Tag Archives: awards

WHITLEY FUND FOR NATURE AWARD

Application Deadline: Midnight GMT on 31 October 2025.

LOCATION: United Kingdom

Whitley Awards fund grassroots conservation leaders in the Global South and put an international spotlight on winners’ work. Applications for the 2026 Whitley Awards are currently open and close at midnight GMT on 31 October 2025. Whitley Awards are for dynamic, mid-career conservationists who are leading wildlife conservation projects in the Global South. Winners are nationals of the country in which they are working who are seeking to scale up proven work that is embedded in the local community and would benefit from further funding, a profile boost and international support.

ELIGIBILITY:

Not High Income Economy countries—Wildlife conservation projects led by local leaders based in countries that are not defined as a High Income Economy by the World Bank. Exceptions to this criterion include Equatorial Guinea and certain island nations in the Caribbean. If you have any questions about eligible countries, please contact WFN.

Nationals with local support—The Whitley Awards support nationals of the country in which they are working (i.e., you were born there or have lived there a long time and achieved national status.) If you are not a national but believe you have an exceptional case based on long-term residency (15+ years) and a demonstrable commitment to that country/region, then please contact WFN.

They seek grassroots conservationists who are embedded in and/or from the communities where they work. Applicants should work for or lead locally incorporated NGOs in the Global South. In-country staff employed by NGOs headquartered in the Global North are highly unlikely to be shortlisted for an award unless there are exceptional circumstances. We will consider franchised or locally incorporated offshoots of international NGOs. However, they would need to have a fully local team and prove they lack access to funds from other sources.

Good communicators and passionate people—people who will inspire others and importantly, who will collaborate and share results. Please note applicants must be able to communicate in English. Whilst total fluency in English is not a requirement, the applicant must be able to communicate in English without a translator. This is so that if the applicant is invited for an interview in the UK, they can benefit fully from the Whitley Awards week which involves interviews, networking events, training and media opportunities.

Leadership and teamwork—Whitley Awards are won by individuals backed by an appropriate team/organization. Individuals working in isolation and team/joint entries are not eligible.

Projects that are based on scientific evidence and understanding—this can be in the leader, expertise on the team, or via partners/collaboration.

Work involving (and benefitting) the local community and stakeholders is essential.

Ecosystem/landscape-level projects are preferred. Genuine flagships are accepted, but not if results are purely species-specific.

Projects must be able to demonstrate past success and an evidence-based approach. They do not fund pilot projects or work that is at the start-up stage.

Grassroots, pragmatic work that is realistic but ambitious too. We look for applicants on the cusp of ‘something big’ and work that is replicable or scalable.

Actions that will have clear, measurable outcomes—they look for applications that have given careful thought to what indicators can be measured to evidence impact.

Sustainable projects—they want the work to continue into the future, well past the Whitley Award. Successful proposals will demonstrate long-term planning.

Projects that demonstrate value for money and ability to manage funding at the Whitley Award level (£40,000). Organisations with Audited Accounts are preferred.

Projects for which an Award will make a big difference. Priority will be given to those that can demonstrate need.

Work that needs publicity—ones that will do well if ‘doors can be opened’ via the media and enhanced recognition.

Pure rural/economic/sustainable development where direct conservation benefits are hard to quantify.

Land purchase or projects focused on construction of buildings.

Animal welfare & rehabilitation of captive animals.

Captive breeding—they recognize it as a useful conservation tool, but at the level of funding we have available, we can’t make much impact. Therefore, we would only fund captive breeding where underlying causes of species decline in the wild have been fully addressed prior to breeding species in captivity.

Government employees. However, we are aware that grey areas exist where conservationists will often be affiliated with government institutions in order to operate. If this is the case, please contact WFN.

While WFN strives to fund projects in every country that meets our eligibility criteria, it is occasionally necessary to restrict support in a particular country. If you are unsure if your country is eligible, please get in touch. We keep this list under constant review, and any changes in policy will be advertised on our website.

If you have any questions or require further information, please email info@whitleyaward.org

BENEFIT:

Whitley Awards are worth £50,000 GBP in project funding over one year.

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BRITISH COUNCIL BIENNIALS CONNECT GRANTS FOR UK AND INTERNATIONAL BIENNIALS/FESTIVALS OF VISUAL ARTISTS

Application Deadline: 4 September 2025, 23.59 (BST). 

LOCATION: United Kingdom

Biennials Connect Grants support visual artists’ participation in UK and international festivals and biennials. The grants directly benefit artists by facilitating opportunities for travel, the production of new work, networking, skills building and showcasing through biennial partners. 

ELIGIBILITY:

Biennials Connect Grants are open to UK (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales) and international biennials, festivals and art organisations. Individual artists are not eligible to apply. 

International biennials/festivals must be based in eligible countries. The full list of eligible countries can be found on the program website. 

Before making your application, please read the Application Toolkit and ensure your application meets these conditions:

Organisations applying must:

be one of the following:

UK biennials or festivals supporting international visual artists’ participation 

international biennials or festivals supporting visual artists’ participation from the UK 

or other visual arts organisations collaborating with a biennial/festival. 

be based in UK or an eligible international country (please see downloads below for the full list of eligible countries)

be primarily a visual art biennial or festival. Multi-arts biennials and festivals can apply but they must demonstrate a focus on visual arts within their programme

be supporting artists over the age of 18. If artist travel is included in the project, the artists must be able to travel internationally on valid passports (organisations must arrange travel, transport, accommodations, insurance and visas themselves)

be supporting artists you have either not previously worked with or supporting new projects with artists you have worked with before

share the British Council’s commitment to Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) and will embed best EDI practices into the activity 

share the British Council’s commitment to paying artists fairly and will ensure artists are fairly compensated for their participation. 

 Applications by individual artists will not be eligible. 

The core activity or biennial/festival presentation will be from February 2026. The final activity and evaluation must take place before February 2027. Project proposals should have a timeline ending no later than February 2027.

Grant applications can be made for projects involving multiple artists, but only one application per biennial organisation can be submitted. 

Festivals can receive a maximum of one Biennials Connect Grant per edition. If you received a grant for a previous or current festival, you can apply and receive another for a forthcoming festival, but you cannot receive multiple grants in one festival edition. 

BENEFIT:

They have up to £9,500 available for: 

UK biennials/festivals collaborating with visual artists based in ODA* countries 

international biennials/festivals based in ODA* countries collaborating with visual artists in the UK.

They have up to £5,000 available for:

UK biennials/festivals collaborating with visual artists based in non-ODA* countries 

international biennials/festivals based in non-ODA* countries collaborating with visual artists in the UK 

You can apply for up to an additional £2,500 for project access costs

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