Further funding opportunities from the Churchill Fellowship
Further funding opportunities from the Churchill Fellowship
Introduction
Here you will find information about the further funding opportunities that the Churchill Fellowship offers to Fellows to implement what they’ve learned from overseas in the UK. We are currently reviewing the support we can offer and so these pages will be updated in the coming months.
All Fellows are currently eligible for a grant of up to £500 once they have submitted their Report. The aim of the fund is to allow Fellows to build on the results of their Fellowship and take the next step to sharing or implementing them. This may include, but is not limited to:
- Running a pilot programme
- Returning to visit specific projects/expanding on a previous visit
- Promoting of Fellowship findings (including through the media or at conferences)
- Partnership development
- Network development
Proposed activities must take place within 12 months of application. We are unable to support projects that have already taken place.
Between 2020 and 2024 we piloted a new fund called Activate which was to support Fellows to implement change in the UK based on what they had learned during their overseas learning. Following three rounds of funding this pilot is being evaluated and is not currently open for applications.
Policy statement
Safeguarding applies consistently and without exception across all activities of the Churchill Fellowship and embraces Fellows and those who come into contact with them, Trustees, Advisory Council members, staff and knowledge / funding partners with whom relationships are entered into.
It requires proactively identifying, preventing and guarding against all risks of harm, exploitation and abuse and having mature, accountable and transparent systems for response, reporting and learning when risks materialise. Those systems must be centered around the Churchill Fellowship’s activities and those engaged or affected by them.
The Churchill Fellowship’s values are:
- Equality
- Respect
- Integrity
- Fairness
- Diversity
- Universality
- Excellence
- Accountability
Who this policy applies to
This policy sets out the Churchill Fellowship’s commitment and guidance on safeguarding and protecting Children and Adults at Risk. This policy applies to all UK based projects funded by the Churchill Fellowship. Our grant agreement makes it clear that by signing a grant agreement, grantees agree to the commitments set out in this policy. If we have good cause to believe that you have not complied with your obligations under this guidance, we may suspend or terminate your funding.
Meaning of terms used in our grant agreements
Child: ‘A child is defined as any young person under the age of 18, regardless of the age of majority in the country where the child is, or his or her country of origin.’ – UN 1989
Adults at Risk: Someone over the age of 18 who may be in need of community care services by reason of mental or other disability, age or illness; and who is or may be unable to take care of, or protect themself against significant harm or exploitation.
Grantee: A recipient of funding from the Churchill Fellowship.
Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS): The Disclosure and Barring Service helps employers make safer recruitment decisions each year by processing and issuing DBS checks for England, Wales, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man. DBS also maintains the adults' and children's Barred Lists and makes considered decisions as to whether an individual should be included on one or both of these lists and barred from engaging in regulated activity.
Regulated activity: Regulated activity can be broadly broken down into six categories: Providing Health Care; Providing Personal Care; Providing Social Work; Assistance with General Household Matters; Assistance in the Conduct of a Person’s Own Affairs; Conveying.
For further details and illustrative examples of each of these categories, please see the full guidance provided by the Department for Health.
Protecting Vulnerable Groups scheme (PVG): The Protecting Vulnerable Groups scheme is managed and delivered by Disclosure Scotland. It helps ensure people whose behaviour makes them unsuitable to work with children and protected adults cannot do regulated work with these groups.
What we require of grantees
We require all grantees to:
- Be committed to a proactive approach safeguarding, understanding your own obligations regarding the safety and wellbeing of any beneficiaries.
- Inform the Churchill Fellowship of any concerns, disclosures or incidents relating to the safeguarding of Children and Adults at Risk as soon as possible and no later than within three working days of any potentially serious concern or incident.
- Ensure that any third parties appointed by you to perform any part of your project, where working with Children and Adults at Risk, have their own, appropriate safeguarding policies and procedures in place.