This is a call for applications into the Omega Resilience Awards – Africa (ORA – A) Fellowship programme for 2024. Applications are invited from visionaries, activists, academics, artists, communicators and organisers involved in movements or struggles that highlight opportunities for creating a more resilient future in the face of the global polycrisis. 

Application Deadline: 15th February 2024

About the Fellowship

The Omega Resilience Awards (ORA) fellowship program is designed to identify visionaries – primarily under the age of 45 – drawn from diverse fields, often working in an intersectional fashion, who can help their society understand the nature of the global polycrisis and imagine what it will take to chart a path toward a more resilient future. Now in its second year, ORA is a project of Commonweal, a US-based NGO dedicated to healing, resilence and justice. For almost50 years, Commonweal has brought together communities of dedicated people to explore the emerging challenges that face our world.

Omega Resilience Awards -Africa (ORA -A) is designed to specifically identify visionaries, activists, academics, communicators, artistes, and people involved in movements or struggles in Africa – people who can help their communities imagine what will be required to chart a path toward a more resilient future amid the polycrisis. It is one of three cohorts being organised globally with the other two being convened in Latin America and India. The Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) is serving as the coordinator for the Africa cohort.

With the ORA-A Fellowship, we are looking for people who understand that the old approach to solving problems in silos is no longer viable and that, instead, we need to apply a systems-thinking lens. But not in a way that paralyses people with complexity. Instead, we want to identify candidates who can translate complexity into actionable steps that help communities slow, if not reverse, the damage being done by the cascading crises enumerated above. And we will invite these same people to frame what a more resilient future might look like for their communities and constituents. 

ORA -A fellows are expected to develop new tools and models of thinking, leadership, communication and engagements in response to the challenges of the global polycrisis. The ultimate purpose of the fellowship is to build a cohort of innovative activists/academics and communicators committed to long-term involvement in the generation of knowledge in radical movements for transformation and system change.

Who Will Be Considered? 

While the diverse stressors that comprise the global polycrisis are beginning to make themselves felt now in the form of extreme weather, drought, famine, migration, and extinction it is agreed that the bulk of the impacts will be felt by generations just emerging and those yet to be born, with a disproportionate burden falling on people living in the Global South. To that end, the ORA Fellowship Program will be focused primarily on identifying young (under 45) communicators, artists, journalists, activists, and public intellectuals who are engaged in translating for their readers, viewers, and listeners the connections between seemingly disparate phenomena – climate, water, health, and migration – and how they interact within the larger system the comprises the polycrisis. While we realise that communicating the full weight of the polycrisis can be intimidating and sometimes overwhelming, we’re looking for people who can render complexity comprehensible and serve as sense-makers for their readers, viewers, and/or listeners.

We anticipate that Fellows will use their stories and projects to illustrate the scope of the global polycrisis and the array of skillful interventions in response. In turn, we expect to gain a deeper understanding of how the polycrisis affects different regions and what messages inspire action and hope.

Eligibility

  • The fellowship is open to Africans resident in Africa, preferably involved in movements and have their origins in the communities of struggles.
  • Applicants/Nominees must not be older than 45 years.
  • Applicants/Nominees are expected to show history of experience in activism and innovative thinking.
  • All applicants/nominees must be active change-makers in their communities.
  • Applicants/Nominees must commit to participate in regular seminars/webinars throughout the programme and be willing to create media (e.g. articles, podcasts, video, photographs, etc.) that can be shared across ORA’s diverse media channels
  • Applicants/Nominees must provide 2 verifiable references to validate their application.

Award

  • The ORA Africa fellowships are awarded yearly. The 2024 fellows will receive $10,000 support for individuals. 
  • ORA Africa fellows would focus on work on the polycrisis.

Requirements

  • Complete and submit the online application form. Access the form at this link.
  • Letter of intent (one page) stating why you think you (or a nominee) should merit consideration to be awarded the fellowship.
  • Proposal outlining clearly what you intend to achieve with the fellowship, the nature of the activity/research you wish to carry out, and the resources you will need to reach your set goal if selected. The proposal must show the polycrisis issue(s) that the proposed project intends to address. Such issues may include but are not limited to environment, gender, health, education, agriculture/food systems, craft, economic inequality, etc. Strong preference will be given to candidates working in an integrated fashion across diverse issues.
  • Applicants/Nominees should be willing to connect with and be part of a community of other Fellows; they should also be willing to participate in monthly online seminars organised by ORA-A as well as periodic online convenings organised by ORA-Global where all three cohorts are gathered

For any clarifications, please feel free to contact 

OduduAbasi Asuquo – [email protected] 

Share This
Select your currency
NGN Nigerian naira