"Seven key findings emerged from this research: 1. Overall donor funding for free expression work has increased–not decreased–over the past three to five years [...] 2. Under current conditions, it is impossible to conclusively measure the amount of free expression funding. Donors themselves have a hard time extracting specific annual dollar amounts for free expression funding because it is housed in so many different programmatic areas and operating under so many different definitions [...] 3. Changes in the political landscape of individual countries have a major impact on whether, how, how much, and what kind of freedom of expression activity is funded [...] 4. Many donors are experiencing economic pressures as a result of the 2008 global financial downturn [...] 5. The community of free expression funders is evolving: new ones are emerging, while some long-time supporters are leaving the field altogether or shifting their priorities. 6. Internal and structural reorganizations are taking place across the board, in both government and private funding organizations. These changes bewilder NGOs and program officers alike [...] 7. The field of freedom of expression has been broadening with the addition of emerging Internet freedom organizations. The field has been complicated by mission overlap between established freedom of expression groups and emerging groups focused on technology and human rights." (Executive summary, page 4-5)
INTRODUCTION, 6
KEY FINDINGS
1 Increases in Funding, 9
2 Measuring Freedom of Expression Funding, 10
3 The Impact of the Political Landscape, 12
4 The Impact of the 2008 Global Financial Downturn, 14
5 The Evolution of the Funding Community, 15
6 Internal and Structural Reorganization of Donors and the Disruption It Causes, 18
7 The Emerging Internet Freedom Movement, 20
CONCLUSION, 23