas include: taxes on sugary beverages and/or ultra-processed food, front-of-package nutrition labeling, restrictions on marketing of unhealthy food and beverages, and healthy public sector food environments, including schools. The Advocacy Fund may also be used to block harmful policies that would set negative precedents and undermine a healthy food policy environment. The Advocacy Fund is managed by the Global Health Advocacy Incubator and supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies.
Eligibility Criteria
The Advocacy Fund provides grants to not-for-profit entities, with strong preference given to civil society organizations in low and middle-income countries. GHAI encourages joint applications from up to three groups working collaboratively toward a healthy food policy win. The applicant or co-applicants must be working on a SMART (specific, measurable, achievable, timebound) policy objective. Ideally, the objective will be achievable within a 12–24-month time frame. The policy may be national or subnational and should ideally have a broader regional or global impact.
For more information, visit
https://advocacyincubator.org/healthy-food-policy-advocacy-fund/
Hubiquitous has launched an open call to accelerate 20 innovators in cross-border uptake and deployment of IoT digital solutions in five key sectors. The objective of this first open call is to support 20 African local entrepreneurs coming from Egypt, Ghana, Nigeria and Tanzania to improve their innovation creation capacities, to increase the investment opportunities for them and to facilitate the development of EU-African joint innovation project and ventures. Hubiquitous is a co-founded project from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 101016895. Hubiquitous will display relevant service implementations through a 6-month Accelerator Program.
Benefits
Awards
Eligible Countries: Egypt, Ghana, Nigeria, and Tanzania.
Eligibility Criteria
For more information, visit
https://hubiquitous.eu/first-open-call/
Applications are now open for the Palladium Challenge Fund which brings in ideas from their network in over 90 countries and partnership with over 1,600 organisations globally to source innovative responses to global challenges. The fund organisations and initiatives that:
Funding Information
To apply for funding up to AU$75,000.00
Eligibility Criteria
For more information, visit
https://thepalladiumgroup.com/news/Palladium-Launches-Call-for-Proposals-for-2022-Challenge-Fund
Under the banner of Generation Restoration, the Youth in Landscapes Initiative (YIL) and the Global Landscapes Forum (GLF) are launching the third edition of the Restoration Stewards program to support and highlight the work of young restoration practitioners and their teams, who represent the next group of ‘Restoration Stewards’. The year-long program provides funding, mentorship, and training to deepen the impact of youth-led restoration projects. The Restoration Stewards program supports young restoration professionals and their teams to further develop their restoration projects and raise awareness among their local communities about the importance of ecosystem restoration and healthy landscapes.
Funding Information
They receive a grant of EUR 5,000 to develop their restoration project.
Eligibility Criteria
For more information, visit
https://stewards.globallandscapesforum.org/about/
The Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism (WSCIJ), under its Collaborative Media Engagement for Development, Inclusivity, and Accountability (CMEDIA) project, invites investigative story pitches with a focus on subnational issues from journalists from all genres across Nigeria. The collaborative media project is designed as a multi-level intervention for media independence and government accountability. The project seeks to strengthen the media’s independence and presence and presence, especially at state and local government levels in a bid to improve public awareness and the ecosystem for accountability there. It is initiated by the WSCIJ, and funded by the MacArthur Foundation.
Journalists applying for this grant will be expected to investigate, produce and publish human interest stories issues at the subnational (state and local) levels of government, including but not limited to; health, rural dwellers, education, road infrastructure, girls and women, water, housing, insecurity, persons, with disability, electricity and agriculture or a mix of the issues.
WSCIJ will choose a maximum of three best story pitches per category.
Note: Journalists from reputable local media organisations focused on specific states and local governments are encouraged to apply.
For more information:
Visit the Official Webpage of the WSCIJ Collaborative Media Project
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