
Putting Sibling Relationships on the Map
A Multi-Disciplinary Perspective
Edited by Martina Klett-Davies
About the Fund
The Parenting Fund was set up in 2004 by the government's Department for Education and Skills (DfES) to:- Do more for parents who have been less well served in the past. For example: Black and Ethnic Minority parents, parents with mental health problems, families living with conflict, parents with disabilities or who have children with a disability
- Strengthen the network of services in the voluntary sector that support parents in bringing up their children
- Highlight and promote good practices so that they can be used by all family and parent support services.
The Parenting Fund received £25 million from the Government's 2002 spending. From the above amount £8.6 million was committed to infrastructure work and the strengthening of helpline services to parents. The remaining £16.4 million has been distributed through an open application process to 134 parent support projects in the voluntary and community sector in England. The Family and Parenting Institute (FPI) manages the £16.4 million grant fund and was chosen as fundholder by the DfES following competitive tendering. Projects were funded from November 2004 to October 2006.
For the second round of the DfES's Parenting Fund the DfES' grant was just over £14 million. The application period ran from December 2005 to March 2006. Under Round Two, the Parenting Fund awarded grants to 131 projects which will run from July 2006 to July 2008. Recipients are charities and "not for profit" organisations undertaking parenting support work where parents, families and children face significant challenges.
There are two major differences from Round One:
- (1) The criteria have been widened and a whole family approach is proposed. This time there is a greater emphasis on working with teenagers, an incorporation of aspects of the "Respect" agenda and recognition of the value of supporting couple relationships as a way of strengthening parenting. Promoting social inclusion and improving access to services and support for less well-served communities remains a cornerstone of the fund.
- (2) The grant focuses on twenty-three localities. This means that the fund no longer covers national or regional projects. But funded projects are expected to deliver learning and outcomes that can be picked up nationally. Also, organisations would be able to apply to work in a number of areas, as is the case with Round One. The areas selected consist of the eighteen from Round One and five others.
As in Round One the Family And Parenting Institute, in partnership with PricewaterhouseCoopers, is acting as the fundholder.
In June 2008 the Department for Children, Schools and Families provided a further £5 million to fund projects up until March 2009.
More details on the funded projects are available here and information on what the FPI is doing as fundholder is available here. Please go to How the fund works for more information.
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Family and Parenting Institute is the operating name of the National Family and Parenting Institute (NFPI). NFPI is a company limited by guarantee. Registered in England and Wales. Registered company number: 3753345. Registered Charity No: 1077444. VAT Registration No. 833 0243 65. Registered Address: 430 Highgate Studios, 53-79 Highgate Road, London, NW5 1TL


