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CFF Announces 2024 Grantmaking

CFF’s Grantmaking in 2024 to Support Safety and Survivor Justice Movement Organizations

This year, CFF is making grants to 50 organizations totaling more than $6 Million in general operating funding over the next two years, nearly all of which are renewed funding to existing grantee partners.

The ecosystem that CFF’s grants support

We support movement-building organizations that are addressing gendered, sexualized, and racialized violence through policy, advocacy, organizing, and services and support for survivors. We fund ecosystems, rather than siloed issues or strategies. We purposefully resource a mix of organizations — small to large annual budgets, as well as local, regional, national and transnational groups. We focus on groups that are historically and systemically under-resourced, and our grants are sized to support individual groups over multiple years within this diverse ecosystem.

The safety and survivor-justice organizations we fund are also rooted in economic justice, reproductive justice, education, racial justice, immigrant rights, and much more — because comprehensive solutions to addressing violence must be intersectional.

Their work addresses interpersonal violence as well as state and structural violence. They utilize an array of strategies to do this — policy, organizing, legal advocacy, healing justice, arts, narrative change, and direct services. 

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Illustration for CFF by Alexis Neely

We prioritize work that centers survivors, Black, Indigenous, and women of color, queer, trans, non-binary and gender non-conforming people of color, people of color with disabilities, and im/migrants, who are cultivating community and sustaining transformational work. The groups we fund often aim to challenge the status quo, focusing on creating survivor-centered, community-based solutions independent of the state. Many seek to reimagine entire systems, recognizing colonialism, capitalism, and imperialism as the root causes of violence. Additionally, they organize beyond borders, utilizing transnational feminist networking, organizing, and solidarity.

Our approach also shows up in the kind of strategies for impact that we fund. We focus on interwoven strategies, which grantee partners carry out in tandem. Here are just a few examples of how these strategies show up in the work we support: 

  • Centering survivors and their communities’ needs to stop and prevent gendered, sexualized, and racialized violence, including providing direct support, spaces for healing, and responding to acute and ongoing situations of harm and violence:

Transforming Generations created a sexual assault curriculum tailored for Hmong, Southeast Asian, and queer communities called “Journey Towards Collective Care” as a training manual for anti-violence advocates and community members in Minnesota and the surrounding area.

An organization of Indigenous women, girls, and LGBTQ+ survivors, Waking Women Healing Institute reclaims traditional pathways for healing and development through practices such as birthing, rites of passage, traditional medicines, and land and water protection.

  • Organizing for civic participation, policy advocacy, community organizing, and base-building to change systems that enable violence to occur:

Feminist Alliance for Rights’ work addresses the marginalization of feminist voices from the Global South by facilitating the participation and influence of feminist voices in international and local policymaking connected to ending violence and harassment in the world of work through ILO Convention 190.

The CARES (Creating, Affirming, Responsive, Equitable, Schools) initiative created by National Black Women’s Justice Institute aims to end school pushout by transforming schools into the nurturing, caring, and supportive educational spaces that Black girls & gender-expansive youth and all students deserve, where they can grow and thrive.

  • Advancing safety narratives that are rooted in gender, racial, and economic justice and changing community norms around safety and accountability:

HEART Women & Girls is changing community norms through “The Sex Talk: A Muslim’s Guide to Healthy Sex and Relationships,” a workshop and resource designed by HEART for sexual health literacy that is sex positive, inclusive, comprehensive, and considers how faith and cultural identity can intersect with sexuality and relationships.

  • Building skills and capacity for transformative, community-rooted safety practices, including digital and physical security infrastructure to protect women and gender expansive people of color against threats to safety:

Reclaiming Our Own Transcendence’s core program Healing Cycles of Harm meets the needs of BIPOC survivors and those impacted by violence through an abolitionist, collective accountability, wellness-circle model. 

We believe deeply in the incredible power and strength of this movement, and the important work grantee partners have been doing to address violence and create safety in spite of an increasingly challenging political environment and funding landscape.

We see supporting these movement-building organizations as a key element of working towards a future free from violence, where everyone experiences collective safety, shared abundance, joy, and power.

CFF's 2024 Grantee Partners

A Long Walk Home

AAPI Women Lead

Acorn Center for Restoration and Freedom

African American Policy Forum

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

Asia Floor Wage Alliance 

Black Girls Restored

Black LGBTQIA+ Migrant Project

Black Women’s Blueprint/Restore Forward

Coalition for Restaurant Safety and Health

Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women

Colectivo Ilé

Creative Interventions

El/La Para TransLatinas

Equality Labs

EveryBlackGirl

Feminist Alliance for Rights

Free Hearts

Freedom, Inc.

Girls for Gender Equity

The HEAL Project

Healing to Action

HEART Women & Girls

In Our Names Network

International Domestic Workers Federation

Jahajee Sisters

JASS/Just Power 

Justice for Migrant Women

Matahari Women Workers Center

metoo. International 

Miami Workers Center

MO Ho Justice

Mother Nation

Moving Mountains

National Black Women’s Justice Institute

National Women’s Law Center

One Fair Wage 

Politics of Sexual Violence Initiative

Reclaiming Our Own Transcendence

Restoring Justice for Indigenous Peoples

Solutions Not Punishment Collaborative

South Asian SOAR

Tahirih Justice Center

Trans Resilience Fund

Transforming Generations

VidaAfroLatina

Vision Change Win

Visioning BEAR Circle Intertribal Coalition

Waking Women Healing

Women on the Rise

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