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Grand Challenges Explorations Round 9 February 2012
In Partnership with the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity
The Challenge:
Many people in the developed world are aid weary. They
know billions of dollars go into aid, and yet the problems never seem to
go away. This leads them to question if the money ever gets to where it
is needed, and even then, if it is used wisely. The media seems full of
stories of corruption, waste and broken systems.
But that’s not the whole story. Effective aid programs
help developing countries become self-sufficient. They do not replace
those countries’ efforts, but rather support the important work that’s
already under way.
While not all aid projects deliver the kind of returns
we hope for, very many do—and it’s critical to keep the support for
those projects flowing.
Insight:
“Aid, which is less than 1 percent of the budget in
most countries, has a significant impact on people’s lives…. Whether
it’s fighting plant disease, treating people with AIDS, or getting a
measles vaccine to a child in a remote area—modest investments in the
poorest make a huge difference…
The relatively small amount of money invested in
development has changed the future prospects of billions of people—and
it can do the same for billions more.” -- Bill Gates, 2012 Annual Letter
What We are Looking For:
If we, as a global community, are to succeed in ending extreme hunger
and poverty and improving the health of the poorest, we must find
ground-breaking ways to gather and share stories of aid working well. We
must bring the data behind those stories to life. And we must do it on a
global scale, making it relevant to audiences who are wrestling with
tough economic decisions at home.
The goal of this challenge is to solicit new approaches to
communications that motivate the public in the wealthy countries of the
world to change their minds about aid, and take actions to demonstrate
their support.
We and others in the development community have traditionally focused on the “why” of aid. But most people already believe it is the right thing to do. We must do a better job of explaining the “how” and the “what” (How exactly does aid work? Where does the money go? How is it used? What impact does it have on communities?).
We want to find revolutionary ways to make these issues matter deeply
to the global community. We’re inspired by projects that allow anyone--
no matter where they live or what their background-- to take part. We
encourage projects that embrace the complexity of these issues. We
admire work that surprises us with its emotional power, and that comes
at the problem from entirely new angles.
Most importantly, we’re looking for game-changing ideas we might
never imagine on our own, and that could revolutionize the field. A few
of the many specific examples to be considered include (but are by no
means limited to…)
- New ways to collect and share first-person stories from those impacted by aid in the developing world;
- Data collection and visualization that
demonstrates the “how” and “what” of aid, e.g. where funding goes and
how it impacts people and communities; money spent on development
relative to other areas; measurable progress against the Millennium
Development Goals. (The foundation is particularly interested in MDGs
1,4,5,and 6.);
- Creative distribution mechanisms to deliver stories, data, and information to key audiences;
- Concepts that spark active engagement and collaborative problem-solving, e.g. games, crowdsourcing, and other projects that move the field from one-way communications towards authentic engagement;
- Revolutionary ways to humanize the challenge and the solutions and to connect communities receiving aid to those who provide it.
We will not consider funding for:
- Single pieces of content that are not supported by a robust engagement strategy;
- Projects focused on crisis response, individual donations, or
emergency relief, which are not as impacted by the current aid
narrative;
- Basic research without a clear objective to solve a communications problem;
- Solely behavioral change/educational initiatives (e.g., training programs, scholarships, education programs);
- Solely infrastructure or capacity-building initiatives;
- Projects earmarking foundation funds for lobbying activity
(e.g., attempts to influence legislation or legislative action) or
efforts to influence political campaigns for public office.
How We'll Evaluate Proposals:
Proposals will be reviewed against the following criteria:
- Response to the topic: Does the proposal address
the problems described in the topic? Please note the types of projects
that will not be funded, above;
- Innovative approach: Does the idea offer an
unconventional or creative approach to the problem outlined in the
topic? Does it demonstrate application of a new or pioneering approach?
Does the proposal describe how the project varies from current
approaches, offers new premises or hypotheses to test, and does it
provide a rational basis for expecting success?
About Our Partnership:
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has partnered with the Cannes
Lions International Festival of Creativity to issue this call for
proposals in Round 9 of its Grand Challenges Explorations program.
Cannes will help the foundation promote the call to the creative
community.
In addition, Cannes Lions has created a group, the Cannes Chimera,
made up of one creative representing the agency who produced each of
the 2011 Cannes Grand Prix winning pieces of work, who will advise the
program, review the submissions, and mentor the winners as they develop
their projects.
About Grand Challenges Explorations:
Grand Challenges Explorations (GCE) supports hundreds of early-stage
projects – including many ideas that have never before been tested – and
experts from a wide range of disciplines and regions. The Explorations
initiative funds innovative ideas that could lead to new vaccines,
diagnostics, drugs, and other tools and technologies targeting our
greatest challenges in health and development
GCE is an extension of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s
commitment to the Grand Challenges in Global Health, which was launched
in 2003 to accelerate the discovery of new technologies to improve
global health. To date, the Foundation has committed over $500 million
to support hundreds of projects on topics such as making childhood
vaccines easier to use in poor countries, and creating new ways to
control insects that spread disease.
Key features of the Grand Challenges Explorations initiative are:
- Rapid turnaround time. We will select grants in approximately 5 months from the proposal submission deadline;
- We review for novel ideas that show great promise. Our review
process is based on reviewers with a track record in identifying
innovative ideas selecting the proposals they find most pioneering - no
consensus or peer review is needed;
- Phase I grants of $100,000 USD are awarded initially; projects
have one opportunity to apply for a follow-on Phase II grant of up to
$1,000,000 USD.
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