In 2013, foundations allocated 2.3billioninsupportofhumanrights.TheAdvancingHumanRightsinitiativedefineshumanrightsgrantmakingasfundinginpursuitofstructuralchange,ofteninsupportofmarginalizedpopulations,toadvancerightsenshrinedintheUniversalDeclarationofHumanRightsandsubsequentrightstreaties.Allgrantmakingconsistentwiththisdefinitionwasincludedinthisresearch,includinggrantsbyfunderswhodonotconsiderthemselvestobehumanrightsfundersbutwhosupportworkinintersectingfields.The803foundationsincludedinthiseditionofAdvancingHumanRights:UpdateonGlobalFoundationGrantmakingmade20,300grantssupportinghumanrights.Thesefoundationsrangefromthetop−rankedOpenSocietyFoundations,FordFoundation,andNationalePostcodeLoterij,eachreportingover250 million in giving for human rights in 2013, to foundations awarding one or two human rights grants.This third annual report explores 2013 human rights grantmaking by funder, region, issue, population, and--for the first time--strategy. To provide a more complete picture of giving for human rights, this year's update also includes 2013 data on bilateral and multilateral aid.Advancing Human Rights: Update on Global Foundation Grantmaking also highlights key changes in foundation giving between 2012 and 2013. To control for year-to-year variations in the data set, the report limits this comparison to a set of 649 funders whose grants were included in the research for both 2012 and 2013. Among this matched subset, total grant dollars for human rights rose by 23 percent and the number of grants awarded increased by 6 percent