News

You-Le/Unsplash

New Survey: US funding freeze triggers global crisis in human rights and democracy 

Press release: A new survey carried out by the EU System for an Enabling Environment (EU SEE) network exposes the impact of the US funding freeze on civil society organisations (CSOs) in over 50 countries. With 67% of surveyed organisations directly impacted and 40% of them losing between 25-50% of their budgets, the abrupt halt in funding is disrupting critical human rights, democracy, gender equality and health programs, leaving vulnerable communities without essential support. 

Explore the survey in this link 

Key Findings

  • The decision by the US to reduce foreign aid funding has become an opportunity to further limit civic space. CSOs are increasingly facing public attacks fuelled by misinformation and negative narratives, along with restrictive regulatory frameworks and heightened scrutiny, according to the new data. 
  • 67% of surveyed CSOs by EU SEE are directly affected, with 40% of them losing 25-50% of their budgets, forcing them to reduce programs, cut staff or close operations. 
  • Human rights, democracy and gender equality programs face the most severe disruptions with a real risk of setting the world decades behind. 
  • Many organisations lack alternative funding sources and risk shutting down permanently. 

Across the world, the immense contributions of civil society to democracy, the rule of law, good governance, policy making and in advancing the rights of excluded voices continue to be undermined by actions that constrain their enabling environment. The time is now for joint action with civil society to push back on these restrictions by advocating for open spaces and progressive laws that promote and protect rights for all,” says David Kode, Global Programme Manager EU SEE. 

What Needs to Happen? 

The EU SEE network urges governments, donors and policymakers to take immediate action in the following ways: 

  • Emergency financial support to stabilize affected CSOs 
  • Stronger donor coordination to ensure sustained support for democracy, human rights, and media freedom programmes. 
  • Flexible and sustainable funding mechanisms that allow CSOs to adapt. 
  • Support civil society organisations to develop stronger advocacy & communication strategies to counter narrative backlash 

If we don’t act now, vital programs which are the direct result of civil society impact, supporting democracy, human rights, and communities will disappear,” says Sarah Strack, Forus Director. 

The US funding freeze, along with the insecurities and “unknowns” it is triggering, is already having far-reaching consequences, and its long-term effects could be even more devastating. Without swift action, many organizations that hold governments accountable, defend human rights, and support vulnerable communities may disappear altogether.  

These data make it clear: civil society is at risk, and the time to act is now. 

In an interview conducted by CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation with Gina Romero, UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights to Freedoms of Peaceful Assembly and of Association, she states: “These measures are a stake in the heart of the right to freedom of association, especially because of the way the decision is made: radical, surprising, with no possibility of gradual action, with little transparency and zero participation of the affected actors.” CIVICUS has also conducted a survey on the impact of the US funding freeze among their members around the world. 

Search

People searched for

Translate »