active projects
October 2020
IAF investment
people benefiting
directly
Contacts for Mexico
Foundation Representatives
Program Assistant
Local Liaison
Country Strategy
Our grantee partners in Mexico expand economic opportunity and enhance peace and security at the local level. They also improve democratic governance and reduce the motivation to migrate. We invest in local organizations addressing challenges like food insecurity, poor crop yields due to environmental degradation, natural disasters, and low market access. Our grantee partners work with underserved populations in 29 of the country’s 32 states, including indigenous people, women, and youth. We fund mainly in Mexico’s central and southern states, particularly those with high poverty, inequality, and migration rates like Oaxaca and Chiapas.
We awarded our first grant in Mexico in 1972. Since then, we have awarded $68 million through 424 grants to local organizations.
Projects in Mexico
ordered by most recently awarded
2020 – Xilotl
Xilotl Asociación para el Desarrollo Social A.C. (Xilotl) works with farmers to improve the sustainable production of diverse crops and livestock.
2020 – Campesino
Centro Campesino para el Desarrollo Sustentable, A.C. (Campesino) established Mexico's first recognized participatory farming certification system and the first network connecting producers directly to consumers to improve farmers' quality of life and consumers' food security.
2020 – México y Caribe Jóvenes
México y Caribe Jóvenes, A.C. (México y Caribe Jóvenes) empowers young people in Chetumal, Quintana Roo to increase graduation rates, reduce gender-based violence, construct a culture of peace, and reduce the pressure on youths to leave their communities in search of other prospects.
2020 – Amigos de San Cristóbal
Amigos de San Cristóbal A.C. (Amigos de San Cristóbal) is drawing from multiple sources -- individual residents, community groups, and the public and private sectors -- to channel know-how and resources to development projects in the region.
2020-Ollin
Ollin, Jóvenes en Movimiento, A.C. (Ollin) engages grassroots leaders to offer training on participatory budgeting, implements a subgrant fund in Mexico State as a pilot of participatory budgeting, promotes the replication of this model beyond Mexico City, and disseminates information on Mexico City’s participatory budgeting program to citizens.
2020 – SKU
Sbelal Kuxlejalil, A.C. (SKU) provides Tseltal women with technical assistance for sustainable vegetable, fruit, and small livestock production to improve their livelihoods.
2020 – FOCN
Fondo Oaxaqueño para la Conservación de la Naturaleza en Oaxaca, A.C. (FOCN) is strengthening its role in environmental programming in Oaxaca and solidifying its organizational structure, setting it on a more sustainable trajectory
2020-Comunalia
Alianza de Fundaciones Comunitarias México, A.C. (Comunalia) will establish a hub to promote peer-to-peer coordination and learning, providing training for community foundations in areas such as evaluation, community philanthropy, grassroots development grant-making, fundraising, and proposal writing.
2019-FCP
Fundación Comunitaria Puebla (FCP), raises funds from local private sector and philanthropic organizations and then invests in community projects in Puebla, Mexico.
Staff working with projects in Mexico
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Frequently asked questions
We are governed by a bipartisan board of directors appointed by the president of the United States and confirmed by the Senate. Members are drawn from both the private sector and federal government. The board appoints a president who serves as our chief executive officer.
- The U.S. Congress annually appropriates funds directly to the IAF. This represents our largest funding source.
- We also receive interagency transfers to address U.S. strategic priorities using our unique, bottom-up development model.
- We diversify our funding sources through strategic partnerships with the corporate and philanthropic sectors.
- Our grantee partners mobilize local resources for every grant we fund. Typically, the amount of resources that they commit exceeds the U.S. taxpayer dollars we invest. By requiring a counterpart contribution, we maximize sustainability and ensure communities take ownership for solving local development challenges.
- We accept private, tax-deductible donations to advance community-led development in Latin America and the Caribbean. You can donate to us directly.
A bipartisan group of visionaries in the U.S. Congress founded the IAF over 50 years ago to address their concern that the U.S. Government needed to do better at directing its foreign development aid to the most vulnerable and underserved people in the Americas. They wanted an agency aligned with U.S. foreign policy priorities and complementary to existing channels of U.S. foreign assistance.
We’ve honed a model of development that differentiates us in the following ways:
- Who we work with. We reach grassroots and civil society organizations that work at the community level and often are just starting out. We target funding to underserved areas and populations.
- Who drives the process. We put local people at the center, catalyzing their own solutions. We believe that development progress will be best sustained when local organizations own the ideas and put them into action.
- How we fund. We provide small amounts of funding directly to local organizations, rather than through international contractors or foreign governments.
- How we adapt. We can rapidly turn on or off, pivot, or accelerate grant flows as conditions change on the ground, which is rare in traditional foreign assistance models.
- How we save money to maximize funds available for grants. We keep costs down by maintaining a lean operation of fewer than 50 staff with no offices overseas. We also share core administrative services with other agencies. This results in a very low rate to operate the foundation—only 8%.
- How we hold our grantee partners accountable for sustainable results. We engage intensively with our grantee partners, build trust-based relationships, and connect them to peer-to-peer learning opportunities and partnership across sectors. We require them to report their progress on project goals every six months and audit their finances regularly. We continuously challenge them towards sustainability and self-reliance.
Our bipartisan, public-private governing structure ensures we benefit from private sector experience and work toward the long-term U.S. national interest. Our work with grantees promotes:
- economic empowerment
- peace and security
- inclusion in local democratic governance
- community resilience to environmental, economic, social, and political shocks.
Yes. Here’s how:
- We know how to select our partners. We support grassroots groups with a track record in participatory self-help activities, who are willing to invest their own resources. We vet all of our partners through the U.S. embassy in-country before we commit to funding.
- We respond to local initiatives. We do not impose top-down projects; instead, we build upon the ideas and commitment of local people.
- We encourage financially sustainable processes, either with revenue generated by grantees or with resources leveraged from private and public sectors.
We support innovative approaches that are replicable and adaptable in other settings. Other communities learn these methods and multiply the impact of project activities.
We use the term “grassroots development” for the process of underserved people organizing themselves locally to improve the wellbeing of their families, communities, and societies. What they design is often holistic, addressing multiple social, cultural, and economic needs. We believe a people-oriented approach is key to promoting both prosperous economies and equitable, democratic societies. To put people first, we stress community participation and networking, and we invest in making organizations stronger and more representative of the communities they serve.
- Invest in people and their organizations
- Channel funds directly to civil society
- Promote entrepreneurship, innovation, inclusion, and self-reliance
- Strengthen democratic practices
- Empower vulnerable people to solve challenges they face
- Treat partners with respect and empathy
We have been a leader in recognizing grassroots initiatives as a critical factor in the sustainable development of Latin America and the Caribbean. Since 1972, we have supported more than 5,400 organizations in 35 countries. Over time, we have consistently invested in food production and agriculture, enterprise development, education and training, civic engagement, and social and economic inclusion.
Together with our grantees, we have tested cost-effective, participatory models for social and economic development. These models have resulted in self-sustaining enterprises and have been replicated and expanded by government and larger donor agencies, improving conditions for hundreds of thousands of underserved families throughout the hemisphere.
More specifically:
- Our model of funding local community-driven initiatives, rather than individuals or international organizations, has come to be recognized as a development best practice.
- We have provided sustained funding and technical support to grassroots organizations in ways that, according to our grantees, other organizations do not. About 30 percent of our new grantees have never received support from either the U.S. government or from an international donor.
- Our knowledge-sharing exchanges among grantees have created an enabling environment for disseminating field-based innovations.
- By supporting local philanthropic sectors, we have fostered conditions necessary to reduce Latin American and Caribbean organizations’ dependency on U.S. foreign aid, responding to our original mandate and common critiques of foreign assistance.
Grassroots development works. It not only engages people in improving their own conditions but also fosters responsible citizenship. To gauge the impact of our investment, we systematically track our projects’ results using indicators designed to measure their tangible results and the civic capacity of individuals, organizations, and communities.
During our 50-year history, we have achieved many concrete milestones, including:
- We funded the first microcredit program in South America almost a decade before the establishment of Bangladesh’s Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, which popularized the idea of microfinance for community development.
- We have invested in associations of farmers, artisans and other producers to refine their products, scale up, market effectively, and export. For example, El Ceibo, a federation of subsistence farmers of Bolivia’s Amazon Basin, became the first organization in the world to export organic cacao and chocolate to high-end international markets. Today, it is one of Bolivia’s top chocolate exporters.
- We created a membership organization of Latin American corporate foundations, RedEAmérica. Moving beyond charity handouts, it became a regional leader in channeling private sector investment into community-driven development projects. Today it is an independent entity with 80 members in 13 countries.
- As one of the first international funders to fund African descendant organizations in the 1970s, we took a leading role in encouraging their work to promote the rights, recognition, and inclusion of people of African descent. Our grantees advocated for the inclusion of African descendants in the censuses of various countries including Uruguay, Paraguay, Brazil, Argentina, and Peru. With IAF support, a Honduran grantee secured a United Nations resolution proclaiming 2015-2024 the global Decade of People of African Descent.
- We partnered with U.S.-based diaspora organizations beginning in 2001 to leverage funds for development in their countries of origin, well before the international development field moved in that direction.