The power of trust
Trust builds trust. That is what I have learned from how Both ENDS works - within our team, with partners in joint strategies and advocacy, and in our relationships with partners as a funder. Trust is the foundation. It is what allows compassion to grow, what gives rise to hope, and what fuels real solidarity. This is especially powerful in contrast to the prevailing global trend of political and international leaders who prioritize hard measures and self-interest, ignoring relations of trust. It is even more reason for us to share what we have experienced when we put trust first.
And that is exactly what we did. Recently, we gathered with a wonderful group of funders to share and learn from one another about trust-based finance. I felt deeply proud to share learnings from our flagship initiative, funded by the Postcode Lottery: Dare to Trust - an unconditional funding initiative for Women Environmental Human Rights Defenders. In this project, they determined themselves how the funds were used and how they reported back. They dreamed together, built safe spaces, community kitchens, learning hubs, developed sustainable agroforestry projects, and kickstarted their own businesses. They chose to invest in their own healing and wellbeing. Some paid off debts so they could begin building a future again. And they reinforced their own communities and environmental organizations.
During the gathering, I was inspired by how deeply committed so many of us are to making trust the foundation of our work. The willingness was not only present - it was abundant. Powerful ideas emerged around overcoming the barriers that still stand in our way, including with regard to due diligence and ways to coordinate and leverage knowledge and networks between funders. Compelling examples of success were shared – on how to guide boards of funders in trust-based finance and demystifying common misunderstandings.
I believe every organization can find its own path toward trust. At Both ENDS, our journey began when we were founded over 35 years ago. From the very beginning, we have focused on connecting environmental movements around the world, working with them through knowledge sharing, collaboration, and joint strategizing. Trust was always at the heart of these relationships. As we took on new roles with partners, both as strategic advocacy allies and funders, we saw again and again just how essential trust is. Trust guides how we set agendas and shape strategies together. It shapes how we each use our own leverage. It is the basis for programs like the Joke Waller-Hunter Initiative , where we fund young environmental leaders in following their own ambitions. It fuels initiatives like the Global Alliance for Green and Gender Action , where we support gender and environmental movements. And this trust journey is far from over. Over the past few years, we have reflected deeply on the power we hold and how we can do better in our Examination of Power process . That process has been humbling, energizing, and transformative. And it has enabled us to take important next steps. In our new strategy - soon to be released - we have made a clear and conscious choice: to create space for care, restoration, and healing for those on the frontlines of environmental justice. A system of care that supports long-term, sustainable change.
Are you interested to know more? You are most welcome to join the (free) Dare to Trust webinar on the 21st of May!
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Dossier /Dare to Trust: the power of unconditional funding
At Both ENDS we cherish our long-term relationships with partners in our global network. These relationships are based on equality and built on trust. The trust we have in each other has developed from years of strategic cooperation, including joint advocacy around common agendas, knowledge sharing, networking, and mobilising and sharing resources to advance environmental justice.
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News / 5 november 2025Interview: Both ENDS at COP30 for Climate Justice and Systemic Change
Both ENDS is present at COP30 to advocate for genuine access to climate finance for locally led, gender-just climate solutions and the mechanisms that facilitate this, including those for farmer-led restoration. Furthermore, the organisation participates to ensure the crucial connection between the climate negotiations and the trade and investment frameworks that shape them.
Learn more about the Both ENDS team at COP30 below, and find all the activities and side-events in which Both ENDS will participate.
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News / 5 november 2025Overview of Both ENDS events at COP30 in Belem, Brazil
Both ENDS is present at COP30 to advocate for genuine access to climate finance for locally led, gender-just climate solutions, and for the mechanisms that make these possible, including those supporting farmer-led restoration. The organisation also engages to highlight the crucial connection between climate negotiations and the trade and investment frameworks that shape them.
Below is an overview of the Both ENDS team at COP30 and a detailed look at the activities and side-events in which Both ENDS will participate.
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External link / 29 april 2025 -
Publication / 1 april 2025
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External link / 28 maart 2025Eerlijke handel en gelijkwaardige relaties: pas dán kan Kenia echt op eigen benen staan
This op-ed is available in Dutch.
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Blog / 27 maart 2025Fair trade and equal partnerships: only then can Kenya stand on its own
Several media outlets, including de Volkskrant, focused last week on the shift from “aid” to “trade,” partly in response to the state visit of the Dutch royal couple to Kenya. The idea is that it would be beneficial for Kenya to stand on its own two feet. A beautiful ideal—one I whole heartedly believe in. But this ideal can only become a reality if equality is at the heart of trade and international cooperation.
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News / 21 februari 2025Cabinet turns its back on international cooperation and solidarity with callous policy letter
Foreign Trade and Development Minister Klever's published policy letter is coldhearted and callous. It places the Netherlands in international isolation and abandons the most vulnerable people worldwide, including many women, farmers, indigenous peoples and youth.
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News / 24 december 2024LILAK's Dare to Trust projects: Dreams transformed into actions
LILAK has worked alongside indigenous women communities for over a decade, focusing on building capacity and advocating for rights to land, the environment, and bodily autonomy. Despite gaining recognition and trust from allies, the journey was challenging. Starting with limited resources, LILAK faced resistance, particularly from patriarchal leaders and the state, which often labeled them as adversaries. Nevertheless, they adapted and continued their work, grounded in solidarity and sisterhood.
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News / 24 december 2024Dare to Trust: a journey of culture, renewal, and empowerment of Sengwer women
Historically, the Sengwer community has lived in harmony with their environment, relying on forest resources for sustenance and integrating conservation into their daily lives. However, recent government policies aimed at forest protection have limited their access to these ancestral lands. Although these regulations intend to protect the environment, they often disregard the traditional conservation practices of indigenous communities like the Sengwer, who have been natural stewards of these lands for generations. Faced with these restrictions, the Segerger Women’s Conservation Group intensified their conservation efforts, viewing it as both a cultural duty and a means to safeguard their heritage.
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News / 24 december 2024Fórum Suape empowers women's groups with Dare to Trust-grants
Fórum Suape decided to help several women’s groups in their network. First, they wanted to understand the desires and needs of each group, with the aim of fostering collective thinking and understanding their collective interests and goals. Five groups were selected, one group had difficulty in organizing themselves. They did not move forward and did not receive the money. The other four had wonderful results.
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News / 24 december 2024Dare to Trust: Sowing dreams irrigated with droplets of trust (Colectivo CASA)
Collectivo CASA in Bolivia, with support from Both ENDS and Dare to Trust, found great satisfaction in assisting women defenders with personal and economic needs. This support allowed the women to express their needs and develop a shared vision for their improvement. Although managing funds sustainably posed challenges, the women defenders demonstrated their skills by quickly creating a “Plan for Good Living,” (“Buen Vivir” in Spanish) addressing health, economy, empowerment, and food production.
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News / 24 december 2024NTFP-EP supports grassroots women’s organisations with Dare to Trust-grants
The pilot of Dare to Trust, facilitated by NTFP-EP, was implemented in two grassroots women’s organisations in the Philippines and Cambodia. The Dare to Trust project provided them with the independence to utilize the resources they have and thus handed to them the agency for more grounded and better judgment. By giving more liberty to the communities we are moving them away from bureaucratic processes and power structures, and towards more empowered decision making capabilities.
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News / 23 december 2024Dare to Trust: LSD supports women to speak up after losing their houses
Lumière Synergie pour Développement (LSD) has helped 63 individual women who all have had problems due to the development of a controversial train project (TER) in Senegal and a recent big earthquake. These communities are displaced by the train project, involuntarily resettled, their property has been destroyed and they have been harassed. Moreover, they have never been consulted and are still waiting to receive fair compensation.
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News / 23 december 2024Dare to Trust: Beneficiaries Tell Success Stories of Kebetkache's Empowerment Project
The Dare to Trust-initiative, led by Kebetkache Women Development & Resource Centre with support from Both ENDS, empowers individual women with support for their businesses and a sustainable income. The program has successfully supported 40 beneficiaries, enabling them to grow their businesses and skills without the need for formal proposals.
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News / 23 december 2024Dare to Trust: Mama Sorghum Peace Movement Maintains Biodiversity
Yasores was supported by the Samdhana Institute in our Dare to Trust-project, a no-strings-attached way of funding. We only asked them to send a creative report in any shape or form they want about the activities. The Samdhana Institute send this story about the history and founding of Yasores by Mama Loretha, to report about their grant.
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News / 23 december 2024Dare to Trust: WoMin supports women's livelihoods in Madagascar
In the Dare to Trust project, WOMIN South Africa has worked with local women’s, youth and farmer groups in Madagascar. They worked on increasing capacities of local organisations, implemented sustainable livelihood initiatives and started a pilot on the promotion of communal land sovereignty.
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News / 23 december 2024Dare to Trust: RWA Eswatini agroecology centre
In the Kingdom of Eswatini, rural women have been the custodians of local and indigenous seeds and preserving biodiversity for generations. Officially founded in 2011, the Swaziland Rural Women’s Assembly (SRWA) has brought together over 20.000 women across the country to reclaim their traditional knowledge of seed sharing. In the Dare to Trust project, the SRWA has developed a new Agroecology Demonstration Center as a learning facility for rural farmers and produced a seed bank to help the 20.000 seed savers in their community.
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News / 23 december 2024Dare to Trust: Our stories (Instituto Cordilheira)
Instituto Cordilheira in Brazil has a vast network of grassroot organisations in Brazil. With a lot of creativity they were able to assist many of them with support of Both ENDS's Dare to Trust-project.
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Blog / 18 november 2024The global rise of authoritarian regimes demands global strategies
The global funding landscape for civil society movements is changing, and is increasingly faced with policies that restrict funding streams, limit philanthropic work, and silence critical voices. These are not incidental shifts but part of a broader pattern that erodes the support for those international networks and movements under the guise ‘necessary financial cuts’, ‘aid reform’ or ‘efficiency’.
