Announcing The First Cohort Of Locally-led NGOs In Southern Africa Selected For Spring Impact’s Scale Accelerator

: Women’s Empowerment Programme

A diverse range of impactful locally-led NGOs across Malawi, South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe have been selected to take part in Spring Impact’s Scale Accelerator: Women’s Empowerment, a new fully-funded scaling consultancy programme for southern Africa organisations addressing issues related to women’s empowerment 

After a rigorous selection process that has spanned several months and attracted hundreds of applications, Spring Impact announces the 11 highly ambitious and impactful NGOs selected for the first ever cohort of Scale Accelerator: Women’s Empowerment Programme. 

Scale Accelerator: Women’s Empowerment is a fully-funded scaling consultancy programme for locally-led NGOs in southern Africa who want to scale up and take their vital work to more people, in more places. 

The programme will help participants figure out how to implement their programme, service or intervention elsewhere in a financially sustainable way. The support will be tailored to each organisation’s needs and will focus on building scaling approaches for long-term impact which retain quality and depth at scale. 

The first cohort consists of 11 dynamic and diverse organisations from Malawi, South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe who are committed to addressing critical issues related to women’s empowerment, including: 

Bakashana (Zambia): A female-and-youth-led Grassroots Organisation, Bakashana’s primary work involves the support of young women living in rural areas who lack the financial or familial resources to attend secondary school. 

Chipembere Community Development Organization (Malawi): CCDO is a youth-led local organisation providing a holistic array of services to improve the wellbeing and livelihood of marginalised communities in rural areas of southern Malawi. 

Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace (Malawi): CCJP works with partners to promote human rights, justice and peace, aiming to ensure justice happens appropriately and swiftly, to increase women’s confidence in the justice systems and to reduce future perpetration within communities. 

Graca Machel Trust (South Africa): GMT is a Pan-African organisation established in 2010 to tackle structural barriers that change how public and private institutions address women’s and children’s rights. 

MOSAIC Training Services and Healing Centre (South Africa): An African-feminist NGO rooted in the communities it was founded in, which provides

quality, holistic and integrated support services to women and children while activating resources, communities and systems, and collaborating with relevant stakeholders from government, civil society and community-based organisations, in order to prevent domestic violence and advance gender equality and safety within relationships, homes and communities. 

SAVEACT (South Africa): Based in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, SAVEACT enables communities to develop financial and enterprise development skills through belonging to savings groups. The organisation works in eight of the country’s nine provinces, with staff and partners spread out across the country. 

The Justice Desk (South Africa): A human rights non-profit organisation that specialises in human rights education, promoting children’s rights and ending gender-based violence. It was established in 2013, with the main goal of Promoting the Power of Everyday Activists. 

Unjani Clinics NPC (South Africa): A non-profit organisation focussed on the empowerment of nurses and communities, with the goal of impacting millions of lives through enhanced access to quality, affordable primary healthcare. 

Young Women in Action (Zambia): A not-for-profit, membership-based Non-Governmental Organisation established in 2002 to provide an enabling environment in which young women in Zambia can contribute towards their own empowerment and national development. 

Youth and Society (Malawi): Founded in 2012, Youth and Society (YAS) is a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) with a mission to promote and defend human rights and democratic governance in Malawi with a particular focus on young people and marginalised groups. 

Zimbabwe Women Resource Centre and Network (Zimbabwe): The Zimbabwe Women’s Resource Centre and Network (ZWRCN) is committed to promoting women’s social and economic justice in Zimbabwe and globally, through the power of information, networking, and strategic advocacy. 

This is the first cohort of NGOs selected to take part, with a second group of participating organisations to be announced in May 2023. 

Scale Accelerator: Women’s Empowerment has been developed with the ambition of enabling locally-led solutions to create even greater impact on more people, in more places. Spring Impact’s ambition is that the programme will build a movement around scaling impact, where leaders and teams across the wider NGO sector are equipped with the frameworks, tools, and networks needed to continue their own scaling journey and inspire the journeys of others into the future. 

Commenting on the launch of the programme, Mohamed Osman, Spring Impact CEO said: 

“Congratulations to the first cohort of 11 organisations for their well-deserved success in joining the programme. The programme has seen an overwhelming number of applications from organisations across the southern Africa region.

Collaborating with these ambitious teams to scale the impact of their programmes, interventions or services will ensure their vital work can benefit many more women and girls. We look forward to supporting the participants to deliver their work at scale and change an ever-growing number of lives for the better.” 

Scale Accelerator, Spring Impact’s flagship programme, originated in the UK. Since 2015, over 50 ambitious NGOs at the frontline of addressing key societal issues have participated. As a result, many have increased their reach and impact, expanded their solution to several locations, and gained funding for their next phase of growth. 

To find out more about the programme and the new cohort, please visit this link

Share
Scroll to Top