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Lossless FTS flow provenance
Flow 344033
Inspect the normalized flow version, every ordered object and report, current year memberships, family links and escaped raw source JSON.
- Source refreshed
- 13 Jul 2026
- Import completed
- 13 Jul 2026
- Source runs
- 1
- Covered years
- 2026
- Stable FTS ID
344033- Import checksum
9dca9a2ec0cca70caa2b383b78937e9aab82f901dbc5bb5dc397f9f3d0965e44
Reported amount $50,231
Status paid
Boundary incoming
Version 1
Year membership 2026
Reference 27_42992
Normalized source fields
Flow record
All normalized fields are displayed; unreported scalars remain explicit.- Description
- Multi-Sector - GBV Programming The regions of Shinyanga and Mwanza in Tanzania are grappling with alarming rates of child sexual violence and early marriages, as evidenced by research from several sources. The World Bank (2022), Women Fund Tanzania Trust (2023), Hakielimu (2024), and the Global Partnership to End Violence Against Children Tanzania (2022) highlight that Shinyanga reports the highest rates of child pregnancies at 34% and sexual violence at 59%, leading to over 500 girls dropping out of school annually. Mwanza also faces significant challenges, with a 37% prevalence of child sexual violence, especially in rural areas like Misungwi, Nyida, and Didia, where child marriage and sexual violence disproportionately impact the least educated and poorest girls. The Women Fund Tanzania Trust (2023) indicates that 61% of women aged 20-24 with no education and 39% with primary education were married or in a union by age 18, compared to only 5% of women with secondary education or higher. In Mwanza and Shinyanga, marriage is often perceived as a means to protect girls from poverty and relieve families' economic burdens. In response, the Government of Tanzania, in collaboration with partners such as UN Women, developed the second national plan of action to eliminate violence against women and children in May 2024. Despite ongoing efforts by several actors, including Tanzania’s second National Plan of Action to eliminate violence against women and children (2024/2025-2028/2029). There remains a critical gap in enforcing the implementation of the NPA against VAWV in Tanzania, resources and focus gap specifically in Nyida, Didia, and Misungwi administrative wards of Shinyanga and Mwanza, where these issues remain alarmingly prevalent. Our project will not only support the implementation of this NPA against VAWC but also this project is designed to directly engage 1,540 adolescents and young girls under the age of 25, both girls living with disabilities (approximately 590 adolescents and young girls living with disabilities and 950 adolescents and young girls without disabilities), and a total of 200 duty bearers. Indirectly, it aims to reach 2,600 adolescents and young girls and 1,000 boys in the Nyida, Didia, and Misungwi wards across two regions namely Shinyanga and Mwanza region. The project aims to employ a human-centered approach: All activities including inclusive Workshops are meant to be organized in an accessible manner such as venues that meet the needs of girls with various disabilities, for instance, venue or school spaces with ramps, or venue with elevators, and accessible restrooms. 1. Conduct 36 inclusive workshops at 9 selected schools on girls's fundamental rights,financial literacy and life skills. 2. Provide quality survivor-centered mental health and reproductive health support services in 9 selected schools. These clinics visit each of the three wards quarterly and aim to reach approximately 1,270 adolescents and young girls over the course of the project. The clinics will offer accessible and confidential sexual and reproductive health services. 3. Establish 9 girls chainbreakers clubs at 9 selected schools (3 clubs in each ward) 4. Organize bi-annual mentorship and coaching sessions to 270 chainbreakers members. 5. Facilitate 16 community dialogues (4 each year) advocating for the protection and prevention of child abuse and violence targeting 200 duty bearers. A total of 200 participants, including 40 local authorities, 80 teachers, 40 media and journalists, and other 40 key actors, police gender desk office, social welfare, and health providers. 6. Conduct four physical educational campaign (one per year). 7. Conduct five online educational campaigns by girl chain breaker clubs. Conduct five online educational campaigns and one physical each year in the 9 selected schools, involving a total of 3,600 students. Overall goal: To create a safer, more equitable environment where a total of 1,540 most vulnerable and marginalized adolescent girls both living with disabilities and without in Shinyanga and Mwanza region can thrive, supported by behavior change, enhanced community support, and access to tailored services by October 2028. Expected Outcomes 1. 1,540 adolescent girls (including 590 with disabilities) survivors of violence and those at risk of intersectional GBV are empowered through improved resources, skills and capacities to protect themselves from violence and prevent VAW/G.. 2. Primary prevention of child sexual abuse and forced marriage is strengthened through accountability efforts and community engagement. The project will be implemented in 4 years with a total budget of $249,183.00.
- Contribution type
- financial
- Flow type
- Standard
- Decision date
- 29 Nov 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.- Donor
- UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Womensingle
- Recipient agency
- Voice of Encouragement Tanzaniasingle
- Country
- Tanzania, United Republic ofsingle
- Plan
- Unspecifiedmissing
- Sector
- Protection - Gender-Based Violencesingle
Source and destination objects 6
| Direction | Position | Type | Name | External ID | Behavior | State | Organization traits |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| source | 0 | Organization | UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women | 15182 | single | single | Pooled Funds, Global UN Pooled Funds, Pooled Funds |
| source | 1 | UsageYear | 2024 | 45 | single | unresolved | Not reported |
| destination | 0 | Organization | Voice of Encouragement Tanzania | 15292 | single | single | NGOs, National NGOs/CSOs, Local and National Non-State Actors |
| destination | 1 | GlobalCluster | Protection - Gender-Based Violence | 13 | single | single | Not reported |
| destination | 2 | Location | Tanzania, United Republic of | 221 | single | single | Not reported |
| destination | 3 | UsageYear | 2026 | 47 | single | unresolved | Not reported |
Report details 1
| Position | Source type | Organization | Channel | Report date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Primary | UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women | 01 Apr 2025 |
Year memberships 2
| Year | Boundary | On boundary | Observed | Import run |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | incoming | "single" | 13 Jul 2026 | 115 |
| 2024 | outgoing | "single" | 12 Jul 2026 | 34 |
Parent and child flows 0
Parent flowNot reported
Child flowsNone reported
Raw FTS JSON
Escaped source evidence is shown verbatim; unknown fields are preserved and not interpreted.
{
"amountUSD": 50231,
"boundary": "incoming",
"budgetYear": null,
"childFlowIds": null,
"contributionType": "financial",
"createdAt": "2025-05-21T13:13:49.974Z",
"date": "2025-05-21T00:00:00Z",
"decisionDate": "2024-11-29T00:00:00Z",
"description": "Multi-Sector - GBV Programming\nThe regions of Shinyanga and Mwanza in Tanzania are grappling with alarming rates of child sexual violence and early marriages, as evidenced by research from several sources.\nThe World Bank (2022), Women Fund Tanzania Trust (2023), Hakielimu (2024), and the Global Partnership to End Violence Against Children Tanzania (2022) highlight that Shinyanga\nreports the highest rates of child pregnancies at 34% and sexual violence at 59%, leading to over 500 girls dropping out of school annually. Mwanza also faces significant challenges,\nwith a 37% prevalence of child sexual violence, especially in rural areas like Misungwi, Nyida, and Didia, where child marriage and sexual violence disproportionately impact the least\neducated and poorest girls. The Women Fund Tanzania Trust (2023) indicates that 61% of women aged 20-24 with no education and 39% with primary education were married or in a\nunion by age 18, compared to only 5% of women with secondary education or higher. In Mwanza and Shinyanga, marriage is often perceived as a means to protect girls from poverty and relieve families' economic burdens. In response, the Government of Tanzania, in collaboration with partners such as UN Women, developed the second national plan of action to\neliminate violence against women and children in May 2024. Despite ongoing efforts by several actors, including Tanzania’s second National Plan of Action to eliminate violence\nagainst women and children (2024/2025-2028/2029). There remains a critical gap in enforcing the implementation of the NPA against VAWV in Tanzania, resources and focus gap\nspecifically in Nyida, Didia, and Misungwi administrative wards of Shinyanga and Mwanza, where these issues remain alarmingly prevalent. Our project will not only support the\nimplementation of this NPA against VAWC but also this project is designed to directly engage 1,540 adolescents and young girls under the age of 25, both girls living with disabilities\n(approximately 590 adolescents and young girls living with disabilities and 950 adolescents and young girls without disabilities), and a total of 200 duty bearers. Indirectly, it aims to\nreach 2,600 adolescents and young girls and 1,000 boys in the Nyida, Didia, and Misungwi wards across two regions namely Shinyanga and Mwanza region. The project aims to\nemploy a human-centered approach: All activities including inclusive Workshops are meant to be organized in an accessible manner such as venues that meet the needs of girls with\nvarious disabilities, for instance, venue or school spaces with ramps, or venue with elevators, and accessible restrooms. 1. Conduct 36 inclusive workshops at 9 selected schools on\ngirls's fundamental rights,financial literacy and life skills. 2. Provide quality survivor-centered mental health and reproductive health support services in 9 selected schools. These\nclinics visit each of the three wards quarterly and aim to reach approximately 1,270 adolescents and young girls over the course of the project. The clinics will offer accessible and\nconfidential sexual and reproductive health services. 3. Establish 9 girls chainbreakers clubs at 9 selected schools (3 clubs in each ward) 4. Organize bi-annual mentorship and\ncoaching sessions to 270 chainbreakers members. 5. Facilitate 16 community dialogues (4 each year) advocating for the protection and prevention of child abuse and violence\ntargeting 200 duty bearers. A total of 200 participants, including 40 local authorities, 80 teachers, 40 media and journalists, and other 40 key actors, police gender desk office, social\nwelfare, and health providers. 6. Conduct four physical educational campaign (one per year). 7. Conduct five online educational campaigns by girl chain breaker clubs. Conduct five\nonline educational campaigns and one physical each year in the 9 selected schools, involving a total of 3,600 students. Overall goal: To create a safer, more equitable environment\nwhere a total of 1,540 most vulnerable and marginalized adolescent girls both living with disabilities and without in Shinyanga and Mwanza region can thrive, supported by behavior\nchange, enhanced community support, and access to tailored services by October 2028. Expected Outcomes 1. 1,540 adolescent girls (including 590 with disabilities) survivors of\nviolence and those at risk of intersectional GBV are empowered through improved resources, skills and capacities to protect themselves from violence and prevent VAW/G.. 2.\nPrimary prevention of child sexual abuse and forced marriage is strengthened through accountability efforts and community engagement. The project will be implemented in 4 years\nwith a total budget of $249,183.00.",
"destinationObjects": [
{
"behavior": "single",
"id": "15292",
"name": "Voice of Encouragement Tanzania",
"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": "344033",
"keywords": null,
"method": "Traditional aid",
"newMoney": true,
"onBoundary": "single",
"parentFlowId": null,
"refCode": "27_42992",
"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": "2025-05-21T13:13:49.974Z",
"versionId": 1
}