Work at this foundation?
Claim this profile to manage it and see interest from grant seekers.
Vibrant Village Foundation is a private corporation based in BEAVERTON, OR. The foundation received its IRS ruling in 2010. The principal officer is Kenneth E Delaski. It holds total assets of $100.3M. Annual income is reported at $26.6M. Total assets have grown from $34M in 2011 to $100.3M in 2024. The foundation is governed by 8 officers and trustees. Tax records are available from 2015 to 2024. The foundation primarily funds organizations in New York, District of Columbia and Vermont. According to available records, Vibrant Village Foundation has made 164 grants totaling $15.4M, with a median grant of $75K. Annual giving has grown from $2.3M in 2020 to $3.4M in 2023. Grantmaking activity was highest in 2022 with $7M distributed across 66 grants. Individual grants have ranged from $2K to $350K, with an average award of $94K. The foundation has supported 63 unique organizations. The foundation primarily supports organizations in Oregon, Vermont, New York, which account for 18% of all grants. Grantmaking reaches organizations across 10 states. Contributions to this foundation are tax-deductible.
Vibrant Village Foundation is a highly selective, invitation-only private family foundation headquartered in Beaverton, Oregon, founded in 2010 by Ken deLaski — a former co-founder and CEO of enterprise software company Deltek. The foundation's giving philosophy is rooted in a firm belief that sustainable development originates from the bottom up, with local communities and leaders driving change rather than receiving solutions imposed from outside.
The foundation's grantmaking is not transactional. VVF describes its relationships as "dynamic, long-term, highly engaged partnerships centered around shared learning and mutual accountability." This is borne out in the data: top grantees such as Andando Foundation (Senegal), Kenya Drylands Education Fund, and Desea Peru have each received 5 grants with cumulative totals exceeding $950,000. The relationship arc typically spans 5+ years with annual or biennial grants, unrestricted in nature.
First-time applicants must understand that there is no open application portal. VVF identifies prospective partners through its regional staff — Regional Partnerships Directors now operate across West Africa, East & Southern Africa, and Central & South America — and through peer referrals from existing grantees. The path to a grant begins with a credible introduction or a proactive email to info@vibrantvillage.org.
Eligibility requirements are non-negotiable: the organization must be locally incorporated (not a foreign entity operating internationally), founded and led by people from the region, operating in a country ranked low or medium on the UNDP Inequality-Adjusted Human Development Index, and working with an annual budget under $1 million USD. Organizations that exceed the budget ceiling or are headquartered in a high-income country are outside scope regardless of program quality.
The board remains a family-controlled governance body under President/Founder Ken deLaski, with Kathleen deLaski, Daphne deLaski, and Dana deLaski also serving as directors. Executive Director Laura Koch ($129,915 compensation in FY2023) manages day-to-day grantmaking and is the primary senior staff interface for external partners.
Vibrant Village Foundation has maintained consistent annual giving in the $4.8M–$6.0M range across the five fiscal years from 2019 to 2023, with grants paid to external partners representing a portion of total giving that also includes direct programs in Ghana and Kenya.
Annual giving trend: - FY2019: $5.63M total giving, $2.58M grants paid - FY2020: $4.81M total giving, $2.34M grants paid - FY2021: $5.33M total giving, $2.69M grants paid - FY2022: $6.00M total giving, $3.50M grants paid - FY2023: $5.84M total giving, $3.37M grants paid
Assets have grown from $85.9M (FY2019) to $100.3M (FY2024), driven primarily by investment income. In FY2023, net investment income reached $8.34M against $5.13M in contributions received, meaning investment returns are the dominant funding source.
Grant sizing: Across 28 tracked grants, the median grant is $78,385 and the average is $96,218. The range spans $2,000 (likely one-time program support) to $220,000 for major multi-year partner investments. In the broader grantee dataset of 164 grants totaling $15.4M, the average across all transactions is $93,893 — confirming that $75,000–$100,000 per grant year is the sweet spot for established partners.
Program area distribution: Food security and agroecology dominate the top grantees (Andando Foundation, Tierra Viva, Groundswell International, Lid). WASH and clean water access represents the second largest cluster (Desea Peru, The Water Trust, Footsteps Africa). Education programs (Kenya Drylands Education Fund) and integrated community health (Wandikweza) round out the portfolio. Direct operating programs in Ghana (water/sanitation) and Kenya (farm input credit, teacher training, digital literacy) account for a significant portion of total giving alongside grantee transfers.
Geography: Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for the largest share of partner activity, with 10 African countries represented. Latin America (Peru, Ecuador, Guatemala, Haiti) is the second cluster. Domestic US grantees (primarily NY, VT, DC, OR) exist in the database, likely reflecting earlier-stage or transitional support.
The foundations listed below are matched to Vibrant Village Foundation by asset size (approximately $100 million) and NTEE category (Philanthropy & Grantmaking). Asset similarity does not imply mission similarity — these foundations represent a range of geographic and programmatic orientations.
| Foundation | Assets | Annual Giving | Primary Focus | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vibrant Village Foundation (OR) | $100.3M | ~$5.8M | Rural dev, Africa & Latin America | Invitation only |
| Brown-Forman Foundation (KY) | $100.1M | ~$2.5M/yr | Arts, education, community (Louisville) | Open (quarterly) |
| Keller Foundation (WA) | $100.1M | Not public | Unknown (private family) | Not disclosed |
| George W Gillemot Foundation (NV) | $100.3M | Not public | Unknown (private family) | Not disclosed |
| Pincus Family Fund (DE) | $100.0M | Not public | Unknown (private family) | Not disclosed |
Vibrant Village Foundation stands out within this peer group for its global development orientation and its explicit focus on international rural communities in low-income countries — a distinct niche compared to the other asset-similar foundations. Brown-Forman Foundation is the only peer with a public-facing open application process, operating quarterly grant cycles exclusively focused on Louisville, Kentucky nonprofits, making it categorically different in scope from VVF. The three remaining peers (Keller, Gillemot, Pincus) are private family foundations without public-facing grantmaking programs, websites, or disclosed giving patterns. For organizations seeking comparable global development funders with community-led philosophies, better peers include Skoll Foundation, Thousand Currents, and Global Fund for Community Foundations — which share VVF's emphasis on locally-led, unrestricted, and trust-based grantmaking.
Vibrant Village Foundation's most significant recent organizational milestone was the creation of its first-ever Theory of Change at a May 2023 global staff retreat — a formal documentation of its grantmaking principles after 13 years of operation. This signals the foundation is entering a more structured phase of its evolution.
In 2023, VVF distributed $4.2 million to 41 grant partners across 12 countries, the largest partner count in the foundation's history. Nineteen new organizations joined the portfolio in early 2023 alone, representing a major portfolio expansion. The proportion of women-led grantees jumped from 24% to 37% — the most notable strategic shift observable in recent data.
A new Grant Management System was acquired in late 2023 and rolled out in early 2024, streamlining partner reporting and application workflows. Executive Director Laura Koch has led the foundation since at least 2020, with her compensation growing from $89,675 (FY2020) to $129,915 (FY2023), reflecting organizational growth.
The foundation hired or appointed three Regional Partnerships Directors in 2023 — for West Africa, East & Southern Africa (based in Malawi, Kenya, or Uganda), and Central & South America — deepening its in-country presence. A $1 million commitment to African Visionaries was also announced, representing one of the larger single-organization investments in recent history. The 2024 Annual Report (published in 2025) highlighted the ADEMI water harvesting partnership. No leadership changes at the board or executive director level have been publicly reported.
There is no open application. Every path to Vibrant Village Foundation funding begins with a relationship or a proactive outreach. Here is how to navigate that reality:
1. Send a concise introduction via email (info@vibrantvillage.org). Your email should be 3-4 short paragraphs covering: who founded the organization (must be from the region), your country of legal incorporation, your annual budget (must be under $1M USD), your program area, and how it aligns with food security, family health, financial wellbeing, or education in your target community. Do not attach a proposal.
2. Lead with local leadership credentials. VVF's core eligibility gate is that the organization must be founded and led by people from the community or region it serves. Foreign-led NGOs, even with local staff, do not qualify. Your outreach should make this clear in the first sentence.
3. Know the 9 assessment criteria before any conversation. VVF evaluates partners on: governance, leadership/team, systems/policies, program logic, impact measurement, collaboration, community accountability, community engagement, and social equity/inclusion. Prepare a one-paragraph narrative for each before any introductory meeting.
4. Do not emphasize short-term project funding. VVF funds multi-year unrestricted partnerships — 83% of all grants are unrestricted. If your organization is seeking restricted project funding for a 12-month deliverable, this is not the right funder. Frame your work as a long-term community strengthening initiative.
5. Highlight women's leadership explicitly. Women-led organizations grew from 24% to 37% of VVF's portfolio between 2022 and 2023. If your founding or senior leadership team is women-led, make this visible.
6. Reference country eligibility proactively. VVF only funds in low and medium IAHDI-ranked countries. If you operate in Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Uganda, Peru, Ecuador, or Guatemala, say so explicitly — these are confirmed active geographies.
7. Demonstrate financial management capacity. Unrestricted grants require VVF to trust grantees with discretionary funds. Showing audited financials, a functioning board, and transparent internal controls will carry more weight than program impact metrics alone.
Create a free Granted account to download this report — includes application checklist, full financial data, and all grantees.
Already have an account? Sign in to download.
Smallest Grant
$2K
Median Grant
$78K
Average Grant
$96K
Largest Grant
$220K
Based on 28 grants from the most recent 990-PF filing.
Vibrant village ecuador works within multiple communities in the northern highlands. Our objective is to enhance agricultural productivity and increase families' intake of nutritious foods. Bio-intensive gardening is extended across the communities by knowledgeable staff. Families receive training in planting, harvesting and seed preservation for their backyard/kitchen gardens. This program also includes a large senior center, arts education for at-risk youth, and irrigation projects to support the larger community.
Expenses: $146K
Vibrant village kenya works in the lake victoria region of western kenya. This program focuses on farm input credit, advanced teacher training, tutoring programs for primary school students, a farm cooperative, adult education. The farm input program reached almost 1500 people, increasing their yields and profits. The teacher training reached 26 teachers impacting over 300 pupils. The tutoring program targeted 550 under-performing primary school students, and was conducted by 89 high school students who gained leadership skills. The agricultural cooperative has 70 members and is on its way to becoming self-sustaining. The adult education component focuses on literacy and numeracy, in addition to basic computer classes.
Expenses: $393K
Vibrant village ghana works in the upper west region of ghana to address key issues of water access, sanitation and hygiene, and access to gardens. We work to construct and repair boreholes, providing 12,833 (cumulative) people with access to clean water. We trained communities and households in hand washing and sanitation practices. This education was also extended to 24 schools. We expanded our dry-season gardens to include 4 community gardens.
Expenses: $423K
Vibrant Village Foundation has maintained consistent annual giving in the $4.8M–$6.0M range across the five fiscal years from 2019 to 2023, with grants paid to external partners representing a portion of total giving that also includes direct programs in Ghana and Kenya. Annual giving trend: - FY2019: $5.63M total giving, $2.58M grants paid - FY2020: $4.81M total giving, $2.34M grants paid - FY2021: $5.33M total giving, $2.69M grants paid - FY2022: $6.00M total giving, $3.50M grants paid - FY202.
Vibrant Village Foundation has distributed a total of $15.4M across 164 grants. The median grant size is $75K, with an average of $94K. Individual grants have ranged from $2K to $350K.
Vibrant Village Foundation is a highly selective, invitation-only private family foundation headquartered in Beaverton, Oregon, founded in 2010 by Ken deLaski — a former co-founder and CEO of enterprise software company Deltek. The foundation's giving philosophy is rooted in a firm belief that sustainable development originates from the bottom up, with local communities and leaders driving change rather than receiving solutions imposed from outside. The foundation's grantmaking is not transactio.
Vibrant Village Foundation is headquartered in BEAVERTON, OR. While based in OR, the foundation distributes grants to organizations across 10 states.
| Name | Title | Compensation | Benefits | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laura Koch | EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR | $130K | $9K | $139K |
| Jeremy Barnicle | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Kathleen Delaski | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Sang Ahn | TREASURER, DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Sarah Goracke | SECRETARY, DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Daphne Delaski | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Dana Delaski | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Kenneth E Delaski | PRESIDENT, DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
Total Giving
N/A
Total Assets
$100.3M
Fair Market Value
N/A
Net Worth
$100.3M
Grants Paid
N/A
Contributions
N/A
Net Investment Income
N/A
Distribution Amount
N/A
Total Grants
164
Total Giving
$15.4M
Average Grant
$94K
Median Grant
$75K
Unique Recipients
63
Most Common Grant
$50K
of 2023 grantees were first-time recipients
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| St George FoundationEMPOWER CHILDREN, WOMEN, AND COMMUNITIES THROUGH SERVICES THAT ENHANCE THEIR WELL-BEING, PROTECTION, AND DEVELOPMENT. | Grafton | $100K | 2023 |
| Andando FoundationESTABLISH AND MANAGE MARKET GARDEN COOPERATIVES, IMPROVING SCHOOL INFRASTRUCTURE AND REHABILITATING HEALTH POSTS | Jefferson, OR | $300K | 2023 |
| Kenya Drylands Education FundDEVELOP A HOLISTIC APPROACH TO REDUCE BARRIERS TO ACCESS TO EDUCATION AND INCREASE SCHOOL ENROLLMENT IN RURAL KENYAN COMMUNITIES | Nanyuki | $220K | 2023 |
| LidLEAD IN FACILITATING INNOVATIVE AND PRACTICAL SOLUTIONS THAT EMPOWER COMMUNITIES TO DERIVE SUSTAINABLE BENEFITS FROM THEIR ENVIRONMENT, ECONOMY, AND SOCIETY | Gweru | $180K | 2023 |
| Desea PeruINSTALL BIOSAND WATER FILTERS IN HOMES, BUILD AND REPAIR COMMUNITY WATER SYSTEMS, TRAIN COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKERS, AND SUPPORT COMMUNITY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN THE HIGHLANDS OF PERU. | Lamay Cusco | $175K | 2023 |
| AcadesBUILD COMMUNITIES OF ECONOMICALLY EMPOWERED SMALLHOLDER FARMERS AND YOUTH | Chirinza | $155K | 2023 |
| WandikwezaPROVIDE HEALTH SERVICES TO RURAL HOUSEHOLDS THROUGH A COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER (CHW) MODEL. | Lilongwe | $150K | 2023 |
| The Water TrustSUPPORT VILLAGES, SCHOOLS, AND HEALTH CENTERS IN RURAL UGANDA TO EQUIP COMMUNITIES TO MINIMIZE PREVENTABLE DISEASE THROUGH IMPROVED WATER, SANITATION, AND HYGIENE. | New York, NY | $135K | 2023 |
| FoccadALLEVIATION OF HUMAN SUFFERING FROM DISEASE, HUNGER, POVERTY AND SOCIAL INJUSTICE BY CREATING AND IMPLEMENTING PARTICIPATORY AND SUSTAINABLE SOLUTIONS | Nkhotakota | $125K | 2023 |
| MopadaEMPOWER COMMUNITIES TO CHAMPION THEIR DEVELOPMENT ASPIRATIONS AND CONSTRUCTIVELY CHALLENGE UNJUST STRUCTURES, SYSTEMS AND ENSURE THAT WOMEN AND CHILDREN FULLY ENJOY THEIR HUMAN RIGHTS WHILST LIVING UP TO THEIR OBLIGATIONS. | Kennedy | $100K | 2023 |
| Tierra VivaFACILITATE AGROECOLOGICAL TRANSITION PROCESSES OF RURAL FARMS THROUGH LEARNING BY EXPERIMENTING SO THAT THEY CAN IMPROVE THEIR LIVING CONDITIONS AND ARE RECOGNIZED AND VALUED AS FARMERS | Pimampiro | $80K | 2023 |
| Puretrust Foundation LbgSUPPORT DEVELOPMENT INTERVENTIONS IN THE AREA OF LIVELIHOOD/ ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT, EDUCATION, HEALTH, ADVOCACY, FINANCIAL INCLUSION AND WATER AND SANITATION. | Tamale | $75K | 2023 |
| Qachuu AloomACHIEVE THE SUSTAINABILITY OF THE ORGANIZATION BY RESCUING THE ANCESTRAL KNOWLEDGE OF THE PRODUCTION AND USE OF NATIVE AND INDIGENOUS SEEDS FOR THE MATERIAL AND SPIRITUAL WELL-BEING OF FAMILIES IN THE COMMUNITIES, SO THAT THEY GENERATE THEIR OWN INCOME AND CAN PRODUCE THEIR OWN FOOD IN HARMONY WITH MOTHER EARTH. | Rabinal | $75K | 2023 |
| SongtabaIMPLEMENT A HOLISTIC MODEL TO IMPROVE ACCESS OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS TO JUSTICE, FOOD, NUTRITION, HEALTH AND EDUCATION. | Tamale | $75K | 2023 |
| Friends Of Orphans (Fro)SUPPORT WAR-AFFECTED COMMUNITIES THROUGH THROUGH REHABILITATION, EDUCATION, VOCATIONAL SKILL TRAINING, AGRICULTURE, MICROFINANCING, WOMEN EMPOWERMENT AND HIV/AIDS PROGRAMS. | Pader | $75K | 2023 |
| Fundacion Nueva EsperanzaWE ARE AN ORGANIZATION WITH HISTORICAL MEMORY, BASED ON THE WORLDVIEW OF NATIVE PEOPLES AND HUMAN RIGHTS. OUR PROCESSES GENERATE SOCIOECONOMIC, ENVIRONMENTAL, CULTURAL AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT THAT IMPACT THE QUALITY OF LIFE OF IMPOVERISHED/RURAL/URBAN FAMILIES AND COMMUNITIES IN LAS VERAPACES. | Rabinal Baja Verapaz | $75K | 2023 |
| AdemiBE A SOLID ORGANIZATION WITH GENERATED CAPACITIES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR CHANGES FOR INTEGRAL RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE LOCALITY AND NATIONALLY FOR THE DEFENSE AND FULFILLMENT OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND POWER RELATIONS OF MAYAN WOMEN AND THEIR PEOPLES. | Tecpn Chimaltenango | $75K | 2023 |
| Network Movement For Justice And Development (Nmjd)ENGAGE IN ADVOCACY AND STRENGTHENS/ENHANCES THE CAPACITY OF CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS TO EFFECTIVELY ENGAGE WOMEN, MEN, CHILDREN, COMMUNITIES, GOVERNMENT AND OTHER ACTORS FOR THE TRANSFORMATION OF SOCIETY. | Aberdeen Freetown | $75K | 2023 |
| The Needy TodaySEEKING LASTING SOLUTIONS IN HELPING DEPLORABLE PEOPLE ACHIEVE A BRIGHTER FUTURE IN SIERRA LEONE. | Makeni | $75K | 2023 |
| Uypetd-LiberiaWORK WITH THE LIBERIA GOVERNMENT, INTERNATIONAL PARTNERS AND OTHER RELEVANT CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS TO SUSTAIN PEACE AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, PROMOTE POLICY DOCUMENTS INCLUDING SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGS) MOST ESPECIALLY GOAL 6 TO IMPROVE ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE SERVICES, MAPUTO DECLARATION, TO END GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE, PARIS DECLARATION AND LIBERIA PRO-POOR AGENDA. | Paynesville City | $75K | 2023 |
| LidleapTHE GROWTH AND RESILIENCE OPPORTUNITIES FOR WOMEN (GROW) PROJECT IS A POVERTY REDUCTION, RESILIENCE BUILDING AND SOCIAL ENTERPRISE INITIATIVE TARGETING MAINLY WOMEN BENEFICIARIES IN CHIREDZI DISTRICT. | Gweru | $68K | 2023 |
| Kci - Komuge Community InitiativePROMOTE HUMAN VALUES & DEVELOPMENT THROUGH IMPLEMENTATIONS OF PRACTICAL PROGRAMS, FOR THE BENEFIT OF ALL IN VIEW OF BUILDING A SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITY WITH IMPROVED STANDARDS OF LIVING. | Kawokakira | $65K | 2023 |
| Center For GenderBUILD SOCIO-ECONOMIC CAPACITIES OF MARGINALIZED COMMUNITIES MOSTLY WOMEN AND YOUTH FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN ZIMBABWE | Masvingo | $50K | 2023 |
| Fifty Fifity Initative For DevelopmentCHAMPION GENDER MAINSTREAMING AND EQUAL REPRESENTATION OF MEN AND WOMEN IN PUBLIC LIFE THROUGH EDUCATION, SKILLS DEVELOPMENT, RESEARCH, AND POLICY ADVOCACY IN GHANA. KEY PROGRAMS INCLUDE, GENDER EQUALITY, GOVERNANCE, LIVELIOGOODS AND ECONIMIC DEVELOPMENT, WASH AND PEACE-BUILDING. | Tamale | $50K | 2023 |
| Calid (Center For Active Learning And Integrated Development)WORK WITH COMMUNITIES AND IDENTIFIED GROUPS, ESPECIALLY GROUPS OF YOUNG PEOPLE, TO FIGHT INJUSTICE AND PROMOTE EQUITABLE ACCESS TO PUBLIC SERVICES. KEY PROGRAMS INCLUDES, HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND FOOD SECURITY AND ECONOMC DEVELOPMENT. | Tamale | $50K | 2023 |
| FocoldDEDICATION TO THE BELIEF THAT INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT PROCESSES ARE CRITICAL TO DEVELOPMENT OF POOR AND HISTORICALLY MARGINALIZED COMMUNITIES, THUS TO CONTRIBUTE EFFECTIVELY AND EFFICIENTLY TO SUSTAINABLE IMPROVEMENTS OF THE LIVING STANDARDS OF THE PEOPLE OF MALAWI ESPECIALLY CHILDREN, YOUTH AND WOMEN THROUGH SELF-HELP PROJECTS BASED ON THEIR PRIORITIES, NEEDS AND CAPABILITIES AND OTHER ACTIVITIES AIMING DIRECTLY AT ALLEVIATION OF POVERTY. | Lirangwe | $50K | 2023 |
| Global Brigade GhanaINSPIRE, MOBILIZE AND COLLABORATE WITH COMMUNITIES TO ACHIEVE THEIR OWN HEALTH AND ECONOMIC GOALS. THE ORGANIZATION PROVIDES MEDICAL SERVICES TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS IN REMOTE COMMUNITIES IN GHANA THROUGH OUTREACH PROGRAMS. THE ORGANIZATION UTILIZES LOCAL AND FOREIGN EXPERTISE TO DELIVER MEDICAL CONSULTATION, ADMINISTER DRUGS AND PROVIDE COUNSELLING SERVICES. GBO ALSO PROVIDES WASH, MICROFINANCE AND ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT SERVICES TO MARGINALIZED POPULATIONS. | Opposite Interberton | $50K | 2023 |
| HopecareHOPECARE AIMS TO EMPOWER VULNERABLE AND POOR COMMUNITIES THROUGH IMPLEMENTING ACTIVITIES IN HEALTH (HIV/AIDS & WASH), ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT AND EDUCATION, AND FOOD SECURITY. | Arusha | $50K | 2023 |
| Initiative For Women Empowerment And Peace Promotion Sierra LeonePROVIDE WIDE RANGE OF EFFICIENT AND EFFECTIVE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES FOR THE WELFARE OF WOMEN, YOUTHS AND CHILDREN. | Kailahun | $50K | 2023 |
| Brave AuroraPROVIDE VULNERABLE CHILDREN IN GHANA WITH BETTER LIFE CONDITIONS, FOR THEM TO GROW UP HEALTHY AND LIVE IN DIGNITY WITHIN FAMILIES. | Walewale | $50K | 2023 |
| Mopada- LiberiaIMPROVE THE QUALITY OF LIFE OF THE VULNERABLE COMMUNITIES, ESPECIALLY WOMEN AND CHILDREN THROUGH STRUCTURAL STRENGTHENING AND SERVICE DELIVERY. | Paynesville | $50K | 2023 |
| Score - Sustainable Community Opportunities For Restoration And EmpowermentINCREASE ACCESS TO OPPORTUNITIES FOR HOUSEHOLDS TOWARDS OPTIMAL HEALTH, EDUCATION, ADVOCACY AND LIVELIHOODS; SUMMARIZED AS HEAL, THROUGH SYNERGISTIC, EMPOWERING, INNOVATIVE, PARTICIPATORY AND RIGHTS-BASED INITIATIVES. | Kisumu | $50K | 2023 |
| SolidlinksSUPPORT AND EMPOWER WOMEN, GIRLS AND THE YOUTH TO REALIZE THEIR FULL POTENTIAL IN IMPROVING THEIR LIVES BY EQUIPPING THEM WITH SKILLS AND KNOWLEDGE THROUGH ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL PROGRAMMES. | Kasese | $50K | 2023 |
| UpayaINVEST IN EARLY-STAGE COMPANIES, CREATING DIGNIFIED JOBS FOR THE POOREST OF THE POOR IN INDIA AND OTHER COUNTRIES (RECOVERABLE GRANT). | Seattle, WA | $50K | 2023 |
| Global Fund For ChildrenEDUCATIONAL RECOVERY IN CENTRAL AMERICA: SUPPORTING THE CRITICAL ROLE OF CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS (RECARGA - RECUPERANDO LA EDUCACIN EN CENTROAMRICA: ACTIVANDO REDES Y GRUPOS ASOCIADOS) | Washington, DC | $50K | 2023 |
| Garden'S EdgeSUPPORT THE 23 COMMUNITIES SURROUNDING RABINAL TO STRENGTHEN THE AGROECOLOGY (AE) PROGRAM, WHICH INCLUDES AN AE LEADERSHIP SCHOOL, TRAINING FARMERS ON THE TRADITIONAL MILPA CORN SYSTEM IN THEIR FIELDS AND SUPPORTING HOME GARDENS | Albuquerque, NM | $36K | 2023 |
| Agrecol AfriqueSTRENGTHEN THE VISION, PRACTICE AND PROMOTION OF ORGANIC AND/OR ECOLOGICAL AGRICULTURE AND SOCIAL CAPITAL IN SENEGAL AND WEST AFRICA | Thies | $30K | 2023 |
| Bega Kwa BegaIMPROVE THE LIVING CONDITIONS OF UGANDAN ORPHANS AND THE FAMILIES WHO CARE FOR THEM THROUGH INTEGRATED COMMUNITY-DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMMING. | Kampala | $30K | 2023 |
| Footsteps AfricaEMPOWER MARGINAL WOMEN FARMERS TO CONSERVE, CONTROL AND ACCESS SOURCES OF WATER FOR BUILDING THEIR HEALTH AND PRODUCTIVE LIVES IN LAST-MILE VILLAGES IN MALAWI. | Blantyre | $30K | 2023 |
| Peace For Life GhanaEQUIP COMMUNITIES WITH THE METHODS, KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND CONNECTIONS NEEDED TO IMPROVE THEIR SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC WELLBEING. KEY PROGRAMS ARE WASH, FOOD SECURITY, EDUCATION AND ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT OF VULNERBALE POPULATIONS. | Tamale | $18K | 2023 |
| Adcsap-UgandaUNLOCK THE POTENTIAL OF FAMILIES AND LOCAL COMMUNITIES TO LEAD THEIR OWN DEVELOPMENT AND THRIVE. | Fort Portal | $15K | 2023 |
| Work By Faith Development Assoc (Wofda)SUPPORT LOCAL COMMUNITIES AND POPULATIONS ESPECIALLY WOMEN AND YOUTH TO DIVERSIFY AND INCREASE FOOD PRODUCTION AND INCOME-GENERATING ACTIVITIES THROUGH THE ADOPTION OF GOOD AGRONOMIC PRACTICES, FINANCIAL INCLUSION AND SKILL TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT. | Port Loko | $10K | 2023 |
| Kenya Quilts For EmpowermentPROVIDE SUPPORT TO WOMEN AFFECTED BY FISTULA BY ESTABLISHING LINKAGES TO AVAILABLE HEALTH SERVICES IN WESTERN KENYA. | Maseno | $10K | 2023 |
| Right Action GhanaSUPPORT LOCAL COMMUNITIES AND POPULATIONS ESPECIALLY WOMEN AND YOUTH TO DIVERSIFY AND INCREASE FOOD PRODUCTION AND INCOME-GENERATING ACTIVITIES THROUGH THE ADOPTION OF GOOD AGRONOMIC PRACTICES, FINANCIAL INCLUSION AND SKILL TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT. | Tamale | $10K | 2023 |
| Independence Road CorporationDONATIONS OF COMPONENTS FOR PROSTHESES IN ECUADOR | Waeaverville, NC | $2K | 2023 |