International Development Grant

Zimbabwe Civil Society Fund

Project Number: CA-3-A032822001

Status: Closed

Country/Region:

Zimbabwe 100.00%

Maximum Contribution: $7,500,000.00

Start Date: October 27, 2006

End Date: November 30, 2010

Duration: 4.1 years

Project Description

From its launch in November 2006 to its close in September 2010 the Zimbabwe Civil Society Fund (ZCSF) Phase I managed its contributions to Zimbabwe’s civil society through two “streams”: the Gender Equality stream and the Rights Democracy and Governance stream. The resulting 59 sub-projects contributed to the improved capacity of Zimbabweans to exercise their civil political economic social and cultural rights. Change in Zimbabwe during the Fund’s life related to human rights governance democracy and gender equality. For example legislative advocacy by ZCSF partners contributed to the enactment of the Domestic Violence Act of Zimbabwe in 2007 – thereby improving women’s rights through identification reporting prevention mitigation and redress of violence against women. CIDA’s funding and technical assistance to selected civil society organizations enabled them to conduct countrywide human rights campaigns including child rights and voter education from January 2007 to March 2008. Thereafter civil society networks and ZCSF partners have noted that between June 2008 and May 2009 reported cases of child sexual abuse dropped by 25% to 30%. In addition parallel tabulation by civic groups on the results of the March 2008 elections minimised opportunities for manipulation of the results helping bring about the Global Political Agreement later that year followed by the formation of a Government of National Unity (GNU) in February 2009. Relative peace and security for the people have emanated from the GNU. Gender equity among elected leaders has improved in part due to the combined effects of voter education and increased awareness of women’s rights. In 2005 the percentage of elected women councillors in Local Government was 15% while males constituted 85%. Following the March 2008 Local Government elections female councillors dramatically increased to 46% of the elected councillors. The 2010 Constitution consultation process saw remarkable public partici

Progress & Results Achieved

From its launch in November 2006 to its close in September 2010 the Zimbabwe Civil Society Fund (ZCSF) Phase I managed its contributions to Zimbabwe's civil society through two "streams": the Gender Equality stream and the Rights Democracy and Governance stream. The resulting 59 sub-projects contributed to the improved capacity of Zimbabweans to exercise their civil political economic social and cultural rights. Change in Zimbabwe during the Fund's life related to human rights governance democracy and gender equality. For example legislative advocacy by ZCSF partners contributed to the enactment of the Domestic Violence Act of Zimbabwe in 2007 - thereby improving women's rights through identification reporting prevention mitigation and redress of violence against women. CIDA's funding and technical assistance to selected civil society organizations enabled them to conduct countrywide human rights campaigns including child rights and voter education from January 2007 to March 2008. Thereafter civil society networks and ZCSF partners have noted that between June 2008 and May 2009 reported cases of child sexual abuse dropped by 25% to 30%. In addition parallel tabulation by civic groups on the results of the March 2008 elections minimised opportunities for manipulation of the results helping bring about the Global Political Agreement later that year followed by the formation of a Government of National Unity (GNU) in February 2009. Relative peace and security for the people have emanated from the GNU. Gender equity among elected leaders has improved in part due to the combined effects of voter education and increased awareness of women's rights. In 2005 the percentage of elected women councillors in Local Government was 15% while males constituted 85%. Following the March 2008 Local Government elections female councillors dramatically increased to 46% of the elected councillors. The 2010 Constitution consultation process saw remarkable public partici

Key Information

Executing Agency:
Embassy of Canada to Zimbabwe Angola and Botswana

Reporting Organization:
Global Affairs Canada

Program:
WGM Africa

Last Modified:
September 19, 2025

Development Classifications

DAC Sector:

Democratic participation and civil society 100%

Aid Type: Project-type interventions

Collaboration: Bilateral

Finance Type: Aid grant excluding debt reorganisation

Selection Mechanism:
Pre-APP

Policy Markers
Level 1 Gender equality
Level 1 Participatory development and good governance
Major Funding (>$1M)
Budget Breakdown
2006-04-01 to 2007-03-31 $7,500,000 CAD
Geographic Information
000";Budget Type:Original;Start Date:2007-04-01;End Date:2008-03-31;Value Date:2006-10-27;Value:"$1
Reference ID: 500