CLOSED CFDA 19.040 ↗ Competitive Grant Moderate ~50h typical effort
MISSION

ITALY ANNUAL PROGRAM STATEMENT 2023

🏛 U.S. Mission to Italy

✓ Free, no account · Source: Grants.gov · Last verified Jul 15, 2026

⏰ Deadline
Mar 31, 2023 ⚠ passed
📅 Fiscal Year
FY 2023
📍 Scope
International

Can you apply?

This grant is for organizations that can strengthen cultural and diplomatic ties between the United States and Italy. Programs must target Italians or residents in Italy, with a significant American cultural element involving U.S. experts, organizations, or institutions. Eligible activities include academic exchanges, cultural workshops, joint performances, and exhibitions.

Priority areas are climate cooperation, democracy and democratic values, transatlantic security, and economic prosperity. All programs must promote bilateral understanding and advance shared U.S.-Italy interests.

The U.S. Mission to Italy administers this public diplomacy grants program. Specific organizational eligibility criteria are not stated in the available text.

Eligible applicants
Check your eligibility — what type of organization are you?

Not the right fit? Find grants for your organization in 5 questions →

Program description

A. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION

The U.S. Mission to Italy’s Public Diplomacy Section (PDS) is pleased to announce that funding is available through its Public Diplomacy Grants Program. This is an Annual Program Statement outlining funding priorities, strategic themes, and procedures for submitting requests for funding. Please carefully follow all instructions below.

 

Purpose of Grants: PDS Italy invites concept notes for programs that strengthen ties between the United States and Italy through cultural and exchange programming that highlight shared values and promote bilateral cooperation. All programs must have a primary audience of Italians or those residing in Italy and include a significant American cultural element, such as a connection with American experts, organizations, or institutions in a specific field that will promote increased understanding of U.S. policy and perspectives.

 

Examples of PDS grants programs include, but are not limited to:

 

·       Academic and professional lectures, exchanges, seminars, partnerships, and speaker programs;

·       Artistic and cultural workshops, joint performances, and exhibitions featuring participants from the United States;

 

Priority Program Areas:

 

·       Climate: Proposals in this area should promote cooperation and seek to mitigate and adapt to the effects of climate change, including through reduction in methane emissions, reducing global deforestation, and transition to renewable energy sources. Proposals may also increase collaboration and/or share best practices on meeting U.S. and Italian commitments on climate change.

 

·       Democracy, and Democratic Values: Proposals in this area should strengthen respect for international human rights norms within Italy (such as countering racism and gender-based violence, reducing extremism, antisemitism, and intolerance of marginalized groups and migrants in Italy) and/or strengthen the capacity of Italian civil society in explaining democratic principles and renewing trust in democracy;

 

·       Transatlantic Security: Proposals in this area should support and advance cooperation and shared interests in the transatlantic relationship between the United States and Italy through efforts to promote cooperation in NATO and other multilateral security organizations, cybersecurity, the role of women in peace and security, and increasing cooperation in the Mediterranean.

 

·       Economic Prosperity: Proposals in this area should promoting transparent and rules-based trade, and investment in sustainable growth. Though not required, proposals with a focus on women’s economic empowerment, will receive favorable consideration.

 

·       Countering Disinformation: Proposals in this area should increase target audiences’ understanding of and ability to counter Russia and People’s Republic of China (PRC) disinformation and/or support combating disinformation that undermines faith in democratic governance. Proposals that support increased awareness of disinformation among the media and journalists are welcome.

 

 

The following types of programs are not eligible for funding:

 

·                             Programs relating to partisan political activity;

·                             Programs targeting an American audience;

·                             Charitable or development activities;

·                             Construction programs;

·                             Programs that support specific religious activities;

·                             Fund-raising campaigns;

·                             Lobbying for specific legislation or programs

·                             Scientific research;

·                             Programs intended primarily for the growth or institutional development of the organization;

·                             Programs that duplicate existing programs.

 

 

B. FEDERAL AWARD INFORMATION

Length of performance period: up to 12 months

Award amounts: awards may range from a minimum of $10,000 to a maximum of $50,000

Type of Funding: Fiscal Year 2023 Public Diplomacy Funding

Anticipated earliest program start date: Summer/Fall 2023

This notice is subject to availability of funding.

 

Issuance of this Notice of Funding Opportunity does not constitute an award commitment on the part of the U.S. government, nor does it commit the U.S. government to pay for costs incurred in the preparation and submission of concept notes. Further, the U.S. government reserves the right to reject any or all concept notes received and award smaller amounts than the full proposal, as deemed appropriate.

 

Funding Instrument Type: Grant, Cooperative Agreement, or Fixed Amount Awards

 

Program Performance Period: Proposed programs should be completed in 12 months or less.

PDS will consider applications for continuation grants funded under these awards beyond the initial budget period on a non-competitive basis subject to availability of funds, satisfactory progress of the program, and a determination that continued funding would be in the best interest of the U.S. Department of State.

 

C. ELIGILIBITY INFORMATION

 

1.    Eligible Applicants

 

The Public Diplomacy Section encourages applications from Italy and the United States:

 

·       Registered U.S. and Italian not-for-profit organizations, including think tanks and civil society/non-governmental organizations with programming experience in Italy;

·       U.S. or Italian individuals;

·       U.S. and Italian non-profit or governmental educational institutions;

·       U.S. and Italian Governmental institutions.

 

Note: U.S. and Italian NGOs and individuals may apply, but preference (through merit review) will be given to Italian NGOs or partnerships that develop capacity with Italian NGOs. Third country organizations and individuals are not eligible.

 

For-profit or commercial entities are not eligible to apply.  

 

2.    Cost Sharing or Matching

 

Cost sharing is strongly encouraged, but not required.

 

3.    Other Eligibility Requirements

 

Applicants should submit only one concept note per organization.

 

 

D. APPLICATION AND SUBMISSION INFORMATION

 

We encourage applicants to submit a concept note using the following application form:

https://form.jotform.com/230233417453145

 

If you do not want to use the form, you can apply by sending your concept note to RomePAgrants@state.gov using the same items outlined in the form.

 

The submission deadline is March 31, 2023. The review process is divided in two phases:

1.    Concept notes are reviewed and a pool of shortlisted applicants will be asked to submit a full proposal between April and May. Unsuccessful applicants will be informed via email of the outcome of their application by May 15, 2023.

2.    The Public Diplomacy Section will review full proposals by June 7, and will communicate the results via email by June 15, 2023. 

 

Organizations asked to submit a full proposal will be required to have a Unique Entity Identifier (UEI) number issued via www.SAM.gov as well as a valid registration on www.SAM.gov. The registration is free of charge. Individual applicants are not required to have a UEI number or be registered on www.SAM.gov.

 

Concept notes should contain sufficient information that anyone not familiar with it would understand exactly what the applicant wants to do. Concept notes include:

 

·        Summary: Short narrative that outlines the proposed program, including program objectives and anticipated impact. 

·        Problem Statement: Clear, concise and well-supported statement of the problem to be addressed and why the proposed program is needed

·        Program Goals and Objectives: The “goals” describe what the program is intended to achieve. What aspect of the relationship between the U.S. and Italy will be improved? The “objectives” refer to the intermediate accomplishments on the way to the goals. These should be achievable and measurable. Which priority program theme is addressed.

·        Program Activities: Describe the program activities and how they will help achieve the objectives.

 

 

Funding Restrictions

 

·       Award funds cannot be used for construction, vehicle purchases, office space rental, etc.

 

·       Alcoholic Beverages: Please note that award funds cannot be used for alcoholic beverages.

 

Applicants will receive a confirmation email after submission.

 

 

Who can apply

Eligible applicants

How to apply

Application links

Required documents

  • Concept note or proposal narrative
  • Evidence of American partner/institutional involvement
  • Project budget or cost estimate
  • Applicant organization background and credentials
  • Timeline and implementation plan

Program contact

Funding track record

Recent awards under CFDA 19.040 from the last 3 years — real organizations that won funding through this same program.

106
awards (3 yrs)
$80M
total funded
74
unique recipients
$752K
average award

Top 10 Largest Recent Awards

  1. $4,682,072
  2. $3,371,312
  3. $2,650,000
  4. $2,446,525
  5. $2,050,500
  6. $1,861,451
  7. $1,700,000
  8. $1,565,795
  9. $1,500,000
  10. $1,480,000

Source: USAspending.gov — federal spending transparency. Data covers last 3 years.

Funding history

Annual funding for this program — Federal obligations (CFDA 19.040). How funding has trended year over year.

2018 $129,428,262
2019 est. $34,549,598
2020 $129,979,440
2021 $128,999,999

FAQ

Who can apply for this grant?

Organizations must demonstrate capacity to implement programs targeting Italian audiences with significant American cultural participation. Eligible activities strengthen U.S.-Italy cultural and diplomatic ties.

What are the priority funding areas?

Climate cooperation, democracy and democratic values, transatlantic security, and economic prosperity. Proposals should align U.S. and Italian interests in these areas.

What types of programs are funded?

Academic exchanges, professional seminars, cultural workshops, joint performances, exhibitions, and speaker programs featuring American expertise or participation.

When is the deadline?

The deadline is March 31, 2023. This is a fixed deadline, not rolling.

What should proposals emphasize?

Programs must have Italian primary audiences, include significant American elements, and demonstrate how they promote understanding of U.S. policy and perspectives.

💡 Tips for applicants

  • Clearly explain how your program targets Italian audiences while incorporating meaningful American cultural or institutional participation. Avoid token American involvement.
  • Align your proposal with at least one of the four priority areas: climate, democracy, transatlantic security, or economic prosperity. Reference specific bilateral interests.
  • Emphasize what makes your program unique and how it strengthens U.S.-Italy relations. Show mutual benefit, not one-way cultural export.
  • Build relationships with American experts, institutions, or organizations before submitting. Document their commitment to participate.
  • Submit concept notes early. The March 31 deadline is fixed, and program officers may be available for guidance before then.

⚠️ Common mistakes

Proposing programs with only superficial American elements or minimal U.S. institutional involvement. American participation must be substantial and meaningful.

Failing to clearly identify the Italian primary audience or explaining how the program serves Italian interests. Cultural exchange is bilateral, not one-directional.

Submitting proposals unaligned with the four stated priority areas. Programs should directly support climate, democracy, security, or economic cooperation themes.

Similar grants

Source: Grants.gov · FY 2023 · Last updated May 27, 2026

Federal grant
View program →