Collective Care

As human rights funders, we should support our grantees to pursue holistic safety and protection (including physical safety, mental health, and digital security), as well as community care and healing. Human rights defenders face trauma, violence, and burnout as a result of their work. Threats to safety may be physical, social, emotional, economic, legal, political, or reputational.


First and foremost, human rights funders must always seek to do no harm and mitigate risks. Funder actions can expose grantees and communities to risks; potential risks should be evaluated in collaboration with those affected and held above all other concerns. Recognizing the high incidence of post-traumatic stress disorder, self-sacrifice, and overwork present in human rights organizations and movements, funders should support improved working conditions and adequate compensation so that self-care is at the heart of internal working cultures.


Write us at principlesproject@hrfn.org to recommend additional resources.

Resources

Article/Blog

Why We Must Overhaul the Funding

of Social Movements

Tatiana Cordero Velásquez

Mónica Enríquez-Enríquez

openDemocracy

Assessment Tool

Care: A Questionnaire for Funders

FRIDA Young Feminist Fund

Urgent Action Fund - LAC

Website

Healing Justice: Building Power, Transforming Movements

Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice

Website

Collective Care Blog

Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice

Document

CARE at the CENTER

Urgent Action Fund -

Latin American and the Caribbean

Document

Taking CARE of Our Digital Body

Urgent Action Fund -

Latin America and the Caribbean

Book

What's the Point of Revolution

if We Can't Dance?

Jane Barry & Jelena Djordjevic

Urgent Action Fund for Women's Human Rights

Article/Blog

How Funders Can Support

Individual Well-Being

Jessamyn Shams-Lau & Leah Wilberding

Standford Social Innovation Review

“Rarely, if ever, are any of us healed in isolation. Healing is an act of communion.” - bell hooks