Grants database

Explore all of the grants we make and the organisations we support. 

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  • Core support for Camden People’s Theatre

    Camden People’s Theatre

    FundArts Fund Amount£261,000 LocationLondon, UK Date2022

    Camden People’s Theatre (CPT) is dedicated to supporting emerging artists, especially those making work about social issues that matter right now. This grant supports CPT to deliver their commissioning and artist support model which aims to increase professional development opportunities for artists experiencing marginalisation and increase the diversity of CPT’s audiences. Funding will allow the organisation to increase core capacity, embed community-led decision-making and improve sustainability.

  • The Jag’s participation and talent development programmes

    Belgrade Theatre Trust

    FundArts Fund Amount£146,000 LocationWest Midlands, UK Date2022

    The Belgrade Theatre is a regional producing theatre with a strong record of participation, community, education and talent development activity. This grant supports the organisation through a key period of leadership transition, along with work at the Jag, Belgrade Theatre’s new venue. Work at the Jag will focus on delivery of youth participation and talent development initiatives with young people in two communities facing high levels of knife crime and deprivation, in partnership with community groups.

  • The Outsiders Project

    Bournemouth Emerging Arts Fringe (BEAF)

    FundArts Fund Amount£90,000 LocationSouth West, UK Date2022

    Bournemouth Emerging Arts Fringe (BEAF) is an independent creative community based in Bournemouth. They work all year round to create opportunities for artists and audiences through collaboration and co-creation with local communities and businesses. This grant supports BEAF to deliver The Outsiders project which will incubate a theatre of people experiencing marginalisation in the community of Boscombe.

  • Core support for Arts at the Old Fire Station

    Arts at the Old Fire Station

    FundArts Fund Amount£210,000 LocationSouth East, UK Date2022

    Arts at the Old Fire Station is an arts centre that brings art to the public, and provides professional development for artists and support for people experiencing homelessness in an inclusive public space. This grant provides core support to the organisation as they rebuild their programme, reconnect with people who are homeless and socially isolated, and adapt and test new ways of working following the pandemic, to reach and support a more diverse range of individuals and communities.

  • Increasing influence of Arts and Homelessness in the UK

    Arts and Homelessness International

    FundArts Fund Amount£140,000 LocationUK-wide, UK Date2022

    Arts and Homelessness International works to bring positive change to people, projects and policy in homelessness through arts and creativity. They focus on connecting and strengthening projects and advocating for arts to be a part of homelessness support and policy. This grant provides core support for the roll-out and evaluation of Arts and Homelessness models to influence local authorities and cultural spaces in the UK. This work includes greater opportunities for people with lived experience of homelessness, including through a new leadership programme.

  • Building a supportive and humane asylum process for women

    Women for Refugee Women

    FundMigration Fund Amount£240,000 LocationWales, UK Date2022

    Women for Refugee Women (WfRW) is a charity that supports and empowers women who seek asylum in the UK. They enable refugee and asylum-seeking women to become leaders, ensure they can speak to the media and at public events, publish robust research on their experiences, and work with policymakers to make the case for a fairer asylum process. This grant supports WfRW to continue their main support and empowerment activities, as well as provide mentoring and training for trustee and leadership roles, develop campaigns to oppose the Nationality and Borders Bill, and strengthen the Sisters Not Strangers coalition.

  • Core funding for Voices in Exile

    Voices in Exile

    FundMigration Fund Amount£200,000 LocationSouth East, UK Date2022

    Voices in Exile are a small frontline charity working with people who migrate and those with no recourse to public funds (NRPF) in Brighton, Sussex and Surrey. They offer practical and legal support ranging from generalist advice to specialist immigration casework for those who would otherwise be unable to access justice. This grant underpins Voices in Exile’s core work, enabling them to continue providing high-quality legal advice and casework to address individual and systemic injustice, increase access to rights, entitlements and services, and increase the role of those with lived experience within the organisation.

  • Organising for Power programme

    Tripod Training for Creative Social Action

    FundMigration Fund Amount£83,000 LocationScotland, UK Date2022

    Tripod Training for Creative Social Action is a small training collective based in Edinburgh. They offer training, facilitation, systems-building and other support to grassroots collectives, and charities to strengthen movements for social, economic and climate justice. This grant supports the delivery of phase two of Tripod’s Organising for Power (O4P) programme. Thirty leaders, organisers, and campaigners will conduct their own deep analysis of their chosen issues and context, plan strategic campaigns, organise their communities, negotiate with power brokers, and build alliances to mobilise around shared issues.

  • Future Voices programme

    The Voice of Domestic Workers

    FundMigration Fund Amount£90,000 LocationLondon, UK Date2022

    The Voice of Domestic Workers (VODW) is an education and support group working for justice and rights for Britain’s 16,000 migrant domestic workers (MDWs). They seek an end to discrimination against MDWs living in the UK through campaigns, education, training, healthcare and legal advice. This grant supports VODW to deliver Future Voices, a programme to build the capacity of 12 members through mentoring and skills development in partnership with English for Action and Sounddelivery. The programme will grow the impact of VODW and create a pipeline for new leaders.

  • Windrush Justice Clinic: Ensuring victims receive advice and fair compensation

    Southwark Law Centre

    FundMigration Fund Amount£67,000 LocationLondon, UK Date2022

    Southwark Law Centre provides specialist legal advice for people who cannot afford to pay for services in the areas of discrimination, employment, housing, planning, welfare rights, and immigration and asylum law. This grant supports the Centre’s Windrush Justice Clinic (WJC), which acts a single point of contact for Windrush victims. They will continue to offer free independent legal advice so that victims can successfully apply for compensation which accurately reflects their loss and suffering.

  • National partners, bigger impact: Countering divisive narratives

    Sheffield Methodist District – Who Is Your Neighbour

    FundMigration Fund Amount£120,000 LocationYorkshire & Humber, UK Date2022

    Sheffield Methodist District’s Who Is Your Neighbour? (WIYN) programme operates at neighbourhood, regional and national levels to counter the impact of divisive narratives. They facilitate dialogue about immigration, race and other relevant issues. This grant supports strategic long-term national partnerships for WIYN, incorporating training, bespoke support and tailored interventions with three national organisations and their members.

  • Time for Change: A lived experience advocacy and leadership development programme

    Saheliya

    FundMigration Fund Amount£150,000 LocationScotland, UK Date2022

    Saheliya provides trauma-informed, wrap-around support in first languages for women with experience of racial inequality. They offer specialised support for women who have been traumatised due to lived experience of gendered abuse and who are unable to access appropriate mainstream services. This grant supports Saheliya to work with Black and minoritised women with lived experience of gender-based violence to find opportunities for change, collaborate with sector partners, develop lived experience leadership and advocate to policy makers.