Grant recommendation summary for grantee application G-22674 by Genio

Context

Genio is a non-profit organisation specialising in social service transformation. Genio was established to assist government to increase cost-effective personalisation of social services. Founded in 2008, the organisations mission is to bring about lasting improvements in the lives of people who are disadvantaged and vulnerable through the reform of social services in a person-centred and cost-effective direction.

In 2014, The Atlantic Philanthropies awarded their final grant amounting €15,000,000 to Genio between 2014 and 2018. Titled Embedding The Change, grant 22674 was purposed to improve the lives of people with disabilities and mental health difficulties by catalysing the development of a Service Reform Fund to embed and scale the Genio model of service transformation.

Description:
The three-page long document in the layout of a form is produced by The Atlantic Philanthropies' staff. It summarises the application request for the grantee project G-22674 titled Embedding The Change by describing the purpose and details of the grant as well as describing the organisation receiving the grant.
Type:
text and business records
Creator:
The Atlantic Philanthropies, 1982-2020
Subject:
Curated collection--Grant documentation, Atlantic Philanthropies (Organization), Genio (Organization), Curated collection--Human rights, Curated collection--Disability, Grant 22674, Disability awareness, http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2006006221, Social service--Reform, Nonprofit organizations, Curated collection--Madeleine Clarke, and Curated collection--Christina Burke
Grant:
Grant 22674
Grantee:
Genio (Organization)
Year of Grant:
2014
Location of Grantee:
Dublin
Rights:
The material is copyright of either Cornell University, The Atlantic Philanthropies, or where listed, the original authors or commissioning bodies. This collection is being made available under CC BY-NC-ND license, which allows users to access the material as long as the original copyright holder is credited; the material cannot be changed in any way or used commercially.
Attribution:
Cornell University Library, Digital Repository of Ireland, and The Atlantic Philanthropies
Doi:
https://doi.org/10.7486/DRI.mc883b546