Small Grants Abstracts
The following provides information on ongoing and completed MEPI small grant projects throughout RO Tunis region of coverage.
ALGERIA
Saadi Film Documentary: “Algerian Women Today” – Algerian film director Hocine Saadi is producing and widely distributing a documentary film describing the life and achievements of four Algerian women. The women include the president of a non-governmental organization (NGO) for the disabled, the publisher of an Arabic-language newspaper, the youngest deputy in the Algerian National Assembly, and one of the top newspaper editors in the country. Saadi will use this film to demonstrate how the role of Algerian women has changed since the violence that shook the country in the 1990s, as well as the ability of these women and others to affect positive change.
ASP Boudiaf: “Acting for Social Development” – This project is designed to strengthen the capacities of local NGOs working on democratic reform initiatives through training programs and targeted consultations. The program will also help establish networks between local NGOs and other members of civil society, government agencies, and the business community. The core of the program involves management and financial training for the managers of 40 NGOs working on such activities as human rights, women’s rights, and youth activities, with follow on consultations for ten of the NGOs to ensure that they are being effective in their work.
Information and Documentation Center on Women's and Children's Rights (CIDDEF): “Campaign to Sensitize Citizens to Political Party Positions on Women’s Issues” – This grant provides support to help CIDDEF publicize the positions of Algerian political parties on issues such as domestic violence, women’s health, and employment ahead of the 2007 elections. After soliciting party views using a custom-designed questionnaire, CIDDEF will coordinate eight radio broadcasts with party members and hold a press conference to discuss the results. The grant also will fund the production and distribution of posters and flyers to educate citizens about party positions, stimulate interest in the elections, and provide concrete reasons for people to vote.
EGYPT
El Nakib Center for Training and Democracy Support: Training Young Lawyers on Principles of Human Rights and Democracy – This grant will create and train a cadre of 120 lawyers specializing in human rights issues to contribute to the enhancement of human rights, civil society, and democracy. The training will enable lawyers to better support civil society movements and institutions, monitor executive bodies, and assist their local communities with democratic and human rights development efforts. In an effort to sustain this initiative, 20 lawyers chosen from each of the four training courses will participate in a training-of-trainers program.
The Land Center for Human Rights (LCHR): Supporting Farmers Rights Under the New Changes – This project aims to safeguard the political, economic, and social rights of local farmers by developing awareness and spurring public debate on farming issues, while increasing participation of farmers in the political reform process. LCHR will organize educational courses for 40 farmers in different rural areas, prepare and distribute publications on farmers’ rights, and provide legal assistance. Training sessions conducted in rural governorates will address issues such as creating farmers unions and the effects of trade agreements on farmers’ rights.
The Afro-Egyptian Human Rights Organization (AEHRO): Know Your Rights – “Ahna Ashab El Haq” – Working through its civil society advocacy group Shayfeencom, AEHRO will use a MEPI grant to promote democracy in action by launching a civic education campaign aimed at raising public awareness throughout Egyptian society on the importance of rule of law and an independent judiciary. The grant will also fund grassroots organization of peaceful ‘sit-ins,’ Internet-based outreach to university students and other youth, as well as innovative marketing tools designed to build awareness among the Executive Branch on the widespread demand for change.
Lebanon
International Education Association: Nabatieh Youth Center – This project will provide informal education for 300 girls and boys, between the ages of 12 and 17, from 30 schools with after school activities designed to promote a better understanding of democracy. The program will train trainers to lead youth in activities that relate to improving their respective communities. Trainers will work with youth in groups, providing innovative instruction on such themes as the media and free press, internet technology, and protecting the environment.
Lebanese Center for Policy Studies (LCPS): Launching a Transitional Justice Program in Lebanon – This grant includes a series of roundtable discussions to bring together participants from government, academia, media, and civil society groups to develop suggestions for practical transitional justice programs. These programs will focus on four themes: recognition of the past and truth seeking, building trust between the state and citizens, reconciliation and public healing, and memory and memorialization. The grant will also bring the Common Ground film festival, a series of films that emphasize the common humanity shared by people in conflict, to Beirut.
Nahar Ash-Shabab Association: Shadow Government Project – This grant aims to empower Lebanese youth through projects focusing on political engagement and education. The grant will offer 31 students from 21 Universities the opportunity to form a “shadow government” to monitor political developments and act as a watchdog over the real government’s performance. Through a combination of academic training and practical application, students will be encouraged to become more active citizens, and with an eye toward a future role in the government.
Morocco
Association of Cooperation for Development and Culture (ACODEC): Women and the Family Code – This grant will help strengthen and increase awareness of the Moroccan family code, women’s rights under the code, and the role of women in local development. Fifteen one-day workshops will target 240 women from the Oujda region, a rural area in great need of assistance. Workshops will be conducted concurrently with a literacy project organized by ADODEC, in partnership with the Secretary of State for Literacy.
Forum for Moroccan Women (Joussour) and Aquarium Theater Company: Women’s Empowerment – Building on the success of a previous MEPI small grant, this project will use theatrical performances to explain the Moroccan family code in an entertaining and non-confrontational manner. Two tours of ten performances each will reach large audiences of women and men, many of whom are illiterate, in an effort to inform a larger and more diverse population about women’s legal rights. Each performance will end with an educational discussion group.
Tunisia
Junior Chamber International (JCI) Tunisia: Democratic Decision-Making Process – this grant will fund training sessions for 175 JCI presidents some 2,500 local chapter members throughout the country on the importance of “Robert’s Rules of Order,” as part of the democratic process. The training sessions will address topics such as how to run a democratic-style meeting, how to work effectively with difficult members, and how to better collaborate with government officials. The program is intended to infuse JCI’s many young leaders with a better understanding of democratic principles, including parliamentary and legal practices.
Institute of Journalism in Tunisia (IPSI): Creating a University Newspaper – This second year of MEPI funding will assist IPSI, which produces most of the journalists in Tunisia, to improve and further distribute a student-run newspaper. The project promotes analytical thinking and problem solving skills, empowers students to undertake projects of their own creation, and provides practical training for future journalists on topics such as objective reporting and freedom of expression. The new grant will again fund the exchange of American and Tunisian professors and students to both countries.
Regional Small Grant
Arab Institute for Human Rights (AIHR): MENA Civil Society Partnership for Democracy Expertise Building (PAD) – this grant will support the establishment of the Al Kawakibi Democracy Transition Center (KDTC) as a regional partnership to strengthen democracy expertise in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. The grant will support creation of a MENA democracy expertise roster and the preparation of country and regional assessment reports for 6 countries; coordination of a workshop to define KDTC strategies; organization of KDTC’s first Board of Trustees meeting; and the development of action-oriented projects.