United States Department of State (USA)

Secure Innovation: Advancing Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity, and Digital Resilience in Argentina

Last update: 4 days ago Last update: Apr 17, 2026

Details

Location:Argentina
Argentina
Grantmaking entity: U.S. Embassy Argentina
Status:Open
Budget: USD 100,000
Award ceiling: USD 100,000
Award floor: USD 25,000
Sector:Education, Training & Capacity Building, Security & Peacebuilding, ICT & Telecommunications, Private Sector & Trade
Languages:English
Eligible applicants:NGOs / Nonprofit Organisations, Government / Public Bodies, Academic Institutions, Other(Public International Organizations)
Eligible citizenships:Argentina
Argentina
Date posted: Apr 17, 2026

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Associated Awards

Quick summary

AI generated
Objectives: Promote innovation, cybersecurity, and responsible AI adoption in Argentina by delivering training, tool...
Eligibility criteria: Eligible prime applicants are: (1) not-for-profit organizations, including think tanks and civil society/NGOs; (2) public or private educational institutions; (3) Public International Organizations; and (4) governmental institutions. For-profit entities...

Description

Secure Innovation: Advancing Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity, and Digital Resilience in Argentina Funding Agency: Department of State Agency: U.S. Mission to Argentina Assistance Listings: 19.040 -- Public Diplomacy Programs Status: Open Close date
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grant Background

About the Funding Agency

The U.S. Department of State is the federal executive body under the US government that advises the President and maintains international relations, serving as the Department of Foreign Affairs. It was formed in 1789 in Washington, DC, USA and guides America’s foreign policy through diplomacy, advocacy and assistance, supporting citizens' interests, security and economic prosperity.

The responsibilities of the Department of State include implementing U.S. foreign policy, managing the country's diplomatic missions overseas, negotiating treaties and agreements with foreign organizations and representing the United States at the United Nations. It is also responsible for working with non-profit organizations and foundations that represent social and political programs in other countries. In addition to managing the Department, the Secretary of State serves as the country's chief diplomat and representative abroad. The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labour, a division of the U.S. Department of State, publishes annual reports on global human rights and U.S. contributions to the advancement of freedom and democracy. The Foreign Service Institute, which is also a division of the Department of State, is responsible for training diplomatic personnel. The director of the institute has the rank of Assistant Secretary of State of the United States. The Office of Digital Diplomacy deals with digital projects such as Diplopedia.

U.S. Department of State key sectors: Public & Foreign Affairs, International Relations, Public Policy, Diplomacy, Socio-Economic Development, Democracy, Human Rights, Programme Management, etc.

About the Sectors

Education, Training & Capacity Building

Covers formal and informal education, training, and capacity-building activities that develop knowledge, skills, and institutional capabilities across all age groups.


Key areas:
  • Education systems and learning programmes
  • Vocational training and skills development
  • Capacity building and professional development

Security & Peacebuilding

Focuses on strengthening safety and security systems while supporting conflict prevention, stabilization, and long-term peacebuilding efforts.


Key areas:
  • Security sector support and oversight mechanisms
  • Protection systems, surveillance, and access control
  • Risk reduction programs
  • Conflict prevention, mediation, and peacebuilding initiatives

Locations

Argentina

Argentina focuses on highway expansion, rail rehabilitation, energy infrastructure, and port development to support industrial growth and agricultural exports. Infrastructure financing combines federal budgets, provincial investment, multilateral development loans, and private sector participation. Projects aim to modernize logistics networks and expand renewable energy capacity. Macroeconomic volatility, inflation, and fiscal constraints significantly influence infrastructure implementation.

Nr. of tenders: 12937
Nr. of grants: 1928
Nr. of donors: 524
Nr. of jobs: 23
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