SCOPE TT (System for Civic Observation, Protection & Engagement – Trinidad & Tobago)
Understanding and Protecting Civic Space in Trinidad & Tobago
SCOPE TT is a national initiative developed by The Cropper Foundation to monitor, understand, and protect civic space in Trinidad & Tobago — the conditions that shape how freely civil society can organise, speak out, access resources, and participate in public life.
While civic freedoms are constitutionally protected, they are also constantly evolving, contested, and experienced differently across organisations and communities. SCOPE TT responds to the need for a clear, credible, and locally grounded system that captures what is happening in real time, and translates those experiences into evidence that can inform action.
At its core, SCOPE TT is about ensuring that the lived realities of civil society are not lost, overlooked, or misunderstood, but instead contribute to stronger advocacy, better decision-making, and a more enabling environment for the sector.
A People-Driven Approach to Civic Space Monitoring
SCOPE TT is built on a simple idea:
those closest to the work are best placed to understand the conditions affecting it.
By creating structured ways for civil society actors to share their experiences, the initiative transforms individual observations into collective insight. These insights help to identify patterns, highlight emerging risks, and surface opportunities for strengthening civic participation and accountability.
This is a Trinidad & Tobago initiative — locally led and locally relevant — drawing on global learning but grounded in national realities.
How SCOPE TT Works
SCOPE TT is built around three core tools that work together to capture, track, and interpret civic space over time:
Anonymous Civic Space Inbox
A secure channel for individuals and organisations to share real experiences from the ground — including barriers, challenges, policy changes, or positive developments — safely and anonymously.
Civic Space Barometer
A short, periodic survey that captures how civic space is experienced across the sector, tracking trends in areas such as freedoms, governance, transparency, and access to resources.
National Civic Space Report
A synthesis of insights from the Inbox, Barometer, and ongoing research, producing evidence-based outputs that inform advocacy, dialogue with the State and private sector, and public understanding of civic space in Trinidad & Tobago.
Why It Matters
Civic space shapes the ability of organisations to function, collaborate, and contribute to national development. When it is constrained, the effects are felt across communities, sectors, and public life.
By providing a structured, evidence-based approach to monitoring civic space, SCOPE TT aims to:
- Strengthen accountability and transparency
- Support informed advocacy and policy dialogue
- Highlight both risks and opportunities affecting civil society
- Build a shared understanding of the enabling environment
- Empower civil society actors to contribute to national conversations
Get Involved
SCOPE TT is designed to be accessible and participatory. If you are part of a civil society organisation, network, movement, or community group, your input is essential.
You can:
- Share your experiences through the Anonymous Civic Space Inbox
- Complete the Civic Space Barometer
- Use and share the findings from the National Civic Space Report (coming soon!)
Your participation helps build a clearer picture of civic space in Trinidad & Tobago and strengthens the collective voice of the sector.
Project Context
SCOPE TT builds on The Cropper Foundation’s broader work to strengthen the enabling environment for civil society in Trinidad & Tobago, including initiatives such as IGNITE CSOs and the EU SEE programme.
The initiative draws on learning and support from international partners, including the European Union and Forus. However, SCOPE TT is independently developed and led in Trinidad & Tobago, designed specifically for the local context and grounded in the lived experiences of civil society here.