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Analyses & Assessments
SRHR Funding Situational Analysis 2025/2026
The landscape for Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR) funding is navigating a period of profound uncertainty as it approaches 2025 and 2026, with East and Southern Africa (ESA) positioned at a particularly vulnerable juncture. This report
provides a situational analysis of SRHR funding, grounded in the emerging realities of 2025 and building upon the historical context up to 2023. It examines how a confluence of various dynamics in the development landscape, including a contracting global Official Development Assistance (ODA) environment, escalating humanitarian needs driven by economic instability, climate change, and conflict, alongside the intensified efforts of anti-rights movements—is shaping the availability and effectiveness of SRHR resources.
Impact & Adaptations To Funding Disruptions
Since the string of executive announcements started arriving on January 20th, 2025, it’s been a whirlwind of activity, panic, pain, loss, and restrategizing. Data is now more crucial than ever before to effectively navigate the uncertainty and volatility in the current landscape. And so, alongside our partners East Africa Philanthropy Network-EAPN, we conducted a brief survey to better understand the impact of the funding disruptions, identify the common and unique emerging challenges and opportunities, and determine possible support for your organization’s resilience and growth. Find the report here and let us know what stands out for you and how we can partner for a better Africa!
Landscape Analysis - PPPP Framework
Public-private partnerships are long-term contracts between a private party (often a company or high net-worth individual) and a government entity (state department or county/district) for providing a public good (asset or service) in which the private party bears significant risk and management responsibility, and remuneration is linked to performance. Public-private partnerships have a long history from Ancient Rome to precolonial Africa, dating back to the 2nd-1st century BCE.