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Functional Areas
- Audit and Investigations
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Capacity development and transition, strengthening systems for health
- A Strategic Approach to Capacity Development
- Capacity Development and Transition - Lessons Learned
- Capacity development and Transition Planning Process
- Capacity Development and Transition
- Capacity Development Objectives and Transition Milestones
- Capacity Development Results - Evidence From Country Experiences
- Functional Capacities
- Interim Principal Recipient of Global Fund Grants
- Legal and Policy Enabling Environment
- Overview
- Resilience and Sustainability
- Transition
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Financial Management
- CCM Funding
- Grant Closure
- Grant Implementation
- Grant-Making and Signing
- Grant Reporting
- Overview
- Sub-recipient Management
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Grant closure
- Overview
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Steps of Grant Closure Process
- 1. Global Fund Notification Letter 'Guidance on Grant Closure'
- 2. Preparation and Submission of Grant Close-Out Plan and Budget
- 3. Global Fund Approval of Grant Close-Out Plan
- 4. Implementation of Close-Out Plan and Completion of Final Global Fund Requirements (Grant Closure Period)
- 5. Operational Closure of Project
- 6. Financial Closure of Project
- 7. Documentation of Grant Closure with Global Fund Grant Closure Letter
- Terminology and Scenarios for Grant Closure Process
- Human resources
- Human rights, key populations and gender
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Legal Framework
- Agreements with Sub-sub-recipients
- Amending Legal Agreements
- Implementation Letters and Management Letters
- Language of the Grant Agreement and other Legal Instruments
- Legal Framework for Other UNDP Support Roles
- Other Legal and Implementation Considerations
- Overview
- Project Document
- Signing Legal Agreements and Requests for Disbursement
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The Grant Agreement
- Grant Confirmation: Conditions Precedent (CP)
- Grant Confirmation: Conditions
- Grant Confirmation: Face Sheet
- Grant Confirmation: Limited Liability Clause
- Grant Confirmation: Schedule 1, Integrated Grant Description
- Grant Confirmation: Schedule 1, Performance Framework
- Grant Confirmation: Schedule 1, Summary Budget
- Grant Confirmation: Special Conditions (SCs)
- Grant Confirmation
- UNDP-Global Fund Grant Regulations
- Monitoring and Evaluation
- Principal Recipient Start-Up
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Procurement and Supply Management
- Development of List of Health Products and Procurement Action Plan
- Distribution and Inventory Management
- Overview
- Price and Quality Reporting (PQR) System
- Procurement of Non-health Products and Services
- Procurement of Pharmaceutical and Other Health Products
- Quality Control
- Rational use of Medicines and Pharmacovigilance Systems
- Strengthening of PSM Services and Risk Mitigation
- UNDP Health PSM Roster
- UNDP Quality Assurance Policy and Plan
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Reporting
- Communicating Results
- Grant Performance Report
- Overview
- Performance-based Funding and Disbursement Decision
- PR and Coordinating Mechanism (CM) Communication and Governance
- Reporting to the Global Fund
- UNDP Corporate Reporting
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Risk Management
- Common Risks Identified in Global Fund Programmes
- Global Fund Risk Management
- Introduction to Risk Management
- Overview
- Risk Management in High Risk Environments
- Risk Management in UNDP-managed Global Fund Grants
- Risk management in UNDP
- UNDP Risk Management in the Global Fund Portfolio
- Sub-Recipient Management
PR and Coordinating Mechanism (CM) Communication and Governance
PR-Coordinating Mechanism Communication Modalities
The Coordinating Mechanism, which includes Country Coordinating Mechanisms (CCMs) and Regional Coordinating Mechanisms (RCMs) or Regional Organizations (ROs), develops and submits grant proposals to the Global Fund based on priority needs at the national level. After grant approval, they oversee progress during implementation. The CCM – or, for a regional grant, a regional coordinating mechanism – is responsible for overseeing the performance of the grants and making strategic decisions at key opportunities during grant implementation, including endorsing requests for reprogramming or changing implementation arrangements. It is important for the Principal Recipient (PR) to maintain regular communication with the CCM at every stage of the grant cycle to ensure progress is actively monitored and any bottlenecks or challenges are addressed in a timely manner.
Examples of PR-CCM best practice communication modalities include (but are not limited to):
- PR regularly attends CCM meetings and provides updates on grant implementation progress and implementation issues;
- PR shares with the CCM progress updates and/or disbursement requests submitted to the Global Fund including the Global Fund feedback and decision;
- PR proactively shares with the CCM any Performance Letters or Notification Letters shared by the Global Fund, in case the CCM was not copied;
- PR involves the CCM in any reprogramming and extension requests that they may submit to the Global Fund and provides evidence of CCM’s endorsement of the requests; and
- At the time of grant closure, PR involves the CCM in the preparation of the closeout plan and budget that should be endorsed by the CCM prior to submission to the Global Fund for approval.
The RO's main
communicating line should be the COs, who can then reach out to the Global Fund/Health Implementation
Support Team for guidance.
The Global Fund has
developed the CCM Oversight Tool or ‘dashboard’.
The use of the tool is voluntary and provides CCM members with a visual, strategic summary of key
financial, programmatic, and management information drawn from existing data sources.
## Governance Arrangements
All Coordinating Mechanisms should have a governance manual or a “constitution” that details the
roles and responsibilities of each member and explains how the CCM, RCM, or RO will conduct
oversight and conflict mitigation. In certain instances, the organization which submits the funding
proposal (i.e. the Regional Organization) may also serve as a Sub-recipient (SR), thereby
introducing potential conflicts of interest and potential for lack of clarity over accountability
and reporting lines (UNDP-SR; UNDP-RO). A governance manual should be developed by the RO – and
reviewed by UNDP for inputs --and should detail the respective roles and responsibilities of all
parties. The manual should also include an agreed-upon Conflict of Interest policy for each CCM
member (or equivalent for a regional organization). In practice, where there is confusion over the
roles of the RO who serves a dual capacity as an SR, or lack of compliance with the policy, Country
Offices are requested to contact their Programme Advisor, Global Fund Partnership & Health
Programme Implementation Support, for guidance.
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