UN OCHA FTS source ledger

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Contribution type
Flow type
Earmarking
Reported amount $11.27M
Flow records 19
Included statuses
  • paid $7.19M · 11
  • commitment $4.09M · 8

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Source buckets: Multiple means several reported objects; Unspecified means none was supplied; Unresolved means a supplied object could not be matched to the canonical register.

  1. $11.27M · 19 flows

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Filtered amount
$11,274,034
Filtered flows
19
Chart node limit
90
Chart link limit
180
Exact funding trace
FromToReported amountFlows
Norway, Government ofNorwegian Refugee Council$4,117,2254
Norwegian Refugee CouncilSyrian Arab Republic$4,117,2254
Norway, Government ofACT Alliance / Norwegian Church Aid$2,814,7684
ACT Alliance / Norwegian Church AidSyrian Arab Republic$2,814,7684
Norway, Government ofSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Fund$2,168,4341
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian FundSyrian Arab Republic$2,168,4341
Norway, Government ofSave the Children$1,233,4864
Save the ChildrenSyrian Arab Republic$1,233,4864
Norway, Government ofNorwegian People's Aid$843,8834
Norwegian People's AidSyrian Arab Republic$843,8834
Norway, Government ofUnited Nations Population Fund$96,2382
United Nations Population FundSyrian Arab Republic$96,2382

Source evidence

Reported flow records

Downloads are generated by the server from all filtered records, not only this page. The safety limit is 50,000 rows; a 413 response means the result is too broad, so narrow the filters and try again. Exports are never silently truncated.

Exact reported funding flows
Flow IDStatus / boundaryReported amountDonorRecipient agencyCountryPlanSectorDecision dateFirst reportedReference
388874paid / incoming$2,168,434Norway, Government ofSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian FundSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026Unspecified13 May 202615 May 2026OCT/NOR/2026/78082/OCHA(CBPF-OCHA)/SYR/85562 QZA-23/0010 Amendment 23
Evidence for flow 388874 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$2,168,434
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Fund
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Unspecified
Decision date
13 May 2026
First reported
15 May 2026
Reference
OCT/NOR/2026/78082/OCHA(CBPF-OCHA)/SYR/85562 QZA-23/0010 Amendment 23

Norway Contribution to Syria Humanitarian Fund (3558) 2026

Funding flow detail →
364326paid / incoming$48,119Norway, Government ofUnited Nations Population FundSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026Health23 May 202513 Oct 2025NOB28 QZA-25/0102
Evidence for flow 364326 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$48,119
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
United Nations Population Fund
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Health
Decision date
23 May 2025
First reported
13 Oct 2025
Reference
NOB28 QZA-25/0102

"Global Humanitarian Appeal" Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities

Funding flow detail →
364327paid / incoming$48,119Norway, Government ofUnited Nations Population FundSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026Protection23 May 202513 Oct 2025NOB28 QZA-25/0102
Evidence for flow 364327 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$48,119
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
United Nations Population Fund
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
23 May 2025
First reported
13 Oct 2025
Reference
NOB28 QZA-25/0102

"Global Humanitarian Appeal" Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities

Funding flow detail →
380395paid / incoming$1,866,727Norway, Government ofNorwegian Refugee CouncilSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026MultipleNot reported03 Mar 2026QZA-25/0010-41 QZA-25/0010
Evidence for flow 380395 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$1,866,727
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Norwegian Refugee Council
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Multiple
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
03 Mar 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0010-41 QZA-25/0010

Flyktninghjelpen/NRC in Syria works to ensure vulnerable conflict and displacement-affected people have access to timely and effective protection and assistance inside Syria. NRC will deliver an integrated, multi-sector package of emergency and transitional assistance and programming to support recovery and pathways to durable solutions. Sectors include Education, Livelihoods and food security (LFS), Shelter and settlements, Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH). The project design is informed by a gender analysis, and all indicators are disaggregated by sex.

Funding flow detail →
380396paid / incoming$740,578Norway, Government ofNorwegian Refugee CouncilSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026ProtectionNot reported03 Mar 2026QZA-25/0010-42 QZA-25/0010
Evidence for flow 380396 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$740,578
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Norwegian Refugee Council
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
03 Mar 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0010-42 QZA-25/0010

yktninghjelpen/NRC in Syria works to ensure vulnerable conflict and displacement-affected people have access to timely and effective protection and assistance inside Syria. NRC will deliver an integrated, multi-sector package of emergency and transitional assistance and programming to support recovery and pathways to durable solutions. Sectors include Information, counselling and legal assistance (ICLA) and Protection from violence (PfV). The project design is informed by a gender analysis, and all indicators are disaggregated by sex.

Funding flow detail →
387599commitment / incoming$1,081,043Norway, Government ofNorwegian Refugee CouncilSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026MultipleNot reported04 May 2026QZA-25/0010-41 QZA-25/0010
Evidence for flow 387599 commitment · incoming
Reported amount
$1,081,043
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Norwegian Refugee Council
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Multiple
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
04 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0010-41 QZA-25/0010

Flyktninghjelpen/NRC in Syria works to ensure vulnerable conflict and displacement-affected people have access to timely and effective protection and assistance inside Syria. NRC will deliver an integrated, multi-sector package of emergency and transitional assistance and programming to support recovery and pathways to durable solutions. Sectors include Education, Livelihoods and food security (LFS), Shelter and settlements, Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH). The project design is informed by a gender analysis, and all indicators are disaggregated by sex.

Funding flow detail →
387600commitment / incoming$428,877Norway, Government ofNorwegian Refugee CouncilSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026ProtectionNot reported04 May 2026QZA-25/0010-42 QZA-25/0010
Evidence for flow 387600 commitment · incoming
Reported amount
$428,877
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Norwegian Refugee Council
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
04 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0010-42 QZA-25/0010

yktninghjelpen/NRC in Syria works to ensure vulnerable conflict and displacement-affected people have access to timely and effective protection and assistance inside Syria. NRC will deliver an integrated, multi-sector package of emergency and transitional assistance and programming to support recovery and pathways to durable solutions. Sectors include Information, counselling and legal assistance (ICLA) and Protection from violence (PfV). The project design is informed by a gender analysis, and all indicators are disaggregated by sex.

Funding flow detail →
387957paid / incoming$615,558Norway, Government ofACT Alliance / Norwegian Church AidSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026ProtectionNot reported05 May 2026QZA-25/0008-25 QZA-25/0008
Evidence for flow 387957 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$615,558
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
ACT Alliance / Norwegian Church Aid
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
05 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0008-25 QZA-25/0008

Humanitarian response in Syria - Protection "Norwegian Church Aid Syria’s SGBV programme supports women and girls with survivor-centred protection services, including psychosocial support, legal and medical referrals, and cash assistance. These services are accessible to all women and girls, particularly those with disabilities, and are delivered through safe spaces and mobile units across Syria. The programme promotes inclusion, economic empowerment, and community engagement to prevent GBV and harmful practices. The response is implemented together with the following national partners: St Ephrem Patriarchal Development Committee (SOPA/EPDC) and The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch/Department of Ecumenical Relations and Development (GOPA/DERD)."

Funding flow detail →
387958commitment / incoming$477,016Norway, Government ofACT Alliance / Norwegian Church AidSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026ProtectionNot reported05 May 2026QZA-25/0008-25 QZA-25/0008
Evidence for flow 387958 commitment · incoming
Reported amount
$477,016
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
ACT Alliance / Norwegian Church Aid
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
05 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0008-25 QZA-25/0008

Humanitarian response in Syria - Protection "Norwegian Church Aid Syria’s SGBV programme supports women and girls with survivor-centred protection services, including psychosocial support, legal and medical referrals, and cash assistance. These services are accessible to all women and girls, particularly those with disabilities, and are delivered through safe spaces and mobile units across Syria. The programme promotes inclusion, economic empowerment, and community engagement to prevent GBV and harmful practices. The response is implemented together with the following national partners: St Ephrem Patriarchal Development Committee (SOPA/EPDC) and The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch/Department of Ecumenical Relations and Development (GOPA/DERD)."

Funding flow detail →
387959paid / incoming$732,565Norway, Government ofACT Alliance / Norwegian Church AidSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026MultipleNot reported05 May 2026QZA-25/0008-26 QZA-25/0008
Evidence for flow 387959 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$732,565
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
ACT Alliance / Norwegian Church Aid
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Multiple
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
05 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0008-26 QZA-25/0008

Humanitarian response in Syria "Norwegian Church Aid Syria’s humanitarian response addresses urgent WASH and food security needs through climate-resilient, community-led solutions. It restores access to safe water and sanitation, promotes hygiene, and supports food production with agricultural inputs and cash assistance. The gender perspective is integrated in all of Norwegian Church Aid`s program work, with the aim to ensure safe and equitable access for all. Needs assessments and surveys inform the development of tailored hygiene promotion strategies, which include the distribution of hygiene items, such as those specifically designed for MHM and incontinence, including the needs of persons with disabilities. The response is implemented together with the following national partners: St Ephrem Patriarchal Development Committee (SOPA/EPDC) and The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch/Department of Ecumenical Relations and Development (GOPA/DERD)"

Funding flow detail →
387960commitment / incoming$989,629Norway, Government ofACT Alliance / Norwegian Church AidSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026MultipleNot reported05 May 2026QZA-25/0008-26 QZA-25/0008
Evidence for flow 387960 commitment · incoming
Reported amount
$989,629
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
ACT Alliance / Norwegian Church Aid
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Multiple
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
05 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0008-26 QZA-25/0008

Humanitarian response in Syria "Norwegian Church Aid Syria’s humanitarian response addresses urgent WASH and food security needs through climate-resilient, community-led solutions. It restores access to safe water and sanitation, promotes hygiene, and supports food production with agricultural inputs and cash assistance. The gender perspective is integrated in all of Norwegian Church Aid`s program work, with the aim to ensure safe and equitable access for all. Needs assessments and surveys inform the development of tailored hygiene promotion strategies, which include the distribution of hygiene items, such as those specifically designed for MHM and incontinence, including the needs of persons with disabilities. The response is implemented together with the following national partners: St Ephrem Patriarchal Development Committee (SOPA/EPDC) and The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch/Department of Ecumenical Relations and Development (GOPA/DERD)"

Funding flow detail →
388188paid / incoming$334,449Norway, Government ofNorwegian People's AidSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026Food SecurityNot reported11 May 2026QZA-25/0009-26 QZA-25/0009
Evidence for flow 388188 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$334,449
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Norwegian People's Aid
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Food Security
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
11 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0009-26 QZA-25/0009

Food Security and Livelihoods in Syria "NPA’s FSL response in Syria supports the resilience and recovery of vulnerable households in Ar-Raqqa and Aleppo through a combination of livelihoods support, agricultural assistance, and income-generating opportunities. Households participate in short-term cash-for-work activities that improve community assets while providing immediate income. Olive-farming households receive agricultural inputs and training, while livestock keepers are supported with fodder, inputs, and equipment such as poultry incubators to enhance productivity and strengthen food security. Women survivors of SGBV and female-headed households receive targeted support through skills development, business training, and small-scale income-generating grants. These activities promote economic independence, reduce vulnerability, and reinforce gender-responsive livelihood pathways. Community resilience is further strengthened through disaster risk reduction structures, with trained committees supporting preparedness, risk mitigation, and community coordination. Environmental sustainability, sensitivity to people with disabilities, and gender equality are integrated across all interventions, ensuring that support is inclusive, locally led, and built on sustainable practices." ----- NORAD

Funding flow detail →
388189commitment / incoming$298,463Norway, Government ofNorwegian People's AidSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026Food SecurityNot reported11 May 2026QZA-25/0009-26 QZA-25/0009
Evidence for flow 388189 commitment · incoming
Reported amount
$298,463
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Norwegian People's Aid
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Food Security
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
11 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0009-26 QZA-25/0009

Food Security and Livelihoods in Syria "NPA’s FSL response in Syria supports the resilience and recovery of vulnerable households in Ar-Raqqa and Aleppo through a combination of livelihoods support, agricultural assistance, and income-generating opportunities. Households participate in short-term cash-for-work activities that improve community assets while providing immediate income. Olive-farming households receive agricultural inputs and training, while livestock keepers are supported with fodder, inputs, and equipment such as poultry incubators to enhance productivity and strengthen food security. Women survivors of SGBV and female-headed households receive targeted support through skills development, business training, and small-scale income-generating grants. These activities promote economic independence, reduce vulnerability, and reinforce gender-responsive livelihood pathways. Community resilience is further strengthened through disaster risk reduction structures, with trained committees supporting preparedness, risk mitigation, and community coordination. Environmental sustainability, sensitivity to people with disabilities, and gender equality are integrated across all interventions, ensuring that support is inclusive, locally led, and built on sustainable practices." ----- NORAD

Funding flow detail →
388190paid / incoming$111,483Norway, Government ofNorwegian People's AidSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026ProtectionNot reported11 May 2026QZA-25/0009-27 QZA-25/0009
Evidence for flow 388190 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$111,483
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Norwegian People's Aid
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
11 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0009-27 QZA-25/0009

Protection from Sexual and Gender Based Violence in Syria "NPA’s SGBV programme in Syria supports local partners who prioritize serving women and girls affected by violence through integrated prevention and response services aiming at strengthening their wellbeing, resilience, and protection. Women and girls' access SGBV case management and psychosocial support, as well as comprehensive and multisectoral services through referrals and women and girls' safe spaces, delivered by trained staff within the local partner organizations. Our programmes prioritize structured life skills training and reintegration support to help women and girls survivors of and at risk of SGBV to regain confidence, strengthen coping skills, and pursue pathways to economic empowerment and social participation as prevention measures against SGBV. Community outreach promotes safer environments by raising awareness on SGBV risks, gender equality, tackling normalization of SGBV, strengthening positive social norms, and disseminating available services. Male engagement initiatives and public dialogues reach all community members, fostering shared responsibility to tackle SGBV. Community-based protection structures are strengthened through the establishment and training of SGBV committees that contribute to advocacy, early warning, and community assessments. All activities prioritise gender, age, and disability inclusion, ensuring survivors and individuals at risk—including marginalized groups—access, respectful, confidential, and survivor-centred care. "ces." ----- NORAD

Funding flow detail →
388191commitment / incoming$99,488Norway, Government ofNorwegian People's AidSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026ProtectionNot reported11 May 2026QZA-25/0009-27 QZA-25/0009
Evidence for flow 388191 commitment · incoming
Reported amount
$99,488
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Norwegian People's Aid
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
11 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0009-27 QZA-25/0009

Protection from Sexual and Gender Based Violence in Syria "NPA’s SGBV programme in Syria supports local partners who prioritize serving women and girls affected by violence through integrated prevention and response services aiming at strengthening their wellbeing, resilience, and protection. Women and girls' access SGBV case management and psychosocial support, as well as comprehensive and multisectoral services through referrals and women and girls' safe spaces, delivered by trained staff within the local partner organizations. Our programmes prioritize structured life skills training and reintegration support to help women and girls survivors of and at risk of SGBV to regain confidence, strengthen coping skills, and pursue pathways to economic empowerment and social participation as prevention measures against SGBV. Community outreach promotes safer environments by raising awareness on SGBV risks, gender equality, tackling normalization of SGBV, strengthening positive social norms, and disseminating available services. Male engagement initiatives and public dialogues reach all community members, fostering shared responsibility to tackle SGBV. Community-based protection structures are strengthened through the establishment and training of SGBV committees that contribute to advocacy, early warning, and community assessments. All activities prioritise gender, age, and disability inclusion, ensuring survivors and individuals at risk—including marginalized groups—access, respectful, confidential, and survivor-centred care. "ces." ----- NORAD

Funding flow detail →
388228paid / incoming$259,783Norway, Government ofSave the ChildrenSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026ProtectionNot reported11 May 2026QZA-25/0011-2 QZA-25/0011
Evidence for flow 388228 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$259,783
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Save the Children
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
11 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0011-2 QZA-25/0011

Humanitarian support (Child Protection): Most vulnerable children are protected against violence, abuse and violations of children’s rights This programme aims to ensure that the most vulnerable children are protected from violence, abuse and violations of their rights by strengthening the safety and resilience of the environments around them. It focuses on preventing harm by addressing underlying risks such as poverty, harmful norms, weak protection systems and limited access to services, while also providing timely, child-centred support when protection concerns arise. Working with families, communities, schools and local authorities, the programme strengthen the capacity of caregivers and institutions to recognize risks early and respond safely and inclusively in line with international child protection standards. It expands access to essential protection services—such as case management, psychosocial support and clear referral pathways—designed to meet the specific needs of girls and boys of different ages and abilities. The programme also empowers children with knowledge of their rights and life skills that help them stay safe and express their needs. By reinforcing community-based protection mechanisms and strengthening coordination with national systems, the programme fosters a more protective environment that upholds children’s well-being in both everyday situations and during crises. All SC programmes are gender mainstreamed, inclusive and aims to strengthen resilience. ----- NORAD

Funding flow detail →
388229commitment / incoming$356,960Norway, Government ofSave the ChildrenSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026ProtectionNot reported11 May 2026QZA-25/0011-2 QZA-25/0011
Evidence for flow 388229 commitment · incoming
Reported amount
$356,960
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Save the Children
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Protection
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
11 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0011-2 QZA-25/0011

Humanitarian support (Child Protection): Most vulnerable children are protected against violence, abuse and violations of children’s rights This programme aims to ensure that the most vulnerable children are protected from violence, abuse and violations of their rights by strengthening the safety and resilience of the environments around them. It focuses on preventing harm by addressing underlying risks such as poverty, harmful norms, weak protection systems and limited access to services, while also providing timely, child-centred support when protection concerns arise. Working with families, communities, schools and local authorities, the programme strengthen the capacity of caregivers and institutions to recognize risks early and respond safely and inclusively in line with international child protection standards. It expands access to essential protection services—such as case management, psychosocial support and clear referral pathways—designed to meet the specific needs of girls and boys of different ages and abilities. The programme also empowers children with knowledge of their rights and life skills that help them stay safe and express their needs. By reinforcing community-based protection mechanisms and strengthening coordination with national systems, the programme fosters a more protective environment that upholds children’s well-being in both everyday situations and during crises. All SC programmes are gender mainstreamed, inclusive and aims to strengthen resilience. ----- NORAD

Funding flow detail →
388230paid / incoming$259,783Norway, Government ofSave the ChildrenSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026EducationNot reported11 May 2026QZA-25/0011-3 QZA-25/0011
Evidence for flow 388230 paid · incoming
Reported amount
$259,783
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Save the Children
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Education
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
11 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0011-3 QZA-25/0011

Humanitarian support (Education): Children in conflict and crises have uninterrupted access to quality and life saving education: This programme ensures that children affected by conflict and crises can continue learning by securing uninterrupted access to safe, quality and life-saving education, in line with SC’s global Education in Emergencies approach. When schools are damaged, closed or unsafe, Save the Children rapidly establishes temporary learning spaces, supports community-based and accelerated learning models, and deploys trained Education in Emergencies staff to restore access as quickly as possible. The programme strengthens learning quality by equipping teachers with crisis-sensitive pedagogy, providing inclusive teaching and learning materials, and adapting curricula so both girls and boys can learn safely despite the heightened risks they face. Protection is at the core of SC’s work: safe learning spaces offer predictable routines, psychosocial support and referral pathways for children experiencing distress, while school-based safeguarding measures reduce exposure to violence, exploitation and early marriage. Save the Children works closely with families, community education committees and local authorities to identify and remove barriers—including insecurity, displacement, poverty and gender-based restrictions—and to reinforce local education systems so they are better prepared for future shocks. Through this integrated and child-centred approach, the programme ensures that education remains a protective lifeline that supports children’s well-being, resilience and right to learn even in the most challenging humanitarian contexts. All SC programmes are gender mainstreamed, inclusive and aims to strengthen resilience. ----- NORAD

Funding flow detail →
388231commitment / incoming$356,960Norway, Government ofSave the ChildrenSyrian Arab RepublicSyrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026EducationNot reported11 May 2026QZA-25/0011-3 QZA-25/0011
Evidence for flow 388231 commitment · incoming
Reported amount
$356,960
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Donor
Norway, Government of
Recipient agency
Save the Children
Destination
Syrian Arab Republic
Plan
Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Priorities 2026
Sector
Education
Decision date
Not reported
First reported
11 May 2026
Reference
QZA-25/0011-3 QZA-25/0011

Humanitarian support (Education): Children in conflict and crises have uninterrupted access to quality and life saving education: This programme ensures that children affected by conflict and crises can continue learning by securing uninterrupted access to safe, quality and life-saving education, in line with SC’s global Education in Emergencies approach. When schools are damaged, closed or unsafe, Save the Children rapidly establishes temporary learning spaces, supports community-based and accelerated learning models, and deploys trained Education in Emergencies staff to restore access as quickly as possible. The programme strengthens learning quality by equipping teachers with crisis-sensitive pedagogy, providing inclusive teaching and learning materials, and adapting curricula so both girls and boys can learn safely despite the heightened risks they face. Protection is at the core of SC’s work: safe learning spaces offer predictable routines, psychosocial support and referral pathways for children experiencing distress, while school-based safeguarding measures reduce exposure to violence, exploitation and early marriage. Save the Children works closely with families, community education committees and local authorities to identify and remove barriers—including insecurity, displacement, poverty and gender-based restrictions—and to reinforce local education systems so they are better prepared for future shocks. Through this integrated and child-centred approach, the programme ensures that education remains a protective lifeline that supports children’s well-being, resilience and right to learn even in the most challenging humanitarian contexts. All SC programmes are gender mainstreamed, inclusive and aims to strengthen resilience. ----- NORAD

Funding flow detail →