Additionally, the unit has been actively involved
with the Climate Centre/Climate team in their
youth action plan on climate and with the
mental health team/Psychosocial Support
Centre in the development of the youth mental
health manifesto. The unit provides technical
support to National Societies, regional offices,
and country delegations in implementing the
education framework.
Externally, the IFRC
engages in partnerships
with various organizations and initiatives. This
includes collaboration with the African Union
Youth Envoy, the Big 6, the Commonwealth
Secretariat for the Commonwealth Alliance on
Quality Youth Leadership, the UN Foundation for
the Unlock the Future Coalition, the International
Association of Volunteer Efforts, and partici-
pation in the Global Education Cluster. These
external partnerships enable IFRC representa-
tion at events like
the Commonwealth Heads of
Government Meeting and the UN’s Transforming
Education Summit, among others.
In 2022, a new Volunteer policy was endorsed
at the General Assembly. This involved extensive
consultation with National Societies to gather
input and feedback. Externally,
the IFRC took part
in the YABC football project in collaboration with
the Qatar World Cup 2022 organizers. Coaching
was provided to 16 international trainers who,
trained 186 youth as YABC and F4D (Football
for Development) facilitators. These facilitators
accompanied 1,252 children, adolescents, and
young adults. Through the implementation of
72 community-based Micro-Projects, more than
22,000 people were directly reached across the
four countries involved.
Coordination and Knowledge Development
Careful management of three National
Society
development funds, which are aimed at fuelling
the transformations of National Societies; ensur-
ing that knowledge drives the development of
National Societies and improve organizational
performance, and providing coordination is
essential.
Two of the Funds are Movement mechanisms
jointly managed by IFRC and ICRC (National
Society Investment Fund and the Empress
Shôken Fund). The third (Capacity Building Fund)
is managed by IFRC. These are demand-driven
funds which provide
resources in the form of
grants to National Societies, based on priorities
identified by them.
The funds work in complementarity, each offering
a dedicated value proposition. The CBF is open
to all National Societies at any time and provides
smaller injections promoting National Society
transformation in a phasal approach. The NSIA
is open only to National Societies operating in
fragile settings and provides much larger and
longer-term investments for sustainable devel-
opment. The Empress Shôken Fund supports
innovation in National Societies. The work is
done in very close collaboration with headquar-
ters and country-level partners and applicant
National Societies of both organizations (where
applicable).
The IFRC’s re-engineered Capacity Building Fund
disbursed 4.8 million Swiss francs between
August 2021-December 2022 to support
addressing the needs of 93
National Societies
through different types of funding assistance.
By December 2022, 23 National Societies had
successfully completed their initiatives, and
reported on their achievements.
The National Society Investment Alliance (NSIA)
launched its fourth round of applications in May
2022, with 24 applications received (nine accel-
erators and 16 bridges). In September 2022, the
NSIA steering committee approved a total of 20
projects (six accelerators and 14 bridges), worth
5.4 million Swiss francs. (For more information
on IFRC funds and
how they help National
Societies, please see Funds section.)
The IFRC created a Knowledge Hub to develop
the strategic framework for institutional learn-
ing and knowledge management that underpin
transformational processes for National
Societies, anchored in
Strategy 2030
and the
Agenda for Renewal. It also designs systems and
tools to support learning activities,
to consolidate
learning (from operational and development
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