European Journalism Call 2026 Journalism Partnerships - Pluralism

EUROPEAN EDUCATION AND CULTURE EXECUTIVE AGENCY (EACEA)

Sciences humaines et sociales (3)

Topic 2. “Journalism Partnerships - Pluralism” covers media sectors that are particularly relevant for democracy. Certain sectors having an important role for democratic debate lack the means to adapt to the digital environment, and phenomena such as shrinking newsrooms or media deserts can lead to a deterioration of pluralism. Support is thus needed for them to improve their position, adapt their methods, continue providing a first-hand source of original reporting to citizens, help keep decision-makers accountable and ultimately contribute to a more diverse and independent sector.

Priorities

Proposals must put in place funding schemes for news media entities and independent journalism and dedicate at least 60% of the total amount of the grant to it. Accompanying activities may be proposed. Applicant organisations should be in a position to set up funding schemes (support to third parties) targeting news media outlets, organisations and, if needed, professionals, such as local and regional media, community media, investigative journalism and organisations delivering public interest news, and in ways that enhance pluralistic media landscapes across the European Union. Non-profit and civil society organisations are particularly encouraged to apply.

The proposed activities must focus on news media sectors of special relevance to democracy and civic participation, i.e. the role they play in enhancing democracy, shaping the public debate and bringing benefits to their audiences and communities, instead of focusing just on profit. For the purpose of this call, these sectors are in particular:

  • Local and regional media

  • Independent and investigative journalism

  • Organisations delivering public interest news/public service journalism (such as community, legal and civic journalism and media, news increasing transparency about the media)

Activities

Applicants must present, develop and implement a funding scheme for cascading grants (i.e. regranting / support to third parties) for independent media and organisations primarily active in one or more of these sectors. They will cover as many geographical areas and news media organisations as possible.

They shall focus on activities that contribute to sustaining, improving or transforming the work of the targeted parties. Activities can among others consist of:

  • Innovations in editorial production (e.g. formats, content), coverage and revenue models

  • The improvement of distribution and dissemination of news

  • The development and engagement of audiences and community-building strategies

  • The development of technical tools applying to the above topics

  • Training on the above topics

Putting in place a funding scheme is compulsory. The funding should be accompanied by active communication towards a maximum of potential stakeholders across the geographical areas covered by the proposal. It is possible to complement the funding scheme with accompanying activities, if relevant and based on a needs analysis of the chosen subsector/s. Such accompanying activities may include, e.g., the development of deontological and governance standards, budgetary readiness, development of criteria and indicators framing their support, repositories of knowledge, legal advice or trainings. The proposal must explain how the proposed activities will work towards addressing the identified challenges.

Proposals should focus on the European Union, and specifically areas with low provision of the specific news described above or in media markets where media pluralism is strained. The needs of smaller newsrooms may also be addressed.

Activities must include concrete deliverables and set clear, objectively verifiable and quantifiable performance indicators for the mid-term and the end of the project. The estimated impact must be more precise than the sum of available distribution channels, and should be substantiated by a detailed outreach plan as well as proof of interest from the target groups.

All projects need to respect widely accepted professional media standards. The chosen standards and the relevant mechanism to ensure them should be indicated in the proposal and confirmed with a signed Declaration on Standards & Independence (Annexed to the Application form). In cases of support given to editorial work, third parties need to operate with full editorial independence.

All Partnerships should consider the ecological footprint of the activities they propose, and where relevant, describe the strategies to ensure a more sustainable and environmentally-respectful media sectors.

Financement

What kind of activities can you propose?

Proposals should include activities that best contribute to the consortium’s goals. These could include events, online trainings and workshops for media professionals, exchange programmes, mentoring schemes, mapping of best practices, sector-wide development of technical standards, development of guidelines and editorial standards, production of practical guidebooks, development and testing of platforms and technical solutions to exchange ideas and best practices, promotional activities, or other activities that aim to uphold the viability of a given sector/s. Sharing of best practices between operators is encouraged and support to media sectors lacking the means to adapt to the digital environment are encouraged.

Financial support to third parties is allowed for grants and prizes under the conditions set in the call.


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Requis d'admission

What is the timeframe of this grant?

Applicants can send proposals until Wednesday 4 February 2026. Proposals will be evaluated in spring, and results communicated in summer 2026. Projects are expected to start towards the end of 2026 and last 24 months.

Who can apply to this grant?

Consortia may include non-profit, public and private media outlets (including written/online press, radio/podcasts, TV, etc) as well as other organisations focusing on news media (including media associations, NGOs, journalistic funds and training organisations focusing on media professionals, etc).

Natural persons are not eligible (with the exception of self-employed persons, i.e. sole traders, where the company does not have legal personality separate from that of the natural person).

How many partners should compose the consortia?

Consortia must gather at least 3 partners from at least 3 different countries participating in the Creative Europe Programme. Since the opening intends to achieve sector-wide impacts, proposals are invited to involve as many news media as possible in their activities.

What is the scope of this grant?

Applicants are called to set up cross-border media collaborations. Proposals can aim to develop, inter alia, better revenue and monetisation models, new approaches to audience development, community-building and marketing, development of common professional/technical standards, new types of newsrooms, syndication networks or other models to exchange content/data between news media across the EU or provide assistance to small media organisations.

Content-wise, they can aim to increase efficiency and the quality of reporting through innovative journalistic collaborations. Projects can test innovative production methods and formats or contribute to high-quality media production standards in other collaborative ways. Projects can aim to increase exchanges of best practices among journalists and optimise workflows for those journalism genres requiring more time and resources.

Consortia may choose to focus on a news media (sub)sector (for example tv, radio, printed press, etc.) and/or journalistic genre (for example, data journalism, specialised journalism, etc.)


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Full-proposal : 04/02/2026

Contacts ULB

Dernière modification le 08/12/2025 par DI GIGLIO Sarah