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Peacebuilding Program is sponsored by Rockefeller Brothers Fund. The Peacebuilding program funds organizations with strong records of collaboration on conflict transformation. It supports policy analysis, dialogue, and pro-peace movements, focusing on conflicts with a disproportionate influence on global security and in which the United States has had significant involvement.
The program aims to encourage shifts in U.S. foreign policy toward peace, justice, and human security.
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Peacebuilding | Rockefeller Brothers Fund Photo by Ben Kelmer, courtesy of Just Vision. Women protest for freedom, dignity, equality, and human security in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem. Achieving durable peace depends on sustained engagement among groups with diverse perspectives to build relationships and explore opportunities for compromise.
Breaking cycles of conflict and repairing past harms requires transformations in attitudes, institutions, doctrine, and strategy, as well as the prioritization of well-being, rights, safety, and dignity of communities affected by conflict. Building a more peaceful international order requires diplomatic and policy frameworks based on principles of interdependence and shared security.
Particular focus must be on shifting U.S. foreign policy, given its outsized role. The Peacebuilding program aspires to advance just and durable peace through nonviolent means by supporting policy analysis, dialogue, and pro-peace movements. Research shows that when women, youth, local communities, and marginalized groups play a vital role in peacebuilding processes, peace outcomes are more robust and durable.
By engaging a wide array of actors—especially communities impacted by violence—the program explores policy paradigms that address root drivers of conflict, including rights violations and impunity, to improve security for all. The program focuses on conflicts that have a disproportionate influence on global security and in which the United States has had significant involvement.
Through its support of frontline peacebuilders, policy architects, and influencers, as well as broader policy interventions, the program seeks to encourage broader shifts in the trajectory of U.S. foreign policy toward peace, justice, and human security. It funds both bottom-up and top-down efforts to transform conflict.
The Fund pursues interrelated strategies to advance conflict transformation of specific conflicts—Afghanistan and Israel-Palestine—as well as conflict prevention efforts elsewhere to de-escalate tensions and develop policy frameworks that advance peace. The Fund has a particular interest in advancing shifts in U.S. foreign policy.
Goal: Advance just and durable peace Promoting analysis and policies that address drivers of conflict and advance peacebuilding. Supporting dialogue across lines of division, including Track II processes. Strengthening constituencies for conflict transformation.
Peacebuilding Program Builds on Impact, Lessons from a Decade of Grantmaking (December 2024) Peacebuilding Program Adopts New Guidelines (July 2020) Middle East Policy Network European Council on Foreign Relations The Voices Project USA, Inc. See All Recent Peacebuilding Grants Peace and Security Funders Group Human Rights Funders Network Grantmakers Concerned with Immigrants and Refugees
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Organizations with strong records of collaboration on conflict transformation, supporting policy analysis, dialogue, and pro-peace movements. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Unspecified Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
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Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
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