Urgent Action Fund-Africa (UAF-Africa) is a Pan-African non-profit organization (NPO) focused on women and founded in Nairobi in 2001. UAF-Africa is the sister organization of the global NPO Urgent Action Fund.[1]
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UAF-Africa structures itself organizationally into three programs: grant making, collaborative initiatives and communications.
UAF-Africa grants rapid response funding up to $5,000 to initiatives across the continent which protect women's human rights. Several representative grant recipients include: enabling women to take part in national truth and reconciliation processes, relocating women's human rights activists whose lives were in danger because of their activism, sensitizing parliamentarians on an upcoming referendum's ramifications on women's human rights, and empowering women to protect their own rights in conflict situations.[1]
In addition to making grants, UAF-Africa's Collaborative Initiatives Programme aims to strengthen its grantees so they become better able to sustain their activism. Collaborative Initiatives was created when the organization established that some of goals were best approached by means outside of making grants.[1]
The Communications Program is the newest of the three and helps create a platform for women’s rights issues as well as the organization’s message in order to reach diverse audiences.
UAF-Africa has also produced a number literary, academic, and organizational of publications, including:
UAF-Africa was founded by Betty Kaari Murungi, a lawyer specialising in the areas of women's human rights, gender, and constitutionalism and governance. In addition to serving as UAF-Africa's director, she has been the legal advisor to the Women's Human Rights Program at Rights and Democracy in Montreal, Canada. Ms. Murungi has fought to ensure that the International Criminal Court and the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda include a gender perspective in their work. In 2003, Ms. Murungi received The Moran of the Order of the Burning Spear from Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki for her achievements.[1]
In no particular order UAF-Africa's institutional donors include: