IPPF Core support 2020
Contribution ID : SE-0-SE-6-61050190This website displays open data about Swedish aid, which shows when, to whom and for what purpose Swedish aid is paid out, as well as what results it has produced. This page contains information about one of the contributions financed with Swedish aid.
IPPF has been a long standing partner and has again approached Sida for a unrestricted support for 2020-2022. IPPF has applied for funding to the Strategic Framework of which Sida has agreed to a sum of SEK 330 Million for the three years. The Strategic Framework aims to achieve the following Outcomes and outputs: Outcome 1) 100 governments will respect, pro...
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IPPF has been a long standing partner and has again approached Sida for a unrestricted support for 2020-2022. IPPF has applied for funding to the Strategic Framework of which Sida has agreed to a sum of SEK 330 Million for the three years. The Strategic Framework aims to achieve the following Outcomes and outputs: Outcome 1) 100 governments will respect, protect and fulfil sexual and reproductive rights and gender equality by 2022 Output: Increased capacity of MAs to advocate on SRHR issues Outcome 2) 1 billion people will act freely on their sexual and reproductive rights by 2022 Output: Increased awareness of SRHR, increased acceptability of and demand for SRHR services, especially among women and youth Outcome 3) IPPF and our partners will deliver 2 billion quality, integrated sexual and reproductive health services by 2022 Output: Enhanced quality of care; improved availability, accessibility and affordability of SRH services Outcome 4) IPPF will be a high performing and united federation Output: Enhanced operational effectiveness with increased income; and increased volunteer and activist support base Sida is one of the core donors to IPPF, where the unrestricted funding comprises 36% of the total budget or 58 MUSD, of the overall budget (including restricted funding) of 163 MUSD for 2020 which totals roughly 20% of the total unrestricted funding to IPPF. The unrestricted funding is currently even more important for IPPF given the Covid 129 crisis.
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Result
IPPF has continued to work against the opposition to SRHR and abortion and have lobbyed against e.g the Global Gag rule etc. Overall IPPF has contributed to 136 policy and legislative changes in support or defence of SRHR and gender equality. Moreover IPPF supported a total of 752 youth and womens groups in 2020 to take public action in support of SRHR. IPPF provided 25.5 million young people with CSE, where the main work was done by the China Family Planning Association and more than 100 000 young people were trained as CSE educators. In 2020 IPPF delivered a total of 218.5 million SRH services provided directly from static clinics or outreach teams and community based providers as well as 7.2 million services enabled through partners health facilities. Further 5.5 million clienst were served in humanitarian settings. IPPFs contraceptive provision averted 11.5 million unwanted pregnancies and 3.4 million unsafe abortions. Examples of results: IPPF contributed to a total of 121 policy and legislative changes in support or defence of sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) and gender equality in 2021. Thats over two "wins" a week. 78 of these advocacy wins were due to work carried out by Member Associations (MA), of which 54 were at the national level and 24 at the subnational level. In 2021, IPPF MAs provided comprehensive sexuality education to a total of 34.8 million young people, representing a 36 per cent increase on 2020. While the IPPF MA in China contributed 89 per cent of this total number of occassions, the number of young people who received comprehensive sexuality education in other countries also grew from 3.4 million in 2020 to 4.0 million in 2021:an 18 per cent increase. In 2021, IPPF MAs trained more than 100,000 young people to provide comprehensive sexuality education, eight per cent less than the previous year. Almost half (49 per cent) were trained in the Americas and Caribbean region, 20 per cent in the Africa region and 13 per cent in the European Network. A total of 231.4 million services were delivered globally in 2021, a six per cent increase from 2020. The results generated by IPPF is impressive and an important contribution to the area of SRHR.
As this is a core funding, we use and highlight IPPFs core outcomes and outputs. IPPF's new Strategy (2023-2028) has twelve outcomes - which IPPF will report against in this amended agreement. Compared to the outcomes in the previous IPPF Strategy (2026-2022) the new strategy encompassess similar types of outcomes, however adapted to the current needs as well as more in line with the organisational changes due to the reform the organisation has gone through over the last few years. The assessment is that the previous assessment done by Sida, based on the old IPPF strategy still holds. Importantly, however to highlight some of the key changes between the two strategies include: Previously, IPPF's strategic ambition was to deliver increasingly high numbers of services, and drive policy change across a large number of countries. In the new strategy, whilst remaining ambitious and seek to grow their impact, the emphasis is to use available resources to reach people who are being excluded and marginalised with quality and people-centred care. It is not only about reaching high numbers, but also about who they reach and the quality of the care that is provided. Secondly, the new strategy moves its ambition from broad policy shifts to much deeper interventions that combine all the tools at IPPFs disposal: shaping laws, policies and norms through feminist action and international solidarity. In doing so, IPPF will expand partnerships to activists, grassroots as well as community based organizations. IPPF will be working in a larger ecosystem of new and diverse partnerships. Lastly, the new strategy is about nurturing and growing the federation, and this starts with re-defining IPPF key values (with a new Charter of values), and being honest about addressing shortcomings while adding new impetus to IPPFs ambition and drive. Likewise, the new strategy will focus more systematically in supporting MAs to become sustainable social enterprises that are less dependent on aid funding. The new Strategy - "IPPF 2028 - Come Together" Outcomes: 1. Proportion of [service providing] MAs/CPs providing IPES-plus AND meeting quality standards. 2. Number of clients served by type of services and model of care (including Digital Health Interventions (DHIs), facilitated self-care) with focus on adolescents and young people, people in humanitarian settings and other marginalized and excluded people. 3. Number of services provided by type of services and model of care (including DHIs, facilitated self-care) with focus on adolescents and young people, people in humanitarian settings and other marginalized and excluded people. 4. Aggregated proportion of MAs/CPs contribution to the national SRH services provided in their countries IPPF's contribution in supporting social movements and defending activists. 5. Number of successful policy initiatives and legislative changes in support or defence of SRHR 6. Shifts in perception of attitudes in relation to gender equality and inclusion across the Federation and the communities we serve 7. Quality reach of and impact CSE, youth centred care, and progress in youth engagement in the Federation. 8. IPPFs contribution in supporting social movements and defending activists. 9. Number of intra- and inter-sector campaigns delivered by the federation in support or defence of SRHR, through a diversity and decolonization lens. 10. Proportion of research and evidence initiatives generated by MA-led centres of learning that are from the global south. 11. Proportion MAs/CPs receiving less than 50% of their income from one single donor. 12. Overall Secretariat Efficiency Score. The new IPPF Strategy 2023-2028 is a step forward compared to the old Strategy (2016-2022) in that IPPF will be more proactive in driving change in a progressive direction, allows IPPF to be more dynamic, agile, quick to act and fast to respond. The assessment is also that it focuses on the quality of services with people in the centre and with a focus on marginalised and excluded groups of people.
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