20 نوفمبر 2019 Il y a 5 ans
Med Dialogue for Rights and Equality is a 3-year (2019 – 2022) EU-funded Technical Assistance regional Programme with the overall objective to strengthen the role of CSOs active at the regional scale, in building sustainable development, regional cohesion and resilience, as well as in influencing policy-making in the Southern Neighborhood and the Euro-Mediterranean Space. Mobilising local communities on regional issues of common concerns to influence the agenda of public decision-makers and regional institutions, and involving CSOs[1] in emerging regional platforms and thematic dialogues, makes its unique character.
Med Dialogue for Rights and Equality represents the continued commitment of the European Union in supporting the civil society in Southern Neighbourhood countries. It recalls the importance of the civil society as an agent for change, an essential component for democracy, whose participation in public processes and in policy dialogues would lead to more inclusive and effective policies, sustainable development, and accountability. It is also a strong reminder of the centrality of the civil society in EU’s various development policy frameworks, regional, thematic, and bi-lateral cooperation programmes, etc.
We are looking for young leaders who are committed to addressing Mediterranean policy challenges beyond national borders, in order to facilitate the development of regional networks, mutual skill-building, promoting advocacy, building channels of cooperation and developing local actions within a common framework. The main purpose of this activity, is to strengthen civil society’s young female and male activists in their capacity to strategise, cooperate together, and advocate for rights and equality in the region.
The Mediterranean is a unique eco-region. Its temperate climate, which has been domesticating the African heat and the Atlantic cold for millennia, and has produced extraordinary biodiversity, is in great danger today. Global warming, which is expected to severely hit this region, unsustainable fishing, forest fires and urbanisation are about to radically impoverish the beauty of our wild and rural sceneries and the richness of our biological heritage. Preserving the Mediterranean eco-region is not only a matter of preventing species’ extinction, nor only about defending our most celebrated healthy and diversified diet, or simply preventing the destruction of landscapes which have been created by Human Beings and Nature over the centuries. It is also about struggling against an advanced process of commodification of goods which belong to all humankind, the planet and future generations: water, soil, seeds and species, and air. There cannot be cultural diversity without biological diversity, and none of them are possible if we do not question the current development pattern. For all these reasons, the first call of “Med Fellows: Addressing the Ecological Challenge” will focus on all those challenges facing the Mediterranean region.
Through this 1st call, 20 young leaders will be selected, and will have the opportunity to:
January 2020),
The 4-day Med Dialogue Fellows Bootcamp[2] will be organised, indicatively, in Tunis, Tunisia on 27-30 January 2020.. The bootcamp will apply principles of eco-management.
Travel and accommodation expenses, visa fees as well as daily allowances are taken in charge by Med Dialogue for Rights and Equality. The meeting languages at the bootcamp are English, Arabic and French. Translation from/into Arabic will be provided, if needed.
Selected participants will be requested to develop at the bootcamp a common action[3] to be then implemented in their own communities. The Programme will be able to cover specific operational costs for an amount not exceeding 1,700 € per local action. The financial procedures related to this support will be defined in the framework of a service contract. Operational costs might include:
In order to better supervise the implementation of the common action, the TA Team will appoint a senior short-term mentor to develop and carry out an administrative and financial follow-up methodology and a quality assessment methodology on the implemented common action. Beneficiaries will be required to submit a final financial and narrative report within 20 days from the implemented action. The report will include a short video documenting the action (maximum 1-5 minutes of length).
Through this Open Call, up to 20 candidates will be selected. During the selection, the Programme will take into account the following aspects:
The Programme’s team reserves the right to eventually directly identify up to 5 highly qualified participants.
Important Note: Please make sure to read all the information in the Call Guidelines, ahead of completing the Application Form and the Common Action Proposal Form.
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