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Lossless FTS flow provenance

Flow 344029

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Source refreshed
13 Jul 2026
Import completed
13 Jul 2026
Source runs
1
Covered years
2026
Stable FTS ID
344029
Import checksum
9dca9a2ec0cca70caa2b383b78937e9aab82f901dbc5bb5dc397f9f3d0965e44
Reported amount $41,093
Status paid
Boundary incoming
Version 1
Year membership 2026
Reference 27_44089

Normalized source fields

Flow record

All normalized fields are displayed; unreported scalars remain explicit.
Description
Multi-Sector - GBV Programming Tanzania Women Cross-Party Platform is primarily committed to engage in advocating for meaningful inclusion of women in politics and governance position in Tanzania. The commitment to specifically work on Girls and Women with disability is prompted by the fact that they are not considered as special group and therefore subject them to double violence compared with women without disability. It is estimated that 16% of the world population is composed of people with disability, while 80% of them are found in the World South in which Tanzania is included. (UN Women). In Tanzania more than 3.3 million people are estimated to live with a disability. It is also depicted that Women have higher disability rates with 7.8% of the country's total population estimated to be women with disabilities against 5.7% men. Tanzania is implementing laws and policies. Election violence tends to disproportionately affect women than men worldwide. While it is true that both men and women may be victims of election violence, the form of violence that women encounter is distinctively different from that of men, and in turn, tends to jeopardize women’s political participation. This study sets out to investigate the barriers that women face in political participation in the form of violence against women in elections (VAW-E) as candidates, as well as voters and propose actions and interventions to reduce and eliminate the identified barriers. In Tanzania, a report on the Mapping and Analysis of 2010 Election-Related Incidents of Violence (2011) shows that compared to previous elections, three quarters of respondents (66.8 percent) said the 2010 elections were either very violent or violent especially during the vote counting process and the declaration of results (UDSM 2011:17). Yet, this study did not use gender-based definition of the election violence to capture the magnitude of the VAW-E in Tanzanian elections. However, the observed violence during the 2010 general elections provides an indication that incidents of violence against women did take place but were not systematically uncovered using conventional methods of election observation and monitoring, It is evident that no analysis that was done to depict the plight of girls and women with disability in that situation. Prevalence of violence against women in elections (VAW-E) during the 2015 general elections in Tanzania. 52% of women reached out by T-WCP monitoring reported spousal violence and 53% of women reported refraining from voting due to fear of violence, lack of registration, or pressure from spouses. Out of 110 appointed women MP special seats, there are only two women with disability evidencing marginalisation and exclusion. Tanzania has adopted and implementing a number of laws, policies and standards pertaining to people with disabilities, including their rights to protective and decent work, vacation training and basic services. Unfortunately, despite the obligations as stipulated in 1977 Constitution and its amendments prohibit discrimination against persons with disabilities, in practice and especially in the political and leadership sphere, there is no policy or guidelines developed to ensure inclusion of women and girls with disability in politics and governance structure. It is therefore the Goal of this project to advocate for creation of safe and inclusive political landscape that empowers Tanzanian Girls and Women survivors of violence and those at risk of intersectional GBV including women and girls with disability to engage in political processes without fear of violence or exclusion. This project addresses the critical issue of violence against women and girls (VAWG) in Tanzanian politics, with a particular emphasis on marginalized groups, including women and girls with disabilities, those facing racial discrimination, and women human rights defenders. The project will be implemented in 11 regions of Tanzania, which recorded significant incidences of violence against women during 2015 general elections. To achieve its goal, the project will employ targeted interventions, through Legal Advocacy, training on Gender-Based Violence and Political Participation; Capacity Building and Training; Media advocacy; Community Mobilization; Debate; Monitoring and Reporting Mechanisms. The expected results of this project include increased awareness on the importance of inclusive approach to political participation and specifically the rights to political participation of women and girls with disabilities. By focusing on the marginalized groups and employing these strategies, this project will contribute significantly in raising awareness on the importance of inclusive democracy and rights of Girls and Women with disability, and at the same time, contribute to the Tanzania national agenda of prevention and elimination of violence against women. This project is planned to be accomplished by utilising a total of US$ 200,000 within for implementation year.
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Decision date
31 Oct 2024
First reported
01 Apr 2025
Flow date
21 May 2025
Budget year
Not reported
Parked amount
Not reported
Original amount
Not reported
Original currency
Not reported
Exchange rate
Not reported
Earmarking
earmarked
Method
Traditional aid
New money
Yes
Keywords
Not reported
On boundary
"single"
Source created
21 May 2025
Source updated
21 May 2025
Source fetched
13 Jul 2026

Canonical dimensions

Linked evidence

Only single resolved IDs become entity or filter links.
Plan
Unspecifiedmissing
Source and destination objects 6
Source and destination objects in source order
DirectionPositionTypeNameExternal IDBehaviorStateOrganization traits
source0OrganizationUN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women15182singlesinglePooled Funds, Global UN Pooled Funds, Pooled Funds
source1UsageYear202445singleunresolvedNot reported
destination0OrganizationTanzania Women Cross-Party Platform15288singlesingleNGOs, National NGOs/CSOs, Local and National Non-State Actors
destination1GlobalClusterProtection - Gender-Based Violence13singlesingleNot reported
destination2LocationTanzania, United Republic of221singlesingleNot reported
destination3UsageYear202647singleunresolvedNot reported
Report details 1
Report details in source order
PositionSource typeOrganizationChannelReport date
0PrimaryUN Trust Fund to End Violence against WomenEmail01 Apr 2025
Year memberships 2
Current completed-run memberships
YearBoundaryOn boundaryObservedImport run
2026incoming"single"13 Jul 2026115
2024outgoing"single"12 Jul 202634
Parent and child flows 0
Raw FTS JSON

Escaped source evidence is shown verbatim; unknown fields are preserved and not interpreted.

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  "amountUSD": 41093,
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  "budgetYear": null,
  "childFlowIds": null,
  "contributionType": "financial",
  "createdAt": "2025-05-21T13:11:25.464Z",
  "date": "2025-05-21T00:00:00Z",
  "decisionDate": "2024-10-31T00:00:00Z",
  "description": "Multi-Sector - GBV Programming\nTanzania Women Cross-Party Platform is primarily committed to engage in advocating for meaningful inclusion of women in politics and governance position in Tanzania. The\ncommitment to specifically work on Girls and Women with disability is prompted by the fact that they are not considered as special group and therefore subject them to double\nviolence compared with women without disability. It is estimated that 16% of the world population is composed of people with disability, while 80% of them are found in the World\nSouth in which Tanzania is included. (UN Women). In Tanzania more than 3.3 million people are estimated to live with a disability. It is also depicted that Women have higher disability\nrates with 7.8% of the country's total population estimated to be women with disabilities against 5.7% men. Tanzania is implementing laws and policies. Election violence tends to\ndisproportionately affect women than men worldwide. While it is true that both men and women may be victims of election violence, the form of violence that women encounter is\ndistinctively different from that of men, and in turn, tends to jeopardize women’s political participation. This study sets out to investigate the barriers that women face in political\nparticipation in the form of violence against women in elections (VAW-E) as candidates, as well as voters and propose actions and interventions to reduce and eliminate the identified\nbarriers. In Tanzania, a report on the Mapping and Analysis of 2010 Election-Related Incidents of Violence (2011) shows that compared to previous elections, three quarters of\nrespondents (66.8 percent) said the 2010 elections were either very violent or violent especially during the vote counting process and the declaration of results (UDSM 2011:17). Yet,\nthis study did not use gender-based definition of the election violence to capture the magnitude of the VAW-E in Tanzanian elections. However, the observed violence during the 2010\ngeneral elections provides an indication that incidents of violence against women did take place but were not systematically uncovered using conventional methods of election\nobservation and monitoring, It is evident that no analysis that was done to depict the plight of girls and women with disability in that situation. Prevalence of violence against women in\nelections (VAW-E) during the 2015 general elections in Tanzania. 52% of women reached out by T-WCP monitoring reported spousal violence and 53% of women reported refraining\nfrom voting due to fear of violence, lack of registration, or pressure from spouses. Out of 110 appointed women MP special seats, there are only two women with disability evidencing\nmarginalisation and exclusion. Tanzania has adopted and implementing a number of laws, policies and standards pertaining to people with disabilities, including their rights to\nprotective and decent work, vacation training and basic services. Unfortunately, despite the obligations as stipulated in 1977 Constitution and its amendments prohibit discrimination\nagainst persons with disabilities, in practice and especially in the political and leadership sphere, there is no policy or guidelines developed to ensure inclusion of women and girls with\ndisability in politics and governance structure. It is therefore the Goal of this project to advocate for creation of safe and inclusive political landscape that empowers Tanzanian Girls\nand Women survivors of violence and those at risk of intersectional GBV including women and girls with disability to engage in political processes without fear of violence or\nexclusion. This project addresses the critical issue of violence against women and girls (VAWG) in Tanzanian politics, with a particular emphasis on marginalized groups, including\nwomen and girls with disabilities, those facing racial discrimination, and women human rights defenders. The project will be implemented in 11 regions of Tanzania, which recorded\nsignificant incidences of violence against women during 2015 general elections. To achieve its goal, the project will employ targeted interventions, through Legal Advocacy, training on\nGender-Based Violence and Political Participation; Capacity Building and Training; Media advocacy; Community Mobilization; Debate; Monitoring and Reporting Mechanisms. The\nexpected results of this project include increased awareness on the importance of inclusive approach to political participation and specifically the rights to political participation of\nwomen and girls with disabilities. By focusing on the marginalized groups and employing these strategies, this project will contribute significantly in raising awareness on the\nimportance of inclusive democracy and rights of Girls and Women with disability, and at the same time, contribute to the Tanzania national agenda of prevention and elimination of\nviolence against women. This project is planned to be accomplished by utilising a total of US$ 200,000 within for implementation year.",
  "destinationObjects": [
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "15288",
      "name": "Tanzania Women Cross-Party Platform",
      "organizationLevels": [
        "Local and National Non-State Actors"
      ],
      "organizationSubTypes": [
        "National NGOs/CSOs"
      ],
      "organizationTypes": [
        "NGOs"
      ],
      "type": "Organization"
    },
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "13",
      "name": "Protection - Gender-Based Violence",
      "type": "GlobalCluster"
    },
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "221",
      "name": "Tanzania, United Republic of",
      "type": "Location"
    },
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "47",
      "name": "2026",
      "type": "UsageYear"
    }
  ],
  "exchangeRate": null,
  "firstReportedDate": "2025-04-01T00:00:00Z",
  "flowType": "Standard",
  "grandBargainEarmarkingType": [
    "earmarked"
  ],
  "id": "344029",
  "keywords": null,
  "method": "Traditional aid",
  "newMoney": true,
  "onBoundary": "single",
  "parentFlowId": null,
  "refCode": "27_44089",
  "reportDetails": [
    {
      "date": "2025-04-01T00:00:00.000Z",
      "organization": "UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women",
      "reportChannel": "Email",
      "sourceType": "Primary"
    }
  ],
  "sourceObjects": [
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "15182",
      "name": "UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women",
      "organizationLevels": [
        "Pooled Funds"
      ],
      "organizationSubTypes": [
        "Global UN Pooled Funds"
      ],
      "organizationTypes": [
        "Pooled Funds"
      ],
      "type": "Organization"
    },
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "45",
      "name": "2024",
      "type": "UsageYear"
    }
  ],
  "status": "paid",
  "updatedAt": "2025-05-21T13:11:25.464Z",
  "versionId": 1
}