Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 113— - UNITED STATES FOUNDATION FOR INTERNATIONAL CONSERVATION › § 10606
The Foundation must give grants to help manage mainly protected and conserved areas and their nearby buffer zones in eligible countries. Grants must not be used to buy, own, or lease land or conservation easements in those countries. Eligible recipients include experienced nonprofit groups, the governments of eligible partner countries (except governments barred by other U.S. laws), and Indigenous and local communities. Projects must have a money match of at least $2 from non-U.S. sources for every $1 provided by the Foundation. Projects must use long-term, binding agreements with host governments and local communities that protect local access and resource rights and allow free, prior, and informed consent. Projects must track key performance measures, show strong local community involvement and due diligence, include grievance processes, create local economic benefits (for example profit-sharing, co-management, jobs), plan to secure steady funding for management, and build local capacity and skills transfer. Before each fiscal year, the Board must review and pick which countries can receive grants. The review looks for countries that are low-income, lower middle-income, or upper-middle-income; have high or at-risk biodiversity or important species or ecosystems; have shown real conservation action (like creating parks or reserves); and are not barred from U.S. foreign aid. Within 5 days after the Board decides, the Executive Director must send a report to Congress listing eligible countries with detailed reasons and publish that report in the Federal Register. The Foundation should coordinate with other donors, seek extra support from host governments, focus on poorer communities when possible, and favor projects that can be sustained for not less than 10 years. Grants should show progress on agreed indicators (such as protecting species and habitats, improving management, boosting community benefits, and finding lasting funding). The Board must end any grant that fails to meet requirements or make progress on its indicators.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 10606
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73