FUNDING OPPORTUNITY DESCRIPTION The U. S. Embassy in Phnom Penh and the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the U. S. Department of State are pleased to announce the fiscal year 2018 call for proposals for the Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation Large Grants Program.
The Fund
credit:
is aimed at preserving cultural sites or objects that have historical or cultural significance for Cambodia.
Floor on Amount of Individual Awards:
US $200,000 per project.
Since 2008, awards made through this program for new large-scale projects have ranged from $200,000 to $979,000 with an average award amount of $480,00 0. GOALS OF FUNDING OPPORTUNITY The Fund was established to help countries preserve their cultural heritage.
For Cambodia, it is aimed at preserving major ancient archaeological sites, historic buildings and monuments, and major museum collections that have historical or cultural significance and are accessible to the public and protected by law in Cambodia.
The projects selected to receive funding through the U. S. Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation (AFCP) will advance U. S. diplomatic goals and demonstrate the depth of U. S. respect for the cultural heritage of Cambodia.
Proposal shall advance U. S. foreign policy objectives and demonstrate American leadership in the preservation and protection of cultural heritage around the world.
FUNDING AREAS - SPECIFIC TO THE AFCP 2018 ANNUAL COMPETITION The AFCP Large Grants Program gives top priority to project activities that are appropriate and in keeping with international cultural heritage preservation standards.
An appropriate preservation activity is one that protects the values of the site as they are understood by stakeholder.
Stakeholders may include national, regional, or local cultural authorities; the local community; and others with vested interests in the site and the outcome of a project.
Appropriate project activities may include:
• Preventive conservation (addressing conditions that damage or threaten the site) • Stabilization (reducing the physical disturbance [settling, collapse, etc.] of a site) • Conservation (addressing damage or deterioration to a collection or sites) • Consolidation (connecting or reconnecting elements of a site) • Anastylosis (reassembling a site from its original parts) • Restoration (replacing missing elements to recreate the original appearance of a site, usually appropriate only with the arts, decorative arts, and historic buildings) FUNDING PRIORITIES - SPECIFIC TO THE AFCP 2018 ANNUAL COMPETITION Applications for projects that directly support one or more of the following will receive additional consideration in FY 2018:
• U. S. treaty or bilateral agreement obligations, such as cultural property agreements • Disaster risk reduction for cultural heritage in seismically active and other disaster-prone areas • Post-disaster cultural heritage recovery • Preservation of inscribed World Heritage sites