Call Fiche - Cerv 2024 Daphne - en
Call Fiche - Cerv 2024 Daphne - en
Call Fiche - Cerv 2024 Daphne - en
children
HISTORY OF CHANGES
Publication
Version Change Page
Date
1.0 21.11.2023 ▪ Initial version
1.1 23.02.2024 ▪ Update of the call timetable and deadline 17
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
children
EUROPEAN COMMISSION
Directorate-General for Justice and Consumers
TABLE OF CONTENTS
0. Introduction .............................................................................................................................. 4
1. Background ............................................................................................................................... 5
2. Objectives — Themes and priorities — Activities that can be funded — Expected impact ..................... 6
Objectives ............................................................................................................................... 6
Themes and priorities (scope) .................................................................................................... 7
Activities that can be funded (scope)..........................................................................................11
Expected impact ......................................................................................................................12
3. Available budget .......................................................................................................................17
4. Timetable and deadlines ............................................................................................................17
5. Admissibility and documents ......................................................................................................18
6. Eligibility ..................................................................................................................................19
Eligible participants (eligible countries) .......................................................................................19
Consortium composition ...........................................................................................................21
Eligible activities ......................................................................................................................21
Geographic location (target countries) ........................................................................................21
Duration .................................................................................................................................21
Project budget.........................................................................................................................21
Ethics and EU values ................................................................................................................21
7. Financial and operational capacity and exclusion ...........................................................................22
Financial capacity ....................................................................................................................22
Operational capacity ................................................................................................................23
Exclusion ................................................................................................................................23
8. Evaluation and award procedure .................................................................................................24
9. Award criteria ...........................................................................................................................25
10. Legal and financial set-up of the Grant Agreements .....................................................................25
Starting date and project duration .............................................................................................26
Milestones and deliverables .......................................................................................................26
Form of grant, funding rate and maximum grant amount ..............................................................26
Budget categories and cost eligibility rules ..................................................................................27
Reporting and payment arrangements ........................................................................................27
Prefinancing guarantees ...........................................................................................................28
Certificates .............................................................................................................................28
Liability regime for recoveries ...................................................................................................28
Provisions concerning the project implementation ........................................................................28
Other specificities ....................................................................................................................29
Non-compliance and breach of contract ......................................................................................29
11. How to submit an application ....................................................................................................29
12. Help ......................................................................................................................................30
13. Important ..............................................................................................................................31
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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0. Introduction
This is a call for proposals for EU action grants in the field of gender-based violence
under the Citizens, Equality, Rights and Value Programme (CERV). The regulatory
framework for this EU Funding Programme is set out in:
The call is launched in accordance with the 2023-2024 Work Programme2 and will be
managed by the European Commission, Directorate-General for Justice and
Consumers (DG JUST).
Please note that this call is subject to the final adoption of the budget for 2024
by the EU budgetary authority. In case there are substantial changes, we may have to
modify the call.
We invite you to read the call documentation carefully, and in particular this Call
Document, the Model Grant Agreement, the EU Funding & Tenders Portal Online Manual
and the EU Grants AGA — Annotated Grant Agreement.
These documents provide clarifications and answers to questions you may have when
preparing your application:
− procedures to register and submit proposals online via the EU Funding &
Tenders Portal (‘Portal’)
1
Regulation (EU) 2021/692 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 28 April 2021 establishing
the Citizens, Equality, Rights and Values Programme (OJ L 156, 5.5.2021, p. 1).
2
Commission Implementing Decision C(2022) 8588 final of 1/12/2022 on the financing of the Citizens,
Equality, Rights and Values programme and the adoption of the work programme for 2023-2024.
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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− detailed annotations on all the provisions in the Grant Agreement you will
have to sign in order to obtain the grant (including cost eligibility,
payment schedule, accessory obligations, etc).
You are also encouraged to consult the list of previously funded projects: CERV
Programme Project Results webpage, Europe for Citizens Programme Project Results
website, REC Programme results webpage and the Daphne Toolkit.
1. Background
Violence affects victims in a profound manner, having a direct impact on their ability to
participate fully in all aspects of society. The human costs are of course tremendous;
but the economic costs of gender-based violence are also alarmingly high. The European
Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE) has estimated that the cost of gender-based
violence across the EU is €366 billion a year. Violence against women makes up 79 %
of this cost, amounting to €289 billion.
The first pillar of the 2020 – 2025 Gender Equality Strategy, entitled “Being free from
violence and stereotypes” sets ambitious policy objectives and actions to tackle gender-
based violence, including funding to support civil society and public services in
preventing and combating gender-based violence. For 2024, a key priority of the
Commission is the adoption of the pending proposal for a Directive combating violence
against women and domestic violence, which the Commission put forward in March
2022. The Commission also plans to adopt in 2024, a Recommendation on harmful
practices which will complement the draft Directive and help Member States to prevent
and tackle such practices – like female genital mutilation or forced marriage – more
effectively.
World vision estimates that more than one billion children around the world experience
violence every year6, in different forms and different settings. Children can be victims,
witnesses, as well as perpetrators of violence – starting from their own homes, in school,
in leisure and recreational activities, in the justice system, offline as well as online.
Experiencing violence can have long term and dramatic consequences on children’s
physical and mental health. It may affect their ability to go to school, to interact socially
3
According a survey carried out by the EU Fundamental Rights Agency in 2014, one in three women in the
EU has been a victim of violence in her lifetime, and one in 20 women has been raped.
4
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CRC.aspx
5
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/crc/docs/CRC.C.GC.13_en.pdf
6
https://www.unicef.org/eu/reports/report-our-europe-our-rights-our-future
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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and to thrive. It can lead to mental health issues, chronic diseases, self-harm
tendencies, even suicide. Children in vulnerable situations can be particularly affected.
Combating violence against children is one of the main objectives of the Commission’s
work on the rights of the child and a third thematic area of the EU Strategy on the rights
of the child7 that was adopted on 24 March 2021. Under this Strategy, and as a key
priority of the Commission in 2024 mentioned in the Commission Work Programme
20248, the Commission will present a Commission Recommendation on Integrated Child
Protection Systems9. Focused on children’s needs, the initiative aims to encourage all
relevant authorities and services to work together in a holistic way, from preventing
abuse of and violence towards children, to protecting them, in a multidisciplinary and
coordinated approach. It is also intended to present how to better use existing EU tools
(laws, policies, funding) to make child protection systems more integrated and robust,
by avoiding silos.
Some of the EU acquis refers to violence against children: Child sexual Abuse Directive,
Trafficking in Human Beings Directive, Victims’ Rights Directive, among others. 10
With this call, divided into 4 priorities, we aim at financing projects that will:
The call recognises the need for proposals to equally address the specificities of the
situation for women and men, girls and boys, in all their diversity. To this end, applicants
are advised to incorporate in their proposals an intersectional perspective that not only
recognises gender and age differences as relevant but also duly pays attention to other
attributes such as disability status, religious belief, ethnic origin and sexual orientation.
2. Objectives — Themes and priorities — Activities that can be funded —
Expected impact
Objectives
To fight violence, including gender-based violence and violence against children by:
7
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/en/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A52021DC0142
8
Commission work programme 2024 (europa.eu)
9
Child protection – integrating systems (europa.eu)
10
See Annex II EU Strategy on the rights of the child: childrights_annex2_2021_4_digital_0.pdf
(europa.eu).
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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o LGBTIQ Strategy,
All forms of gender-based violence can be addressed under this priority through
prevention, gender-sensitive protection and support to victims. The objective is to
achieve balanced coverage of actions across different areas of intervention in line
with the priorities of the Gender Equality Strategy.
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
children
Activities and project outputs should contribute to changes at a structural level with a
positive impact that can be maintained, or further enhanced after the end of the
project.
Projects are encouraged, in their interventions, to envisage the use of new and
innovative tools, methods and applications which can also contribute the achieving
sustainable effects. They can cover new inter-disciplinary ways of working, reaching
out to target groups, establising dialogue with professionals, victims etc.
Finally, proposals must include an effective and detailed monitoring and evaluation
system, which will enable partners to evaluate the impact of their intervention.
Projects addressing this priority should pay attention to the specific needs and
circumstances of women and men, girls and boys, in all their diversity.
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2. Targeted actions for the protection of and support for victims and
survivors of gender-based violence
This priority will focus on the protection of and support for victims of gender-based
violence, including children. This includes:
11
Home - Barnahus
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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Actions will include (but are not limited to): education and awareness raising,
training and practical activities to tackle prejudices and gender stereotypes,
norms, attitudes and behaviours that encourage, condone or minimise
violence, in particular in relationships; activities that promote respectful and
conscious choices regarding all aspects of relationships and reduce the risk of
violence.
Children may face different forms of violence. Exposure to violence severely affects
a child’s physical, psychological and emotional development. It may affect their ability
to go to school, to interact socially and to thrive. It can lead to mental health issues,
chronic diseases, self-harm tendencies, even suicide. Children in vulnerable situations
can be particularly affected.
• early identification (that helps recognise and address early signs of violence)
and reporting of cases of abuses, strengthening child-friendly referrals between
relevant national actors (e.g. law enforcement, the judiciary, support service
providers, health and social service professionals), multidisciplinary
assessment;
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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(i) harassment and (sexual) violence, notably happening in the formal and
informal educational context, in leisure, cultural, sportive, or any community
or recreational activities, in the domestic context, where children might be in
specific situations of vulnerability; and
(ii) online and offline bullying, notably at school or in leisure activities, and
affecting children with specific vulnerabilities (e.g. children in alternative or
foster care, children with disabilities, including mental disabilities, Roma
children, children with a migrant background), or link to their religion, belief,
gender or sexual orientation.
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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• Analytical activities, such as data collection and research, and the creation and
implementation of tools or data bases/data collection strategies and systems.
Applicants should explain in their proposal the potential different impact of the project
and its activities on women and men as well as girls and boys in all their diversity.
Thereby, unintended negative effects of the intervention on either gender should be
forestalled (do no-harm approach).12
Applying organisations are encouraged to use, disseminate and build on already existing
materials (e.g tools, projects’ deliverables, handbooks, research, studies, mapping
exercises, reports, etc).
Expected impact
2. Targeted actions for the protection of and support for victims and survivors
of gender-based violence:
• Victims from particularly vulnerable groups can better access protection and
support services that address their specific needs;
• Increased capacity of stakeholders and relevant professionals in contact with
these groups to address issues related to gender-based violence and violence
against children, including through strengthened multi-disciplinary cooperation;
• Increased reporting of violence to the police and other services, with appropriate
mechanisms in place to facilitate this;
• Increased quality of victim support services, including those providing for
targeted and integrated support for victims with specific needs, such as victims
of sexual violence including in the domestic context, victims of violence in close-
relationships, providing for trauma support and counselling;
• Increased awareness of gender-based violence, including gender-based sexual
violence, including in the context of migration and/or in the context of armed
conflict;
12
For more information see section Ethics and EU values
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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Mainstreaming
Projects funded under this call shall seek to promote equality between women and
men and the rights of the child, as outlined in the EU Gender Equality Strategy and
the EU Strategy on the Rights of the Child. Gender and rights of the child mainstreaming
means integrating a gender and rights of the child perspective in the design,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation of a project, as appropriate. Consequently,
when relevant, the applicant shall take the necessary steps to ensure that gender
equality and child-related issues are taken into account by paying attention to the
situation and particular needs of women and men, girls and boys, and of vulnerabilities
of children. Applicants are advised to explain explicitly in their proposals how gender
and children’s rights will be mainstreamed and how relevant risks will be addressed. It
is, for example, essential that projects do not silence, stereotype, stigmatise, lay the
blame on or discriminate against any group. Projects should contribute to empowering
women and to ensuring that they achieve their full potential and enjoy the same rights
as men. Projects should contribute to empowering children in all their diversity, and to
ensuring that they all achieve their full potential and enjoy the same rights. For more
information, please also refer to the section Ethics and EU values under point 6 (page
21).
All proposals are expected to respect the child's right to participate 13 and all project
activities must clearly integrate and protect the child's right to be heard 14. Proposals
must make children's involvement central and integral in every stage of the project’s
design, implementation and evaluation.
As a good practice, organisations that already work with children could consult them on
the project proposal and include reflections/references to this process in the
applications. Voice of children can be also brought in based on available reports and
documents recording children’s opinions and needs. All actions and activities, both at
design, consultation and implementation phase, shall ensure that actions are adequate
to the age and gender specific needs of children. Thus, applicants should conduct and
include in their proposal an analysis, which maps the potential different impact of the
13
Aligned with Article 24 of the Charter, relevant EU law and the UN Convention on the rights of the child
14
As set out in UNCRC Article 12 and General Comment No 12
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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project and its activities on children, including from a gender perspective. Thereby,
unintended negative effects of the intervention on children of all ages should be
forestalled (do no-harm approach).
Child protection policies will be also assessed for projects directly involving children.
This assessment will be integrated into award criteria and will also be considered under
ethics. Proposals which directly involve children and fail to provide a diligent child
protection policy will be regarded as less relevant and of lower quality. Organisations
that will plan working directly with children must have a child protection policy
(mandatory annex to the submission package) covering the four areas described in the
Keeping Children Safe Child Safeguarding Standards. This policy must be available
online and transparent to everyone who comes in contact with the organisation. It must
include clear information about the recruitment of staff (including trainees and
volunteers) and include background checks (vetting). It must also include clear
procedures and rules to staff, including reporting rules, and continuous training. This is
valid for those partners that will be working directly with children (this should be clearly
indicated in the proposal).
Applicants are encouraged, whenever possible, to apply insights and practical tools from
behavioural sciences in their projects in view of achieving changes in attitudes and
behaviour. A step-by-step approach to guide applicants in the incorporation of
behavioural insights in their projects is provided in the following JRC publication: Sara
Rafael Almeida, Joana Sousa Lourenço, François J. Dessart and Emanuele Ciriolo,
Insights from behavioural sciences to prevent and combat violence against women.
Literature review (2016).
Bibliography
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Role of men/Masculinities:
Gender-based cyber-violence:
Gender mainstreaming
• https://eige.europa.eu/gender-mainstreaming
• Gender analysis | EIGE (europa.eu)
• Sara Rafael Almeida, Joana Sousa Lourenço, Dessart François Jacques, and
Emanuele Ciriolo. Insights from behavioural sciences to prevent and combat
violence against women. Literature review (2016):
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC103975
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Child Participation:
3. Available budget
The availability of the call budget still depends on the adoption of the budget 2024 by
the EU budgetary authority.
We reserve the right not to award all available funds or to redistribute them between
the call priorities, depending on the proposals received and the results of the evaluation.
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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Proposals must be submitted before the call deadline (see timetable section 4).
Proposals must be submitted electronically via the Funding & Tenders Portal Electronic
Submission System (accessible via the Topic page in the Search Funding & Tenders
section. Paper submissions are NOT possible.
Proposals (including annexes and supporting documents) must be submitted using the
forms provided inside the Submission System ( NOT the documents available on the
Topic page — they are only for information).
Proposals must be complete and contain all the requested information and all required
annexes and supporting documents:
− Application Form Part B — contains the technical description of the project (to
be downloaded from the Portal Submission System, completed and then
assembled and re-uploaded)
Please note that an annual activity report is NOT a financial audit report or balance
sheet, but a report highlighting the activities and projects of your organisation.
Please be aware that since the detailed budget table serves as the basis for fixing the
lump sums for the grants (and since lump sums must be reliable proxies for the actual
costs of a project15), the costs you include MUST comply with the basic eligibility
conditions for EU actual cost grants (see AGA — Annotated Grant Agreement, art 6).
This is particularly important for purchases and subcontracting, which must comply with
best value for money (or if appropriate the lowest price) and be free of any conflict of
interests. If the budget table contains ineligible costs, the grant may be reduced.
15
https://ec.europa.eu/info/funding-tenders/opportunities/portal/screen/programmes/horizon/lump-
sum/guidance
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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At proposal submission, you will have to confirm that you have the mandate to act for
all applicants. Moreover, you will have to confirm that the information in the application
is correct and complete and that the participants comply with the conditions for
receiving EU funding (especially eligibility, financial and operational capacity, exclusion,
etc). Before signing the grant, each beneficiary and affiliated entity will have to confirm
this again by signing a declaration of honour (DoH). Proposals without full support will
be rejected.
Your application must be readable, accessible and printable.
Proposals are limited to maximum 45 pages (Part B). Evaluators will not consider any
additional pages.
You may be asked at a later stage for further documents (for legal entity validation,
financial capacity check, bank account validation, etc).
For more information about the submission process (including IT aspects), consult
the Online Manual.
6. Eligibility
Applications will only be considered eligible if their content corresponds wholly (or at
least in part) to the topic description for which it is submitted.
(a) Lead applicants must be non-profit making. Organisations which are profit-oriented
cannot submit applications as lead applicants, but only in partnership with public
entities, private non-profit organisations, or international organisations;
(c) the application must involve at least two organisations (applicant and partner
from 2 different eligible countries, not being affiliated entity or associated partner);
(d) the EU grant applied for cannot be lower than EUR 1 000 000 and higher than
EUR 2 500 000.
To be eligible under the second, third and fourth priority, grant applications must
comply with all of the following criteria:
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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(a) Lead applicants must be non-profit making. Organisations which are profit-oriented
cannot submit applications as lead applicants, but only in partnership with public
entities, private non-profit organisations, or international organisations;
(c) the application must involve at least two organisations (applicant and partner not
being affiliated entity or associated partner);
(d) the EU grant applied for cannot be lower than EUR 100 000 and higher than EUR
1 000 000.
Beneficiaries and affiliated entities must register in the Participant Register — before
submitting the proposal — and will have to be validated by the Central Validation Service
(REA Validation). For the validation, they will be requested to upload documents
showing legal status and origin.
Other entities may participate in other consortium roles, such as associated partners,
subcontractors, third parties giving in-kind contributions, etc (see section 13).
Specific cases
Natural persons — Natural persons are NOT eligible (with the exception of self-employed
persons, i.e., sole traders, where the company does not have legal personality separate
from that of the natural person).
Entities without legal personality — Entities which do not have legal personality under
their national law may exceptionally participate, provided that their representatives
have the capacity to undertake legal obligations on their behalf, and offer guarantees
for the protection of the EU financial interests equivalent to that offered by legal
persons16.
EU bodies — EU bodies (with the exception of the European Commission Joint Research
Centre) can NOT be part of the consortium.
EU restrictive measures — Special rules apply for certain entities (e.g. entities subject
to EU restrictive measures under Article 29 of the Treaty on the European Union (TEU)
and Article 215 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU) 18. Such entities are
not eligible to participate in any capacity, including as beneficiaries, affiliated entities,
associated partners, subcontractors or recipients of financial support to third parties (if
any).
16
See Article 197(2)(c) EU Financial Regulation 2018/1046.
17
For the definitions, see Articles 187(2) and 197(2)(c) EU Financial Regulation 2018/1046.
18
Please note that the EU Official Journal contains the official list and, in case of conflict, its content prevails
over that of the EU Sanctions Map.
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For more information, see Rules for Legal Entity Validation, LEAR Appointment and
Financial Capacity Assessment.
Consortium composition
Eligible activities
Activities must be grouped into work packages (e.g., Project Management and
Coordination; Communication and Dissemination, etc.), which are major sub-divisions
of the project.
Projects should take into account the results of projects supported by other EU funding
programmes. The complementarities must be described in the project proposals (Part
B of the Application Form).
Projects must comply with EU policy interests and priorities (such as environment,
social, security, industrial and trade policy, etc).
Proposals must relate to activities taking place in the eligible countries (see above).
Duration
Project budget
• For Priority 1 - the EU grant applied for cannot be lower than EUR 1 000 000 and
higher than EUR 2 500 000.
• For the other priorities the EU grant applied for cannot be lower than EUR 100
000 and higher than EUR 1 000 000.
− other applicable EU, international and national law (including the General Data
Protection Regulation 2016/679).
Projects must seek to promote gender equality and non-discrimination mainstreaming
in accordance with the Gender-responsive evaluation. Project activities should
contribute to the equal empowerment of women, men, girls and boys, in all their
diversity, ensuring that that they achieve their full potential and enjoy the same rights
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CERV-2024-DAPHNE: Call for proposals to prevent and combat gender-based violence and violence against
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Applicants must show in their application that they respect ethical principles and EU
values based on Article 2 of the Treaty on the European Union and Article of the 21 EU
Charter of Fundamental Rights.
Participants with activities involving children must moreover have a child protection
policy covering the four areas described in the Keeping Children Safe Child Safeguarding
Standards. Please see section 2, page 14.
Financial capacity
Applicants must have stable and sufficient resources to successfully implement the
projects and contribute their share. Organisations participating in several projects must
have sufficient capacity to implement all these projects.
The financial capacity check will be carried out on the basis of the documents you will
be requested to upload in the Participant Register during grant preparation (e.g. profit
and loss account and balance sheet, business plan, audit report produced by an
approved external auditor, certifying the accounts for the last closed financial year, etc).
The analysis will be based on neutral financial indicators, but will also take into account
other aspects, such as dependency on EU funding and deficit and revenue in previous
years.
− public bodies (entities established as public body under national law, including
local, regional or national authorities) or international organisations
− if the individual requested grant amount is not more than EUR 60 000 (n/a).
If needed, it may also be done for affiliated entities.
− further information
− an enhanced financial responsibility regime, i.e. joint and several responsibility
for all beneficiaries or joint and several liability of affiliated entities (see below,
section 10)
− propose no prefinancing
− request that you are replaced or, if needed, reject the entire proposal.
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For more information, see Rules for Legal Entity Validation, LEAR Appointment and
Financial Capacity Assessment.
Operational capacity
If the evaluation of the award criterion is positive, the applicants are considered to have
sufficient operational capacity.
Applicants will have to show their capacity via the following information:
Exclusion
20
See articles 136 and 141 of EU Financial Regulation 2018/1046
21
Professional misconduct includes: violation of ethical standards of the profession, wrongful conduct with
impact on professional credibility, false declarations/misrepresentation of information, participation in a
cartel or other agreement distorting competition, violation of IPR, attempting to influence decision-
making processes or obtain confidential information from public authorities to gain advantage.
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− created under a different jurisdiction with the intent to circumvent fiscal, social
or other legal obligations in the country of origin or created another entity with
this purpose (including if done by persons having powers of representation,
decision-making or control, beneficial owners or persons who are essential for
the award/implementation of the grant).
− they were previously involved in the preparation of the call and this entails a
distortion of competition that cannot be remedied otherwise (conflict of interest).
For proposals with the same score (within a topic or budget envelope) a priority order
will be determined according to the following approach:
Successively for every group of ex aequo proposals, starting with the highest scored
group, and continuing in descending order:
1) The ex aequo proposals within the same topic will be prioritised according to the
scores they have been awarded for the award criterion ‘Relevance’. When these
scores are equal, priority will be based on their scores for the criterion ‘Quality’.
When these scores are equal, priority will be based on their scores for the
criterion ‘Impact’.
All proposals will be informed about the evaluation result (evaluation result letter).
Successful proposals will be invited for grant preparation; the other ones will be put on
the reserve list or rejected.
If you believe that the evaluation procedure was flawed, you can submit a complaint
(following the deadlines and procedures set out in the evaluation result letter). Please
note that notifications which have not been opened within 10 days after sending are
considered to have been accessed and that deadlines will be counted from
opening/access (see also Funding & Tenders Portal Terms and Conditions). Please also
22
See Article 141 EU Financial Regulation 2018/1046.
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9. Award criteria
− Relevance: extent to which the proposal matches the priorities and objectives
of the call; clearly defined needs and robust needs assessment; clearly defined
target group, with gender perspective being appropriately taken into account;
contribution to the EU strategic and legislative context; European/trans-national
dimension; impact/interest for a number of countries (EU or eligible non-EU
countries); possibility to use the results in other countries (potential for transfer
of good practices); potential to develop mutual trust/cross-border cooperation
(40 points)
− Quality: clarity and consistency of project; logical links between the identified
problems, needs and solutions proposed (logical frame concept); methodology
for implementing the project with gender perspective being appropriately taken
into account (organisation of work, timetable, allocation of resources and
distribution of tasks between partners, risks & risk management, monitoring and
evaluation); ethical issues and measures/policies to guarantee full compliance
with EU values are addressed; feasibility of the project within the proposed time
frame; financial feasibility (sufficient/appropriate budget for proper
implementation; cost-effectiveness (best value for money) (40 points)
Relevance 25 40
Impact n/a 20
Proposals that pass the individual threshold for the criterion ‘Relevance’ AND the overall
threshold will be considered for funding — within the limits of the available call budget.
Other proposals will be rejected.
If you pass evaluation, your project will be invited for grant preparation, where you will
be asked to prepare the Grant Agreement together with the EU Project Officer.
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This Grant Agreement will set the framework for your grant and its terms and
conditions, in particular concerning deliverables, reporting and payments.
The Model Grant Agreement that will be used (and all other relevant templates and
guidance documents) can be found on Portal Reference Documents.
The project starting date and duration will be fixed in the Grant Agreement (Data Sheet,
point 1). Normally the starting date will be after grant signature. The action should start
within 6 months following the Grant Agreement signature, except in duly justified cases.
Retroactive application can be granted exceptionally for duly justified reasons but never
earlier than the proposal submission date.
Project duration:
For each work package, an objective, list of the activities, milestones and deliverables
must be defined. The deliverables must be quantified and measurable. The grouping
should be logical and guided by identifiable outputs.
The milestones and deliverables for each project will be managed through the Portal
Grant Management System and will be reflected in Annex 1 of the Grant Agreement.
Additional work packages may be added according to the activities foreseen in the
project.
The grant parameters (maximum grant amount, funding rate, total eligible costs, etc)
will be fixed in the Grant Agreement (Data Sheet, point 3 and art 5).
• For Priority 1 - the EU grant applied for cannot be lower than EUR 1 000 000 and
higher than EUR 2 500 000.
• For Priority 2, 3 and 4 - the EU grant applied for cannot be lower than EUR 100
000 and higher than EUR 1 000 000.
The grant will be a lump sum grant. This means that it will reimburse a fixed amount,
based on a lump sum or financing not linked to costs.
The amount will be fixed by the granting authority on the basis of the estimated project
budget and a funding rate of 90%.
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The budget categories and cost eligibility rules are fixed in the Grant Agreement (Data
Sheet, point 3, art 6 and Annex 2).
− for lump sums based on estimated project budgets: the estimated budget
must comply with the basic eligibility conditions for EU actual cost grants
(see AGA — Annotated Grant Agreement, art 6)
− for lump sums based on estimated project budgets: costs for financial
support to third parties are not allowed
− personnel costs:
The reporting and payment arrangements are fixed in the Grant Agreement (Data
Sheet, point 4 and art 21 and 22).
After grant signature, you will normally receive a prefinancing to start working on the
project (float of normally 80% of the maximum grant amount; exceptionally less or no
prefinancing). The prefinancing will be paid 30 days from entry into force/financial
guarantee (if required) — whichever is the latest.
In addition, you will be expected to submit one or more progress reports not linked to
payments.
Payment of the balance: At the end of the project, we will calculate your final grant
amount. If the total of earlier payments is higher than the final grant amount, we will
ask you (your coordinator) to pay back the difference (recovery).
23
Decision of 30 September 2022 authorising the use of lump sums for actions under the Citizens, Equality,
Rights and Values Programme (2021-2027).
24
Commission Decision of 10 April 2019 authorising the use of unit costs for declaring personnel costs for
the work carried out by volunteers under an action or a work programme (C(2019)2646)
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Please also note that you are responsible for keeping records on all the work done.
Prefinancing guarantees
If agreed with us, the bank guarantee may be replaced by a guarantee from a third
party.
The guarantee will be released at the end of the grant, in accordance with the conditions
laid down in the Grant Agreement.
Certificates
Depending on the type of action, size of grant amount and type of beneficiaries, you
may be requested to submit different certificates. The types, schedules and thresholds
for each certificate are fixed in the Grant Agreement (Data Sheet, point 4 and art 24).
Liability regime for recoveries
The liability regime for recoveries will be fixed in the Grant Agreement (Data Sheet point
4.4 and art 22).
For beneficiaries, it is one of the following:
− limited joint and several liability with individual ceilings — each beneficiary up
to their maximum grant amount
− individual financial responsibility — each beneficiary only for their own debts.
In addition, the granting authority may require joint and several liability of affiliated
entities (with their beneficiary).
IPR rules: see Model Grant Agreement (art 16 and Annex 5):
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n/a
The Grant Agreement (chapter 5) provides for the measures we may take in case of
breach of contract (and other non-compliance issues).
All proposals must be submitted directly online via the Funding & Tenders Portal
Electronic Submission System. Paper applications are NOT accepted.
To use the Submission System (the only way to apply), all participants need to create
an EU Login user account.
Once you have an EULogin account, you can register your organisation in the Participant
Register. When your registration is finalised, you will receive a 9-digit participant
identification code (PIC).
Access the Electronic Submission System via the Topic page in the Search Funding &
Tenders (europa.eu) section (or, for calls sent by invitation to submit a proposal,
through the link provided in the invitation letter), open your desired call and start
submission.
− Part B (description of the action) covers the technical content of the proposal.
Download the mandatory word template from the Submission System, fill it in
and upload it as a PDF file
− Annexes (see section 5). Upload them as PDF file (single or multiple depending
on the slots). Excel upload is sometimes possible, depending on the file type.
Detailed budget table must be re-uploaded filled out in the format .xlsx.
The proposal must keep to the page limits (see section 5); excess pages will be
disregarded.
The proposal must be submitted before the call deadline (see section 4). After this
deadline, the system is closed and proposals can no longer be submitted.
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Once the proposal is submitted, you will receive a confirmation e-mail (with date and
time of your application). If you do not receive this confirmation e-mail, it means your
proposal has NOT been submitted. If you believe this is due to a fault in the Submission
System, you should immediately file a complaint via the IT Helpdesk webform,
explaining the circumstances and attaching a copy of the proposal (and, if possible,
screenshots to show what happened).
Details on processes and procedures are described in the Online Manual. The Online
Manual also contains the links to FAQs and detailed instructions regarding the Portal
Electronic Exchange System.
12. Help
As far as possible, please try to find the answers you need yourself, in this and
the other documentation (we have limited resources for handling direct enquiries):
− Online Manual
− FAQs on the Topic page (for call-specific questions in open calls; not applicable
for actions by invitation)
Contact
For help related to this call you may contact the CERV Contact Point of your country, if
established.
For individual questions on the Portal Submission System, please contact the IT
Helpdesk.
Non-IT related questions should be sent to the following email address: EC-CERV-
[email protected].
Please indicate clearly the reference of the call and topic to which your question relates
(see cover page).
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13. Important
IMPORTANT
• Don’t wait until the end — Complete your application sufficiently in advance of the
deadline to avoid any last minute technical problems. Problems due to last minute
submissions (e.g. congestion, etc) will be entirely at your risk. Call deadlines can NOT
be extended.
• Consult the Portal Topic page regularly. We will use it to publish updates and
additional information on the call (call and topic updates).
• Affiliated entities — Applicants may participate with affiliated entities (i.e. entities
linked to a beneficiary which participate in the action with similar rights and
obligations as the beneficiaries, but do not sign the grant and therefore do not
become beneficiaries themselves). They will get a part of the grant money and must
therefore comply with all the call conditions and be validated (just like beneficiaries);
but they do not count towards the minimum eligibility criteria for consortium
composition (if any).
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• No-profit rule — Grants may NOT give a profit (i.e. surplus of revenues + EU grant
over costs). This will be checked by us at the end of the project.
• Multiple proposals — Applicants may submit more than one proposal for different
projects under the same call (and be awarded a funding for them).
• Resubmission — Proposals may be changed and re-submitted until the deadline for
submission.
• Rejection — By submitting the application, all applicants accept the call conditions
set out in this this Call Document (and the documents it refers to). Proposals that do
not comply with all the call conditions will be rejected. This applies also to applicants:
All applicants need to fulfil the criteria; if any one of them doesn’t, they must be
replaced or the entire proposal will be rejected.
• Cancellation — There may be circumstances which may require the cancellation of
the call. In this case, you will be informed via a call or topic update. Please note that
cancellations are without entitlement to compensation.
• Language — You can submit your proposal in any official EU language (project
abstract/summary should however always be in English). For reasons of efficiency,
we strongly advise you to use English for the entire application. If you need the call
documentation in another official EU language, please submit a request within 10
days after call publication (for the contact information, see section 12).
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• Data protection — The submission of a proposal under this call involves the
collection, use and processing of personal data. This data will be processed in
accordance with the applicable legal framework. It will be processed solely for the
purpose of evaluating your proposal, subsequent management of your grant and, if
needed, programme monitoring, evaluation and communication. Details are explained
in the Funding & Tenders Portal Privacy Statement.
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