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Philanthropic Support to Address HIV and AIDS in 2021

October 24, 2023

This marks the 20th annual resource tracking publication from Funders Concerned About AIDS (FCAA) on philanthropic support to address HIV and AIDS. The report relies on grants lists submitted directly by 72 funders (representing 92% of the total HIV-related philanthropic funding tracked by FCAA), as well as publicly sourced grants information from funder websites, grants databases, annual reports, U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 990 returns, and Candid's Foundation Maps grants database (representing the remaining 8% of funding in the report). This report specifically captures HIV-related funding from philanthropic organizations around the world; it excludes any government funding to address HIV and AIDS, including domestic government, bilateral, and multilateral support.HIV-related giving among philanthropic organizations totaled $692 million in 2021, representing a $9 million (1%) decrease from 2020. As in previous years, fluctuations in funding are predominantly driven by a handful of funders who control the majority of the resources.

Case Study: Ending the HIV Epidemic in Cook County, Illinois

March 9, 2023

This resource provides an overview of the HIV epidemic in Cook County, IL − the most populous county in the state and the second most populous county in the U.S. − and the amount of HIV-related philanthropic funding received by organizations there in 2020. It complements a data partnership between Funders Concerned About AIDS (FCAA) and AIDSVu, which offers a glimpse at what the HIV epidemic looks like in the 57 jurisdictions prioritized in the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. Initiative (EHE).To learn more about the work behind these numbers, please read this feature story with AIDS Foundation Chicago.

Case Study: Ending the HIV Epidemic in Washington, D.C.

March 9, 2023

This resource provides an overview of the HIV epidemic in Washington, D.C. and the amount of HIV-related philanthropic funding received by organizations there in 2020. It complements a data partnership between Funders Concerned About AIDS (FCAA) and AIDSVu, offering a glimpse at what the HIV epidemic looks like in the 57 jurisdictions prioritized in the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. Initiative (EHE).

FCAA Data Spotlight: HIV-Related Philanthropy and the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. Initiative

March 9, 2023

The Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. (EHE) is a ten-year federal initiative that focuses on communities most affected by HIV by supplying resources and expertise to 50 local areas that account for more than half of new HIV diagnoses, and seven states with a substantial rural burden in order to expand HIV prevention and treatment efforts. These 57 locations are referred to as jurisdictions.The following infographic examines HIV-related philanthropic funding that was disbursed to the 57 Ending the HIV Epidemic Initiative jurisdictions in 2020.To complete this analysis, FCAA first looked at all funding disbursed to organizations headquartered within the 57 EHE jurisdictions. To further align with EHE efforts – which emphasize local resources, context, and needs – we next removed grants that encompassed national or regional-level work. What remains, and is analyzed here, is funding to organizations based within the 57 jurisdictions and doing work at the state or local level.

Philanthropic Support to Address HIV and AIDS in 2020

May 11, 2022

Funders Concerned About AIDS' signature resource tracking report, Philanthropic Support to Address HIV and AIDS, is the most comprehensive study of its kind. The current edition -- based on calendar year 2020 grant making -- captures data on more than 5,000 grants, awarded by 323 foundations in 10 countries, in an effort to identify gaps, trends, and opportunities in HIV-related philanthropy.The resource tracking report offers a unique snapshot of the HIV landscape, helping funders to:Align available resources with critical needs;Discover other organizations active in the countries that they fund;Identify new partners and help leverage and strengthen their own work;Build support for a new project or issue in an under-resourced country; andInform efforts of grantees and partners to increase long-term sustainability or programs.

Converging Epidemics: COVID-19, HIV & Inequality

April 13, 2021

This report—commissioned by Funders Concerned About AIDS (FCAA) in partnership with the Elton John AIDS Foundation (EJAF)—highlights how marginalized communities have been impacted by COVID-19 in the U.S. and globally and what their key evolving needs have been as the pandemic has progressed; provides reflections on lessons learned from private funders' emergency COVID-19 response; and presents a set of recommendations for funders, global health institutions, and governments—including the new U.S. administration—for their efforts going forward. The learning and recommendations are based upon and informed by a review of surveys, reports, and rapid assessments produced by HIV-related funders, philanthropy-serving organizations (PSOs), research institutions, and global, regional, and national networks representing the populations of focus for the learning effort, as well as over 30 interviews with funders, networks, community-based organizations (CBOs), and individual activists, which were conducted by an external consultant team from November 2020 to February 2021.The key underlying theme running throughout this report, and the most commonly expressed reflection from CBOs, networks, and the funders who support them, is that the challenges and stresses highlighted by the pandemic are not new for people living with or at risk of HIV, especially in the case of LGBTQ individuals and communities of color in the U.S. and key populations globally. These challenges reflect the structural, systemic issues that have disproportionately affected these communities for decades, and continue to do so.

Global Philanthropic Support to Address HIV/AIDs in 2012

December 1, 2013

This resource tracking project reports on philanthropic funding given to HIV/AIDS programmes in high, middle and low-income countries. It relies on surveys completed by funders, with supplemental review of data from grants databases and funders' grantlists. Data was obtained for close to 300 organisations that are believed to represent the substantial majority of global private philantropic HIV/AIDS funding. This year's report includes funding data from 209 U.S.-based funders and 38 E.U.-based funders, as well as 40 HIV/AIDS philanthropic funders based outside of the U.S. and E.U.

U.S. and European Philanthropic Support to Address HIV/AIDS in 2011

November 2, 2012

Funders Concerned About AIDS (FCAA) and the European HIV/AIDS Funders Group (EFG) share the common mission of mobilizing philanthropic leadership, ideas, and resources to address the HIV/AIDS pandemic -- domestically and internationally -- as well as its social and economic dimensions. Through this resource tracking effort, FCAA and EFG have been monitoring the field of HIV/AIDS philanthropy for close to a decade. This resource tracking report on philanthropic support to HIV/AIDS from U.S.- and European-based funders in 2011 relies largely on surveys completed by funders, with supplemental review of data from grants databases and funders' grants lists. Data was obtained for over 300 funders who are believed to represent the substantial majority of private philanthropic HIV/AIDS funding from the U.S. and Europe.

Looking Back, Forging Ahead: 25 Years of FCAA

January 1, 2012

This year marks the 25th anniversary of Funders Concerned About AIDS' work to mobilize philanthropic leadership, ideas, and resources in the fight against AIDS. We are using this occasion to remember, recommit and reinvigorate. We remember the lives lost to the disease, and the catalytic influence of the philanthropic sector in achieving successes to date. We recommit to our work of convening the sector, providing timely and relevant information to enlighten your grantmaking, and providing the important time and space for funder networking and exploration of collaborative approaches to current challenges. Finally, we will use this quarter century mark to reinvigorate the philanthropic sector -- seeking to re-engage those funders who've moved on from AIDS, as well as reaching out to those working in adjacent areas of health, human rights, and social justice to highlight the important intersections in our work.

U.S. Philanthropic Support to Address HIV/AIDS in 2009

December 20, 2010

Analyzes data on U.S. foundations' HIV/AIDS-related funding compared with previous years and projected funding for 2010. Examines trends by type of funder, recipient region, types of organizations and projects supported, and population served.

U.S. Philanthropic Commitments For HIV/AIDS 2005 and 2006

September 1, 2007

This report analyses HIV/AIDS philanthropy undertaken by U.S.-based grantmakers in 2005 and 2006. This report includes also data about funders' disbursements (actual monies transferred) in addition to their funding commitments.

U.S. Philanthropic Commitments For HIV/AIDS 2004

August 1, 2006

This reports analyses HIV/AIDS philanthropy undertaken by U.S.-based grantmakers in 2004.