Volunteers for International Security and Prosperity (VISP)

The VISP Annual Program Statement (APS) is designed to help USAID maximize its development impact by providing an easy to use, responsive mechanism that enables Missions to access expertise from a broad array of partners that can mobilize volunteers.

The APS seeks to help USAID maximize development impact, as well as promote efficient resource use, by mobilizing the creative capacity of volunteers globally. It also serves to fulfill the mandate of the Volunteers for Prosperity Executive Order, which tasks USAID with promoting, expanding, and enhancing volunteer service opportunities for highly skilled U.S. professionals who wish to work with non-governmental and voluntary service organizations around the world in support of major U.S. development initiatives.

This APS is an effective mechanism to facilitate access to skilled paid and volunteer expertise across any sector while supporting the U.S. foreign policy objectives of promoting national security, advancing American values, and supporting global prosperity and self-reliance. This global program will be funded and managed at the individual OU (Mission, Bureau or Independent Office) level.

How it Works

The VISP APS is not a Request for Applications or a Request for Proposals; it invites concept papers from a wide variety of non-governmental and voluntary service organizations for assistance awards that achieve development impact in USAID focus areas through the inclusion of volunteers.

Eligible organizations should contact USAID OUs to discuss their organization’s proposal. Following these discussions, the organization may submit a brief concept paper. Volunteers must comprise at least 30% of the total labor level of effort within any activity funded through the VISP APS. Based on their review of the concept paper, the USAID OU will make a decision whether to co-create the activity with the applicant and to request a full application. Acceptance of the concept paper satisfies competition requirements but does not guarantee an award.

Through the VISP APS, Missions can engage new organizations and non-traditional partners with specialized expertise. These new partners, and the opportunity to co-design solutions, allow for the generation of new ideas from people and organizations with fresh approaches. Peer-to-peer learning opportunities can also offer a way to build relationships between U.S. and local organizations that have the potential to live beyond the life of the development program. Missions can stretch development dollars and public diplomacy efforts by using the additional technical capacity provided by volunteers.

The flexibility of the mechanism and the opportunity for co-design adds another tool to the Mission toolbox for accessing specific expertise, paid and volunteer. Missions can also tailor programs to their specific needs by adding an addendum to the APS at any time. Addenda are brief descriptions of the problem the Mission is trying to solve and will be posted to grants.gov independently from the APS.

Contact

Local Sustainability Office (E3/LS)
Email: visp-aps@usaid.gov

Global Donor Working Group on Land Updates on the SDG Land Indicator 1.4.2

Donors’ data from land surveys to support methodology for 1.4.2

In June, the Friends of the Custodians (FoC) Committee collected data sets from land surveys conducted by donors agencies and shared them with the Custodians. The data comprised past evaluations and other surveys that have household/individual/parcel information, information about upcoming evaluations and countries where donors have close relations with the statistical agency or land/agricultural ministry to help advocate reporting on indicator 1.4.2. This info will help in the preparation of the methodology report to be submitted to the Inter-Agency Expert Group (IAEG) on SDG Indicators by 2 October 2017.

Highlights of July meetings

In July the Custodians held three important meetings:

3rd Expert Group Meeting: Using Administrative Data to Monitor SDG land (Barcelona, 6-7 July)

The focus of this EGM was on the indicator component “legally recognized documentation” which will be measured using administrative data produced by the land agencies in the different countries. Other components of the indicator will be measured using household survey data. Particularly, the objectives of this EGM were to: (1) agree on a methodology to monitor the part of indicator 1.4.2 pertaining to legally documented rights using administrative data, (2) assess availability of existing data and explore ways of institutionalizing reporting at country and regional level, and (3) explore options for building on administrative data to advocate and measure progress of land policy reforms. A readout from this EGM will be shared soon by the custodian agencies. The FoC had access to at least one presentation – by Klaus Deininger (WB) – on strategies for compiling administrative data – see the PPT here.

Expert Group Meeting on Women Land Rights (NY, 8-9 July)

This EGM examined land indicators in the SDGs, seeking for meaningful and more harmonised approaches to monitor women’s land rights in a coordinated manner at all levels. This EGM was convened by Global Land Indicators Initiative (GLII) in partnership with Oxfam. This EGM was particularly relevant for indicators 5.a.1 and 5.a.2 addressing women’s land rights, but also important to raise political support for 1.4.2. See the readout from this EGM here.

HLPF side event on Progress on Monitoring Tenure Security in SDGs – where are we? (NY, 10 July)

At this well-attended side-event, custodian agencies and partner organisations aimed at raising political support by UN Member States and other groups to globally monitor land governance through the SDG indicator 1.4.2.

Speakers included H.E. Ambassador Dessima Williams, Special Advisor to the President of the General Assembly of the United Nations on the Implementation of the SDGs, Heath Cosgrove, Director of the Land and Urban Department at USAID, Yongyi Min, Chief of Sustainable Development Goal Unit-IAEG, amongst others. They underscored the importance of securing land tenure to fight poverty and provided an update on the progress made in developing the methodology on indicator 1.4.2.

Amongst the participants’ recommendations for the ongoing process of developing a global methodology on indicator 1.4.2, are to support public education and raise awareness at the country level to the importance of monitoring tenure security and to promote capacity building for Land agencies and National Statistical Offices in new data production methods including surveys/earth observation.

Upcoming Meetings

  • 12 September, online: German NGO Welhungerhilfe will host a video conference to raise awareness of the German multi-stakeholder forum on land about the SDG land indicators. This multi-stakeholder forum comprises german government officials (Ministry of Development Cooperation, Ministry of Food and Agriculture), GIZ, NGOs and academia. Invited experts, such as Sven Kaumanns of the German Statistical commission (tbd) and Luca Miggiano from Oxfam-Novib, will inform about the importance of land tenure in the SDG context and share updates on the various land indicators – particularly the need to reclassify indicator 1.4.2 from Tier III to Tier II. Participation is by-invitation only. More info with Marion.Aberle@welthungerhilfe.de
  • 9-13 October, Rome, Italy: 44th Committee on World Food Security (CFS). This year the CFS is organizing a special plenary session on the SDGs. Countries will have the opportunity to share and discuss how they are implementing the Agenda 2030 and to reflect on the outcomes of the High-Level Political Forum 2017 to further implementation of the SDGs.
  • 11-14 November, Manama, Bahrain: 6th Meeting of the IAEG-SDGs, hosted by Bahrain Center for Strategic, International and Energy Studies (DERASAT). You can view the provisional agenda here, as well as further information here. The first two days (11 – 12 November) will be an exclusive IAEG-SDGs members meeting, while the final two days (13 – 14 November) are a plenary session, where countries non-members of the IAEG, international organizations and other stakeholders are welcome to attend.

Dialogue that Matters: USAID Talks Tenure with University Students

USAID Land Tenure Project အေၾကာင္းေဟာေျပာပုိ႔ခ်မႈကုိ ေက်ာင္းသူ၊ ေက်ာင္းသား ၅၀၀ နီးပါး၊ ပါေမာကၡေတြနဲ႔ အစုိးရတာဝန္ရွိသူေတြတက္ေရာက္ခဲ့ၾကပါတယ္။ တက္ေရာက္လာၾကသူေတြထဲမွာ ရန္ကုန္တကၠသုိလ္၊ မႏၱေလးတကၠသုိလ္နဲ႔ ေရဆင္းစုိက္ပ်ဳိးေရးတကၠသုိလ္ ဥပေဒပညာဌာနေတြက ကထိကေတြနဲ႔ အတူ ဘြဲ႔ႀကဳိကေန ပီအိပ္ခ်္ဒီ တန္း တက္ေနၾကတဲ့ ေက်ာင္းသူ၊ ေက်ာင္းသားေတြ ပါဝင္ၾကပါတယ္။ ျမန္မာအစုိးရ တာဝန္ရွိပုဂၢဳိလ္ေတြကလည္း တက္ႂကြစြာ ပါဝင္ေဆြးေႏြးခဲ့ၾကပါတယ္။

Nearly 500 students, professors and government officials attended a series of USAID Land Tenure Project lectures covering land governance, policy and law. Participants ranged from undergraduate students to doctoral candidates, along with Law Department lecturers from the University of Yangon, Mandalay University and Yezin Agricultural University. Burmese government authorities actively participated in the dialogue.

Learn more about USAID’s Land Tenure Project in Burma.

To Effectively Reach a Population, We Need to Coordinate with All Institutions

Q&A with the Restitution Coordinator at the Superintendence of Notary and Registry — SNR

Originally appeared on Exposure.

IN ORDER TO STRENGTHEN THE INSTITUTIONS INVOLVED IN RURAL DEVELOPMENT AND LAND ADMINISTRATION IN THE MUNICIPALITY OF SANTANDER DE QUILICHAO (CAUCA), USAID AND THE LOCAL MAYOR’S OFFICE HAVE PUSHED FORTH AN AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL PLAN. THE PLAN WILL BE USED AS A RURAL PLANNING TOOL IN ORDER TO MAKE BETTER INVESTMENTS IN LOCAL AGRICULTURE. EDNA GRIJALBA MONCAYO, SANTANDER DE QUILICHAO’S SECRETARY OF ECONOMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT, DESCRIBES HOW THIS PLAN WILL IMPROVE THE FUTURE OF THE MUNICIPALITY.

Q: How has USAID supported the mayor’s office?

A: Initially, USAID played an advisory role with regard to the Municipal Development Plan, the Territorial Action Plan, and the goals that we have to meet. Similarly, it provided support for each of our agriculture projects, and subsequently, the Agricultural and Environmental Plan. These tools will allow us to manage resources and determine how the municipality is doing and what its problems and limitations are.

Q: What is the relationship between the municipality’s Agricultural Plan and its Development Plan?

A: The important thing about creating the Development Plan is that it was done with the community’s participation. They defined their needs. With the Agricultural Plan, we focused on solving the limitations of each of the agricultural value chains that support the municipality’s economy and the families in rural areas—such as cacao, pineapple, mango, sugarcane, and coffee. The Plan is a tool that allows us to visualize the areas where we must intervene, whether in terms of service and inputs, technical assistance, or infrastructure.

Q: What role does land formalization play in the context of the municipality’s Agricultural Plan?

A: The mayor’s office is coordinating actions that support the right to ownership in rural areas, such as the assessment of rural properties using survey data collected by USAID. We have carried out a census for nearly 500 farmers, of which 153 produce cacao. These are the ones we have projected for land formalization. With secure property and their participation in agriculture projects, we can make sustainable changes to improve the farmer’s quality of life.

 




 

Tracking Land-Related SDGs: New Addition to the Land Portal

Today, the Land Portal launched a Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) section to track land-related SDGs. This is a joint initiative of the GLTN-GLII and the Land Portal Foundation, funded by the Omidyar Network.

UN member States endorsed the 2030 Agenda and committed to implementing the Sustainable Development Goals, a set of 17 Global Goals, in a 15-year period. Agenda 2030 contains land-related indicators under SDG 1, 2, 5, 11 and 15. Each goal includes specific targets and indicators addressing land. Many land organizations and stakeholders are committed to fully implementing the SDGs and to monitoring the land-related indicators in order to promote responsible land governance. Land is a major resource and cross-cutting component, critical to achieving the SDGs.

The SDG section on the Land Portal includes the targets and indicators related to land, a timeline of important decisions that have been made for indicators, and the site’s latest news and blogs on land and SDGs. New content will be published weekly, in concert with the GLTN and the SDSN.

Learn more about this initiative by clicking here.

USAID Land Champion: Marcela Chaves

Tell us about yourself.

I manage USAID/Colombia’s Land and Rural Development Program (LRDP). Since 2009, I have worked with USAID and have supported USAID’s assistance to the Government of Colombia (GOC) on land related issues. I lead the coordination and implementation of actions to strengthen GOC institutions so they can better and more effectively reach out to remote conflict-affected rural areas and deliver services that will allow Colombia’s sustainable transition to peace. LRDP is USAID’s largest land-related program globally.

At the national level of the GOC, and mostly in the regions, I have seen evidence of how weak land governance and land policies fuel conflict, open doors for illicit economies to flourish, and limit the opportunities for positive transformation within conflict-affected regions while hampering sustainable development and mobilization of resources. At USAID, we are working closely with the national government, as well as the departmental/municipal governments and communities to address structural issues that have impeded effective implementation of land policies in Colombia.

Why is land tenure/property rights important to your work at USAID?

Land has historically been at the heart of the Colombian conflict. For more than 50 years, Colombia has tried to implement socio-economic development in rural areas and to transform conflict affected regions that have weak land governance and land tenure issues as common denominators. When land rights are unclear, socioeconomic development is either limited and/or unsustainable. USAID-targeted regions have faced displacement (Colombia has the second highest number of displaced people in the world, after Syria), very low public and private investment, and difficulties in securing sustainable results for those who most need development opportunities and are vulnerable due to this limitation. At the moment, Colombia has a window of opportunity to address land policy barriers as a result of the peace accord. If Colombia can begin to properly address land policies, this will lead the way for sustained economic growth, increased agricultural production, strengthened state presence, sound environmental practices, and equality for all its citizens. Although a difficult and long-term task, doing this is mandatory if the interest is to truly generate positive conditions in rural areas of Colombia.

What are some of the biggest challenges you see in addressing land tenure/property rights issues? And how are we tackling these challenges?

Some of the main technical issues have to do with lack of access to land information required to implement land policies; a heavy, confusing, and sometimes contradictory legal framework; a diverse array of institutions involved in each process; diminished institutional capacity to address the magnitude of decades of land governance decay that accumulated during the conflict; and unequal distribution of land. Other more difficult issues have to do with political, economic, and social overlapping interests in relation to land.

USAID provides support to the GOC in three different phases. In 2010, we provided support at the public policy level with inputs to the Victims and Land Restitution Law and with the establishment of the GOC conditions to implement it, including the creation of both the land restitution and the victims unit. In 2012 we provided support with increased capacity in the field to begin the implementation of land restitution while support at the national level to address issues such as cadaster versus registry, access to information, institutional architecture continued. In 2013 USAID transitioned its support from filling a service gap within the GOC to providing tools and support to strengthen GOC agencies and remove internal bottlenecks to in turn enable the GOC entities to be fully responsible for accomplishing their institutional mandates. Furthermore, USAID supports the strengthening of local actors such as youth and women groups, mayors and governors to allow their empowerment and regionally-led approach to land policy implementation. Finally, USAID mobilized funding from both the public and private sectors into the areas where we support land policies to commit their investment in economically viable public-private partnerships based on appropriate value chains for each region. With this approach, the expectation is that land beneficiaries will find the right economic conditions in rural areas to transform their lives and their future.

What are some successes USAID has achieved in the land sector?

One of the main successes regarding information management has to do with the launch of the first digital platform in Colombia that will allow over 10 government entities to access and share land restitution-related information in real time instead of through cumbersome and paper-based transactions. It significantly decreases the time it takes the GOC to address land restitution in Colombia. This required significant effort and investments to recover data from the information systems of each one of the participating institutions, yet this information system is still an important base to address broader land policies mandated in the peace accord.

In relation to land formalization, USAID and the GOC have begun the implementation of the first massive land titling pilot in Colombia through a sweep methodology in which the GOC will test how to address massive land titling instead of on a case by case basis. This pilot is expected to significantly reduce the cost and time it takes the GOC to issue titles in any given municipality of Colombia and will, therefore, allow more conflict affected families to access titles quicker. It will also strengthen land governance in conflict-affected municipalities which will allow them to access investment and programs more easily. USAID also supported the signing of eight public private partnerships in targeted regions to make sure that land beneficiaries find the right conditions to remain in their land and improve their livelihoods. These partnerships are showcasing how the public and private sectors can work with small agricultural producers effectively and to secure gains for all the participants, generating trust across all stakeholders.

Finally, according to a recent evaluation of USAID/Colombia land programming, evidence shows that USAID support contributes to strengthening land restitution, with a strong emphasis on gender and ethnic minorities in the recommendations made to the GOC. This evaluation also showed that USAID programming has significantly strengthened institutional coordination and planning while providing contributions at the policy level that have proposed new and more efficient institutional arrangements, that has facilitated decision making.

Final thoughts?

Land in Colombia remains critical to secure, sustainable, and licit conditions to transition rural areas into thriving economies. However, the technical and bureaucratic complexity that revolves around this matter has not permitted sufficient actions at the highest decision-making levels of the GOC. Technical approaches need to be paired with sustained political will and a strong institutional agenda. While the peace accord is a significant step forward, it is just the beginning of a set of conditions that are required and that, in the longer term, will have effects in land policy implementation. It may sometimes sound easier to try and achieve development in conflict affected rural Colombia without getting involved in the longer term and very complex agenda that land entails. However, international experiences around the world have demonstrated that ignoring land issues is seldom a good idea, Colombia precisely being one of them. I believe one of the main challenges is to continue with sustained support while remaining realistic regarding the process that addressing land issues implies.

Land Matters Media Scan – 25 August 2017

Here are the recent land tenure and resource management media items:

USAID

  1. On The Road Again (8/22/17)
    Source: USAID Colombia LRDP
  2. Mapping the Unmapped for Global Good (8/12/17)
    Source: USAID 2030
  3. LEGEND Land policy bulletin: August 2017 – mentions USAID’s Pilot on Responsible Land-Based Investments (8/1/17)
    Source: ODI

Reports and Publications

  1. South Africa: How the government is throttling land reform (8/24/17)
    Source: Financial Mail
    Related report: Elite capture and state neglect: new evidence on South Africa’s land reform

Upcoming Events

  1. Community Land Initiative: Inaugural Call for Participants (2017-18) (9/15/17)
    Source: International Land Coalition
  2. Mokoro Seminar: Women’s Land Tenure Security (9/1/17)
    Source: Mokoro

Global

  1. A timely tribute to the power of women’s land rights (8/17/17)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation

Indigenous Peoples

  1. Indigenous chief says Trudeau needs ‘wake-up call’ on land rights (8/17/17)
    Source: The Globe and Mail
  2. Human Roadblocks Prevent Takeover of West Java Indigenous Community’s ‘Holy Land’ (8/24/17)
    Source: Jakarta Globe
  3. Indigenous people seize some facilities on Peru oil field – chieftain (8/23/17)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  4. Maps reveal how Amazon development is closing in on isolated tribes (8/17/17)
    Source: Science

Africa

  1. Liberia: ‘Land Rights Act Must Protect Rural Landowners’ (8/21/17)
    Source: Daily Observer
  2. Madagascar Sets an Example for Land Reform (8/2/17)
    Source: World Bank
  3. Tanzania: Oxfam, Stakeholders to Address Women Land Ownership Challenges (8/23/17)
    Source: The Citizen
  4. Tanzania seizes ex-PM’s farm in crackdown on ‘idle’ land (8/17/17)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  5. Uganda: Land Disputes – Acholi Residents Resort to Local Council Courts (8/23/17)
    Source: AllAfrica / The Monitor
  6. Zimbabwe: Zim’s evicted white farmers to launch fresh bid for justice, compensation (8/23/17)
    Source: News24
  7. Women across Africa call for greater land-ownership rights (8/18/17)
    Source: Talk of the Town

Americas

  1. Brazil abolishes huge Amazon reserve in ‘biggest attack’ in 50 years (8/24/17)
    Source: The Guardian

Asia

  1. Cambodia: Outcome in land dispute delayed again (8/22/17)
    Source: Khmer Times
  2. Cambodia: Villagers protest over land disputes (8/24/17)
    Source: Khmer Times
  3. Cambodia: Protecting the forest before it’s too late (8/15/17)
    Source: Oxfam
  4. Myanmar: Speaker rebukes Supreme Court judge over land conflicts (8/24/17)
    Source: Frontier Myanmar

On The Road Again

USAID partnership results in the paving of a 13km mountain road that will allow more than 500 Colombian families to diversify their crops and reach national markets.

Originally appeared on Exposure.

As he looks out over his coffee trees, Leonardo Rodríguez Durán—a representative of 11,000 cafetera families—recalls how a harvest of several tons of blackberry and lulowere recently discarded by farmers, who were en route to a market in the municipality of Agustín Codazzi, located in Cesar, in northern Colombia. The dirt road, devastated by the rainy season, was so damaged that perishable fruit did not stand a chance. Farmers threw their arms in the air and just left the spoiled harvest on the side of the road.

He also remembers the many times seeing how farmers would throw away bruised avocados at that market, due to hours of transportation in the trucks that managed to get through the 13 kilometers in one piece and get down the mountain.

The road, which has caused so many headaches for farmers and residents of Alto Sicarare, consists of a 13-kilometer stretch of the 46-kilometer highway connecting Agustín Codazzi with rural villages, San Jacinto and Sicarare.

This area, which sits at the Colombian-Venezuelan border, suffered for decades at the hands of guerrilla and paramilitary groups, who for decades murdered community leaders in order to take over their land and grow illicit crops. The violence eliminated any possibility of development.

“Unfortunately, illicit crops created focal points for violence and brought armed groups to the area. There were no roads, and supplies were transported by mule,” recalls Diego Armando Osorio, a representative of the Agrosolidaria Codazzi Association who is trying to reactivate the campesino economy.




 

Land Matters Media Scan – 18 August 2017

Here are the recent land tenure and resource management media items:

USAID

  1. Request for Proposal: Strengthening Tenure and Resource Rights II (8/18/17)
    Source: USAID LandLinks
  2. Sources Sought Notice: Communications, Evidence and Learning Project (8/17/17)
    Source: USAID LandLinks
  3. The Cloud With A Silver Lining (8/9/17)
    Source: USAID Colombia LRDP
  4. Cagayan de Oro City Unlocks Potential of Land (8/15/17)
    Source: USAID LandLinks / USAID SURGE
  5. Chiefs Ready to Release Lands to Women – Mentions USAID (8/14/17)
    Source: Ghana News Agency

Global

  1. Opinion: 7 ways to use blockchain for international development (8/11/17)
    Source: Devex
  2. Fertile land the most important resource for the future of food security (8/13/17)
    Source: The Weekly Times

Indigenous Peoples

  1. SATIIM launches Maya lands registry to celebrate UN Indigenous Peoples day (8/9/17)
    Source: Breaking Belize News
  2. Brazilian supreme court upholds land rights of indigenous people (8/17/17)
    Source: The Guardian
  3. For secure land rights, indigenous forest communities need more than just titles (8/14/17)
    Source: CGIAR

Africa

  1. Ghana: Government working to reclaim encroached state lands – Minister (8/9/17)
    Source: Ghana Business News
  2. Q&A: How a new law in Mali is securing villagers’ rights to land (8/10/17)
    Source: IIED
  3. Sierra Leone News: Reviewing mining and agricultural land issues (8/10/17)
    Source: Awoko
  4. South Africa: Put land in the hands of women – PAP MPs (8/10/17)
    Source: The Independant
  5. Tanzania: Kilombero residents to receive over 2,000 land certificates (8/13/17)
    Source: Daily News

Americas

  1. Modernizing land records in Honduras can help stem violence, says analyst (8/11/17)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation

Asia

  1. India: Securing Land Rights for the Poor is Key to Telangana’s Success (8/8/17)
    Source: Landesa
  2. Indian state to give property rights to slum dwellers in ‘historic’ step (8/8/17)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  3. Indian states look to digitize land deals with blockchain (8/10/17)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  4. India: Can Amaravati set land pooling example for a city built from scratch? (8/11/17)
    Source: Citizen Matters
  5. India: GIS-enabled portal maps land-related information (8/13/17)
    Source: The Hindu
  6. India: Cidco offers perpetual lease of land in lieu of freehold, to give more rights to buyers (8/13/17)
    Source: The Times of India
  7. Poverty, land rights feature at film festival in Indonesia’s Papua (8/11/17)
    Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation
  8. Indonesia: Government accelerates land certification for agrarian reform: Jokowi (8/16/17)
    Source: Antara News
  9. Malaysia: International investment blamed for violence and oppression in Sarawak (8/15/17)
    Source: Mongabay

Request for Proposals: Strengthening Tenure and Resource Rights II

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) is seeking proposals to provide technical assistance to USAID’s Office of Land and Urban (LU) in the Bureau for Economic Growth, Education, and Environment (E3) as described in this Request for Proposals (RFP).

USAID anticipates awarding approximately seven Multiple Award Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) Contracts, of which approximately three may be set aside for small business concerns. The Agency reserves the right to award more or less awards than anticipated, or to make no award. USAID anticipates that the maximum ordering limitation of the contract(s) resulting from this RFP will not exceed $650,000,000 over the five-year ordering period. The maximum aggregate dollar value of task orders awarded to all contractors cannot exceed this contract ceiling. This ceiling is not being subdivided among the number of awardees nor is it being multiplied by the number of awardees.

Award of a contract under this RFP is subject to availability of funds and other internal USAID approvals. There is no guarantee as to the number of task orders that the successful contractors will receive or the amount of money beyond the minimum order guarantee set forth in the RFP.

Upon award of the Strengthening Tenure And Resource Rights II (STARR II) IDIQ contracts, USAID anticipates issuing the Integrated Land and Resource Governance (ILRG) Task Order, which will be a Cost-Plus-Fixed-Fee (CPFF) Term and Completion task order comprised of a three-year base period and two one-year option periods. The total estimated cost for the task order is between $22,000,000 – $26,000,000.