Volag 2012
Volag 2012
Volag 2012
2012 VOLAG
REPORT OF VOLUNTARY AGENCIES
DR. RAJIV SHAH Administrator U.S. Agency for International Development DR. MAURA L. O'NEILL Director Office of Innovation and Development Alliances
CONTENTS
OVERVIEW USAID Works to Elevate Development and Seize Pivotal Opportunities through Expanded Partnerships with Nongovernmental Organizations U.S. PRIVATE VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS Registry Summary of Activities (Fiscal Year 2010) 9 135 4
INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS Registry Summary of Activities (Fiscal Year 2010) 167 191
U.S. COOPERATIVE DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS (CDOs) Registry Summary of Activities (Fiscal Year 2010) 199 203
OVERVIEW
USAID WORKS TO ELEVATE DEVELOPMENT AND SEIZE PIVOTAL OPPORTUNITIES THROUGH EXPANDED PARTNERSHIPS WITH NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
INTRODUCTION
In April 2012, Dr. Rajiv Shah, Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development, released his second annual letter, stating: "Two years ago, President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton both called for elevating development within America's foreign policy. Many people in the development community assumed their call to elevate development was about recognizing the importance of the work USAID and others have done for decades. But the President and Secretary's call for elevating development was not a show of gratitude. It was not a reward. It was a challenge. It meant we would have to move past old debates and embrace new opportunities. Over the last two years, we've worked hard to take up the President and the Secretary's call." One of USAID's key responses to the Quadrennial Development and Diplomacy Review (QDDR) and its call to "elevate development" in U.S. Foreign Policy is USAID Forward. USAID Forward is a set of reforms aimed to transform the Agency into a "modern development enterprise," focused on more innovative and strategic approaches to development cutting across the sectors of the
Agency's work. USAID Forward, with an emphasis on innovation and a relentless focus on results, is fostering new partnerships with civil society and the private sector. The USAID Forward reforms encompass the universe of Agency operations, internal and external, and focus on streamlining business processes, formalizing evaluation and learning methodologies to improve performance, and promoting innovative solutions to development challenges. One of the central objectives of USAID Forward is Implementation and Procurement Reform (IPR), including the expansion of USAID partnerships with a wider range of development actors, specifically nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), small businesses, and local civil society and private-sector organizations. Increasing direct relationships with local organizations furthers a key goal of USAID Forward and IPR to increase the sustainability and cost effectiveness of the Agency's development investments. Nearly two years into this reform process, the Agency has reformed procurement procedures, revised regulations, amended policies, and elevated learning and accountability around capacity development to help transform USAID culture to one more amenable to fostering direct relationships with a broad range of implementing partners, including local organizations.
In 2010, USAID created the Development Innovation Ventures Fund, which uses a venture capital model to fund, pilot, and bring creative solutions to scale. In addition, the Agency has initiated Grand Challenges for Development, which identifies solvable development problems and provides a framework for overcoming scientific and technological barriers to find scalable solutions to address the problems. The first Grand Challenge, Saving Lives at Birth, generated more than 600 proposals to address the survival needs of women and newborns in low-resource, rural settings. USAID Forward is also providing opportunities to reorganize the Agency and elevate innovation and partnerships. For example, the Private and Voluntary Cooperation Division has been renamed the Local Sustainability (LS) Division and is now part of the Office of Innovation and Development Alliances (IDEA), which is working to more quickly, cost-efficiently, and sustainably achieve development goals by supporting innovations that lead to significant improvements in development impact. During the past year, the LS Division continued its efforts to expand partnerships with a wide range of private voluntary organizations (PVOs) to support their direct activities, as well as their work with local partners. The LS Division also has expanded direct
relationships with a wide range of local organizations. USAID recognizes the contributions that PVOs and local organizations make to the world's development objectives and believes that PVOs and local organizations, as participants on the frontlines of development, are essential to the process of generating low-cost, transformative solutions to improve lives worldwide. To facilitate its humanitarian and development work, USAID registers PVOs so that they are eligible to compete for funding opportunities with the Agency. The purpose of the PVO registration is to: Identify PVOs that engage in, or intend to engage in, voluntary foreign aid operations Determine whether PVOs meet certain general operating guidelines and accountability standards Certify that PVOs are eligible to apply for USAID assistance IDEA/LS is the Agency lead for the Registry of U.S. and international PVOs and has made significant improvements toward streamlining the online registration system, created in 2008, including efforts to enhance the submission experience and ensure the accuracy of the data collected.
PARTNERSHIP DEVELOPMENT
Partnerships are a central component of USAID's vision of a modern development enterprise and the Agency's ongoing major initiatives to increase effectiveness in meeting development objectives. Working closely with local implementing partners and building their capacity is a key aspect of the Agency's implementation and procurement reform effort. The LS Division is at the cutting edge of these efforts. The Division implements several programs that complement IPR and works with and builds the capacity of local partners to strengthen local development outcomes. IDEA/LS leads the Agency's partnership building with PVOs, NGOs, and cooperatives. In this role, IDEA/LS: serves as an institutional bridge between the Agency and the PVO, NGO, and cooperative communities; provides support and services to Agency staff and partners that are developing strategic partnerships involving NGOs, PVOs, or cooperatives; informs Agency efforts to develop innovative, effective programs that strengthen PVOs, NGOs, and cooperatives in USAID partner countries; and
OVERVIEW 5
U.S. PVOs received $20.9 billion in support from U.S. citizens and private sources, over 6 times the $3.3 billion from USAID.
provides leadership on the Agency's outreach to the PVO, NGO, and cooperative communities as well as on policy formulation and issues of concern to these communities. In addition to PVO Registration, IDEA/LS also manages the following programs: The Development Grants Program (DGP) focuses on building and expanding partnerships with U.S. and local, in-country organizations that have little or no direct experience in working with USAID. The DGP program enables grantees to develop their organizational and technical capabilities while implementing innovative development activities in their home countries. Through the DGP, USAID aims to create stronger, flexible, and sustainable organizations that can rapidly respond to the evolving needs of those they serve. In addition to receiving funding for activities and institutional support, DGP grantees have access to capacity development support to enhance their organizational and/or technical capabilities. This support is nimble and customized to grantees' needs, with a focus on empowering local capacitybuilding service providers where possible. The DGP staff helps contribute to the expertise of
USAID's Mission staff and regional USAID Local Capacity Development Teams. The Cooperative Development Program (CDP) builds the intellectual capital of major partner U.S. cooperatives and cooperative development organizations and has led to notable achievements, including new research on cooperative law and regulation, the development of tools to measure cooperative development, and the creation of a Comprehensive Guide for Rural Electric Cooperative Development. Though modest in budget, the CDP enables partners to address critical challenges to cooperative development, to develop and test solutions and, where successful, to incorporate these solutions in their broader programs, creating substantial impact and a significant multiplier effect. The Small Project Assistance Program (SPA) / Peace Corps is a joint collaboration with the Peace Corps through which volunteers support USAID development efforts, helping to implement small self-help activities to support community-level development projects in sectors ranging from health to agriculture to small-enterprise development. SPA-sponsored projects focus on developing local community groups, including local associations, government entities, schools, and NGOs.
Volunteers also work with NGOs to improve services to surrounding communities. Participants learn key development skills that encompass program design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation, integrated planning, and service delivery. The Limited Excess Property Program (LEPP) enables USAID-registered PVOs to access government excess property for use in their overseas development programs. LEPP partners are able to obtain property, such as hospital beds, vehicles and computers, through access to the U.S. General Services Administration's and the Defense Logistics Agency's Disposition Services' excess property programs.
PVOs spend on international development activities far exceed the resources they receive from USAID or the U.S. Government. During fiscal year 2010, U.S. PVOs registered with USAID received $20.9 billion in support from nonU.S. Government and private sources, over six times the $3.3 billion that USAID channeled to USAID-registered PVOs. Other U.S. Government agencies and international organizations provided an additional $3.6 billion, bringing the total private and public support and revenue for registered U.S. PVOs to $27.8 billion. USAID also provided more than $239 million to registered international PVOs in 2010, augmenting their $3.6 billion in direct spending on international relief and development activities. Meanwhile, U.S. CDOs received $316 million from USAID during 2010, as well as $293 million from other sources, to support their efforts to build and strengthen cooperative organizations overseas.
pvo.usaid.gov/usaid/ Registry of Private Voluntary Organizations: provides detailed information on PVOs currently registered with USAID via a searchable database. idea.usaid.gov/organization/ls/ Local Sustainability Division: provides an overview of the Division, which manages the Agency's registration policy, the PVO registration process, and various grant programs. idea.usaid.gov/ls/pvo/ PVO Registration: provides information on USAID's PVO registration process, including the Conditions of Registration, a description of the information and documentation required to complete an application for registration, and a link to the registration site. The VolAg Report is the culmination of the annual effort by the Office of Innovation and Development Alliances' Local Sustainability Division staff to collect, validate, and disseminate a clear, factual report that helps inform the Congress, Agency staff, partner organizations, and the general public about the activities of the PVO community. We hope you find it a useful resource.
OVERVIEW 7
UNITED STATES
PRIVATE VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS
REGISTRY The rules governing the registration of nongovernmental, nonprofit agencies engaged in voluntary foreign aid are promulgated in the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 22, Part 203. The U.S. PVO Registry consists of the following agencies.
the organization has implemented more than 6,000 projects that have reached more than 2 million people. AGOH's endowment covers all operating expenses, so 100 percent of all contributionspublic and privateget to the projects. The Addis Ababa-based team inspects project sites and documents outcomes with photographs, videos, and narrative reports.
ACCION INTERNATIONAL
Mr. Michael Schlein, CEO 56 Roland Street, Suite 300 Boston, MA 02129 TEL: (617) 625-7080 FAX: (617) 625-7020 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.accion.org Gives people the financial tools they need to work their way out of poverty. By providing microloans, business training, and other financial services to poor women and men who start their own businesses, ACCION International's microlending partners help people work their way up the economic ladder with dignity and pride. ACCION seeks to bring this opportunity to as many of the world's poor as possible by developing microlending institutions that are financially self-sustaining and capable of reaching billions of people. Since 1992, ACCION programs have disbursed billions in microloans to millions of borrowers. ACCION's partners have put funding into the hands of the poor in 23 countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and Latin America.
strengthens in-country capabilities in the areas of health training, research, prevention, and care; and creates evidence-based models that are immediately relevant in resource-limited settings. By working within African medical centers, Accordia develops lasting institutional leadership, paves the way for stronger African health systems, and nurtures the next generation of health leaders.
programs, and conducts training programs and consultancies using state-of-the-art tools and techniques.
The Advocates for Human Rights investigates and exposes human rights violations internationally and in the United States; represents immigrants and refugees who are victims of human rights abuses; trains and assists groups that protect human rights; and uses education and advocacy to engage the public, policymakers, and children in human rights and cultural understanding. For 28 years, The Advocates for Human Rights' innovative programming has improved the lives of refugees and immigrants, women, ethnic and religious minorities, children, and other marginalized communities.
designs constructs, and rehabilitates schools. In addition, ACEII is working to ensure that Ugandan villages have access to clean water by conducting needs assessments, designing sanitary facilities, and providing hygiene training.
Assists immigrants, refugees, and those seeking asylum from across Africa and the African diaspora. ASC was founded in New York in 1981 by Ethiopian refugees wanting to give a helping hand to other newcomers. A nonprofit organization, ASC provides services to improve the health and self-sufficiency of the African community in New York City and in Africa. Today, ASC is a multiservice agency that addresses the needs of African communities affected by war, persecution, poverty, and disease. The organization provides health, housing, legal, and social services to more than 10,000 people each year in its U.S.-based operations. In Ethiopia, ASC serves 40,000 people per year, operating HIV/AIDS prevention and voluntary testing and counseling programs and providing access to care and treatment.
resource development, environmental management, basic education, microenterprise development, privatesector development, governance, and emergency humanitarian aid. In the United States, Africare focuses on building understanding of African development through public education and promotional outreach. Founded in 1970, Africare has expended more than $750 million to support and implement humanitarian assistance and development programs in 36 African nations. Today, Africare supports more than 200 programs in some 23 nations.
AFRICARE
Dr. Darius Mans, President 440 R Street NW Washington, DC 20001-1961 TEL: (202) 462-3614 FAX: (202) 328-3624 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.africare.org Provides families and communities across Africa with assistance in the areas of food security, agriculture, health, and HIV/AIDS. Africare also specializes in water
family gains housing and clean water and every child has access to primary education. In 2010, ninety-nine percent of loans provided through the organization's women's microcredit project were repaid on time.
most desperate situations around the world. ASI flies where other air carriers cannotor will notfly. ASI provides safe, reliable, and cost-effective air transportation to fellow humanitarian relief and development agencies working primarily in remote, transportation-deficient regions of the world. ASI's pilots fly small yet agile single- and twin-engine airplanes, carrying relief workers into stricken areas of Africa and Asia. ASI's operations impart a multiplier effect on donor dollars, as the organizations receiving transport share the costs. These organizations are then able to concentrate on their areas of expertise, leaving the logistics to the experts at ASI.
AGROS INTERNATIONAL
Mr. Don Manning, CEO 2225 4th Avenue, 2nd Floor Seattle, WA 98121 TEL: (206) 528-1066 FAX: (206) 528-0393 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.agros.org Combines the groundbreaking work of making the rural poor landowners with holistic community development in four countries in Central America and in Mexico. Through Agros International's development model of training, community organizing, enterprise development, and land ownership, families become landowners and move from subsistence farming to producing as many as three harvests annually. Under the Agros model, every
America to accomplish its program objectives. Alliance associates provide volunteer and professional assistance in the development and implementation of specific projects. The Alliance's grassroots educational and democratic process improves quality of life and facilitates participatory roles for people living on the margins of society.
consumer leaders dedicated to advancing energy efficiency for economic, environmental, and energy security reasons. To achieve this goal, ASE conducts research, pilot projects, educational programs, and policy advocacy. ASE receives the majority of its funding through grants and contracts from the Federal Government, energy-efficient industry companies, utilities, and foundations. ASE is the only national, nonprofit, bipartisan public policy organization working in strategic partnership with businesses, government, and environmental, educational, and consumer leaders to encourage a more vibrant marketplace for energyefficient products.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF THE ORDER OF ST. LAZARUS, INC. Order of St. Lazarus
Mr. Scott G. Thompson, VP and Treasurer 3715 Northside Parkway Building 400, 8th Floor Atlanta, GA 30327 TEL: (404) 266-9599 FAX: (404) 266-8327 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.st-lazarus.us Establishes, maintains, and provides aid to numerous leprosaria, while supporting medical research into
leprosy. The Order of St. Lazarus maintains two leprosy clinics in Mexico and provides financial support to Rising Star Outreach for programs benefiting lepers in India. In addition, due to advances in modern medicine and the treatment of leprosy, the organization has diversified its humanitarian relief efforts. The organization has donated medical supplies to victims of war and natural disasters in Nicaragua, Guatemala, Mexico, Northern Ireland, and the former Yugoslavia. The Order of St. Lazarus also provides financial support to the renowned Infant Welfare Center in the Old City of Jerusalem.
education institutions for partnerships with higher education efforts overseas. HED manages these international partnerships to enable sustainable development through human and institutional capacity building. ACE convenes HED's governing board, which includes senior executives of ACE and other organizations representing the U.S. higher education community.
without regard to race, creed, color, or ability to pay. Laniado's physicians and researchers discovered the only treatment for West Nile Virus and are currently engaged in developing a cure for Parkinson's disease in conjunction with the Michael J. Fox Foundation. Laniado's nursing school trains immigrant students as well as licensed practical nurses to become registered nurses. The organization has completed work on the Children of the Holocaust Memorial Hospital, the S. Daniel Abraham Geriatric Center, the Bildirici Diabetes Center, and the Rothmann Cardiology Department.
democratic development of Latvia by promoting understanding and support for Latvia through educational efforts in the United States. ALA ensures the availability of Latvian schools, books, and teaching materials for Latvian children and promotes the study of Latvian language, history, and culture. The organization also provides humanitarian aid to people in Latvia. ALA is the main representative organization for the LatvianAmerican community. Through its 142 member organizations, churches, clubs, and about 5,250 individual members, ALA represents more than 90,000 people of Latvian descent living in the United States.
community-based health care (measles, malaria and HIV/AIDS), restoration of contact among disaster- and war-affected families, and public awareness of international humanitarian law.
urban areas. The organization helps women in developing cultures gain independence through microcredit programs, vocational and hygiene training, and counseling. ASTI provides scholarships to qualified students for study at institutions that prepare them for higher learning. Women also receive scholarships in nursing and teaching. In addition, ASTI provides funds to disaster victims to help them rebuild their lives.
Prevents and relieves sickness and injury and enhances the health and well-being of people of all races and creeds. Established in 1957, The American Society of The Order of St. John became a Priory of The Order of St. John of Jerusalem in 1996. The Order is an international charity that operates in 42 countries and oversees two foundations: The St. John of Jerusalem Eye Hospital in East Jerusalem (established in 1882) and the St. John Ambulance. The U.S. Priory's primary charitable beneficiary is the eye hospital, and the organization and its members raise funds to support the hospital's activities. Since its founding, The American Society of The Order of St. John has raised millions of dollars for the hospital and has provided it with volunteer ophthalmologists and a substantial quantity of medical supplies and equipment.
THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF THE MOST VENERABLE ORDER OF THE HOSPITAL OF ST. JOHN OF JERUSALEM The American Society of The Order of St. John
Ms. Ruth Ann Skaff, Executive Director 1875 K Street NW, Suite 603 Washington, DC 20006-1251 TEL: (202) 510-9691 FAX: (202) 822-0040 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.saintjohn.org
D.C., and Miami, and in Canada and throughout Latin America, to exchange ideas and formulate solutions to the challenges facing the Americas today. The organization promotes economic and social development, social inclusion, open markets, the rule of law, and democracy throughout the Western Hemisphere. Americas Society increases public awareness of, and appreciation for, the diverse cultural heritage of the Americas and the importance of the inter-American relationship.
AMIZADE LTD.
Mr. Brandon Blache-Cohen, Executive Director 4 Smithfield Street, 7th Floor Pittsburgh, PA 15222 TEL: (412) 586-4986 FAX: (412) 904-2598 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.amizade.org Empowers individuals and communities through worldwide service and learning. Amizade connects people across cultures through service-learning courses and volunteer programs that combine education, reflection, and community service. Amizade works with people in their communities to identify areas of need and connects volunteers with the identified service projects, such as tutoring children or installing water-harvesting tanks. Project volunteers work side by side with community members to achieve a concrete goal while building goodwill and international understanding. Amizade annually connects more than 400 volunteers with meaningful service opportunities in 11 communities in nine countries.
THE APPEAL OF THE NOBEL PEACE LAUREATES FOUNDATION, INC. d/b/a Peace Appeal Foundation
Mr. Derek S. Brown, Executive Director 303 Goodwood Gardens Baltimore, MD 21210 TEL: (857) 998-1747 FAX: (857) 233-0561 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.peaceappeal.org Supports peace and conflict resolution processes globally through inclusive, multi-track, and multi-sector interventions designed to achieve agreed, fair, and just outcomes. The cornerstone of the Peace Appeal Foundation's work is direct, sustained mediation, facilitation, and advisory services that address some of the world's most intractable conflicts. The foundation also works collaboratively with local and international partners to develop and disseminate innovative tools, methodologies, educational materials, and programs in support of peace and conflict resolution efforts. The Peace Appeal Foundation has helped design and facilitate structured dialogue processes in Sri Lanka, Nepal and, most recently, the Middle East.
and are made with local materials. A simple system provides potable water for a family and will last for 10 years. The organization seeks to engage women as business owners and supports new businesses with construction manuals, health and hygiene curriculums, and simple accounting and marketing ideas. ACI distributes its water purification systems through a core staff, churches and mission groups, medical personnel, and organizations such as the Friends of the Peace Corps, Men of Mission, and Habitat for Humanity.
nonsectarian organization, the fund represents all Armenians. Armenia Fund U.S.A. maintains high standards and strict policies of transparency. Since 1992, the fund, with its global affiliates, has raised more than $215 million toward rebuilding Armenia and Karabakh.
policy research. With 18 offices throughout Asia, an office in Washington, D.C., and its headquarters in San Francisco, the foundation addresses these issues on both a country and regional level. In 2010, the foundation provided more than $98 million in program support and distributed nearly one million books and journals valued at over $42 million.
ASSIST INTERNATIONAL AI
Dr. Robert J. Pagett, President 230 Mount Hermon Road, Suite 206 Scotts Valley, CA 95066-6396 TEL: (831) 438-4582 FAX: (831) 439-9602 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.assistinternational.org Addresses the critical needs of the world's most vulnerable people. AI's essential work is accomplished in emerging countries through high-tech medical installations (procurement, training, maintenance), essential infrastructure (power, water, capacity expansion), caring for the vulnerable (orphans, widows), and education and empowerment (schools, vocational training, enterprise endeavors). The humanitarian organization has a successful history working with a wide variety of partners, including foundations, hospital groups, service clubs, corporations, faith-based groups, and individual donors. Projects have been completed in over 50 countries, lifting thousands beyond mere existence to a hopeful and productive future.
community development initiatives through peace building, civic education, and participatory approaches.
the lives of disaster victims, underprivileged children, the sick, elderly, orphans, widows, and needy families regardless of nationality, race or religion. Baitulmaal's goal is to restore dignity and instill hope in communities hit hard by poverty and disaster. The organization pursues this goal by providing short-term emergency disaster relief in the form of food, medical supplies, clothing and shelter; distributing basic necessities over the long term; and repairing social infrastructure, which includes building and supporting family housing, orphanages, and health care facilities.
BAITULMAAL, INC.
Mr. Suleiman Alghanem, Executive Director 2300 Valley View Lane, Suite 632 Irving, TX 75062 TEL: (972) 257-2564 FAX: (972) 258-1396 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.baitulmaal.org Provides emergency food and medical assistance to disaster areas as well as sustainable solutions for longterm food production and hunger relief. Baitulmaal institutes compassionate projects worldwide to improve
understanding of the conditions to be addressed, assuring the donors and partners that the medical relief delivered will meet the project's specific needs. In addition, the C.U.R.E. Clinics program sends teams of medical professionals to help partner organizations provide free patient care and basic health care education at the community level.
partnerships that include governments, the international community, nongovernmental organizations, and local agencies to design and implement innovative, low-cost solutions to save lives. Since 1999, BI has completed more than 50 projects; the organization is currently engaged in approximately 40 projects in 20 countries.
pharmaceuticals for disaster relief efforts, such as the earthquakes in Haiti, Pakistan, and Indonesia. Blessings has worked in Iraq and Pakistan and is currently focusing on a tuberculosis and malaria treatment program in Burma (Myanmar).
BLESSINGS INTERNATIONAL
Dr. Harold C. Harder, President 1650 North Indianwood Ave Broken Arrow, OK 74012 TEL: (918) 250-8101 FAX: (918) 250-1281 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.blessing.org Equips medical mission teams with vitamins, pharmaceuticals, and medical supplies. Blessings International has served indigent patients in more than 170 developing nations since its inception. Blessings has assisted hospitals, clinics, and dispensaries as well as short-term medical teams that treat patients. In any given year, Blessings' pharmaceuticals are shipped to approximately 90 nations. The organization also serves as a resource for U.S. clinics and provides
BRAC can operate at scale and provide program implementation, monitoring, reporting, legal services, and governance programming and cultivate volunteers, interns, and partnerships; and (3) public education developing campaigns, relationships, and strategies to raise awareness of BRAC's successful approach to development in the United States and around the world.
Working through and in partnership with local agencies, BBF has helped people in more than 140 countries.
BUCKNER INTERNATIONAL BI
Dr. Albert Reyes, President 600 North Pearl Street, Suite 2000 Dallas, TX 75201 TEL: (214) 758-8000 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.buckner.org Seeks to transform the lives of vulnerable children, build strong families, and care for senior adults. BI works to preserve, protect, empower, and create permanency for children in the most family-like setting. BI utilizes the expertise and resources of individuals and organizations to offer culturally sensitive programs worldwide, including in the Dominican Republic, Egypt, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Honduras, Kenya, Mexico, Peru, Russia, Sierra Leone, and the United States. Founded in 1879, BI offers family programs, empowerment programs, and community programs, as well as aid and support in the form of health services and service trips. BI also provides footwear for needy children through its Shoes for Orphan Souls program.
Build Change is a 501(c)(3) social enterprise organization with programs in China, Haiti, and Indonesia. Through Build Change's work, more than 70,000 people live in safer houses.
BUILD CHANGE
Dr. Elizabeth Hausler Strand, Founder and CEO 1416 Larimer Street, Suite 301 Denver, CO 80202 TEL: (303) 953-2563 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.buildchange.org Designs earthquake-resistant houses in developing countries and trains builders, homeowners, engineers, and government officials to build them. Build Change works in partnership with the public and private sectors to effect lasting change in construction practices and methods in seismically active areas. Founded in 2004,
health care; and teach farmers to increase crop production. CCI was founded in 1982 by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, in partnership with Emory University. The Center emphasizes action and results, believing that people can improve their lives when provided with the necessary skills, knowledge, and access to resources.
organization is motivated by faith to cherish, preserve, and uphold the sacredness and dignity of all human life, foster charity and justice, and embody Catholic social and moral teaching. CRS acts to promote human development by responding to major emergencies, fighting disease and poverty, nurturing peaceful and just societies, and serving Catholics in the United States as they live their faith in solidarity with their brothers and sisters around the world.
technical assistance to 44 U.S. states, the border states of Mexico, and provinces of China. The organization is recognized for its signature stakeholder-based, comprehensive planning and fact-finding process that empowers stakeholders to find common ground and reach consensus on custom policies that work for their state or region. CCS plays a critical bridge-building role between state and Federal policymakers in the formulation of national climate, energy, and economic policy.
CENTER FOR HUMANITARIAN OUTREACH AND INTER-CULTURAL EXCHANGE d/b/a CHOICE Humanitarian
Ms. Leah Barker, CEO 7879 South 1530 West, Suite 200 West Jordan, UT 84088-8314 TEL: (801) 474-1937 FAX: (801) 474-1919 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.choicehumanitarian.org Ignites lasting change in impoverished rural communities that lack access to simple human necessities such as clean water, education, health care, and opportunities to earn an income. In conjunction with volunteers, CHOICE Humanitarian works in hundreds of rural villages across Bolivia, Guatemala, Kenya, Mexico, and Nepal to provide residents with opportunities to improve their lives. Village projects are remarkably effective tools for building leadership skills, but it is the organization's investment in people that makes CHOICE Humanitarian so successful in alleviating poverty. CHOICE Humanitarian facilitates volunteer expeditions to the communities it supports.
concert with international institutions and ministries of health. CIFA's mission is to improve the capacity and effectiveness of the faith community in its collective effort to reduce poverty and disease.
CENTER FOR RELIGION AND DIPLOMACY, INC. d/b/a International Center for Religion & Diplomacy (ICRD)
Dr. Douglas Johnston, Jr., President 1625 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Suite 601 Washington, DC 20036 TEL: (202) 331-9404 FAX: (202) 872-9137 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.icrd.org Addresses identity-based conflicts that exceed the reach of traditional diplomacy by incorporating religion as part of the solution. These conflicts typically take the form of ethnic disputes, tribal warfare, or religious hostilities. ICRD seeks to promote more effective preventive measures to minimize the conflicts that put people in harm's way and foster a stable global environment that supports the kind of economic growth that can benefit
an expanding percentage of the world's population. By linking religious reconciliation with official or unofficial diplomacy, ICRD has created a new synergy for peacemaking.
With a growing network of 5,000 alumni and partners in more than 150 countries, CEDPA is building a groundswell of change agents for effective international development.
Creates environments where children can thrive. ChildFund International is a global child development and protection agency that believes lasting change comes from children. The organization works with children throughout their journey from birth to young adulthoodas well as with families, local organizations, and communitiesand recognizes that childhood provides the prime opportunity to break the generational cycle of poverty. ChildFund's distinctive approach leverages more than 70 years of experience with a deep understanding of children's experiences of deprivation, exclusion, and vulnerability. ChildFund receives its funds through child sponsorship, grants, and donations. The organization is a member of the ChildFund Alliance and serves more than 15 million children and family members in 31 countries.
to include organizations that provide donated medical equipment, medications, and telemedicine services.
CHILDREN INTERNATIONAL
Mr. James R. Cook, President and CEO 2000 East Red Bridge Road Kansas City, MO 64131 TEL: (816) 942-2000 FAX: (816) 942-3714 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.children.org Seeks to ensure that every child has a chance to develop properly in mind, body, and character. Children International recognizes the full potential residing in children and young people who are overlooked by society because of their socioeconomic circumstances. Children as young as 3 years can enter Children International's program, and the organization's goal is to keep them in the program until they graduate at age 19. Children receive free medical care, regular dental exams, and nutritional support. The organization also provides school supplies, uniforms, and other educational support. Finally, the organization's youth program strives to impart the values, life skills, and leadership abilities that will help graduates break the grip of poverty and enter adult life as responsible, productive, self-reliant citizens.
education, and environmental and economic development. All programs are designed for capacity building and sustainability. COAF's current mission is to revitalize the more than 900 Armenian villages that have been seriously compromised by the collapse of the Soviet Union, a devastating earthquake, and the conflict with Azerbaijan. COAF's comprehensive, integrated rural development program focuses on effecting longlasting change.
on HIV-impacted and AIDS-orphaned children. CAF also provides technical and capacity-building assistance to existing and start-up providers that serve HIV-impacted children and their families. Care, treatment, and prevention programs focusing on children and families are ongoing in Malawi, South Africa, Uganda, and Zambia.
CHILDREN'S FUND
Dr. Sherlie Scribner, CEO 1555 Bruton Court McLean, VA 22101 TEL: (703) 489-8990 FAX: (703) 288-9320 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.childrensfund.net Supports education and training activities that focus on poor children. In southern India, Children's Fund provides funds for teacher salaries, uniforms, school and personal hygiene supplies, and meals. In sub-Saharan Africa, the organization provides funds for wells, latrines, roofs, desks, and books and other instructional materials and supports community efforts to improve education and set up libraries. Children's Fund supports orphanages in India, Pakistan, and Africa. In addition, the fund transports young people to job training sessions in Egypt and provides training for severely disabled children and youth in Central America.
International and was formed in 2001 to assume the charitable functions of its parent organization.
The Children's Place Association helps families meet their children's physical, psychological, and cognitive developmental needs. This approach is based on the philosophy that child development occurs optimally in the presence of loving and nurturing adults. The Children's Place Association launched the Northern Haiti Family Support Project in January 2008. The project is assisting 442 HIV/AIDS-affected children in Gonaives, Limonade, L'Esther, and Cap Haitien. The organization also provides technical assistance to local partners in Guyana and Botswana.
empowerment. CBM implements its programs through partnerships with local civil society and government organizations. CBM's work is carried out without regard to race, gender, age, or religious belief.
CHRISTIAN MEDICAL & DENTAL SOCIETY d/b/a Christian Medical & Dental Associations (CMDA)
Dr. David Stevens, CEO 2604 Highway 421 P.O. Box 7500 Bristol, TN 37621-7500 TEL: (423) 844-1000 FAX: (423) 844-1090 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.cmda.org Provides international mission opportunities for medical, dental, and other health care professionals. CMDA organizes and leads 50 short-term health care teams around the world each year. The organization uses volunteer doctors to train physicians in other countries and trains and equips career missionaries involved in medical and dental outreach. The organization conducts a 10-day continuing education conference in Kenya or Thailand each year for 300 medical missionaries. CMDA also sends medical teams to developing countries to train local doctors in specialty areas. Other priorities include mission hospital management consultation; management training for mission hospital leaders; a monthly newsletter for encouragement, education, and sharing of best practices; and a pre-field orientation for newly appointed medical missionaries. The organization's most recent outreach addresses the health implications of human trafficking.
poverty and works to build peace between groups in conflict. CRWRC builds the capacity of communities to set their own development priorities and to work together using local resources to achieve and sustain desired results. Founded in 1962, CRWRC is the official international humanitarian agency of the Christian Reformed Church in North America.
Alliance Church, to develop self-sustaining projects and community health programs at the local level.
accelerate access to lifesaving technologies, and develop more effective local management for health care organizations in the developing world.
COMMON HOPE
Ms. Shari Blindt, Executive Director 550 Vandalia Street St. Paul, MN 55114 TEL: (651) 917-0917 FAX: (651) 917-7458 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.commonhope.org Promotes hope and opportunity in Guatemala by partnering with impoverished children, families, and communities that want to participate in a process of development to improve lives through education, health care, and housing. Since 1986, Common Hope has provided opportunities for students and families to create change in their lives. While education is the heart of Common Hope's work, the organization believes a comprehensive, integrated approach is critical for students and their families to reach their full potential.
Department Drug Demand Reduction Services in seven countries in Central and South America and in South Africa. Second, CADCA is a nongovernmental organization consultant to the U.N. Economic and Social Council and assists the United Nations in forming global drug demand reduction policy through its participation in international conferences and meetings throughout the year.
projects is that all people, regardless of the severity of their disability, are entitled to self-determination. COI has extensive experience in facilitating individual competencies in accessing and influencing governmental processes to achieve positive results. COI has a proven track record of implementing relevant practices in developing countries. The organization has experience in the Middle East, Russia, and South America, specifically Peru.
Implements a wide range of emergency relief and longterm development programs, including health, nutrition, water and sanitation, education, HIV/AIDS, microfinance, and food security. Founded in 1968, CONCERN Worldwide is a nongovernmental, international humanitarian organization committed to the relief, assistance, and advancement of the poorest people in the least developed areas of the world. The organization operates in 28 of the poorest countries throughout Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean. CONCERN's 4,000 experienced personnel work in partnership with local community groups to ensure that people living in extreme poverty will achieve major improvements in their lives, and that these improvements will last and spread without ongoing support from CONCERN.
health; valuing the role of nature in human cultures; and safeguarding the ability of species and biodiversity to sustain healthy ecosystems and the benefits nature provides.
organizations to promote HIV/AIDS education programs. The organization has supported professors and projects in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Brazil, Brunei, Bulgaria, China, Czech Republic, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Morocco, Nigeria, Romania, Russia, South Korea, Tajikistan, Ukraine, and Vietnam.
COPRODELI USA
Mr. Michael Muldowney, President 703 West Monroe Street Chicago, IL 60661 TEL: (410) 244-3144 FAX: (410) 244-3161 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.coprodeliusa.org Aids the most marginalized Peruvians by providing for fundamental needs, promoting education and job development, and developing strong, self-sustaining community programs. Coprodeli USA's volunteers from the United States, Europe, and Latin America, and from the disadvantaged people of Peru, provide hope and vital services to those in need. Coprodeli USA provides humanitarian aid, preventive health care, education, fair trade, employment development, housing, drug prevention, and extensive outreach to homeless and orphaned children. The organization's programs serve more than 110,000 people annually in some of Peru's most impoverished communities in the regions of Callao and Ica.
Unlocks the God-given potential of children in Egypt who face extraordinary challenges. COUSA is a Christian international development organization that equips children to break the cycle of poverty and become agents of change in their communities. The organization's Not Alone program connects fatherless children to the resources and support they need through a network of more than 300 volunteers who serve as advocates and mentors. Since its founding in 1988, COUSA has touched the lives of more than 20,000 children in Egypt.
CORE, INC.
Ms. Karen LeBan, Executive Director 1100 G Street NW, Suite 400 Washington, DC 20005 TEL: (202) 380-3400 FAX: (202) 380-3399 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.coregroup.org Fosters collaborative action and learning to improve and expand community-focused public health practices. CORE envisions a world of healthy communities where no woman or child dies of preventable causes. Established in 1997, CORE is an independent charitable organization and home of the Community Health Network, which brings together CORE's membership of citizen-supported organizations, associates, scholars, advocates, and donors to support the health of underserved mothers, children, and communities around the world. CORE's 57 member organizations work in more than 180 countries.
commitment to learning and continuous improvement, and a reputation as a responsible steward of resources.
COVENANT HOUSE CH
Mr. Kevin Ryan, Esq., President and CEO 5 Penn Plaza New York, NY 10001-1810 TEL: (212) 727-4000 FAX: (212) 727-6516 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.covenanthouse.org Provides crisis care and long-term support to more than 51,000 homeless abandoned, abused, and trafficked youths annually. CH (Casa Alianza and La Alianza in Spanish-speaking countries) operates in the United States, Canada, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua. The organization's Latin American programs provide street children and youth with a safe, dependable environment in which to grow and become self-sufficient. CH is a recognized leader in the effort to combat the sexual and commercial exploitation of children. Depending on in-country needs and conditions, CH provides shelter, street outreach, medical and nutritional assistance, educational and vocational training, therapeutic counseling, substance abuse counseling, legal advocacy and representation, family reunification, life and vocational skills, and aftercare. CH also advocates for the protection of children's rights and provides training to government officials, educators, and nongovernmental organizations on children's rights, trafficking, and youth in crisis.
more than 84,000 surgeries and training more than 800 national medical practitioners. CURE hospitals and programs treat patients without regard to ability to pay, ethnic background, or religious affiliation.
support and assistance to Native American farmers, Central Asian cultural and agricultural stakeholders, valueadded food producers, small-scale entrepreneurs, and young people, helping them develop management and operational skills and supporting their agricultural and business activities. In addition, the organization has helped establish broadband IT installations in remote areas. Din Inc. also works in the area of conflict resolution, offering training in the traditional practice of Native American peacemaking and assisting in disputes related to natural resource extraction.
Programs operate on an ongoing basis and in response to emergency situations. Nonsectarian and apolitical, DRI is privately funded and receives no government funding. Internationally, DRI strengthens access and quality in three areas: maternal and child health, HIV/AIDS, and primary care; domestically, the organization provides medicine to low-income, uninsured patients of community health centers. DRI works to increase the self-sufficiency of more than 500 partner organizations that serve nearly 35 million people in more than 50 countries, providing financial support, pharmaceuticals, supplements, medical supplies, and equipment. DRI's goal is to ensure that appropriate care is available to people in need regardless of political affiliation, ethnic or religious identity, or ability to pay for services.
and disability law to advance disability rights and support disability communities around the world.
Thailand, Turkey, and Vietnam. The organization also works through clinics in India. In 2010, DKT served 22 million couples on three continents. DKT's programs provide services at a remarkable low cost.
Provides capital and enterprise development services to small and growing clean energy enterprises in the developing world, with the objective of reducing the impact of climate change and alleviating poverty. Using both seed and growth capital, E&Co has invested more than $45 million in over 200 enterprises since 1998, with significant and measurable triple-bottom-line (financial, social, and environmental) impacts. E&Co, a U.S. nonprofit, has offices in China, Costa Rica, Ghana, the Netherlands, South Africa, Tanzania, Thailand, and the United States.
E&CO
Mrs. Christopher A. Aidun, Managing Director 383 Franklin Street Bloomfield, NJ 07003-3404 TEL: (973) 680-9100 FAX: (973) 680-8066 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.eandco.net
brings together disparate viewpoints to promote collaboration for positive change. The organization mobilizes networks of key individuals from both the public and private sectors, leveraging its access to intellectual entrepreneurs and business and policy leaders around the world to defuse current conflicts and prevent future flare-ups. With offices in New York, Brussels, and Moscow, EWI's fiercely guarded independence is ensured by the diversity of its international board of directors and supporters.
ECHO, INC.
Mr. Stan Doerr, President and CEO 17391 Durrance Road Fort Myers, FL 33917-2212 TEL: (239) 543-3246 FAX: (239) 543-5317 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.echonet.org Networks with community leaders in developing countries to seek hunger solutions for families growing food under difficult conditions. ECHO is a nonprofit, faith-based organization that provides community development workers and organizations with agricultureoriented project ideas, training, information, and underexploited food crops that are critical to the fight against hunger in more than 180 countries. ECHO offers tropical agricultural training at its southwest Florida farm and provides consulting services in project design, evaluation, and implementation methods for sustainable agriculture internationally.
Empowers rural people to restore and protect tropical ecosystems, focusing on Mexico and Central America. The Eco-Logic Development Fund collaborates with the rural poor and helps local communities identify, evaluate, and prioritize their conservation and natural resource needs. Eco-Logic then helps them to obtain what they needskills, financing, materials, access to decision makers and experts, hands-on experience, and other forms of supportto restore and conserve the tropical ecosystems where they live and on which they rely for basic necessities and well-being. Eco-Logic operates and forges links between partner organizations in Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and Panama.
development, basic education, nutrition, health, and youth and workforce development. EDC also helps strengthen the management capacity of local institutions by providing assistance in management training, development communications, and information technology.
Provides quality educational programs for the dissemination of knowledge among facial plastic surgeons through courses, workshops, and other scientific presentations, as well as a fellowship training program. AAFPRS (American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery) surgeons give freely of their time and expertise, both at home and abroad, through the organization's humanitarian program, FACE TO FACE. Internationally, AAFPRS primarily assists children suffering from deformities caused by birth, trauma, or war-related injuries. AAFPRS is committed to educational and scientific exchange among its participating surgeons and with surgeons in emerging countries. In the United States, AAFPRS assists survivors of domestic violence by offering pro bono consultations and surgeries through its National Domestic Violence project as well as to U.S. veterans through its FACES OF HONOR program.
EL PORVENIR EP
Mr. Robert Bell, Executive Director 3131 Osceola Street Denver, CO 80212 TEL: (303) 861-1499 FAX: (303) 861-1480 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.elporvenir.org Assists rural Nicaraguan communities to improve their living standards through sustainable development in clean water, sanitation, reforestation, and health education. More than two-thirds of Nicaragua's rural communities lack access to clean drinking water. Globally, 1.8 million children die annually because of illnesses linked to consumption of polluted water. Women and girls shoulder the burden of collecting water for household needs, spending hours daily carrying 40-pound buckets of water for miles. Access to clean drinking water dramatically improves family living standards, reducing disease and child mortality, freeing girls' and women's time, and improving school attendance and performance.
EGPAF brings counseling, testing, and low-cost drug interventions to women who need it, advancing one of the greatest success stories in the battle against HIV: prevention of mother-to-child transmission. EGPAF has also moved to help fill the gap in access to care and treatment, including antiretroviral treatment.
Improves quality of life in rural communities in Nepal. ENF networks with the Nepali diaspora and friends of Nepal individuals and organizations to pool and transfer resources to the communities it serves. ENF provides scholarships to underprivileged children so they can attend public schools. The organization's efforts have helped communities build schools and libraries, strengthened local institutions, improved English education, and supported medical clinics. ENF has also helped organize health camps that address the issue of uterine prolapse.
ENGENDERHEALTH, INC.
Mr. Daniel Doucette, COO 440 Ninth Avenue, 12th Floor New York, NY 10001-1620 TEL: (212) 561-8000 FAX: (212) 993-9877 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.engenderhealth.org Works to improve the quality of health care in the world's poorest communities. EngenderHealth, an international reproductive health organization, partners with governments, institutions, communities, and health care professionals to achieve sustainable health delivery systems and enable people to lead healthier lives. The organization shares its knowledge of quality improvement, clients' rights, advocacy, gender equity, and facilities-based health services in core areas of technical expertise, including family planning, maternal health (including obstetric fistula), HIV and sexually transmitted infections, and youth and men's reproductive and sexual health. EngenderHealth currently works in more than 40 countries through 18 offices worldwide.
create innovative, equitable, and cost-effective solutions to society's most urgent environmental problems.
issues; environmental economics; hazardous waste; toxic substances; mining practices; marine, wetlands, and coastal-zone protection issues; and land, biodiversity, and environmental management policies. ELI works with local partners to train citizens, judges, industry leaders, and government officials. ELI's extensive publications program includes the Environmental Law Reporter, which provides expert analysis of environmental law issues and complete updates on major judicial, legislative, and regulatory developments.
Creates customized communication strategies and outreach solutions that address critical challenges affecting people in the developing world in the areas of youth life-skills and livelihoods, women's and girls' empowerment, health, democracy and governance, and human rights. By designing and producing compelling local-language audio and multimedia programs incountry, Equal Access International educates and catalyzes behavior change in target audiences. The organization also analyzes local infrastructure and uses a range of technologies to develop the best dissemination strategysatellite broadcasting, AM/FM/TV broadcasts, SMS/mobile, IVR (interactive voice response), street theater, community outreach, or a combination of methods. Partnering with international agencies and nongovernmental and community-based organizations, Equal Access has large-scale programs in Afghanistan, Cambodia, Chad, Niger, Nepal, Pakistan, and Yemen and project activities in Indonesia and Laos.
EQUIP, INC.
Reverend Barrie Flitcroft, President 126 Rock House Road P.O. Box 1126 Marion, NC 28752-1126 TEL: (828) 738-3891 FAX: (828) 738-3946 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.equipinternational.com Prepares, trains, and sends evangelical Christian missionaries and supports their work in countries worldwide. While Equip is a faith-based organization, most of its training focuses on community development. The organization aspires to train individuals to train others in agriculture, food production, animal husbandry, health, hygiene, sanitation, and water development, filtration, and disposal, as well as community development. By training in both formal and informal settings, Equip prepares people to teach others within their communities.
ECM also educates the public about albinism to help communities accept children with the condition. The organization provides basic education, health services, and nutritional support to orphans and displaced children through sponsorship. ECM operates a school for educationally deprived children as well as a home for children needing shelter in a family-like atmosphere. The organization also provides nonformal education support to help war-affected children return to and succeed in school, aids war-affected families with resettlement, educates the public about child ritual abuse and sacrifice, and helps rehabilitate victims of ritual abuse.
and churches. FOMI identifies responsible providers and connects these providers with people in need. FOMI develops programs for proper nutrition, basic health care, education, child sponsorship, and community economic development. The organization responded to the 2010 Haitian earthquake by airlifting medical supplies and providing containers of relief goods. With its network of volunteers, FOMI assists three major orphanages in Port-au-Prince, a hospital, clinics, and nearly 100 schools throughout the country.
clothing, and the services of dozens of medical specialists who provide free care to the needy. The organization provides financial assistance to nonprofit groups, supports orphanages, and aids hospitals. JAINA also supports community-based health care, works to eliminate malnutrition, and provides relief during emergencies and natural disasters.
has a major stake in the development of viable market economies in these countries, FSVC contributes to the process of building the sound financial infrastructures that development requires. FSVC provides assistance to host institutions by recruiting senior bankers, lawyers, accountants, regulators, and other professionals to serve on FSVC-sponsored assignments. Projects span commercial banking, central banking, and development of capital markets. FSVC provides technical assistance and training in payment systems development, anti-moneylaundering issues, small and medium-sized enterprise lending, pension-system reform, and legislative matters affecting the financial sector.
FIVE TALENTS-U.S.A.
Mr. Craig Cole, President and CEO 543 Beulah Road NE P.O. Box 331 Vienna, VA 22183-0331 TEL: (703) 242-6016 FAX: (703) 242-6017 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.fivetalents.org Fights poverty in developing countries through microenterprise development. Five Talents-U.S.A. identifies and supports partnering organizations that work in the area of microenterprise development and that serve their communities with integrity and transparency. The organization combats poverty in the developing world by providing poor people with funds to start small businesses; equipping churches and other organizations to help the poor start businesses; showing God's love and mercy in thought, word, and deed; and affirming human dignity. Five Talents-U.S.A. has provided business training and funded thousands of microloans in 19 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. A majority of the organization's loan recipients are women, and each loan provides financing to a business that, in turn, impacts at least six other people.
agriculture programs, creating economic opportunity through microfinance and microenterprise, and offering spiritual inspiration. With the organization's assistance, millions of trees have been planted and thousands of farmers have been able to significantly increase both their standard of living and the long-term viability of their farms.
including microenterprise development and skills training. FH also provides relief and rehabilitation services to communities experiencing or recovering from disasters.
to feed themselves. FRB does not ship grain or food overseas; instead, the organization offers people dignity by giving them a hand up instead of a handout, thus breaking the cycle of dependency. As a Christian, nongovernmental, humanitarian organization, FRB is committed to providing sustainable food security in the developing world through small-scale agricultural interventions. Programs focus on education and the introduction of no-till alternatives, conservation, improved seeds and livestock, market access, water reclamation, food storage, and other techniques that allow people to feed their families, send their children to school, and improve the quality of life at home and in their communities. The organization's strategic goal is to engage the grassroots U.S. agricultural community in efforts to solve the problem of hunger worldwide.
Provides financial services to the world's lowest-income entrepreneurs so they can create jobs, build assets, and improve their standard of living. Operating a network of 21 programs in Africa, Eurasia, Latin America, and the Greater Middle East and using a business model that integrates both donations and investments, FINCA is credited with developing the village-banking methodology of microcredit delivery. FINCA provides clients with a range of financial and other products and services, including savings, loans, microinsurance, and remittances; raises funds to drive research and development that enhances microfinance services; and carries out demographic, market, and social research to better understand and measure benefits to clients.
programs provide training and support to human rights defenders, civil society organizations, media outlets, and government officials in Africa, Central Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East. Through respected surveys and publications, Freedom House monitors political and civil liberties, press freedom, and religious freedom around the world. Freedom House has received international recognition as a consistent champion of democracy.
Assists Hope Africa University in Bujumbura, Burundi, one of the poorest countries in the world, by providing financial support for construction, student scholarships, volunteer teaching personnel, and educational and medical equipment. Friends of Hope Africa University's assistance facilitates the training of professionals in a range of academic disciplines, including medicine, nursing, and education. The organization's overall goal is to provide hope for a young population scarred by more than a decade of war.
helps the most vulnerable segments of the population at-risk children and the elderlyand prepares youth and professionals to drive the country's new democratic state. Headquartered in New York City, FAR has three offices in Armenia and Karabakh. Since its inception, the organization has served millions of people through more than 220 relief and development programs. FAR's projects include basic relief, construction, education, medical assistance, and economic development.
FUTURE GENERATIONS
Mr. Daniel Taylor, President HC 73 Box 100 Franklin, WV 26807 TEL: (304) 358-2000 FAX: (304) 358-3008 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.future.org Teaches and enables a process of equitable and sustainable community change in Afghanistan, China, India, and Peru, and in West Virginia. Future Generations' process of community change is designed to facilitate three-way partnerships among communities and governmental and nongovernmental organizations and to raise successful community-based programs to the regional or national level. Future Generations formalized its education program in 2003 by offering a master of arts degree program in applied community change and conservation. The initial class of 16 students included community development practitioners from Afghanistan, Australia, Canada, China, Ethiopia, India, Mozambique, Nepal, Nigeria, Peru, and Zambia.
GAVI CAMPAIGN
Mr. Paul O'Connell, President 1776 Eye Street NW, Suite 600 Washington, DC 20006-3700 TEL: (202) 478-7743 FAX: (202) 478-1060 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: everychild.gavialliance.org Promotes health by providing vaccines and the means to deliver vaccines to children in the world's poorest countries and by facilitating research and development efforts for vaccines of primary interest to the developing world. The GAVI Campaign also provides support in conjunction with efforts to achieve the foregoing purposes by helping to strengthen health care systems and civil societies that support such purposes in the developing world.
manage the distribution of humanitarian aid. GA's goal is to provide temporary assistance while people achieve self-sufficiency. GA has been able to assist in countries and regions that, for the most part, would otherwise be ignored.
management and leadership skills. Since 1972, GHA has trained thousands of health professionals and community leaders from 94 countries worldwide. Current projects and programs in Africa, China, Haiti, India, and the United States focus on HIV/AIDS, child survival, community-health-worker training, women's health and reproductive health, and youth empowerment. GHA's scheduled and custom-designed courses are available in many languages, including English, French, Hindi, Mandarin, Russian, and Spanish.
water and promotes personal hygiene. GI's communitybased projects have the ultimate goal of self-sufficiency.
GLOBAL LINKS
gl
Ms. Kathleen G. Hower, CEO and Co-Founder 4809 Penn Avenue, 2nd Floor Pittsburgh, PA 15224 TEL: (412) 361-3424 FAX: (412) 361-4950 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.globallinks.org Advances a two-fold mission of promoting environmental stewardship and improving health in developing countries. To accomplish its mission, gl works through multiple collaborative efforts that (1) engage multiple partners to share expertise and technical knowledge; (2) redirect still-useful materials away from U.S. landfills to public health improvement efforts in targeted countries throughout the hemisphere; and (3) educate partners and volunteers on the issues of global health and environmental stewardship. Currently, gl provides medical aid through its programs in Bolivia, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, and Nicaragua.
needed pharmaceuticals to hospitals and clinics in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and to Middle East war zones. Projects in Kenya and Zambia have provided lifesaving pharmaceuticals in time to curb outbreaks of malaria. In addition, the organization refurbishes medical equipment and ships it to hospitals and clinics. GCH has also shipped relief items to Chile, Haiti, Indonesia, and Uganda and is active in many U.S. communities through its We've Got Your Back program, which provides homeless children with backpacks full of food, and its Giving for Living and Mobile Medical Clinic programs.
sustainable incomes, building infrastructure to enable the success of farm businesses, supporting communities to grow local economies and empower citizens, and strengthening institutions to reinforce local governance and assure continuity.
GLOBAL RIGHTS
Ms. Susan Farnsworth, Executive Director 1200 18th Street NW, Suite 602 Washington, DC 20036 TEL: (202) 822-4600 FAX: (202) 822-4606 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.globalrights.org Works side by side with local activists in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America to promote and protect the rights of marginalized populations. Through broad-based technical assistance and training, Global Rights strengthens partners to document and expose human rights abuses, conduct community outreach and mobilization, advocate for legal and policy reform, and provide legal and paralegal services. Founded in 1978, Global Rights is an international human rights capacitybuilding organization that has worked in scores of countries to help local leaders and organizations address human rights abuses and lift those struggles out of isolation and onto the international stage, where regional and global institutions develop and enforce human rights standards. At the core of Global Rights' programming is a deep commitment to increase access to justice for poor and marginalized groups, promote women's rights, and advance racial and ethnic equality.
Ethiopia. Through projects in water, health, education, and income generation, GTLI is helping this ancient tribe, which is besieged by drought and disease, gain the skills needed for continued survival.
GLOBAL VOLUNTEERS
Mr. Burnham Philbrook, Esq., President and CEO 375 East Little Canada Road St. Paul, MN 55117-1628 TEL: (651) 407-6100 FAX: (651) 482-0915 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.globalvolunteers.org Facilitates community-based human and economic development by engaging short-term volunteers in teaching conversational English, math, and science; starting and maintaining school gardens; providing health, hygiene, and nutrition education; constructing, repairing, and maintaining schools and community buildings; and caring for orphaned, disabled, and abandoned children. Global Volunteers' strategic approach enables Americans to work with and learn from and about local people at the invitation of host organizations, under the direction of community leaders, and hand-in-hand with local people on community-defined development goals. An important part of Global Volunteers' work increases awareness of the basic principles and measurable effectiveness of community-driven development.
safe drinking water and sanitation facilities is the root cause of hunger, disease, and poverty throughout the developing world. The organization's water projects have an immediate and life-changing impact, particularly for women and children who, in rural areas of developing countries, have the primary responsibility for gathering water for the family every day of their lives. Successful projects leverage water and sanitation activities to foster sustainable socioeconomic development in the communities where the organization works.
GLOBUS RELIEF GR
Mr. Ashley Robinson, President 1775 West 1500 South Salt Lake City, UT 84104-3832 TEL: (801) 977-0444 FAX: (801) 977-3999 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.globusrelief.org Works to improve health care by upgrading facilities, supplies, and standards of delivery worldwide. A humanitarian medical-resource organization, GR partners with other charities, nongovernmental organizations, governments, corporations, medical manufacturers, hospitals, surgical centers, and clinics working to improve the delivery of health care. The organization provides four key deliverables: assessments; consultations; acquisition, packaging, and distribution; and bio-tech solutions and training. GR seeks to reduce unnecessary duplication of effort among its partners and works to create synergistic environments that magnify effort and social impact. GR embraces the values of accountability, quality and efficiency, and credibility.
the Millennium Development Goals Award by the United Nations in 2007. Good Neighbors USA has offices in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.
independent agencies that provide job training, employment placement services, and other communitybased programs to people who have disabilities and disadvantages. To pay for its programs, GII sells donated goods in over 2,500 retail stores and online at www.shopgoodwill.com. Local Goodwill agencies also build revenue and create jobs by providing a wide range of commercial services, including packaging and assembly, food service preparation, and document imaging and shredding. In 2010, more than 2.4 million people benefited from the organization's career services.
Empowerment engages a diverse constituency of North American and European universities, civic groups, and businesses to expand projects, broaden skill-sets, and mobilize resources for its nongovernmental partners. Green Empowerment currently partners with organizations in Ecuador, Malaysia, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, the Philippines, and on the Thai-Burma border.
H2 EMPOWER INC.
Ms. Helen Boxwill, Executive Director 44 Foxwood Drive East Huntington Station, NY 11746 TEL: (631) 549-9346 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.h2empower.org Improves educational opportunities by sending books to primary and secondary schools and colleges, facilitating teacher training, providing basic literacy classes for vulnerable women, building community libraries, and developing sustainable systems. H2 Empower seeks to advance the quality of education, increase income, improve health and sanitation, and empower women and girls. Through coordinated efforts, H2 Empower links people, projects, and agencies to empower individuals with the greatest needs so that they can reach their potential and improve their standard of living. H2 Empower is currently working in Ethiopia and Burundi.
Seeks to eliminate homelessness and inadequate housing worldwide. HFHI is an ecumenical Christian organization operating in nearly 90 countries. Since its founding in 1976, HFHI has built more than 350,000 houses. Working with autonomous, locally run affiliates, volunteer labor, and tax-deductible donations of money and materials, HFHI builds simple, decent, affordable houses with the help of the future homeowners, without favoritism or discrimination. The houses are sold at cost and financed with zero-interest, long-term loans. HFHI's community-based, faith-based, people-oriented approach reflects its belief that sustainable community development will succeed only by engaging all segments of society.
GREEN EMPOWERMENT
Ms. Anna Garwood, Executive Director 140 SW Yamhill Street Portland, OR 97204-3007 TEL: (503) 284-5774 FAX: (703) 460-0450 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.greenempowerment.org Provides villages in the developing world with access to clean water, electricity generated with renewable fuels, and sustainable solutions. Green Empowerment coordinates efforts that provide technical, organizational, and financial assistance to local partners and communities working to improve living conditions, restore watersheds, and address climate change. In addition, Green
HAITI OUTREACH
Mr. Jeffery Brown, President 15119 Minnetonka Boulevard Minnetonka, MN 55345-1520 TEL: (612) 929-1122 FAX: (612) 216-3777 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.haitioutreach.org Works with communities in Haiti to create clean water systems, build public schools, and promote microlending and other community development projects that the communities initiate, help build, and maintain after they are completed. Haiti Outreach's vision is "For Haiti to Become a Developed Country"; its mission is "To collaborate with the people of Haiti to build and maintain community-initiated projects that advance their development." Programs are based on a model of grassroots community participation and community ownership. It is a model of empowerment that inspires people to create and maintain the projects that help to develop their communities. Haiti Outreach brings Haitians together at the local level, teaching and empowering them to take ownership of their community's infrastructure. Haiti Outreach may also provide project materials that the communities do not have the means to purchase.
year in Haiti with food it receives from the U.S. Government, Breedlove Dehydrated Foods, and registered PVOs Stop Hunger Now and International Relief Teams. The organization also provides other services, including training in the areas of health, education, and agriculture.
HANDICAP INTERNATIONAL HI
Ms. Beth MacNairn, Executive Director 6930 Carroll Avenue, Suite 240 Takoma Park, MD 20912-4423 TEL: (301) 891-2138 FAX: (301) 891-9193 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.handicap-international.us Works to improve the living conditions of people living in disabling situations in post-conflict or developing countries around the world. HI's eight international
sections based in Canada, Europe, and the United States support a total of 4,200 field staff. HI partners with local stakeholders in 60 countries to respond to humanitarian emergencies, prevent and treat disabling conditions, fight to eliminate landmines and cluster munitions, and press for the universal recognition of the rights of the disabled through national planning and advocacy. The organization utilizes local resources to work with local partners with whom it shares knowledge and builds systems to prevent disability, treat those in need, and advocate for inclusive development.
important component of HAI's work. Major projects are located in Mozambique (HIV/AIDS treatment and care, maternal and child health, and operations research), Cte d'Ivoire (HIV/AIDS treatment and care) and Timor-Leste (maternal and newborn health and child spacing).
lasting access to health, helping to protect and fulfill the rights of excluded communities. The organization's projects address health and social crises made worse by human rights violations, with a particular focus on HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria; women's health; orphans and other at-risk children and youth; and survivors of human rights violations.
Heartland Alliance has developed international expertise and competence in torture treatment and protection, detention monitoring, refugee and migrant protection, mental health and primary health care, and services for victims of gender-based persecution and human trafficking. Providing technical assistance, training, and direct services, Heartland Alliance collaborates with community-based organizations, elected officials, government agencies, and other nonprofits to create policies that advance the human needs and human rights of all people.
HEARTLAND ALLIANCE FOR HUMAN NEEDS & HUMAN RIGHTS Heartland Alliance
Reverend Sid Mohn, President 208 South LaSalle Street, Suite 1818 Chicago, IL 60604-1156 TEL: (312) 660-1300 FAX: (312) 660-1500 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.heartlandalliance.org Advocates for social justice and provides housing, health care, human services, and legal assistance to ensure basic human rights and dignity for vulnerable people.
management, agriculture, resource conservation, health and nutrition, sanitation, housing, leadership training, and local institution building. Hermandad seeks to actively participate in a network of small international community development agencies and provide assistance to these agencies by disseminating the organization's successful technologies and methodologies.
Sustains the presence of Arab Christians and improves the lives of the Palestinians in the Holy Land through dynamic programs designed to build economic competencies, identify available resources, and connect distinct sectors (tourism, education, culture, and health). HCEF's projects focus on employment, leadership development, senior citizens' activities, education, housing rehabilitation, and partnership programs between Americans and Palestinians that ultimately contribute to peace building in the Holy Land.
organizations that work in the areas of partnership development, food aid, water and sanitation, girls' education, vocational education, agriculture, and disaster relief. In Haiti, the organization partners with local NGO Spirit of Truth to support two orphanages that aid 60 children and three schools that serve more than 600 children. In India, HfH has helped local organizations construct two orphanages and a school. HfH provides support to Light of Hope in Alleppy, Kerala, which currently houses 120 orphans, and Abundant Life For All in Bangalore, which aids 28 orphans and hosts more than 750 students in its schools.
helping people with disabilities in Iowa and Minnesota unleash their potential.
hospital in Cambodia and medical clinics in many nations, HOPE Worldwide treats the medically underserved and victims of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and leprosy. The organization also cares for orphaned and vulnerable children by providing loving homes and giving support to needy children. HOPE Worldwide affects more than one million poor and needy people annually on all six inhabited continents.
Promotes the protection of all animals with a wide range of actions and strategies. HSUS and its affiliates have worked on international issues for more than 30 years, focusing on animal-protection activities in Africa, Asia, and Central and South America. HSUS and its international arm, Humane Society International (HSI), address such matters as inhumane practices and conditions affecting companion and farm animals, the economic benefits of humane transport and slaughter, veterinary services in rural communities, illegal trade in wildlife, and threats to endangered species. HSUS and HSI also work on international policies at the United Nations and in other forums to protect marine mammals, wildlife, and habitats.
education, election administration, civil society, governance, rule of law, and political processes. As one of the world's premier democracy and governance assistance organizations, IFES provides targeted technical assistance to strengthen transitional democracies. Founded in 1987 as a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, IFES has developed and implemented comprehensive, collaborative democracy solutions in more than 120 countries.
range of health, nutrition, social, education, agriculture, and community development programs, INMED creates opportunities that inspire hope, build self-reliance, and encourage community collaboration through three areas that represent the organization's primary development focus: (1) securing children's health, development, and safety; (2) developing skills, knowledge, and opportunities for children and youth; and (3) building family and community capacity to support and sustain positive change.
high-level policies and strategies. ISET's work directly focuses on this as a fundamental catalyst for positive forms of social and environmental transition.
and nongovernmental organizations in developing countries to implement projects that demonstrate how transport emissions and accidents can be reduced, or how the basic mobility of the poor can be improved. ITDP's primary programs focus on building bus-rapidtransit systems, promoting bicycling and walking, managing traffic demand, and revitalizing city centers. Projects build local knowledge and skills while generating greater public awareness of viable sustainable transport solutions. ITDP prioritizes its involvement in projects based on the level of demonstrated local commitment to successful implementation, the availability of financial resources, and the potential benefits of the project, including the degree to which the project will demonstrate solutions to others.
areas of targeted disease control, procurement of medicines and medical supplies and equipment, integrated health-system strengthening and information management, and training. The organization serves as a liaison between international funding entities, U.S. corporations, and overseas health-related community organizations. As a member association of 12 Christian relief and development agencies, IMA World Health works through a worldwide network of health and development partners affiliated with its member agencies.
Program supplies new and refurbished medical equipment, operating manuals, and technical field support to health care providers in developing nations. The organization's Lab-in-a-Suitcase Program provides health care operations in remote areas with portable medical equipment that can perform 80 percent of standard diagnostic tests. IA also supports first-response organizations. The organization facilitates the delivery of health productssuch as medicine, nutritional supplements, and personal care itemsfrom socially responsible corporate donors to humanitarian organizations, replenishes stocks of medical equipment and supplies, and assists with rebuilding efforts.
grassroots efforts in agroforestry, reforestation, watersheds, water and sanitation, and global climate change. VIC works to rehabilitate people living with disabilities in Cambodia and help them to lead active, fulfilling lives. VVAF operates humanitarian programs in Vietnam, including the Landmine/Unexploded Ordnance Impact Assessment and Technical Survey Program, a mental health program, and the Agent Orange/Dioxin Resolution Initiatives and Education Program.
builds capacity and conducts policy-oriented research and policy advocacy efforts. The organization's staff members work in five technical teams that target poverty reduction and economic growth, HIV/AIDS, reproductive health and nutrition, population and social transition, and policy and communications. ICRW has two field offices in India and is establishing a formal presence in East Africa.
collaborated with other organizations to build hospitals and mobile dental and medical units for orphans and to provide cleft palate surgeries. ICA conducts a Welcome Home Camp each year for 70 to 100 orphans from various countries.
organization's feeding program in Ethiopia reaches three poorly served areas. ICA's efforts have saved the lives of more than 4,000 children and shielded thousands from malnutrition. In addition, ICA has seven safe homes for girls rescued from sex trafficking in Ethiopia.
Improves the lives of the rural poor in developing nations through agricultural and economic development. IDE's guiding principle is that the rural poor are natural entrepreneurs who, if given the opportunity, will invest their limited resources to ensure their families' food supply and generate income. IDE empowers rural farmers to pull themselves out of poverty by making available quality inputs, training, affordable technologies, capital, and access to markets. Simple, low-cost water technologies increase income generation by allowing farmers to cultivate high-value, labor-intensive crops. These technologies have enabled families to become more efficient agricultural producers, generally doubling their net annual income in the first year. IDE's efforts have helped some 17 million people escape poverty.
and community development programs, including teacher training, curriculum development, microprojects, HIV/AIDS prevention education, conflict resolution training, and microlending. Founded by Reverend Leon Sullivan, IFESH focuses on self-help principles. Its programs forge relationships between Africans and Americans, particularly African Americans, through volunteer programs that focus on meeting the education goals of African nations and providing human resources to nongovernmental organizations working at the grassroots level in Africa.
changes to prevent these abuses from recurring. In recent years, IJM has focused its work on trafficking, sexual violence against women and children, bonded slavery, illegal land seizure, torture, illegal detention, and police abuse of street children. IJM is headquartered in Washington, D.C., and has an overseas presence in Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Latin America.
mobile medical clinics, trains and supports health personnel, helps build local NGO capacity, and has engaged in many specialty care projects. IMHO also responds in times of crisis around the world through disaster relief services.
than 35,000 farmers and is improving farm production in the Central African Republic and the Republic of Congo. IPHD supports programs to prevent trafficking of children in Guinea-Bissau and the Central African Republic. IPHD also supports the development of village water systems and implements malaria prevention and school infrastructure programs.
IRT construction teams repair homes damaged by natural disasters and build clean water and sanitation facilities. Rather than establish field offices, IRT works in partnership with local nongovernmental organizations to build their capacities. IRT has provided assistance to more than 59 countries during its 23-year history.
rule of law, protect human rights, and promote equitable economic development worldwide. Through the pro bono work of retired and active practitioners, working independently and in law firms, ISLP helps governments and citizens develop and implement legal reforms, assists programs that advance the social and economic wellbeing of people in developing countries, and builds the capacity of local organizations and professionals to meet the needs of their communities.
INTERNATIONAL UNION AGAINST TUBERCULOSIS AND LUNG DISEASE, INC. IUATLD, Inc.
Mr. Jose Luis Castro, Executive Director 61 Broadway, Suite 1720 New York, NY 10006 TEL: (212) 500-5720 FAX: (212) 480-6040 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.theunion.org Supports scientific research and other activities that aim to prevent lung diseases and related health problems among low- and middle-income populations. Incorporated in 1995 as a 501(c)(3) Public Charity, IUATLD, Inc. works in close collaboration with the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung
Disease (France), the World Lung Foundation, and other domestic and international organizations in the health field. IUATLD, Inc. annually finances an average of $18 million in research grants and auxiliary activities worldwide. IUATLD, Inc. has joined the Bloomberg Initiative to support tobacco control in 15 targeted developing countriesincluding Brazil, China, India, and Russiathat account for 80 percent of the world's tobacco use.
organizations that deliver programs that tie education to work and develop young people's critical work-life skills, improving their employability. IYF offers young people the opportunity to make a positive contribution to their families and communities. The organization combines its extensive global reach with its local presence and identifies, adapts, and scales-up in-country programs that are proven to work. IYF then shares these best practices and lessons learned across its network to continuously strengthen and improve its impact. IYF's efforts allow it to create effective, customized programs that fit the needs of an extensive array of corporate, governmental, and civil-sector backers.
IPAS, INC.
Ms. Elizabeth S. Maguire, President and CEO 300 Market Street, Suite 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27516-4493 TEL: (919) 967-7052 FAX: (919) 929-0258 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.ipas.org Works globally to increase women's ability to exercise their sexual and reproductive rights and to reduce abortion-related deaths and injuries. Ipas believes that women everywhere must have the opportunity to determine their futures, care for their families, and manage their fertility. Through regional and country offices in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and North America, Ipas' staff works to train health care providers and improve service delivery, conduct reproductive health research, publish and disseminate information to key audiences, advocate for improved reproductive health policies, and manufacture and distribute reproductive health commodities.
literacy, microenterprise, individual development accounts, subsidized employment, and refugee resettlement. The organization's research and program evaluation activities provide high-quality survey design, data collection, and information management services to measure and report outcomes, impacts, and cost-benefits of social and economic policies and programs.
Cares for individuals and families by providing exceptional human service and health care programs guided by Jewish traditions of social responsibility, compassion, and respect for all members of the community. JF&CS provides comprehensive services for people with disabilities, seniors, new parents, and families facing problems associated with economic crisis or chronic poverty. Programs include supported housing, home health care, food assistance, legal services, mental health services, housing advocacy, and education.
ISED SOLUTIONS
Ms. Catherine L. Robson, President and CEO 1400 K Street NW, Suite 1201 Washington, DC 20005-2403 TEL: (202) 223-3288 FAX: (202) 223-3289 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.isedsolutions.org Provides program support, technical assistance, policy research, and program evaluation services to government agencies, nonprofit service providers, private firms, and development initiatives. ISED Solutions' consulting and technical assistance efforts address needs for strategic planning, staff and governance strengthening, best practices adoption, program design and implementation, operating systems enhancement, and resource development for scaling-up and enhancing sustainability. ISED Solutions has expertise in areas such as financial
businesses. The board of leaders introduces the facilitator to members of the community, and other supporters connect the entrepreneur with resources for marketing, financial management, or product needs. By the end of 2010, Kamina Friends had helped establish or expand more than 76 small businesses and create more than 447 jobs.
round, enabling them to move from rain-dependent subsistence farming to commercial agriculture.
their communities and break the cycle of poverty. KAI cares for and nurtures children in 17 countries in Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, and the Pacific Rim.
and Project of Life programs were developed in cooperation with Colombia's national child welfare agency. The Encuentros Milagrosos program helps older orphans find permanent families and long-term mentors; Project of Life helps them develop life skills. Kidsave's Summer Miracles program helps older orphaned children from Colombia find permanent families in the United States. The organization's most recently initiated project arranges permanent family care for orphans in Sierra Leone.
KIDSAVE INTERNATIONAL
Ms. Randi Thompson, CEO and Executive Director 5185 MacArthur Boulevard NW, Suite 108 Washington, DC 20016 TEL: (888) 543-7283 FAX: (310) 641-7283 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.kidsave.org Helps orphaned and abandoned children find permanent families and long-term mentoring relationships with adults. Kidsave International's Malenkaya Mama (Little Mother) program in St. Petersburg, Russia, teaches teenage mothers and pregnant teens to care for their babies. The program has been expanded to Moscow. Kidsave's family visit programs in Russia (Smolensk, Yaroslavl, and Sakhalin Island) are now operated by local nongovernmental organizations and government agencies. In Colombia, Kidsave's Encuentros Milagrosos
centers, and outreach organizations with in-kind donations of food and other supplies.
programs. The organization is active in seven countries and has managed projects in Ethiopia and Kenya. Since 1979, Lifewater-trained national workers have installed approximately 3,461 water systems throughout the world, providing safe water to 1.5 million people.
LIFEWATER INTERNATIONAL
Mr. Joseph Harbison, Executive Director 3563 Empleo Street, Suite C San Luis Obispo, CA 93401 TEL: (888) 543-3426 FAX: (805) 541-6649 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.lifewater.org Trains and equips national workers in the areas of well drilling, hand-pump repair, hygiene promotion, and sanitation. Lifewater International is a training organization with a focus on water development. By utilizing a participatory training methodology to equip national workers in WASH (water, sanitation, and hygiene) promotion and technologies, Lifewater promotes rapid dissemination and contextualization of its
Teaches, consults, and equips others to develop pure water sources in developing countries through drill training, pump repair, health and hygiene, bio-sand filter construction, and team-leader training courses. LWI also trains nationals to operate, maintain, and service community water systems. LWI consults with organizations to identify and address water and health needs. In addition, LWI equips communities by providing technical assistance, drilling rigs, transportation, and personnel. Short-term mission trips are conducted to provide opportunities for volunteers to meet physical needs through well drilling and hygiene education, as well as to meet spiritual needs. LWI currently operates in 27 countries.
organization has sent three shipping containers of clinic supplies, food, building materials, clothing, and other items to the region. In addition, LMA has purchased four acres of land, which it is using to help residents establish a self-sufficiency project that will provide employment opportunities as well as chickens, eggs, and vegetables for consumption and to sell. The land and projects will be owned entirely by the people of Cap Haitien, with no profits going to any entity in the United States or to any U.S. citizen.
focuses on health care and education; Mano a ManoApoyo Aereo, which operates the organization's aviation program; and Mano a Mano-Nuevo Mundo, which addresses economic development.
Provides lifesaving and life-sustaining humanitarian aid to the poorest of the poor in unserved and underserved regions of the United States and the world. M25M is a nondenominational, ecumenical, interfaith ministry that rescues and reuses landfill-bound inventories of excess clothing, personal care and hygiene products, building and school supplies, sewing materials, and medical supplies donated by U.S. corporations, organizations, hospitals, schools, and individuals. After it processes the intercepted goods at its 132,000 square-foot headquarters in Cincinnati, Ohio, M25M distributes the humanitarian aid via 40-foot seaborne containers to the poorest of the poor throughout the United States and in remote villages, hospitals, clinics, orphanages, and schools around the world. Additionally, M25M funds infrastructure and building improvements in numerous rural, poverty-stricken villages in Nicaragua.
video content. MMC has built a virtual information bridge, called the MMC Global Telemedicine and Teaching Network (GTTN), between U.S. mentoring hospitals and participating hospitals in foreign countries. Medical specialists from U.S. mentoring hospitals take part in interactive video conference sessions to consult on patient diagnoses, discuss new techniques and treatments, and answer questions. The GTTN is also used for educating physicians, nurses, and administrators about new medicines and protocols and for relaying cutting-edge medical knowledge. Programs are tailored to the specific needs of each participating hospital or country.
MEDISEND INTERNATIONAL
Mr. Nick Hallack, President and CEO 9244 Markville Drive Dallas, TX 75243 TEL: (214) 575-5006 FAX: (214) 570-9284 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.medisend.org Supports hospitals in developing countries. MediSend International is a global leader and innovator in transforming health care systems. MediSend International's programs are specifically designed to meet the needs and challenges of developing-country hospitals. The organization provides education, training, and technical and management technologies support in biomedical equipment repair. MediSend also distributes lifesaving medical supplies and biomedical equipment.
MediSend's programs impact the lives of millions of the poor and needy worldwide.
Serves the poor through the development of sustainable businesses by providing credit, business training, marketing, and technical assistance. MEDA's 5,000 supporters contribute to the economic growth of, and work in partnership with, low-income communities in 45 developing countries. Through these efforts, MEDA serves more than 9.4 million clients through its programs worldwide. MEDA also provides consulting, foreignexchange services, and business-investment services in other locations through staff and a network of professionals.
MERCY SHIPS
Mr. Peter Schulze, Managing Director 15862 State Highway 110 North Lindale, TX 75771 TEL: (903) 939-7680 FAX: (903) 939-7189 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.mercyships.org Uses the world's largest private humanitarian hospital ship as a platform for providing thousands of specialized surgeries and building health care capacity in the developing world to increase access to health care. Mercy Ships' surgical programs focus on training and capacity building where possible. In addition, other health-sector issues, such as mother and child nutrition, maternal health, biomedical technology, health care administration, infrastructure improvement, community health education, water and sanitation, and food security and sustainable food production, are addressed through partnerships with local organizations and governmental officials. Mercy Ships provides services primarily in Africa and Latin America. Founded in 1978, the organization's 1,200 staff members and volunteers serve all people, regardless of race, religion, gender, or ethnic or national background.
MERCY CORPS
Mr. Neal Keny-Guyer, CEO 45 SW Ankeny Portland, OR 97204-3504 TEL: (503) 896-5000 FAX: (503) 896-5011 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.mercycorps.org Helps people in the world's toughest places turn the crises of natural disaster, poverty, and conflict into opportunities for progress. Mercy Corps provides communities with tools that allow people to transform their lives using their own energy and ideas. The organization delivers immediate humanitarian assistance to hasten recovery, leading into programs for longerterm prosperity. Mercy Corps works toward innovative solutions that harness market forces and can reach millions of people without continued charitable support. Since 1979, Mercy Corps has provided $1.95 billion in assistance to people in 107 nations. Today, its team of 3,700 professionals is improving life for 16.7 million people in more than 40 countries.
MERCY, INCORPORATED
Mr. Dennis Hardin, President 941 Fry Road Greenwood, IN 46142 TEL: (317) 881-6751 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.mercyinc.org Works to meet basic human needs. Mercy, Incorporated has partnered with CDP/Talitha Koumi in Bangladesh to install 80 tube wells in areas where groundwater is contaminated by inorganic arsenic. The organization assists women in Bangladesh by providing microcredit funding for small business development and education and training opportunities to improve awareness of
health-related issues. Mercy, Incorporated also works in Haiti, providing education, food, and safe drinking water, and the organization's beneficiaries in Haiti are assisting earthquake refugees. In addition, Mercy, Incorporated is partnering with nongovernmental organizations in Africa, where it is meeting basic needs by providing health and agriculture education and support to orphanages.
Secretariat hosted by a member organization. MWA members include CARE, Catholic Relief Services, Eagle of Hope, Food for the Hungry, Global Water, Lifewater International, Living Water International, WaterAid America, Water for People, Water Missions International, Water.org, and World Vision International.
MISSION LIBERIA
Reverend Joseph Oniyama, Executive Director 66 South Grove Street East Orange, NJ 07018 TEL: (201) 341-7324 FAX: (973) 676-4121 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.gceo.com Takes a proactive approach, through its SHAPE program, to make communities self-sufficient by providing assistance in meeting their health care and agricultural
needs and helping them rebuild their physical and educational facilities. Mission Liberia engages in a variety of collaborative arrangements with other nongovernmental organizations in implementing SHAPE, which is inextricably linked to the capacity to empower people to be self-sufficient and integrated into society. The organization assesses its operations twice a year to determine where to focus its energies.
health education outreach center, and is working cooperatively with the A.M. Dogliotti College of Medicine by providing textbooks, computers, and other assistance. In addition, MTL has adopted a goal of providing safe drinking water in the village where its outreach center is located and throughout the country.
MISSION POSSIBLE
Mr. Kurt Bishop, President 124 West Front Street, Suite 106 Findlay, OH 45840 TEL: (419) 422-3364 FAX: (419) 422-3342 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.ourmissionispossible.org Owns and operates nine schools in Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Mission Possible is a Christian faithbased organization providing education, vocational training, feeding programs, discipleship training, and leadership development opportunities via leadership training for students, pastor seminars for pastors and lay people, and teacher seminars for private and public school teachers. Mission Possible also organizes shortterm mission teams for construction, medical, and other outreach activities.
for the development and disability communities. MIUSA's global disability network includes countries from every region of the world.
communities and, with them, creating programs that make a lasting difference. TMI is the only international nonprofit organization solely devoted to helping mountain communities create and sustain environmentally responsible development globally. TMI works in some of the highest and most remote regions of the world, addressing issues that affect everyone: clean water, the environment, and livelihoods.
integration, workforce and leadership development, new technologies, and emerging issues.
framework of political realism. American foreign policy interests include preserving and strengthening national security; supporting political, religious, and cultural pluralism; improving U.S. relations with the developed and developing worlds; advancing human rights; encouraging realistic arms-control agreements; curbing nuclear and unconventional weapons proliferation; and promoting an open and global economy. NCAFP offers educational programs addressing security challenges facing the United States and publishes a bimonthly journal, American Foreign Policy Interests, and other works.
NATIONAL COUNCIL OF THE YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS OF THE USA YMCA of the USA
Mr. Neil Nicoll, CEO and National Executive Director 101 North Wacker Drive Chicago, IL 60606 TEL: (312) 977-0031 FAX: (312) 977-9063 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.ymca.net Strengthens YMCAs throughout the world by providing financial and technical assistance. The YMCA movement has a presence in more than 125 countries in Africa, Asia and the Pacific, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, and North America. YMCA of the USA helps build local self-reliance and innovative youth development programs by empowering people with knowledge, life skills, values, and resources. The organization's programs focus on developing and delivering innovative, relevant programs that concentrate on key social and economic challenges in underserved communities. YMCA in the USA provides life-changing programming and services in the areas of health education, youth leadership and service learning, employment and vocational training, recreation and camping, the arts and education, and technology. Through its partnerships, programs, and financial contributions, YMCA of the USA promotes international
conservation advocacy organization founded in 1989. NHI works in watersheds worldwide that have been significantly altered and where intact aquatic systems of exceptional ecological value are subject to imminent development pressure. NHI helps to show how changing water management policies to optimize water usage can lead to beneficial impacts, as measured in both economic value and in healthy conditions, for all a watershed's inhabitants. NHI works with an array of governmental and nongovernmental partners and provides expertise through five major practice areas: (1) public policy research and advocacy; (2) scientific research, technical investigations, and predictive modeling; (3) legal and litigation services; (4) community education and organizing; and (5) restoration planning and implementation.
and implement innovative conservation solutions and strengthen other organizations with similar missions.
more than 150 areas around the world. A faith-based, nonprofit organization established by the International Church of the Nazarene, NCMI serves as an intermediary between faith-based organizations in the United States and nongovernmental organizations in other parts of the world. As an intermediary, NCMI builds the capacity of its partner agencies to deliver services.
NETHOPE, INC. NH
Dr. William Brindley, CEO 10615 Judicial Drive, Suite 402 Fairfax, VA 22030 TEL: (703) 388-2845 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.nethope.org
Develops and applies technological solutions on the international stage to improve humanitarian operations and significantly increase impact on beneficiaries. NH is a new-generation information technology collaboration of 32 leading international nongovernmental organizations representing more than $30 billion of humanitarian development, emergency relief, health care, microfinance, and conservation programming. NH's collaborative, membership-based model serves tens of millions of beneficiaries in more than 180 countries.
project implementation and intermediary services. NVF hosts a range of public interest projects, many of which focus on conservation, education, and global health. The organization also has managed programs focused on voter registration, disaster recovery, education, and music and the arts. NVF is overseen by an independent board of directors that has extensive experience in philanthropy and nonprofit management.
Works to alleviate hardship and meet basic needs of vulnerable groups such as children, the elderly, and poor families in Nicaragua, the second poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. NCRM helps children receive an integrated education through its Adopt a Child for Education and Operation Back Pack programs. The organization supports hospitals by providing disposable medical supplies and used furniture and equipment. Furthermore, with the aid of dedicated doctors, the organization has helped seriously ill patients receive treatment in the United States. NCRM also provides sewing courses to underprivileged women to enhance their ability to make a decent living. NCRM seeks partnership opportunities with other PVOs desiring to transform the lives of indigent families in Nicaragua.
fields and who donate their time and expertise to bring proper nutrition to impoverished communities in Afghanistan.
on creating new, isolated solutions, but rather on pioneering a general method for farmers to access the plentiful solutions that already exist. The organization's typical client is a woman supporting five children and working a median landholding of one acre. In 2010, One Acre Fund served more than 30,000 farmers in Kenya and Rwanda.
Helps communities alleviate the effects of disasters, disease, and endemic poverty throughout the world by providing privately funded relief, reconstruction, and development aid. Operation USA provides material and financial assistance to grassroots organizations that promote sustainable development, leadership and capacity building, income-generating activities, education and health services, and that advocate on behalf of vulnerable people. The organization has delivered emergency and reconstruction assistance to Chile, China, Haiti, Nicaragua, the Philippines, and U.S. Gulf Coast communities.
OPERATION COMPASSION OC
Mr. David Lorency, President 114 Stuart Road NE, Suite 370 Cleveland, TN 37312 TEL: (423) 728-3932 FAX: (423) 728-3958 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.operationcompassion.org Responds to natural disasters around the world, providing bottled water, food, cleaning supplies, and building materials. OC works to establish an in-country local network of churches, agencies, and government leaders to meet the needs of children and families during natural disasters and to assist people living in extreme poverty. The organization ships medical supplies, medical equipment, clothing, food, and toys to developing countries. In addition, OC supports more than 50 orphanages worldwide, providing food, clothing, educational material, and operational support.
the individuals and communities it serves, and with over 40 years of experience, the organization's success lies in its legacy and model. Today, OIC International operates a global network of sustainable, community-based centers in 20 countries, working to mitigate poverty and create economic opportunities by ensuring that disadvantaged individuals obtain the skills and have access to resources they need for gainful employment or selfemployment.
creation of women-only cooperatives and strengthens existing ones by improving coordination, sustainability, and participation in decision-making process and providing training. OFED International enhances women's managerial and financial skills to ensure sustained and superior output; familiarizes women with water management, irrigation, and marketing intelligence systems to facilitate production and marketing; and develops infrastructure, such as roads, to help producers more easily connect with markets. OFED International also supports health care and community service activities.
individuals to distribute humanitarian aid and support programs that encourage long-term development and strengthen coping mechanisms. Echocuba also assists Christian churches and individuals to create independent enterprises through self-employment initiatives. The organization has helped launch more than 1,000 small businesses in eastern Cuba and is working with many more. In addition, Echocuba supports individuals, groups, and churches as they strive to create the systems necessary to build Cuban civil society.
Develops and implements real-world solutions to problems that include lack of water and sanitation, global warming, environmental injustice, and habitat destruction. The Pacific Institute works to create a healthier planet and sustainable communities. The organization conducts interdisciplinary research and partners with stakeholders to produce solutions that advance environmental protection, economic development, and social equity. Since its founding in 1987, the Pacific Institute has been known for independent, innovative thinking that cuts across traditional areas of study. The Pacific Institute addresses environmental issues through programs on water, communities, and globalization and the following initiatives: International Water and Communities, Water Use in Business, and Climate Impacts and Adaptation.
members drawn from over 130 parliaments. The organization actively supports transitional democracies, economic revitalization, international justice, sustainable development, and the empowerment of women in politics. PGA has been active in the Nuclear Test Ban field and supports U.N. peacekeeping efforts. Delegations have been mobilized to observe transitional elections and to mediate political stalemates in Burundi, Cte d'Ivoire, Haiti, Tanzania, and other countries.
partnership with communities to fulfill their aspirations for a better future by mobilizing the private sector as an engine for economic growth, by using the best available methodologies and tools, and by creating effective linkages.
Brings together citizen volunteers from Latin America, the Caribbean, and the United States to build opportunity and mutual understanding among the people of the hemisphere. POA pairs U.S. states with countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, forming international partnerships. Partnership volunteers focus their skills and energy on common concerns such as the social, economic, and cultural development within these countries. The organization draws on its network of enduring links among professionals, institutions, and communities to provide a diverse array of activities and programs. POA's initiatives cover a wide range of issues, including disaster assistance, cultural exchange, strengthening democracy, combating domestic violence, expanding opportunities for children and youth, building the rule of law, and natural resource management.
PATHFINDER INTERNATIONAL
Ms. Purnima Mane, President and CEO 9 Galen Street, Suite 217 Watertown, MA 02472 TEL: (617) 924-7200 FAX: (617) 924-3833 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.pathfinder.org Provides women, men, and adolescents with a range of quality health servicesfrom contraception and maternal care to HIV prevention and AIDS care and treatment. Pathfinder International places reproductive health services at the center of all that it does, believing that health care is not only a fundamental human right but also critical for expanding life opportunities for women, families, communities, and nations, while paving the way for transformations in environmental stewardship, decreases in population pressures, and innovations in poverty reduction. Pathfinder strives to strengthen access to family planning, advocate for sound reproductive health policies, and, through all of its work, improve the rights and lives of the people it serves.
pathology and technology coverage in overseas hospitals. Pathologists Overseas is active in Bhutan, Eritrea, Ghana, Madagascar, Nepal, and Uganda.
PARTNERS WORLDWIDE
Mr. Douglas Seebeck, President 6139 Tahoe Drive SE Grand Rapids, MI 49546 TEL: (616) 818-4900 FAX: (616) 818-4899 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.partnersworldwide.org Supports and encourages entrepreneurs in the "missing middle," including owners of micro, small, and mediumsized businesses. Members of Partners Worldwide work in cross-cultural partnerships to help grow these businesses, create jobs, and transform lives. The organization facilitates partnerships, access to capital, mentoring relationships, and advocacy to end poverty. Partners Worldwide currently operates in 22 countries, partners with 40 business affiliates, and serves more than 16,000 business clients and farmers around the world.
Working with local partners worldwide, PCI-Media Impact produces carefully researched and culturally sensitive radio and television programs, often using serial dramas, helping people to make choices that improve their health and educational prospects. By combining the power of storytelling with the reach of broadcast media, PCI-Media Impact's programs capture the dynamics of everyday life and model behaviors that promote family health, stable communities, and a sustainable environment. PCI-Media Impact's dramas address a wide range of issues, including HIV/AIDS prevention, alcohol and drug abuse, literacy, violence, and gender equality.
reached thousands of program participants in China, Korea, the Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam.
training to educators and administrators in leadership roles worldwide. The Perkins School conducts shortterm courses for teachers in developing countries, provides on-site consultations at schools, and translates literature into multiple languages. The program also works with parent organizations and supports teacher training in universities. Priority is given to programs in Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Middle East. Offices in Bangkok, Thailand, and Cordoba, Argentina, assist in developing services for children in those regions.
nonprofit, child-centered development organization without religious, political, or governmental affiliations. PLAN USA's program approach is known as Child Centered Community Development, through which children, families, and communities are active and leading participants in their own development. Programs provide children with safe spaces, education, health and wellness training, and psychosocial support. PLAN USA works through partnerships with local nongovernmental organizations and community groups, setting realistic goals, evaluating program impact, and learning from experience.
THE PHILADELPHIA AIDS CONSORTIUM d/b/a World Health Care Infrastructures (TPAC/WHCI)
Mr. Yoshiaki Yamasaki, Executive Director 112 North Broad Street, 5th Floor Philadelphia, PA 19102 TEL: (215) 988-9970 FAX: (215) 988-9902 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.tpaconline.org Provides HIV counseling and rapid testing to individuals at no cost. TPAC/WHCI also provides medical services to people with HIV/AIDS. The organization facilitates the AmeriCorps Access to Care through Service Program, providing volunteers with opportunities to work in the areas of HIV/AIDS education, outreach, counseling and testing, and nutrition. TPAC/WHCI promotes local, regional, and international leadership training; provides technical assistance, capacity building, and program coordination to community-based HIV/AIDS service organizations; and offers certified training in HIV counseling and testing.
PLANET AID
Ms. Ester Neltrup, President and CEO One Cross Street Holliston, MA 01746 TEL: (508) 893-0644 FAX: (508) 893-0646 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.planetaid.org Supports and undertakes development projects in a number of countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Planet Aid supports Child Aid, Farmers Clubs, and children's towns; teacher training, vocational schools, and schools for street children; and health care, HIV/AIDS prevention, and income-generating activities. Founded in 1997, Planet Aid raises funds by collecting and reselling used clothing. Planet Aid also receives corporate funding and grants from the U.S. Government.
and supplies, medicines and medical books, exchange programs, and grants to help those who are left behindthe ill, the elderly, the children, and the physically challengedduring the transition to a democratic, market-oriented economy.
POPULATION COUNCIL
Dr. Peter J. Donaldson, President One Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, 9th Floor New York, NY 10017-2201 TEL: (212) 339-0655 FAX: (646) 277-8255 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.popcouncil.org Seeks to improve the well-being and reproductive health of current and future generations and to help achieve a humane, equitable, and sustainable balance between people and resources. The Population Council conducts biomedical, social science, and public health research on global issues, including reproductive health, HIV/AIDS, and population trends. The Population Council helps build research capacities in developing countries. Governed by an international board of trustees, the organization employs more than 500 people and has expertise in a wide array of scientific disciplines. The Population Council has 17 offices in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and works in more than 60 countries.
family planning, HIV/AIDS, malaria, contaminated water, and threats to maternal and child health. PSI is committed to the principle that health services and products are most effective when they are accompanied by robust communications and distribution efforts that help ensure that they are widely accepted and properly used. PSI works in partnership with local governments, ministries of health, and local organizations. In 2010, PSI's interventions prevented more than 186,000 HIV infections, 4 million unintended pregnancies, 4 million cases of diarrhea, and 28 million episodes of malaria.
Provides Latin America's poorest women with the means to build livelihoods for themselves and futures for their families through microlending, business training, and health care support. Pro Mujer fights poverty by establishing sustainable microfinance organizations that provide financial and personal development services that help women build and improve their small businesses. In addition, Pro Mujer supports the health of its clients and their families and helps women build self-esteem. The network serves more than 200,000 clients in Argentina, Bolivia, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Peru, benefiting nearly 800,000 children and extended family members.
term solutions to health care needswith an emphasis on children's health needs. All Project HOPE programs are designed to be sustainable by local organizations and the existing health care infrastructure as well as replicable in other areas of the world. Project HOPE's programs currently operate in more than 35 countries throughout Africa, the Americas, China, Europe and Eurasia, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. Project HOPE is staffed by full-time and volunteer medical and health care experts.
the focal point of the organization's education and advocacy efforts. In addition, ORBIS's Cyber-Sight program uses the Internet to connect doctors throughout the developing world with volunteer ophthalmologists in the developed world for professional mentoring and consultation on patient cases and eye care techniques. Cyber-Sight also provides free access to e-learning modules for ongoing education and accreditation.
global reach, ProLiteracy is the oldest and largest nongovernmental adult literacy organization in the world.
PUEBLO A PUEBLO
Ms. Rosemary Trent, Executive Director 7108 Broxburn Drive Bethesda, MD 20817 TEL: (202) 302-0622 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.puebloapueblo.org Carries out community development programs in the western highlands of Guatemala. Pueblo a Pueblo partners with local schools and health organizations to implement health, education, and nutrition/food security programs for indigenous women and children. A nonprofit organization, Pueblo a Pueblo was founded on the belief that meaningful and sustainable change requires the commitment and active involvement of the recipients of assistance. Pueblo a Pueblo's approach allows individuals, communities, and organizations to determine their needs and identify solutions, a process that facilitates culturally appropriate, effective, and sustainable interventions.
certified producers and international buyers to make certification an economically viable alternative to deforestation. The Rainforest Alliance promotes sustainable tourism by educating key stakeholders, by providing technical support to entrepreneurs implementing sustainable practices, and by building regional and international consensus around sustainable tourism.
RAINFOREST PARTNERSHIP RP
Ms. Niyanta Spelman, Executive Director 505 Willow Street Austin, TX 78701 TEL: (512) 420-0101 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.rainforestpartnership.org Partners with people who live in and around tropical rainforests to develop environmentally sustainable economies to protect and regenerate local forests. RP creates sustainable economic alternatives to deforestation, making it more valuable for communities to leave rainforests standing. The organization uses a bottom-up approach that matches community needs, desires, culture, knowledge, and skills with sustainable economic development opportunities appropriate for the locale. RP currently has projects in Peru and Ecuador.
PROLITERACY WORLDWIDE
Mr. David C. Harvey, President 1320 Jamesville Avenue Syracuse, NY 13210-4241 TEL: (315) 422-9121 FAX: (315) 422-6369 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.proliteracy.org Builds the capacity of grassroots development and literacy organizations with training, technical assistance, consultation, conferences, and financial grants. ProLiteracy Worldwide works with partners in 50 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. The organization has 1,200 U.S. affiliates. By partnering with organizations that focus on the unique educational, social, and economic needs of women, ProLiteracy's international programs help women, men, and their families gain skills and opportunities to make permanent improvements in their daily lives. With its
RARE
Mr. Brett Jenks, CEO and President 1310 North Courthouse Road, Suite 110 Arlington, VA 22201 TEL: (703) 522-5070 FAX: (703) 522-5027 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.rareconservation.org Protects wild lands of globally significant biological diversity by enabling local people to benefit from their
preservation. Focusing on education and economic opportunities, RARE works in partnership with local communities, nongovernmental organizations, and other stakeholders to develop and replicate locally managed conservation strategies. Working in Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Pacific, RARE generates grassroots support for conservation by building on national pride, promoting family planning and conservation through locally produced media, and training rural people to be skilled, English-speaking nature tour guides. RARE also trains rural people to develop income-producing nature trails and other ecotourism initiatives that benefit both local communities and protected areas.
REHOBOTH FOUNDATION
The Reverend Felix Awotula, President 7707 Bissonnet Street, Suite 106 P.O. Box 710402 Houston, TX 77271 TEL: (713) 484-5850 FAX: (713) 270-4110 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.rehobothfoundation.org Works to meet the needs of individuals who are indigent, have mental or substances abuse issues, or are in need of food, clothing, education, retraining, job placement assistance, or medical services. Rehoboth is a nationally recognized community outreach program that was established in 1999. The foundation strives for excellence in all that it does. Rehoboth's primary aims are as follows: (1) provide individuals with basic materials and training to enhance and facilitate their economic development; (2) reduce the youth incarceration rate by providing young people with opportunities to gain control of their lives; (3) provide individuals and families in need with food, clothing, furniture, and other necessities; and (4) provide medical and relief assistance to people living in poverty in Africa.
economic self-reliance, human rights, civil society, and democracy. RI aids the neediest, including children, women, minorities, the elderly, and the poor. Programs cover emergency disaster relief, refugee resettlement, and development and include health, food aid, agriculture, shelter, education, community development, microcredit, private-sector-led development, and income generation. RI has worked in over 26 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas.
RELIEF INTERNATIONAL RI
Dr. Farshad Rastegar, President and CEO 5455 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1280 Los Angeles, CA 90036 TEL: (323) 932-7888 FAX: (323) 932-7878 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.ri.org Provides emergency relief, rehabilitation, and development assistance to victims of natural disasters and conflict worldwide. RI's programs bridge the gap between immediate emergency relief and long-term community development through multisectoral grassroots projects that promote local capacity building,
healthiest option for people and the planet. TRI's commitment to research is the backbone of its mission, and the organization's research has helped support the worldwide movement for organic agriculture and food.
local GoodWeave offices monitor carpet production, certify carpets as child-labor free, and rehabilitate and educate former child workers. In consumer countries, GoodWeave raises consumer awareness and demand for the GoodWeave label. Operations are supported by industry licensee payments and contributions from private foundations and individuals. GoodWeave licenses carpet-importing companies, and licensees pay 1.75 percent of the value of shipments on a quarterly basis. The majority of the revenue is remitted to Asian weaving communities to support social welfare and educational programs.
SALESIAN MISSIONS SM
Reverend Mark Hyde, Executive Director 2 Lefevre Lane New Rochelle, NY 10801 TEL: (914) 633-8344 FAX: (914) 500-1403 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.salesianmissions.org Helps support the work of the 34,000 Salesian priests, brothers, and sisters working in 135 countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and the Near East. SM's primary mission is to educate poor, disadvantaged, orphaned, or abandoned youths to help them establish a better life and contribute to community improvement. SM's development efforts focus on formal and informal education, vocational training, agricultural production, and life-skills orientation. SM works on issues of health, HIV/AIDS prevention, nutrition, street children, and microenterprise development. SM provides humanitarian assistance, including relief, refugee resettlement, and emergency disaster assistance.
Salvadorea para la Salud y el Desarrollo Humano (FUSAL). At its U.S. headquarters in Miami, SAHF focuses on raising funds to support its in-kind distribution program that supplies FUSAL with medicines, medical supplies, medical equipment, school supplies, and food staples for free distribution among the neediest Salvadorans. SAHF supports the creation and continuation of additional programs implemented and run by FUSAL, which focus on establishing integral community programs that foster all areas of social development.
SAMARITAN'S PURSE
Mr. W. Franklin Graham, III, President and CEO 801 Bamboo Road Boone, NC 28607-8721 TEL: (828) 262-1980 FAX: (828) 266-2447 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.samaritanspurse.org Provides physical and spiritual assistance to victims of war, famine, disease, and natural disaster through a broad range of relief and development projects in more than 100 countries worldwide. Samaritan's Purse projects focus on emergency humanitarian relief, large-scale rehabilitation, community health assistance, water and sanitation, food security and nutrition, and animal husbandry. Medical personnel, equipment, and other aid are provided to hospitals and clinics in crisis areas and developing countries. Special emphasis is placed on helping poor, sick, and suffering children. Assistance is based on need, not race, creed, or nationality. Samaritan's Purse projects foster the active participation of individuals, families, communities, and churches in addressing local needs and problems.
water is contaminated. When clean water is available, it is possible to address other community needs, such as education, health care, income generation, and women's empowerment. With water, development happens.
Ensures the survival of sea turtles, with an emphasis on turtles in the Atlantic and the Wider Caribbean Basin, through research, education, advocacy, and the protection of the natural habitats upon which they depend. Established in 1959 as the Caribbean Conservation Corporation, STC employs research, habitat protection, public education, community outreach, networking, and advocacy as its basic tools. The organization conducts annual sea turtle monitoring programs in Tortuguero, Costa Rica, and in Panama. STC works with the governments and citizens of Costa Rica, Nicaragua, and Panama to develop a regional plan for sea turtle conservation. STC also works to protect U.S. populations of sea turtles through its Florida-based programs.
SEARCH FOR HEALING AID AND RELIEF FOR EVERYBODY'S CIRCLE SHARE
Mr. Guerra Freitas, Executive Director 726 Monroe Street Evanston, IL 60202 TEL: (847) 491-0800 FAX: (328) 328-8431 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.sharecircle.org Partners with Angolans to promote sustainable social and economic development through education, health care, and employment assistance. SHARE, a nondenominational organization with a strong civic character, works with communities to institutionalize lasting peace. The organization works for justice, shares to build, and educates for the future. At the request of the people of Bi Province, SHARE is working to establish a private, world-class university in Kuito, the provincial capital. The university will employee Angolans, Westerners, and West-educated faculty and staff to foster the best and most diverse learning environment possible.
humanize the conflict, provide conflict resolution and leadership training, facilitate open dialogue, and create a network of young leaders who will become a core constituency for peace. Every summer, SOP brings together young peopleAmerican, Israeli, Palestinian, Egyptian, Jordanian, Indian, Pakistani, and Afghanwith demonstrated leadership potential to its International Camp in Maine, with the goal of dispelling fear, hatred, and misunderstanding and fostering a new generation of leadership. Camp activities are followed up with yearround programming overseas and an adult educator program.
technology transfer in cataract surgery, and creating a model of self-sustaining eye care programs. SEVA's work in Cambodia, India, Nepal, and Tanzania is widely replicated in other parts of the world. Since its founding, SEVA has helped restore sight to 2 million people in the developing world and helped provide services to 10 million more.
understand people and their cultures and respects what a Christian community looks like in the context of a particular culture.
more than 330 investments in SMEs, and this experience allows the organization to identify and invest in promising companies that deliver positive financial results to investors and significant economic and social benefits to employees and communities. Through its Center for Entrepreneurship and Executive Development, SEAF is involved with an ever-expanding network of ambitious entrepreneurs, currently numbering more than 10,000.
THE SMALL ENTERPRISE EDUCATION AND PROMOTION NETWORK The SEEP Network
Ms. Sharon Donofrio, Executive Director 1875 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 414 Washington, DC 20009-5721 TEL: (202) 534-1418 FAX: (202) 534-1433 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.seepnetwork.org Serves more than 120 North American and international private and voluntary microfinance and business development organizations working in more than 139 countries. By defining and promoting best practices through peer-learning opportunities, developing cuttingedge research, creating innovative training tools, and developing and disseminating key publications, The SEEP Network enables the creation and implementation of effective on-the-ground solutions for eradicating poverty in Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, and Latin America. The SEEP Network promotes professional standards of practice, conducts an educational program for its members and other practitioners, and disseminates publications with a high level of field applicability. As a center for collaboration on a range of related issues, The SEEP Network runs both an action research and capacity-building program.
understanding of complex social, cultural, economic, and political processes. The organization works with practitioners, policymakers, and academic researchers in the social sciences, related professions, the humanities, and natural sciences. With partners around the world, SSRC mobilizes existing knowledge to address new problems, links research to practice and policy, strengthens individual and institutional capacities for learning, and enhances public access to information. SSRC brings knowledge to public action.
opportunities that strengthen the capacity of South African organizations and improve their ability to carry out program activities; offer the potential for long-term collaborations between institutions in the United States and South Africa; identify model programs and best practices that can be replicated in both countries; and encourage people-to-people initiatives that strengthen relationships between the two countries.
combatants, and refugees. A pioneer in its field, Right To Play sets standards for quality sustainable programming, promotes best practices, and advances research on the efficacy of sport-based development efforts.
communities. The organization offers a full spectrum of community-based early intervention and prevention services along with specialized residential programs at sites in Michigan and Ohio. Starr Commonwealth's Institute for Training provides parents and childcare professionals from around the world with access to the organization's successful and innovative techniques aimed at bringing out the best in every child.
STARR COMMONWEALTH
Dr. Martin Mitchell, President and CEO 13725 Starr Commonwealth Road Albion, MI 49224 TEL: (517) 629-5591 FAX: (517) 630-2400 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.starr.org Creates positive environments where children flourish. Since 1913, Starr Commonwealth has been a refuge for troubled youths. Today, Starr Commonwealth is internationally recognized as a leader in transformational programs for young people, families, schools, and
business practices and advocates for the implementation of these practices across the travel and tourism industry. STI also seeks to increase consumer awareness of sustainable business practices and works to help the travel and tourism industry move toward more sustainable business practices. STI is a Coloradoregistered 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation.
TECHNOSERVE, INC.
Mrs. Bruce McNamer, CEO 148 East Avenue, Suite 3H Norwalk, FL 06851 TEL: (203) 852-0377 FAX: (203) 838-6717 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.technoserve.org Helps entrepreneurial men and women in poor areas of the developing world to build businesses that create income, opportunity, and economic growth for their families, their communities, and their countries. To complement its business- and industry-building work, TechnoServe also runs entrepreneurship development programs that broadly promote a culture of entrepreneurship and give individuals the training and connections they need to successfully launch and manage their own businesses. TechnoServe works in Chile, Colombia, Cte d'Ivoire, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guatemala, Honduras, India, Kenya, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Peru, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. TechnoServe also has an affiliate program in Poland.
tuberculosis in the region. The organization supports education through programs in literacy, vocational training, the arts, and international educational exchanges. Programs are carried out by a multidisciplinary coalition of Tibetans, Chinese, and Westerners in cooperation with nationals from the People's Republic of China and local health authorities.
TERMA FOUNDATION
Dr. Nancy Harris, Founder 799 Main Street, Suite J Half Moon Bay, CA 94019-1987 TEL: (650) 712-8413 FAX: (650) 712-8792 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.terma.org Combines indigenous and Western knowledge to confront the enormous health crisis now affecting the 6 million Tibetans in China. The Terma Foundation implements public health programs that address nutrition, education, maternal and child health, sanitation, and primary care, integrating traditional belief systems with low-tech, low-cost Western technology where appropriate. Current emphasis is on multi-drug-resistant
community development, and cultural preservation programs. The organization aids Tibetans in Tibet by supporting nongovernmental organizations that treat and prevent blindness, house and educate orphans, and provide English-language training and emergency relief assistance.
holistic, participatory education to adults and adolescents who have not had access to formal schooling. Over the past two decades, Tostan has demonstrated that education transforms learners and their communities and leads to meaningful and sustainable social change. Tostan's unique 30-month education program, known as the Community Empowerment Program, includes modules on human rights, hygiene and health, literacy, and project management. It also employs community-led outreach strategies that engage participants in their own neighborhoods and neighboring villages. Through this approach, Tostan has transformed the lives of thousands of people in Africa.
TRICKLE UP PROGRAM
Mr. William Abrams, President 104 West 27th Street, 12th Floor New York, NY 10001-6210 TEL: (212) 255-9980 FAX: (212) 255-9974 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.trickleup.org Empowers people living on less than $1.25 a day and in extreme poverty to take the first steps out of poverty by providing them with resources to build sustainable livelihoods for a better quality of life. Working through local partner organizations, Trickle Up provides very poor women and men with business training and seed capital to build sustainable livelihoods, and with savings support to build assets. The organization works in
TOSTAN
Ms. Molly Melching, Executive Director 2121 Decatur Place NW Washington, DC 20008 TEL: (202) 299-1156 FAX: (202) 280-1326 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.tostan.org Empowers African communities to bring about sustainable development and positive social transformation based on respect for human rights. Working primarily in remote regions, Tostan provides
Burkina Faso, Guatemala, India, Mali, and Nicaragua. Trickle Up was founded in 1979, and in the past year, the organization supported the launch or expansion of more than 10,000 businesses that have improved the lives of more than 50,000 people.
Promotes private- and public-sector participation in projects that reflect the principal goals of the Organization of American States. The Trust for the Americas executes capacity-building programs, both for individuals and organizations, and implements its projects though local partner organizations with support from over 200 public- and private-sector partners in more than 21 countries throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. The trust provides benefits to more than 80,000 people a year through programs carried out in areas such as information communications technology for development, transparency and governance, labor rights, and peace and reconciliation.
Develops agricultural markets, thereby enabling trade and improving lives worldwide. The U.S. Grains Council is a private, nonprofit organization dedicated to building and maintaining the use of U.S. corn, barley, sorghum, and associated products in the international marketplace. Founded in 1960, the council is funded through membership contributions from farmer checkoff organizations, agribusinesses, state entities, and others. These resources trigger Federal matching funds and support from cooperating groups in other countries, producing an annual market development program valued at more than $28 million. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the council has 10 international offices, consultants in 15 countries, and programs in more than 50 countries.
USUF also provides humanitarian assistance and facilitates improvements in the health care sector.
provides food, hygiene items, and medical supplies to other nonprofit organizations and needy people overseas.
organization enhances regional cooperation and interaction by supporting linkages and networks among Asia's institutions of higher education and between Asia and the West. The United Board strengthens institutional capacity by facilitating designated funding for approved programs, including capital projects, at partner schools.
UNITED SIKHS
Mr. Hardayal Singh, Board Chairman 4 West 43rd Street, Suite 403 New York, NY 10036 TEL: (646) 688-3525 FAX: (810) 885-4264 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.unitedsikhs.org Works in the fields of human and civil rights advocacy, humanitarian aid, and education and empowerment. UNITED SIKHS is an organization that believes in people, and it places people at the non-negotiable center and focus of its mission. UNITED SIKHS' success is not measured in terms of the amount of food it has delivered or the bricks and mortar it has laid, or by standing for the rights of minorities, but rather by the positive and sustainable impact made on individual and community livelihoods as a result of its partnerships with them. UNITED SIKHS is always a front runner in providing humanitarian aid during disasters around the world and is actively engaged in advocating for human and civil rights across the globe.
the United States considers ratification of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Through the Global Disability Rights Library, USICD is working with disabled people's organizations around the world to expand the reach of disability rights knowledge resources. USICD also organizes and coordinates the American disability community, seeking to ensure that foreign assistance efforts are fully accessible to, and inclusive of, people with disabilities.
providing technical assistance and training to the Vietnamese Government. VNAH's major policy effort focuses on upgrading Vietnam's current national ordinance on disabled persons to a new, more comprehensive disability law modeled after the Americans with Disabilities Act.
and leaders of various faiths as volunteers. VCI chapters initiate development programming with the outcomes they want for their orphans and vulnerable children clearly defined. The organization evaluates program success by assessing the quality of outcomes achieved rather than the quantity of services provided.
VILLAGEREACH
Mr. Allen Wilcox, President 601 North 34th Street Seattle, WA 98103 TEL: (206) 925-5200 FAX: (206) 925-5201 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.villagereach.org Provides critical last-mile support for health intervention programs to provide health systems with greater capacity and higher efficiency. VillageReach delivers the following support elements: Logistics and Supply Chain Optimizationproviding standard tools and practices for effective distribution of medical commodities to the last mile, taking into consideration human and financial resources and infrastructure conditions; Information Managementproviding management information system software to meet the data and reporting needs and infrastructure conditions at the last mile; and Technical Assistance and Supportive Supervision providing technical assistance and supportive supervision for all aspects of the logistics and supply chain system as well as health center operations.
Achieves social and economic justice in the developing world through its community-based, grassroots programs. Visions in Action implements relief and development programs in education, HIV/AIDS, and agriculture. Supported volunteers work directly on programs in education and food security in Liberia and with education and HIV/AIDS counseling and testing programs for internally displaced persons and returnees in Uganda. Visions in Action builds local capacity by placing skilled volunteers for 6 to 12 months with indigenous organizations working in the areas of food security, community development, education, social work, health care, human rights, democratization, communication, and environment in Uganda, Tanzania, and South Africa. Visions in Action also hosts West African high school students on civic exchange programs in the Washington, D.C., area.
VISIONSPRING, INC.
Dr. Jordan Kassalow, Founder and CEO 322 Eighth Avenue, Suite 201 New York, NY 10001 TEL: (212) 375-2599 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.visionspring.org Develops market-appropriate business models to deliver affordable and high-quality eyeglasses to low-income communities. VisionSpring works to train local people, or "Vision Entrepreneurs," to conduct outreach and sell quality, low-cost eyeglasses in their communities. Vision Entrepreneurs conduct mobile Vision Campaigns and employ an efficient classification method to determine whether customers need over-the-counter eye care products, prescription eyeglasses, or more complex care requiring an ophthalmologist. Vision Entrepreneurs sell reading glasses and provide customers who need more complex care treatment with referrals, either to a VisionSpring Optical Shop or to reputable eye clinics. VisionSpring's wholesale distribution channel enables it to leverage existing nongovernmental organization networks, which not only broadens the scope of
VISIONS IN ACTION
Dr. Shaun Skelton, Director 2710 Ontario Road NW Washington, DC 20009-2154 TEL: (202) 625-7402 FAX: (202) 588-9344 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.visionsinaction.org
helps more than 2 million people in over 400 communities in 44 states through thousands of human service programs, including housing and health care. Volunteers of America's work touches the mind, body, heartand ultimately the spiritof the people it serves, integrating its deep compassion with highly effective programs and services.
local entrepreneurs, civil society, governments, and communities to establish creative, collaborative solutions that allow people to build and maintain their own reliable, safe water systems. Empowering everyone transforms lives by improving health and economic productivity to end the cycle of poverty.
WATER.ORG, INC.
Dr. Richard Thorsten Director, International Programs 920 Main Street, Suite 1800 Kansas City, MO 64105 TEL: (816) 877-8400 FAX: (816) 421-2086 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.water.org Provides access to safe water and sanitation. Water.org is a nonprofit organization that has transformed hundreds of communities in Africa, Latin America, and South Asia. Co-founded by Matt Damon and Gary White, Water.org
works with local partners to deliver innovative solutions for long-term success. The organization's microfinancebased WaterCredit Initiative is pioneering sustainable giving in the sector. Water.org delivers programs through carefully screened indigenous partner organizations that understand and are part of the local culture. Working through local partners also allows Water.org to leverage its intellectual capital and to scale up quickly. Water.org is technology agnostic: By working through local partners and engaging the communities it serves, the organization ensures that the technologies it employs address the issue.
WELLSHARE INTERNATIONAL
Ms. Diana DuBois, Executive Director 122 West Franklin Avenue, Suite 510 Minneapolis, MN 55404-2480 TEL: (612) 871-3759 FAX: (612) 230-3257 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.wellshareinternational.org Addresses critical health needs and provides preventive health care services in developing countries and in refugee communities in the United States. Since 1979, WellShare International (formerly Minnesota International Health Volunteers) has conducted largescale public health projects overseas with a focus on maternal and child health, malaria, reproductive health, and HIV/AIDS. WellShare has extensive experience training community health workers and partnering with community organizations, ministries of health, and international organizations. Initiatives undertaken through these partnerships fulfill WellShare's mission to improve the health of women, children, and their communities. WellShare also transfers international lessons learned to its domestic projects, which primarily work with the Somali refugee community in Minnesota.
movement that builds alliances, influences policies, harnesses resources, and inspires action to save women's and newborn's lives. Through its Global Secretariat, WRA supports member alliances worldwide by providing skills and technical assistance on issues affecting maternal and newborn health, including advocacy, information sharing, and access to care.
opportunity, and sustain natural resources. By linking local individuals and communities with new ideas and technology, Winrock International Institute for Agricultural Development is increasing long-term productivity, equity, and responsible resource management to benefit the poor and disadvantaged of the world. Winrock staff implements projects in more than 65 countries in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, Eastern Europe, the New Independent States of the former Soviet Union, and in the United States. Activities are funded by grants, contracts, and contributions from public and private sources. Winrock is headquartered in Little Rock, Arkansas, and has a capital office in Arlington, Virginia, and project offices worldwide.
Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iraq, Kosovo, Nigeria, Rwanda, and Sudan.
has implemented training workshops in four countries and 27 U.S. states, responding to natural disasters such as Hurricanes Katrina and Irene, the Haiti earthquake, and the Japanese tsunami.
Works to accomplish the following goals (called the six T's): trust, trade, tourism, technology, twin cities, and treasury. WCM engages in activities that include trade missions, international conferences, assistance to mayors and local officials on technical issues, and the operation of an international telecommunication link between the cities and mayors who are members. Headquartered in Tuskegee, Alabama, WCM has offices worldwide: Dakar, Senegal (Africa); Washington, D.C.; and Point Fortin, Trinidad and Tobago. The organization is a nonpolitical worldwide conference of mayors and other local elected officials from approximately 5,600 cities in 38 countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and Europe and the United States.
and its global family provide assistance in 18 countries. In the United States, the organization provides assistance to Native Americans. WER's program activities also include disaster relief and a number of smaller, one-time projects to address needs around the world.
WORLD HELP
Ms. Noel Yeatts, VP 1148 Corporate Park Drive Forest, VA 24551 TEL: (434) 525-4657 FAX: (434) 525-4727 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.worldhelp.net Provides support and medical assistance to hospitals, clinics, orphanages, elderly centers, and the indigent in more than 60 countries. World Help's distribution network distributes medical supplies, food, clothing, and other relief supplies. The organization also executes development programs in agriculture, aquaculture, education, health care, women's empowerment, and fresh water and sanitation. In recent years, World Help has shipped and distributed more than $454 million of much-needed relief supplies. World Help takes great pride in its community development programs, child development and child sponsorship programs, church
programs and national policies; and create networks and national coalitions to promote the full inclusion of people with disabilities into all aspects of society. WID currently maintains partnerships with disability organizations in Armenia, Georgia, Lebanon, and Russia.
Works in partnership with organizations throughout the world that share its mission of improving lung health. WLF cooperates closely with agencies working in the field of tuberculosis (TB) control, such as the STOP TB Partnership and the World Health Organization (WHO). WLF partners with the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union), a nonprofit scientific organization and registered IPVO that has played a leading role in the fight against tuberculosis and other lung diseases since 1920. Research by The Union led to the development of DOTS, the internationally recommended TB control strategy that has been adopted by the WHO for treatment and control of tuberculosis worldwide. WLF partners with The Union to ensure wider and wiser application of DOTS and to create new strategies to fight TB.
volunteer professionals, provides technical assistance in project planning, development, implementation, and evaluation.
experience involving capacity building, environment, health, civil society, and education.
rehabilitation, and community-based development projects. The majority of WVUS's programs are carried out worldwide through World Vision International, a related entity. WVUS is active in nearly 100 countries throughout Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East. WVUS's programs focus on complex humanitarian emergency relief, international health, child development, food security, natural resource management, and microenterprise development.
WORLDTEACH, INC.
Ms. Helen Claire Sievers, Executive Director One Brattle Square, Suite 550 Cambridge, MA 02138 TEL: (617) 495-5527 FAX: (617) 495-1599 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.worldteach.org Strives to meet the educational needs of developing countries by partnering with ministries of education and other educational organizations to provide volunteer teachers. WorldTeach volunteers primarily teach English, but a growing number also provide instruction in math, science, entrepreneurship, and information technology. Volunteers teach full time in schools ranging from elementary level to community colleges. Each program has a full-time in-country field director and offers a fourweek in-country orientation. Most programs encompass a full academic year, although the organization also provides a few summer and semester opportunities. WorldTeach is a nonfunded affiliate of the Center for International Development at Harvard University.
and mentoring and interaction with U.S. counterparts in various fields. WSOS manages the Great Lakes Consortium for International Training and Development, which is an association of organizations working to link capacity and resources with needs around the world.
ZOE
Mr. Michael Hart, CEO 23018 Oak Street Santa Clarita, CA 91321 TEL: (661) 255-7963 FAX: (661) 254-9305 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.zoechildren.org Cares for orphans, combats child trafficking, and shares God's love. ZOE works actively to rescue children from human trafficking and provides restorative care to both rescued children and children at high risk of being
trafficked. Mobile teams provide community education presentations to prevent further occurrences of this atrocity. Zoe provides the following services to the children it serves: safe housing, meals, clothing, medical care, education, and spiritual care. These services are provided in a family setting. ZOE also provides humanitarian assistance and leadership training.
UNITED STATES
PRIVATE VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS
64%
Agency 100X Development Foundation A Glimmer of Hope Foundation A Self-Help Assistance Program ACCION International Accordia Global Health Foundation Action Africa, Inc. Action Against Hunger - USA Action for Enterprise Adventist Development and Relief Agency International, Inc. The Advocates for Human Rights Advocates for Youth The Africa-America Institute African Children's Educational Initiative, Inc. African Medical & Research Foundation, Inc. African Services Committee, Inc. The African Village Community Development Corporation African Wildlife Foundation Africare Aga Khan Foundation U.S.A. Agape Samaritan International Agros International Aid to Artisans, Inc. Air Serv International, Inc. All Hands Volunteers, Inc. Alliance for African Assistance Alliance for Communities in Action The Alliance for Youth Achievement, Inc. Alliance to Save Energy Allied Recovery International Amazon Conservation Association Amazon Conservation Team America's Development Foundation, Inc. America-Mideast Educational & Training Services American Association of the Order of St. Lazarus, Inc. American College of Nurse-Midwives American Committee for Shaare Zedek Hospital in Jerusalem, Inc. American Council on Education American Councils for International Education American Foundation for Children with AIDS
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
75,812
3,865,902
3,202,560
592,907
4,172,378
7,479,923
2,732,448
24,270
886,187 792,878
364,950
1,882,166
280,538 395,732
31,058,239
48,181
6,274 37,428,552
29,949
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 1,122,051 13,367,697 586,778 19,887,003 8,622,521 738,133 50,785,117 2,110,397 79,269,622 5,250,873 3,401,881 2,727,528 101,521 7,093,834 3,180,029 91,791 22,226,585 61,931,035 28,868,186 28,456 3,235,896 5,345,043 4,625,936 1,267,679 4,641,716 256,565 304,734 16,406,729 1,423,644 5,132,020 2,805,940 1,570,458 78,108,259 321,527 6,058,553 17,420,648 54,811,898 54,934,921 6,322,136
Expenses Administrative and Management 134,751 1,905,470 16,053 6,096,247 715,821 55,734 2,201,188 475,543 5,440,930 387,939 884,514 491,858 469,009 2,112 1,062,452 2,668,967 5,748,359 3,336 280,300 994,453 1,729,515 68,981 246,173 6,495 11,537 3,888,094 52,934 699,460 797,557 568,069 7,545,742 417,476 920,592 3,935,345 9,729,473 86,746 390,049 9,707 904 2,115,538 1,099,219 1,476,323 300 894,452 5,051 62,364
In-Kind Contributions
Private Contributions 1,122,051 7,939,923 449,277 7,690,540 7,780,466 364,133 21,442,605 1,643,519 35,995,409 858,288 2,251,254 1,785,356 53,721 2,307,226 545,615 30,020 9,162,782 15,361,002 21,949,543 16,792 3,143,676 2,321,286 32,418 1,225,536 480,652 168,013 218,534 3,918,699 548,351 2,718,692 2,783,666 557,344 192,014 184,245 408,423 16,506,318 2,414,032 3,850,739 1,015,215
Private Revenue 5,427,774 137,501 10,371,857 505,803 -806,531 13,888 2,226,524 110,614 33,267 547,068 21,323 239,304 1,179,594 998,243 199,722 84,738 1,091,918 702,772 42,143 479,871 44,750 201 6,358,210 189 192,997 18,424 8,688 32,897,336 137,282 5,254,398 16,149 32,592,162 9,331,430 697
Overseas Programs 934,926 4,086,929 596,880 23,242,943 6,238,272 406,000 35,785,251 1,434,711 65,390,207 505,608 386,436 2,396,499 72,125 5,947,146 265,733 84,530 18,730,444 60,099,836 29,873,220 7,177 2,410,782 4,264,825 3,853,817 786,527 8,791 158,273 290,383 976,348 1,347,740 3,066,940 2,907,349 1,670,316 41,819,760 211,100 1,440,330 18,495,533 16,001,790 43,854,545 5,452,956
Fund Raising 3,473 11,737 2,653,412 491,013 4,713 2,218,360 1,574,018 35,808 432,159
Total Expenses 1,113,791 5,992,399 624,670 31,992,602 8,809,647 536,675 42,699,385 1,910,254 72,405,155 5,565,819 4,965,392 3,847,710 72,125 7,192,849 2,927,599 87,546 21,908,434 63,868,022 37,537,550 12,924 3,585,534 5,259,278 5,588,383 995,660 4,381,679 168,118 317,311 16,224,710 1,434,731 3,793,918 4,364,467 2,238,385 77,223,517 273,319 5,327,221 21,850,072 49,229,224 55,011,719 6,223,326
25,269,288
47,800 2,359,109 5,677,391 11,787,151 36,001 61,771 842,315 670,110 575,984 11,664 7,482
439,648 2,111
512,703
Agency American Friends of Kiryat Sanz Laniado Hospital, Inc. American Himalayan Foundation The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, Inc. American Latvian Association in the United States, Inc. American Leprosy Missions American Medical Overseas Relief American National Red Cross American Near East Refugee Aid American Refugee Committee American Service to India American Society of Civil Engineers The American Society of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem American Soybean Association American-Nicaraguan Foundation, Inc. AmeriCares Foundation, Inc. Americas Humanitarian Relief Logistics Team, Inc. Americas Society, Inc. Amizade Ltd. The Appeal of the Nobel Peace Laureates Foundation, Inc. Aqua Clara Foundation, Inc. The Aquaya Institute ARF Human Services Network Armenia Fund U.S.A., Inc. Armenian Missionary Association of America, Inc. Armenian Relief Society, Inc. The Asia Foundation Assist International The Association of Volunteers in International Service USA, Inc. Atlas Service Corps, Inc. Baitulmaal, Inc. Batey Relief Alliance, Inc. Bellefaire Jewish Children's Bureau Benevolent Healthcare Foundation Bethany Christian Services International, Inc. Bethany Relief and Rehabilitation International, Inc. Blacksmith Institute, Inc. BlazeSports America, Inc. Bless the Children, Inc. Blessings International
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
20,000
91,905 19,402
38,254,713
1,656,012
19,626,258
339,165
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 2,083,620 5,389,420 276,764,779 1,994,774 6,629,536 6,183,168 3,604,435,000 50,655,010 44,084,995 1,023,708 53,785,580 1,711,443 16,557,064 174,708,321 798,723,186 342,550 8,298,101 616,873 117,157 275,456 528,070 10,000 1,184,610 13,649,553 1,012,523 154,762,328 12,616,255 843,518 817,409 1,279,421 4,269,251 31,914,272 51,968,796 3,581,346 728,929 4,192,766 1,260,049 1,919,628 42,287,518
Expenses Administrative and Management 469,863 214,690 15,800,425 168,467 509,390 245,316 138,472,000 2,295,677 3,325,305 23,321 3,730,288 122,267 1,881,057 1,838,420 3,434,808 31,050 916,717 132,342 23,718 36,311 86,405 2,270 91,316 1,185,845 354,250 11,072,132 437,925 57,944 53,992 144,838 3,296,595 436,485 334,736 178,158 271,255 171,036 31,953 694,946
Private Contributions 1,900,154 4,418,566 213,823,761 195,115 6,415,839 6,183,168 1,026,249,000 5,549,366 2,970,637 1,021,512 1,367,398 1,614,110 4,133,887 1,730,822 39,866,965 334,850 2,038,979 87,131 33,513 274,854 455,266 10,000 1,142,178 4,227,904 730,910 3,862,832 5,873,589 818,818 239,967 1,279,421 176,729 1,837,772 3,660,600 1,123,444 723,117 422,691 563,536 219,220 113,224
Private Revenue 183,466 770,854 36,964,761 1,799,659 213,697 2,506,023,066 129,370 6,321,864 2,196 52,219,288 1,971,122 3,437,626 3,179,051 7,700 6,171,484 529,742 29 1,294 2,150 9,421,649 281,613 3,830,997 224,189 24,700 577,442
Overseas Programs 1,809,550 3,281,006 226,875,509 406,168 3,168,275 4,344,176 250,993,000 48,179,339 37,810,184 1,418,763 1,422,206 11,712,951 166,697,503 591,795,807 247,077 60,000 357,313 58,232 250,631 499,505 10,000 794,591 4,333,500 449,151 140,784,392 13,722,762 793,537 560,914 959,920 4,638,466 3,312 43,814,416 2,117,668 702,618 2,802,746 116,378 1,865,511 40,613,053
Domestic Programs
Fund Raising 757,480 4,031,637 10,709 1,806,956 73,739 130,193,000 525,561 680,696 3,680 475,467 142,993 408,987 7,107,525 2,178 867,770 12,973 17,686 12,613 30,482 82,637
Total Expenses 2,279,413 4,253,176 246,707,571 1,047,439 6,372,468 4,663,231 3,370,835,000 51,000,577 41,816,185 1,445,764 50,464,152 1,696,506 17,082,820 168,944,910 855,834,972 390,305 5,641,175 731,073 111,444 299,555 616,392 12,270 1,598,609 6,825,451 809,852 152,212,738 14,480,485 851,481 817,276 1,174,328 4,843,574 31,602,473 44,664,465 2,863,099 1,025,968 3,367,021 1,168,200 1,898,998 41,333,019
25,831,490
12,406,388
630,065 1,306,106 6,451 250,726 158,138 3,170 205,108 27,647,602 409,944 188,896 868,786
4,824,089
38,199,848
44,415,674 6,499,075
356,214 69,072 44,232 66,400 654,964 413,564 751 145,192 104,124 12,000 1,534 25,020
2,563,452 237,167
1,190,140 1,700,307
Agency Board of World Mission of the Moravian Church Books For Africa, Inc. BRAC USA, Inc. Bread and Water for Africa, Inc. Bright Hope International Brother's Brother Foundation Buckner International Build Change C.I.S. Development Foundation, Inc. Care For Life, Inc. Carmen Pampa Fund The Carter Center, Inc. Catholic Medical Mission Board, Inc. Catholic Near East Welfare Association Catholic Relief Services - United States Conference of Catholic Bishops CDA Collaborative Learning Projects, Inc. CDC Development Solutions, Inc. Center for Climate Strategies Center for Human Services Center for Humanitarian Outreach and Inter-Cultural Exchange The Center for Interfaith Action on Global Poverty Center for International Environmental Law, Inc. Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems Center for Religion and Diplomacy, Inc. Center for Victims of Torture Center for Watershed Protection, Inc. The Centre for Development and Population Activities Child Health Foundation ChildFund International Children & Charity International Children International Children of Armenia Fund, Inc. Children of the Nations Children of Vietnam Children's AIDS Fund Children's Emergency Relief International Children's Fund Children's Hope International Foundation Children's Hunger Relief Fund, Inc.
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
26,115 15,702
829,747
200
3,198,520 531,295
2,609,339 7,000
1,176,467 881,205
6,377,654
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 1,507,566 19,032,837 7,572,602 6,878,631 6,148,171 273,372,396 100,988,884 2,423,830 54,443,006 532,759 446,418 216,761,561 189,841,839 23,416,775 919,623,000 1,167,103 14,253,113 3,199,847 2,443,285 1,657,572 1,349,740 2,282,808 479,747 939,396 9,325,568 2,408,147 10,103,284 268,644 215,976,055 326,137 149,768,972 1,836,022 5,932,044 522,487 7,932,244 1,875,562 63,316 402,507 47,747,274
Expenses Administrative and Management 341,192 69,082 142,865 24,088 603,490 667,140 6,718,744 97,385 89,285 57,188 43,230 9,053,787 3,498,283 930,800 17,870,000 688,378 2,278,066 596,577 407,899 110,081 251,707 142,471 53,164 92,945 214,806 330,025 100,581 16,530 16,849,426 5,717 9,418,117 118,129 426,501 30,441 244,300 17,491 9,302 7,454 460,455
Private Contributions 1,226,566 1,548,082 5,077,866 343,648 2,767,438 2,782,796 17,915,560 858,442 1,321,647 505,921 442,885 42,871,783 20,995,002 18,774,046 286,391,000 4,000 124,316 1,512,090 27,731 1,528,107 1,260,802 1,476,921 161,800 649,131 2,636,355 832,353 717,793 166,396 190,169,299 17,270 91,353,577 1,638,704 5,294,756 341,735 365,304 961,486 44,707 402,458 3,803,172
Private Revenue 281,000 38,055 472,452 40,207 1,047,925 80,496,585 1,524,474 320 796 3,533 27,089,314 97,603 2,319,228 6,719,794 360,731 6,771,316 9,629
Overseas Programs 607,993 18,467,270 7,581,861 6,842,405 5,308,336 213,500,199 6,006,128 1,150,472 55,153,144 482,998 426,706 195,524,728 186,921,747 13,421,260 772,032,000 1,726,349 11,513,159 467,007 714,618 1,440,025 1,530,357 2,441,589 26,094 824,245 5,059,780 10,650,492 205,914 169,499,301 62,438 118,851,844 1,283,647 3,578,227 540,944 7,599,963 1,795,447 43,901 396,255 46,549,229
Fund Raising 137,898 309,695 6,858 200,489 224,650 3,417,073 104,261 83,899 46,429 63,911 6,305,025 3,730,917 1,893,202 25,059,000 15,939 248,805 109,868 255,618 244,524 13,179 111,802 629,644 75,834 247,486 99 23,420,237 16,730,344 102,017 336,756 19,877 37,542 130 29,472 671,500
Total Expenses 1,366,665 18,674,250 8,034,421 6,873,351 6,112,315 274,032,226 105,309,653 1,352,118 55,326,328 586,615 533,847 216,046,505 194,578,851 21,022,243 823,045,000 2,414,727 13,807,164 3,723,830 2,469,246 1,659,974 2,037,682 2,828,584 498,169 1,028,992 9,183,432 2,350,051 10,998,559 241,353 212,871,170 232,826 146,687,857 1,503,793 5,845,458 591,262 7,886,410 1,812,938 54,053 433,181 47,933,718
1,800,000
1,620,875
940,162
59,640,237 89,167,708
26,042 14,548,972 2,078,177 101,419,548 802,372 656,310 1,678,128 1,070,219 31,984 471,771 274,248 528,435 127,161,902 166,248,916 245,324 16,175,440 6,545,584
101,340
271,842
2,411,441 1,346,729
4,454 150,460 307,447 16,017 393,413 570,075 3,604,934 942 2,863,158 46,500 2,475,185 197,318 2,676 12,819 32,871 18,609 49 270,629
405,732 3,279,202 1,944,192 18,810 3,102,206 164,671 1,687,552 1,503,974 4,605 720 252,534
43,673,473
Agency Children's Nutrition Program of Haiti, Inc. The Children's Place Association Christ Reaching Asia Mission Worldwide, Inc. The Christian and Missionary Alliance Christian Blind Mission International Christian Medical & Dental Society Christian Mission Aid Christian Reformed World Relief Committee Christian Relief and Development, Inc. The Christian Relief Fund Christian Relief Services Church World Service, Inc. CitiHope International, Inc. Clinton Health Access Initiative, Inc. CNFA Coalition of Children in Need Association, Inc. Coffee Quality Institute Common Hope Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America Community Forestry International, Inc. Community of Caring Community Options, Inc. Compatible Technology International CONCERN Worldwide (U.S.), Inc. Conservation International Foundation Convoy of Hope Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere, Inc. Cooperative Studies, Inc. Coprodeli USA Coptic Orphans Support Association CORE, Inc. The Corporate Council on Africa Counterpart International, Inc. Covenant House Cross International Aid, Inc. The CRUDEM Foundation, Inc. Curamericas Global, Inc. CURE International, Inc. Deseret International Foundation, Inc.
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
267,114
39,858
2,751,468
12,143,361
259,650 18,428,481
50,307
100,000 13,033,124
7,121
884,054 622,203
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 4,043,698 52,277 110,789,950 3,311,694 1,156,513 8,170 30,000 9,950,274 8,940,412 20,350,213 1,594,885 170,460 1,507,841 545,905 433,824 31,255,281 1,258,508 12,490,000 222,971,000 634,700 155,435 12,500 166,270 502,065 538,376 41,332,756 17,102,000 707,811 243,799
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 1,414,815 5,299,067 1,404,198 62,239,755 113,446,269 12,627,183 1,041,309 17,646,997 37,703 3,941,163 19,857,824 83,002,015 21,627,610 194,314,174 23,031,527 831,969 1,981,863 3,431,140 8,137,713 114,412 729,902 68,999,423 1,239,997 32,009,344 73,927,081 61,282,203 619,403,117 1,768,316 511,060 4,257,621 1,946,912 6,351,983 70,667,607 142,870,304 93,503,046 5,083,763 1,991,821 57,511,034 3,885,750
Expenses Administrative and Management 155,820 484,863 161,949 3,738,701 501,166 1,874,974 5,287 599,815 1,400 180,682 300,607 3,053,378 382,701 6,690,749 3,640,284 2,466 383,186 358,236 568,599 48,449 112,013 7,103,641 80,870 803,957 14,856,000 2,631,446 51,407,000 94,127 29,065 370,754 17,987 1,348,662 258,221 15,105,410 893,333 239,402 192,384 968,989 59,799
In-Kind Contributions
Private Contributions 1,400,173 926,983 1,350,165 45,360,376 1,283,895 7,802,939 239,354 14,505,669 29,533 3,911,163 9,479,626 34,457,188 775,270 20,800,761 5,764,839 831,969 92,300 3,202,420 552,035 114,412 99,178 201,750 712,264 10,087,277 56,371,079 18,629,587 165,977,727 1,040,451 267,083 4,178,698 13,983 233,430 7,235,065 94,305,682 6,509,811 4,993,951 691,758 15,930,457 837,725
Private Revenue 14,642 18,705 1,756 16,879,379 11,412 1,512,550 1,955 492,551
Overseas Programs 1,172,465 433,319 778,280 32,628,856 112,997,710 5,792,489 988,988 9,432,052 34,567 3,356,116 8,116,247 32,936,232 18,874,083 171,650,458 19,302,188 520,024 1,456,754 1,954,039 184,478 130,880 848,327 29,111,141 114,367,000 27,251,817 524,888,000 1,653,494 535,846 3,088,286 1,773,347 3,591,224 70,285,839 23,645,127 88,613,654 3,033,342 1,630,730 52,291,795 5,736,471
Domestic Programs 4,140,418 8,314,547 4,047,257 15,986 4,237,200 2,719 7,140,087 35,035,002
Fund Raising 58,713 378,609 153,028 3,990,185 493,843 656,727 7,207 1,160,845 1,214 149,061 3,865,745 8,610,990 132,648 750,652 33,803 25,224 271,625 465,258 2,000 122,140 58,288 668,566 9,600,000 3,171,650 25,451,000 25,700 5,813 275,228
Total Expenses 1,386,998 5,437,209 1,093,257 48,672,289 113,992,719 12,371,447 1,017,468 15,429,912 39,900 3,685,859 19,422,686 79,635,602 19,389,432 179,091,859 22,942,472 556,293 1,989,565 3,406,122 9,147,862 232,927 695,455 68,426,430 987,485 31,344,367 138,823,000 53,688,933 601,746,000 1,773,321 652,106 3,734,268 1,791,334 6,830,857 70,898,560 140,806,342 93,419,257 3,565,653 1,860,500 56,126,375 5,817,099
300,326 4,412,482 4,855 39,852,539 166,088 77,033 73,285 2,767,964 30,630 37,461,706 25,668 26,462 3,240,000 891,552 51,117,000 3,816 178 78,923 126,441 2,368,402 479,582 17,050,464 52,267 89,812 13,489 30,789,259 38
81,382
13,844,787
1,227,898 14,801,806
68,770
Other Other USG Grants 961,203 452,357 17,132 70,893 210,060 260,678
Agency Developing Innovations in Navajo Education, Inc. Development Gateway, Inc. The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International Direct Relief International Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund Disability Rights International, Inc. DKT International, Inc. Double Harvest, Inc. E&Co Earth Day Network EARTH University Foundation, Inc. EastWest Institute ECHO, Inc. Eco-Logic Development Fund EcoHealth Alliance, Inc. Ecology Project International Education Development Center, Inc. The Education For Employment Foundation Educational and Research Foundation for the AAFPRS El Porvenir Eliminate Poverty Now, Inc. Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation Emmanuel International Mission Empower Nepal Foundation EngenderHealth, Inc. Engineers Without Borders - USA, Inc. Environmental Defense Fund, Incorporated Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide Environmental Law Institute Episcopal Relief and Development Equal Access International Equip, Inc. Ethiopian Community Development Council, Inc. Every Child Ministries The Fabretto Children's Foundation, Inc. Family Care International Family Outreach Ministries International, Inc. Father's Way International, Inc. Fauna & Flora International, Inc.
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
598,058
591,764
64,507,110
34,050,015
22,052,021
104,541,977
44,916,894 2,561,388 739,439 1,525,131 2,618,194 20,468 20,451 310,000 1,425,956 12,329,114 75,014
431,690
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 130,957 6,780,445
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 1,118,672 7,764,779 5,847,500 341,085,218 2,658,701 1,038,755 112,712,627 4,301,380 6,656,310 6,205,913 7,199,882 10,025,054 2,635,394 1,995,636 6,218,816 2,499,233 179,934,194 2,168,519 2,613,617 875,390 36,047 151,356,673 190,570 64,836 56,459,880 10,577,926 54,939,493 1,312,098 5,477,490 34,970,874 5,004,168 1,534,426 15,421,909 851,801 3,134,258 7,445,585 2,550,018 5,549 2,464,688
Expenses Administrative and Management 31,705 1,642,233 402,368 2,112,983 74,206 204,207 1,562,069 61,757 689,559 559,145 494,029 1,640,422 484,865 192,299 539,781 159,210 14,541,512 249,116 160,739 91,120 4,295 13,500,404 16,855 96 11,490,376 345,447 5,603,785 68,899 595,474 831,510 14,625 312,373 1,850,765 17,475 254,905 831,742 9,458 95 90,166
Private Contributions 2,512 953,655 4,677,670 14,938,106 447,578 67,320 16,624,319 4,275,266 978,512 6,104,027 3,572,177 7,365,262 1,480,069 1,810,920 2,058,478 1,387,233 159,346 1,557,057 838,110 742,089 35,998 21,318,720 190,570 64,836 9,493,273 3,628,042 49,919,349 1,280,092 2,003,030 30,189,519 40,708 1,519,245 221,254 851,684 1,846,560 2,988,870 90,500 5,549 2,031,836
Private Revenue 30,679 6,037 187,466 1,662,482 850,522 84,266,021 26,114 3,040,479 101,886 1,036,071 1,044,810 924,728 106,630 1,001,154 1,092,000 14,246,349 429 1,775,507 117,769 49 100,777
Overseas Programs 5,619,496 3,567,332 211,691,936 17,209 525,734 111,980,397 2,302,916 5,322,334 323,294 3,960,697 5,729,557 226,000 1,384,399 3,004,467 1,081,425 93,741,104 2,254,520 2,319 824,548 16,877 125,885,064 216,685 23,215 50,342,260 9,468,905 12,434,890 977,498 1,197,390 20,367,733 5,305,258 886,210 1,021,791 776,989 2,205,869 1,919,940 1,965,267 3,500 1,502,122
Fund Raising 282,421 345,142 1,559,568 86,725 69,560 345,105 265,189 225,965 580,976 660,633 148,671 374,539 798,098 160,726 84,614 144,767 91,675 2,651,959
Total Expenses 1,034,024 7,544,150 5,122,995 273,525,288 1,448,701 895,356 114,326,097 2,364,673 6,277,082 6,956,398 5,035,702 9,525,689 2,790,675 1,951,237 6,265,344 1,833,747 178,645,145 2,588,250 2,136,165 1,007,343 21,172 145,315,274 233,540 26,811 62,342,293 10,178,095 88,087,455 1,174,993 5,720,411 25,888,711 5,333,192 1,468,631 14,529,129 805,409 2,688,123 4,737,835 2,629,814 3,595 1,613,278
4,000
266,831 50,020 11,822,287 2,242,865 1,383,774 1,526,181 394,454 18,038 88,801 230,597 29,840
259,415 25,929,819
3,277,847 3,500
4,083,063
1,999,268 678,509 2,458,756 26,651 1,769,288 2,161,880 475,662 15,181 1,448,174 117 78,185 365,247
509,657 363,743 10,795,756 128,596 671,366 2,067,226 13,309 38,628 10,945 227,349 143,997
1,842,156 655,089
1,162
20,990
USAID Support P.L. 480 Donated Food 252,305 1,137,400 1,817,398 81,946 534,597 8,870,310 76,189 10,329,545 21,350,793 4,154,202 838,257 343,804
Agency Federation of Jain Associations in North America Feed the Children, Inc. The Field Museum of Natural History Financial Services Volunteer Corps, Inc. The Fistula Foundation Floresta USA, Inc. Focus Humanitarian Assistance U.S.A. Food First, Inc. Food for the Hungry, Inc. Food For The Poor, Inc. The Foundation for a Civil Society, Ltd. The Foundation for Hospices in Sub-Saharan Africa Foundation for International Community Assistance, Inc. The Free Iraq Foundation Freedom from Hunger Freedom House, Inc. The Fregenet Foundation Friends of Hope Africa University Friends of WFP, Inc. Full Belly Project, Ltd. Fund for Armenian Relief, Inc. Future Generations GAiN International, Inc. GAVI Campaign The German Marshall Fund of the United States Global Assistance, Inc. Global Environment & Technology Foundation The Global Fairness Initiative Global Health Action, Inc. Global Health Ministries The Global Hunger Project Global Impact, Inc. global links Global Operations & Development/Giving Children Hope Global Outreach Mission, Inc. Global Partners for Development Global Partnership For Afghanistan Global Rights Global Samaritan Resources, Inc.
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
2,929,532 1,627,435
3,531,590 4,146,638
3,770,521
23,960,512
6,880,076
222,056 71,875
544,708
59,845
740,759 1,480,062
305,917
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 4,922,969 6,226,834
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 651,552 537,885,926 70,583,413 10,083,997 3,061,011 3,870,918 6,066,719 748,350 98,940,000 1,047,498,583 519,959 2,502,587 25,638,191 3,092,680 8,000,767 34,578,850 121,632 643,598 39,777,101 150,369 4,259,459 3,924,112 34,853,406 29,254,204 31,599,808 1,089,387 9,663,284 977,684 701,201 3,718,797 14,018,882 273,060 5,053,109 58,234,898 3,834,698 1,753,778 3,247,222 6,161,886 1,866,973
Expenses Administrative and Management 35,982 39,970,261 15,493,259 908,120 234,904 195,285 217,832 233,375 6,584,000 7,585,171 87,222 6,467,486 208,148 866,100 19,805 1,458 4,185 1,170,220 11,618 526,531 715,605 591,321 484,319 12,604,287 182,497 1,231,712 50,685 67,130 138,892 1,437,847 171,818 113,916 678,753 111,497 349,497 1,456,912 43,905
Private Contributions 283,940 93,932,927 18,429,049 1,548,271 2,960,175 3,445,168 4,612,191 14,510 29,289,000 114,772,209 519,959 1,013,454 15,017,319 8,028 7,787,787 2,341,637 65,632 642,378 39,042,183 98,528 3,082,445 2,585,123 4,603,279 4,922,442 3,599,079 1,058,740 7,192,182 50,440 412,849 1,877,649 12,570,261 29,046 1,230,633 1,447,246 3,729,726 850,232 851,730 1,498,626 386,911
Private Revenue 367,612 12,232,633 41,609,156 56,651 100,836 23,348 275,530 1,046,762 170,909
Overseas Programs 138,263 429,630,057 2,288,303 9,224,762 2,420,329 2,688,090 4,252,584 21,000 83,646,000 1,011,437,729 45,748 2,136,346 21,303,690 2,331,375 4,884,323 33,700,952 69,000 812,158 33,075,956 163,234 3,559,464 1,274,676 28,765,709 29,818,010 20,071,947 669,490 4,450,452 339,747 657,546 3,244,570 11,067,865 70,528 4,813,641 50,275,969 2,752,956 1,376,088 2,978,530 4,008,314 221,748
Fund Raising 53,761,721 3,097,493 15,833 328,527 236,534 59,236 9,183 6,762,000 25,928,071 26,840 3,484,391 495,268 202,262 3,060 816,496 11,374 275,081 167,567 1,024,507 868,234 521,380
Total Expenses 600,452 901,881,944 64,717,189 10,148,715 2,983,760 3,406,980 4,687,879 642,133 97,706,000 1,051,214,423 470,800 2,461,695 31,255,567 3,085,094 6,245,691 33,923,019 70,458 819,403 37,612,728 186,226 4,361,076 3,192,925 33,577,727 33,364,448 38,720,295 851,987 6,232,395 529,328 842,583 3,421,441 14,356,378 124,863 5,034,048 57,744,536 3,814,564 1,642,613 3,518,311 5,539,536 520,666
6,992 17,991,000 921,094,621 135,969 1,208,434 206,314 81,428 694,125 56,000 696,026 51,841 610,302
1,220 38,892 344,656 704,408 1,625,228 121,500 18,346,912 30,647 78,448 550,000 146,127 86,433 248,621 54 47,179 104,972 26,745 20,314 9,148
2,550,056
28,597,906 24,210,262
1,035,077 3,196,190 2,193,885 5,522,681 550,231 117,616 16,930 834,138 54,335 7,334,709 340,253 58,600
21,280 100,977 37,979 1,016,528 48,589 19,942 42,602 96,428 190,284 74,310 14,910
1,615,194
626,590 3,521,028
240,103
Agency Global Team for Local Initiatives Global Volunteers Global Water, Inc. GlobalGiving Foundation, Inc. Globus Relief Good Neighbors USA Goods for Good, Inc. Goodwill Industries International, Inc. Grameen Foundation USA The Grant Foundation Green Empowerment Habitat for Humanity International, Inc. Hadassah, The Women's Zionist Organization of America, Inc. Haiti Outreach Haiti Vision, Inc. The Haitian Health Foundation The Halo Trust (USA), Inc. Handicap International Healing Hands International, Inc. Healing Waters International Health Alliance International Health Volunteers Overseas, Inc. Healthcare Charities, Inc. HealthRight International, Inc. Heart to Heart International, Inc. Heartland Alliance for Human Needs & Human Rights Heifer Project International, Inc. Helen Keller International, Inc. Help For Others Help the Afghan Children Hermandad, Inc. Hesperian Health Guides Holt International Children's Services, Inc. Holy Land Christian Ecumenical Foundation, Inc. Hope Educational Foundation International, Inc. Hope For A Healthier Humanity Hope for the Hungry Hope Haven, Inc. Hope International
USAID Contracts
67,460 11,500
16,655,959
2,692,380
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 267,435 2,873,099 331,767 14,328,196 85,233,001 1,163,781 1,298,601 54,979,040 26,846,297 12,786,685 531,665 285,350,080 128,295,444 1,319,203 666,724 9,887,991 20,654,883 3,939,947 5,158,813 1,669,504 22,264,548 7,509,317 2,519,785 5,111,955 84,240,206 120,878,747 122,853,961 112,229,388 20,899 944,273 73,131 952,683 24,085,746 1,311,768 798,518 4,894,865 1,864,887 24,127,631 8,668,508
Expenses Administrative and Management 25,220 483,513 55,688 3,684,990 270,478 107,719 64,928 3,612,653 3,437,414 301,656 66,749 12,212,717 15,928,273 58,263 17,316 410,172 1,040,816 456,700 224,269 123,502 373,184 139,251 136,861 268,843 433,465 7,326,488 7,408,003 6,105,468 63,417 8,699 163,143 2,241,976 80,158 105,997 29,468 120,080 1,666,910 421,738
In-Kind Contributions 13,510 189,650 151,109 82,714,672 68,356 984,692 1,641,400 2,367,829 1,388,974 1,432 38,648,748 9,790 361,964 2,809,261 50,750 558,576
Private Contributions 82,413 2,767,714 142,117 11,277,899 145,783 587,121 316,624 3,810,681 22,672,081 8,650,783 414,065 204,154,645 77,863,519 1,213,232 67,560 6,042,418 1,022,428 641,354 4,576,011 1,177,964 1,670,352 960,968 2,200,904 2,184,918 3,880,808 9,348,774 117,777,322 15,437,859 20,899 934,767 61,563 594,913 11,565,195 1,145,713 40,100 228,237 1,864,627 1,669,031 8,261,623
Private Revenue 3,282 105,385 2,877,188 2,372,546 -1,440 -2,715 20,096,846 1,806,387 2,048,163 116,168 23,142,632 49,246,817 81,181 225,700 960,420 4,136 24,226 491,540 3,682 246,588 9,919 522,347 7,821,819 3,291,510 404,116 9,506 68 357,770 12,290,027 166,055 2,077 181,375 260 8,106,399 -108,384
Overseas Programs 155,393 2,337,126 216,850 3,355,142 60,037,380 868,790 1,414,829 962,485 9,106,046 6,987,706 293,764 85,245,081 15,622,394 1,138,646 577,891 5,231,241 19,111,775 2,436,520 2,202,725 1,346,529 21,446,090 7,075,548 2,040,951 4,137,469 77,372,980 6,007,715 60,154,758 105,445,407 2,000 973,737 63,890 1,173,904 11,186,552 749,929 750,126 4,226,629 1,207,551 2,107,378 5,890,529
Fund Raising 37,114 64,780 572,892 131,674 106,461 64,254 473,040 450,051 452,030 74,060 42,844,662 10,027,948 83,048 2,000 51,568 36,138 719,358 149,264 241,509 30,594 13,273 360,797 651,102 651,918 22,505,520 678,587 300 19,722 249,479 3,847,777 49,201 31,673 18,251 670,913 1,000,812
Total Expenses 217,727 2,971,434 272,538 13,929,847 67,079,232 1,082,970 1,544,011 52,209,931 18,920,111 7,741,392 609,005 292,230,200 55,007,854 1,279,957 625,786 5,692,981 20,188,729 3,612,578 3,370,479 1,711,540 21,819,274 7,245,393 2,191,085 5,550,712 82,636,637 117,247,988 113,655,014 114,235,232 24,218 1,056,876 82,589 2,089,628 23,940,959 1,295,389 856,123 5,033,645 1,547,277 23,540,222 7,313,079
22,000 509,744
310,627
15,000
707,955 2,459,855
794,221
783,603 4,179,090 103,261,867 23,586,733 2,005,770 21,918 10,000 503,102 6,664,654 416,101 745,875 201,395 19,095,021
11,500
Agency HOPE Worldwide, Ltd. Hospital Sisters Mission Outreach Corporation The Humane Society of the United States Humanitarian Universal Connexions, Inc. The Humpty Dumpty Institute IFES, Inc. Imani House, Inc. India's Forgotten Children Foundation INMED Partnerships for Children, Inc. Institute for Multi-Track Diplomacy Institute for Practical Idealism Institute for Social and Environmental Transition Institute for Sustainable Communities The Institute for Transportation and Development Policy Institute of Cultural Affairs Institute of International Education Interchurch Medical Assistance, Inc. Intermed International, Inc. International Action, Inc. International Aid, Inc. International Association for Human Values International Book Project The International Center International Center for Journalists, Inc. International Center for Not-for-Profit Law International Center for Research on Women International Child Care (USA), Inc. International Child Resource Exchange Institute International Christian Adoptions International City/County Management Association International Clinical Epidemiology Network International Crisis Aid International Crisis Group International Development Enterprises International Executive Service Corps International Eye Foundation, Inc. International Foundation for Education and Self-Help International Fund for Animal Welfare, Inc. International Institute of Rural Reconstruction
USAID Grants
50,985,462
203,072
10,931,006
1,311,000 16,477,265
113,000
196,663,000
136,817
161,437 5,398,766
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 240,000
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 23,561,442 9,277,000 170,151,330 32,445 2,838,214 94,993,265 643,382 37,650 2,713,705 595,579 1,108,420 2,972,571 15,214,861 8,698,908 1,862,370 337,406,000 98,686,426 216,147 1,055,265 73,616,194 780,900 292,214 1,875,625 12,665,360 6,010,635 7,464,279 1,987,328 4,790,881 1,330,154 35,411,238 1,747,479 1,516,567 29,075,851 9,615,299 5,318,936 5,911,959 13,139,981 29,438,853 4,989,526
Expenses Administrative and Management 2,402,105 83,000 6,366,563 641 439,086 8,949,577 51,839 14,038 15,321 110,918 92,364 241,023 1,871,146 404,706 351,679 8,872,000 2,643,540 22,715 54,426 885,216 23,541 32,003 522,485 911,887 992,658 3,131,268 79,736 472,837 136,653 8,044,372 24,620 107,475 2,776,647 2,755,480 2,751,956 574,489 1,818,819 2,132,265 303,140
Private Contributions 9,579,042 931,000 122,316,971 32,445 539,637 296,199 36,434 37,650 1,307,473 257,979 394,303 2,527,572 2,856,264 8,145,263 106,329 109,276,000 7,856,516 215,274 1,054,290 1,275,365 502,923 247,559 782,098 4,445,543 660,953 5,178,208 1,286,152 178,350 45,510 596,944 1,492,579 1,514,057 12,653,907 329,879 2,458,118 1,022,225 1,344,909 9,581,530 1,848,165
Private Revenue -1,295 22,129,024 262,031 7,755 100,541 166,956 160,983 32,917 241,060 470,357 1,729,674 9,917,000 31,929 873 975 1,101,927 277,977 44,655 36,849 352,664 1,585 796,041 3,663,837 187,985 13,631,181 4,549 2,510 3,001,974 2,031,181 4,458 1,376,395 1,754 2,344,557 1,347,846
Overseas Programs 16,810,468 10,020,000 5,610,957 22,000 1,289,334 83,678,915 62,274 50,236 3,796,991 350,109 929,077 2,410,021 11,859,841 8,812,579 5,532 328,051,000 126,395,761 181,393 642,922 43,508,175 340,846 192,391 2,704,672 6,566,789 3,486,272 8,259,225 1,433,240 198,432 445,324 15,046,371 1,775,932 1,254,050 14,556,842 16,037,512 4,511,071 4,934,445 11,322,827 12,698,397 2,586,234
Domestic Programs 2,497,934 118,708,266 217,441 525,125 1,336,587 97,903 73,982 792,080 1,515,014
Fund Raising 1,002,736 73,000 26,263,566 573 152,990 83,163 8,548 17,998 17,362 1,082 169,341 104,451 173,306 1,134,000 362,175 8,548 41,531 36,400 4,691 21,080 18,869 751,316 279,163 78,171 76,648 13,897 106,947 14,152 21,571 1,134,897 221,053 328,776 129,221 2,362,816 88,310
Total Expenses 22,713,243 10,176,000 156,949,352 23,214 2,098,851 92,711,655 647,786 64,274 5,166,897 576,292 1,096,505 2,651,044 14,692,408 9,321,736 2,045,531 338,057,000 129,401,476 212,656 738,879 73,385,979 709,860 257,077 3,246,026 8,388,639 4,572,243 14,193,461 1,591,147 4,579,510 1,447,790 35,398,871 1,814,704 1,383,096 18,468,386 20,227,582 7,263,027 5,837,710 13,270,867 26,420,178 2,977,684
4,479,000
69,939,303
71,238,902
101,491
1,213,537
9,295,095 1,793,515
9,226,700
Agency International Justice Mission International Medical Corps International Medical Equipment Collaborative of America International Medical Health Organization International Orthodox Christian Charities, Inc. International Partners in Mission International Partnership for Human Development International Planned Parenthood Federation, Western Hemisphere Region International Relief and Development International Relief Teams International Rescue Committee International Senior Lawyers Corporation International Service Center International Services of Hope/Impact With God Crusades, Inc. International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, Inc. International Union for Conservation of Nature & Natural Resources International Wilderness Leadership Foundation International Youth Foundation IntraHealth International, Inc. Ipas, Inc. ISED Solutions JA Worldwide Jewish Family & Children's Service Jewish National Fund (Keren Kayemeth Le Israel), Inc. The Joseph Assignment Global Initiative Kamina Friends, Inc. Keep A Child Alive KickStart - International, Inc. KidCare International Kids Alive International Kids Around the World, Inc. Kidsave International Latter-day Saint Charities League of Women Voters - Education Fund LeSEA Global Feed the Hungry Life in Abundance International Lifewater International Lions Clubs International Foundation Living Water International
USAID Contracts
20,615
2,765,618 50,964
123,737 13,352
151,904
963,711
231,863 453,045
192,548
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 4,454,535
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 25,794,540 133,073,413 20,316,951 410,938 37,221,100 1,204,680 2,311,213 21,320,122 720,048,356 26,915,471 325,312,294 13,001,349 382,075 11,594,540 20,296,749 972,283 2,776,569 30,743,971 83,213,927 50,904,030 1,075,396 28,777,210 27,169,384 39,917,271 518,587 12,875 5,325,533 7,493,957 1,304,675 6,491,345 3,004,038 2,411,880 21,468,000 3,473,189 11,508,046 2,081,804 3,130,744 61,810,062 17,410,541
Expenses Administrative and Management 2,438,436 8,898,908 153,629 81,098 2,089,491 50,620 391,525 1,561,029 56,869,608 158,991 16,998,245 90,660 208,492 230,141 19,924 288,615 3,223,355 13,523,840 5,106,029 202,961 6,286,359 3,790,728 3,195,274 62,584 302 326,253 545,143 53,868 496,574 156,278 313,745 385,000 413,102 128,393 98,933 303,884 5,063,455 1,127,685
Private Contributions 23,613,248 19,267,716 1,323,184 404,857 6,431,336 778,990 50,033 14,323,043 14,047,476 1,256,244 83,637,858 827,057 27,027 601,717 19,514,023 970,686 2,054,968 9,278,668 8,526,808 35,504,615 27,688 8,657,902 1,928,153 38,006,431 518,587 12,875 4,924,646 5,004,049 147,697 6,338,785 2,906,491 1,491,449 16,075,000 2,443,587 2,973,892 1,965,677 2,251,397 34,315,591 17,277,227
Private Revenue 991,982 495,335 6,081 110,204 408,230 234,004 4,654,618 980,239 20,867 9,143,203 13,158 232,938 368 12,726 1,597 76,796 1,449,391 3,712,628 56,378 17,507,525 20,611,458 1,910,840
Overseas Programs 20,413,167 114,259,186 19,788,316 214,039 27,755,958 824,133 7,869,330 14,496,314 653,858,655 26,366,355 205,018,355 12,734,314 10,499 9,910,694 20,231,301 820,982 2,000,000 18,855,273 67,527,179 34,132,162 105,024 1,170,282 76,585 26,347,380 459,293 20,268 2,324,413 7,700,214 99,596 4,940,585 1,489,378 834,855 17,153,000 178,312 5,696,149 1,969,346 2,055,134 23,208,261 11,652,203
Domestic Programs 29,568 1,400 10,246,413 259,575 7,572,210 3,478,886 187,431 81,322,336 364,740 1,373,901 19,950 555,153 45,000
Fund Raising 3,075,523 794,614 9,976 51,303 869,954 55,131 1,694,462 14,359 180,398 11,477,739 117,682 37,065
Total Expenses 25,927,126 123,982,276 19,951,921 347,840 40,961,816 1,189,459 8,260,855 25,324,015 714,221,508 26,893,175 314,816,675 12,942,656 375,239 11,530,152 20,461,442 860,856 2,855,991 22,198,485 81,134,551 40,580,322 1,089,987 32,173,691 24,486,445 36,886,721 532,683 20,692 5,266,185 8,664,209 1,342,340 5,437,159 2,275,034 2,301,491 17,538,000 2,250,439 9,857,903 2,123,371 2,919,666 36,670,147 16,351,259
1,263,254
1,242,544
2,342,461 14,879,050 115,457,019 145,285 122,110 770,000 126,780 3,359,835 11,686,787 91,815 3,425,783
75,000
50,000
356,352 291,642 1,156,978 152,560 158,156 4,293,000 8,360,642 116,127 586,178 65,000
44,535 2,148,266
12,223 74,857 83,532 1,342,131 63,103 1,714,979 828,503 3,738,792 10,806 122 387,288 418,852 31,343 135,441 114,297 414,785 610,905 55,092 233,039 3,749,236 2,329,278
169,936
Agency Lott Carey Baptist Foreign Mission Convention of America Love A Child, Inc. Lutheran Mission Association Lutheran World Relief, Inc. Management Sciences for Health, Inc. Mano a Mano International Partners MAP International, Inc. Matthew 25: Ministries, Inc. Medical Benevolence Foundation Medical Care Development, Inc. Medical Missions for Children, Inc. Medical Teams International, Inc. Medicines for Humanity, Inc. MediSend International MedShare International, Inc. The Mennonite Economic Development Associates Mercy Corps Mercy Ships Mercy-USA for Aid and Development, Inc. Miami Medical Team Foundation, Inc. Millennium Water Alliance Mission Liberia Mission Possible Mission to Liberia Mission Without Borders International Mobile Medical Disaster Relief Mobility International USA MorningStar Fellowship Church The Mountain Institute, Inc. Nascent Solutions, Inc. National Albanian American Council National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors National Cancer Coalition, Inc. National Council of the Young Men's Christian Associations of the USA National Rural Electric Cooperative Association - International Foundation The Natural Heritage Institute The Nature Conservancy Nature Healing Nature Nazarene Compassionate Ministries, Inc.
USAID Contracts
99,350
80,417,104
895,640 180,798
31,941
389,996 951,828
82,867
829,526
26,098 20,390
2,084,369
3,680,790
17,484,328
26,675
1,862,128 335,792 400,000 458,317 733,772 960,758 223,904 86,625 5,271,504 128,205 65,276 23,977 7,928,981 30,300 896,123 31,923 63,445,800 893,705 5,757,895
235,300
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 4,975,305 40,528,995 60,894 40,897,050 247,724,553 1,352,538 209,558,094 134,940,504 9,619,603 43,178,787 9,354,041 215,860,462 1,916,000 2,135,801 19,223,960 32,637,873 260,141,809 48,578,396 7,014,034 589,853 1,707,137 97,500 1,061,940 33,740 30,088,439 1,443,029 1,970,572 10,654,432 3,185,930 1,409,522 1,146,260 7,104,099 180,609,795 112,290,895 1,666,590 1,005,344 990,192,782 38,709 9,037,513
Expenses Administrative and Management 653,074 1,064,826 570 1,793,432 37,819,912 84,653 604,585 253,001 920,233 2,758,184 137,671 1,281,147 33,885 139,826 286,189 21,774,057 3,950,981 122,666 12,837 482,092 5,000 86,753 1,033 552,513 171,315 28,295 1,439,020 473,291 351,932 331,677 532,180 1,978,971 9,250,350 235,644 389,596 98,683,000 215 173,877
Private Contributions 4,975,305 11,640,654 60,853 26,268,137 44,344,620 594,136 5,358,081 2,097,940 3,149,055 1,551,827 883,583 14,021,913 1,427,423 1,950,738 4,400,574 4,217,982 49,649,152 27,044,809 2,195,423 77,555 858,877 18,000 966,673 33,740 10,373,111 571,209 15,209 6,006,628 913,188 560,869 277,578 1,803,104 4,114,768 20,759,669 676,240 35,849 469,678,658 20,936 1,807,770
Private Revenue 145,710 41 44,215 1,079,267 24,610 3,251,484 1,692,143 350,844 12,782,924 149,259 1,840,019 488,577 20,746 15,552 3,507,196 30,327,310 2,376,959 13,650 228,113 61,045 -202,323 495 491,579 4,647,804 592,849
Overseas Programs 2,315,698 35,872,485 53,224 30,523,544 208,474,078 841,667 258,615,226 121,858,162 8,033,578 14,995,461 9,469,990 189,353,672 1,237,727 2,045,166 15,784,132 29,634,800 224,198,327 36,757,981 6,562,432 559,620 1,197,214 82,100 917,188 35,689 28,668,734 1,044,327 1,404,213 462,014 2,892,314 1,044,782 739,222 2,957,769 174,138,112 8,758,852 1,406,317 23,023 56,422,728 26,368 7,770,125
Domestic Programs 898,772 3,643 3,123,530 21,687 298,535 10,596,362 24,433,448 470,731 17,641,288
Fund Raising 16,072 1,365,774 1,666,240 63,070 2,670,587 423,284 370,533 246,352 2,323,302 120,335 50,839 468,171 1,002,292 8,843,200 5,168,920 143,702 23,771 1,203 50,016 267,772 30,216 15,732 51,437 24,516 122,740 29,132 3,045,800 2,270,074 82,114 9,616 71,393,000 3,058 75,726
Total Expenses 3,883,616 38,303,085 57,437 37,106,746 246,315,677 1,287,925 261,890,398 133,130,809 9,324,344 42,187,093 10,324,744 210,599,409 1,391,947 2,235,831 16,538,492 31,528,978 262,397,960 45,877,882 6,847,268 596,228 1,680,509 97,500 1,053,957 36,722 29,489,019 1,245,858 2,109,058 11,664,053 4,168,182 1,421,230 1,193,639 6,679,780 180,505,614 106,535,303 1,724,075 1,190,406 719,652,643 31,332 9,123,713
11,113
12,787,009 733,792 199,040,034 131,150,421 5,080,936 8,261,199 197,951,128 164,317 14,717,392 11,710,472 18,699,226 512,298
9,500
10,400
1,480,733
370,033 65,608,401
Agency Near East Foundation NetHope, Inc. New Life International, Inc. New Manna Ministries Outreach Association New Venture Fund New York Botanical Garden Nicaraguan Christian Relief Ministries, Inc. Nonprofit Enterprise & Self-sustainability Team, Inc. North American Bangladeshi Islamic Community Nutrition and Education International Olive Branch International One Acre Fund Operation Blessing International Relief and Development Corporation Operation California, Inc. Operation Compassion Operation Smile, Inc. Opportunities Industrialization Centers International, Inc. Opportunity International, Inc. Orangutan Foundation Organisation pour la Femme Et le Developpement (O.F.E.D.) Orphan Grain Train, Inc. ORT America, Inc. Outreach Aid to the Americas, Inc. Outreach International, Inc. Pacific Environment and Resources Center Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment and Security Palms for Life Fund, Inc. Pan American Development Foundation Parliamentarians for Global Action Partners for Democratic Change Partners for Development Partners In Health, a Nonprofit Corporation Partners International Foundation Partners of the Americas Partners Worldwide Pathfinder International Pathologists Overseas, Inc. Paul Carlson Medical Program PCI-Media Impact, Inc.
USAID Contracts
44,745
3,519,700
282,151
36,694
13,512 72,707 19,673,402 224,207 1,768,147 2,832,604 57,347,448 9,537,675 1,509,646 198,905 1,068,357 8,507,305 2,841,277 7,755,429
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 2,280,166
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 7,660,468 3,056,602 3,454,645 1,023 16,813,261 73,199,691 39,510 3,358,581 222,504 1,831,315 251,578 4,902,682 474,002,770 22,680,870 262,681,170 66,955,686 7,120,955 88,026,986 976,250 128,518 10,664,509 21,732,862 854,381 3,498,413 2,676,013 2,288,518 107,540 55,670,342 1,953,924 3,150,929 1,681,636 152,527,117 2,882 7,916,393 4,255,958 100,888,224 37,323 1,122,542 1,506,831
Expenses Administrative and Management 719,968 205,304 121,911 1,262 503,209 10,603,641 3,813 158,812 8,894 160,660 24,547 314,111 2,151,564 434,172 243,676 1,565,424 174,850 2,663,039 67,712 43,122 250,696 1,252,615 49,407 216,042 265,406 400,135 23,750 5,451,659 282,235 441,758 699,034 2,519,747 944 2,336,177 397,581 10,621,041 11,222 100,869 181,356
Private Contributions 3,417,202 2,273,749 2,656,737 1,000 16,190,995 19,333,941 29,894 2,623,088 206,734 739,671 251,578 3,166,904 26,026,517 3,180,000 3,667,705 33,557,812 81,970 24,186,788 852,837 6,526 2,108,664 20,131,161 66,103 2,932,165 2,635,351 50,628 25,704 9,848,353 12,573 60,211 174,904 131,980,551 2,757 15,973 3,876,720 5,885,570 34,433 630,242 932,860
Private Revenue 679,739 455,625 797,908 23 472,266 41,382,747 9,616 265,115 15,770 288 1,665,778 75,667 8,531 483,748 2,657,334 3,011,224 4,531 1,649 1,104,585 492 98,410 40,662 1,681,671 9,129 46,197 -1,045 377,432 168,881 743,861 199,921 136,701 12,855,107 2,890 492,300
Overseas Programs 4,536,809 2,706,927 112,190 6,850 649,282 460,908 31,622 2,435,993 240,971 1,204,197 197,432 4,145,516 351,288,056 17,300,104 124,069,592 38,467,813 6,715,050 103,279,276 789,154 81,921 4,419,851 9,075,586 913,079 2,642,168 1,631,415 13,512 127,597 35,945,299 1,468,748 1,586,952 4,673,966 85,278,891 20,569 6,253,950 3,589,713 89,733,066 33,644 846,541 1,478,168
Domestic Programs
Fund Raising 100,817 75,870 5,426 406,345 3,474,525 2,557 178,117 15,025
Total Expenses 5,357,594 2,988,101 783,862 8,112 14,893,390 68,623,271 37,992 2,772,922 264,890 1,364,857 221,979 4,708,888 472,976,571 20,317,746 204,441,347 64,553,776 6,889,900 112,332,390 883,897 125,706 10,124,282 17,372,133 983,068 3,360,631 2,894,499 2,162,201 167,660 55,324,421 1,821,162 3,027,274 5,373,000 91,876,540 21,513 8,625,860 4,272,312 102,298,778 44,866 994,743 1,974,759
10,470,715
303,000 163,222
881,100
249,261 1,390,757 69,447 108,421 15,759,894 6,390,075 27,031 663 170,396 3,031,216 20,582 400,397 166,367 27,730 11,313 314,971 70,179
704,456 59,274,734
29,175
12,500
1,355,503
459,655
3,530,693
20,844 343,948
360,000
213,971
Agency PeacePlayers International Pearl S. Buck International, Inc. The Peregrine Fund Perkins School for the Blind The Philadelphia AIDS Consortium Physicians for Peace Foundation PLAN International USA, Inc. Planet Aid Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc. Polish American Congress Charitable Foundation Population Council Population Services International Prison Fellowship International Private Agencies Collaborating Together, Inc. Pro Mujer, Inc. Program for Appropriate Technology in Health Project Concern International Project HOPE - The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc. Project Medishare for Haiti, Inc. Project Mercy, Inc. Project ORBIS International, Inc. Project Peanut Butter Project WET Foundation ProLiteracy Worldwide Pueblo a Pueblo Rainforest Alliance, Inc. Rainforest Partnership RARE Reach Out and Care Wheels, Inc. Rehoboth Foundation Relief International Research For Health, Inc. The Resource & Policy Exchange, Inc. The Rodale Institute Roots of Peace The Rotary Foundation of Rotary International RugMark Foundation - U.S.A. Rural Development Institute Sabre Foundation, Inc.
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
386,076
18,317,112
17,832,277
1,526,497 147,445,291
4,698,996
16,543
395,113
138,000 3,059,245 73,433 183,699 12,955,244 346,200 302,147 3,506,757 303,294 1,344,643 13,826,818 457,491 74,802
202,589 74,543
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 113,551 4,000 5,000 33,209,381
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 1,577,560 3,641,618 4,984,273 83,737,613 700,850 13,233,882 64,017,295 36,483,275 88,399,515 761,671 64,316,992 585,021,282 4,671,481 201,305,164 27,552,306 283,276,825 31,187,640 194,803,536 11,301,448 1,764,872 83,799,811 2,208,204 1,996,796 9,487,146 245,708 35,626,290 387,943 7,972,331 364,947 20,827 38,711,790 19,261 658,302 9,310,400 9,192,435 322,761,000 1,365,202 9,899,178 21,379,206
Expenses Administrative and Management 262,043 123,938 396,003 7,279,432 48,337 301,652 6,685,952 3,343,042 7,777,982 76,343 12,362,814 36,067,961 512,192 17,280,963 2,291,285 30,457,000 4,364,541 3,994,151 150,048 300,813 5,823,410 23,959 109,583 976,667 29,121 302,330 24,065 339,968 54,511 2,400 3,765,763 9,988 641,790 1,791,396 5,227,000 91,029 589,479 147,152
Private Contributions 1,333,392 1,241,788 2,957,334 20,074,857 22,224 1,294,378 35,345,401 26,281 81,184,302 673,092 14,031,306 2,241,622 1,635,980 54,424 5,231,444 187,959,989 12,197,509 27,847,710 6,974,607 1,738,173 25,438,826 2,207,964 1,637,132 3,062,480 244,135 4,219,037 139,684 5,427,315 160,572 20,827 1,588,673 15,806 9,247 1,617,733 789,480 268,412,000 640,783 9,199,815 143,428
Private Revenue 38,333 2,395,830 1,125,376 29,007,936 95 1,083,510 1,564,449 27,772,924 7,215,213 88,579 21,471,442 109,514,459 2,834,791 30,127,742 22,320,862 7,201,665 359,001 4,875,766 26,699 2,798,441 240 264,622 5,969,158 1,573 21,545,619 2,179 394,801 14,844 2,597,756 3,455 708 6,784,876 -18,871 54,349,000 190,236 221,497 182,100
Overseas Programs 1,418,022 2,144,494 1,248,997 7,909,037 12,427 12,279,521 43,722,423 12,029,089 6,110,142 69,760 60,825,143 549,974,970 3,813,327 184,039,226 20,588,016 250,285,000 25,077,597 168,454,449 10,163,276 1,546,888 66,455,174 1,710,719 1,014,593 282,020 161,589 26,048,258 281,237 10,178,934 384,873 6,415 26,620,029 19,897 599,880 7,154,095 175,489,000 439,796 5,122,650 21,220,700
Domestic Programs 11,724 540,516 3,252,203 42,392,027 695,558 1,818,694 16,018,017 56,116,099 116,569 16,311,556 14,468
Fund Raising 155,282 214,539 457,564 3,048,456 310,852 6,605,894 4,536,121 10,900,057 535,029 316,867 49,217 26,410 1,069,199 1,863,000 587,221 6,682,406 82,525 176,652 5,668,965 10,126 111,017 859,112 15,438 2,356,992 21,318 1,039,053 17,388 98,999
Total Expenses 1,847,071 3,023,487 5,354,767 60,628,952 756,322 12,892,025 58,832,963 35,926,269 80,904,280 262,672 90,034,542 586,359,798 4,389,204 201,346,599 23,948,500 282,605,000 31,206,900 184,004,424 10,395,849 2,024,353 80,952,131 1,798,593 2,162,042 10,050,781 206,148 35,219,644 328,629 11,557,955 527,330 18,843 30,484,791 21,273 609,868 3,186,342 9,116,772 226,587,000 1,650,822 6,362,029 21,400,717
7,006,779
8,790,333 1,109,369
38,648,085
4,756,474 287,171,825 16,206,302 24,255,280 741,206 888,154 3,720,041 117,919 95,042 317,508 5,076,976 1,190,314 1,267,922 246,080 811,666 5,832 2,679,172 200,710 164,959 3,634,647 2,209,358 156,853,000 606,800 55,444,625
1,177,541 4,873,418
3,004,582 53,789 926,849 7,932,982 6,512,064 2,009 70,558 10,028 1,376 2,325,280 29,410,000 949,559
5,064,127
170,060
134,532 3,400,366
469,965
76,282 304,842
Other Other USG Grants 1,203,688 13,296 92,587 11,606,950 10,540,950 129,168 2,922,226 465,386
Agency Safe Water Network Salesian Missions Salvadoran American Humanitarian Foundation The Salvation Army World Service Office Samaritan's Purse The Samburu Project, Inc. Save the Children Federation, Inc. Sea Turtle Conservancy Search for Common Ground Search for Healing Aid and Relief for Everybody's Circle Seeds of Peace Self-Help International Serving at the Crossroads Seva Foundation Share and Care Foundation for India Shelter For Life International, Inc. SIM USA, Inc. Sister Cities International Small Enterprise Assistance Funds The Small Enterprise Education and Promotion Network Social Accountability International, Inc. Social Science Research Council Solar Cookers International Solar Electric Light Fund South Africa Partners, Inc. Spence-Chapin Services to Families and Children Spirit of America Worldwide Sports Humanitarian Group, Inc. Star of Hope International, America, Inc. Starr Commonwealth Stockholm Environment Institute U.S., Inc. Stop Hunger Now Strategies for International Development Students in Free Enterprise Sustainable Travel International The Synergos Institute TechnoServe, Inc. Terma Foundation Think on These Things Ministries International, Inc.
USAID Contracts
26,927,824
138,358,025 4,684,032
529,938 200,804
1,419,809
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 1,570,066 51,563,576 40,382,451 53,786,127 385,492,801 246,921 553,847,458 3,721,586 19,647,842 130,509 4,845,726 418,464 147,433 3,897,405 972,014 3,568,833 40,151,022 3,031,334 18,155,398 4,244,215 4,006,841 19,632,935 912,831 3,561,759 1,966,127 8,607,768 4,331,999 3,341,922 1,799,272 31,953,297 3,199,665 6,860,643 273,368 12,900,417 867,038 6,644,151 55,983,157 392,491 2,185,301
Expenses Administrative and Management 50,237 2,761,621 58,486 940,164 17,025,532 39,213 23,410,053 77,795 1,340,942 5,270 963,972 47,345 10,792 382,129 65,598 460,515 5,081,835 238,776 7,869,040 927,856 637,149 3,738,426 95,829 161,554 229,589 1,236,236 232,315 130,264 70,955 7,720,708 946,355 296,989 626,793 141,937 1,034,427 7,781,340 48,246 27,479
Private Contributions 1,539,472 36,176,352 1,015,378 49,102,347 191,048,627 241,588 237,289,468 2,317,862 906,928 130,509 3,424,442 378,505 135,968 2,828,847 962,363 289,918 38,876,112 2,469,618 1,183,983 3,614,532 462,675 12,778,429 538,101 2,907,861 1,017,035 1,465,144 1,290,563 3,339,653 1,784,270 4,040,422 630,896 4,704,723 273,368 11,511,602 462,481 2,626,332 38,777,022 79,986 71,059
Private Revenue 30,594 1,050,835 61,278 2,812,214 2,909,950 5,333 24,751,208 764,423 906,384 827,318 24,195 1,979 9,651 8,379 1,274,910 11,885,025 511,971 2,313,837 1,479,683 270,276 174,630 11,197 6,976,118 2,330 2,269 3,232 5,306,676 1,046,944 23,845 85,353 316,557 3,548,984 214
Overseas Programs 1,828,965 41,860,104 40,299,294 31,575,650 298,052,554 172,130 445,066,138 784,183 20,169,194 5,265 1,019,822 224,157 126,616 1,824,467 900,240 2,826,227 33,611,708 1,673,584 5,727,462 6,641,943 3,132,087 6,680,150 375,081 1,904,850 1,250,841 2,196,336 3,804,111 2,172,145 1,138,224 481,509 5,233,140 467,492 3,602,929 265,673 6,315,184 48,552,480 414,377 32,594
Fund Raising 25,119 5,106,134 122,992 21,966,217 34,395 29,466,514 161,453 202,643 438 535,685 48,764 2,074 378,083 150,991 6,608 1,341,160 41,865 1,620,350 136,068 122,033 118,943 98,460 170,850 141,470 560,508 92,570 825,741 155,375 706,784 242,533 1,229,356 13,833 530,239 1,584,086
Total Expenses 1,904,321 50,377,859 40,480,772 32,515,814 348,832,222 245,738 527,166,916 3,120,596 22,774,315 124,814 4,200,957 320,266 140,192 3,568,714 1,116,829 3,293,350 40,034,703 3,094,870 15,216,852 7,705,867 3,944,437 20,333,708 887,140 2,237,254 1,921,900 8,370,538 4,128,996 3,264,502 1,364,554 32,402,940 3,301,207 5,772,662 608,010 12,713,893 806,299 7,879,850 58,316,105 462,623 2,182,151
72,994
1,140,645
3,548,389 368,582 4,855,073 8,173 166,506 3,039,106 11,770 542,158 22,076,261 778,863 2,132,075 1,026,142 79,150 3,681,440 2,114,242 117,712 107,482 43,905 471,095
519,750
53,168 9,796,189 317,770 300,000 4,377,458 136,352 23,975,448 1,873,343 140,518 7,254,815 384,856 398,199 2,122,078
4,085,024 312,291
Agency The Thomas Morris Chester Benevolent Corporation The Tibet Fund Tibetan Poverty Alleviation Fund Tostan Trees for Life, Inc. Trees, Water and People Trickle Up Program Tropical Forest Foundation The Trust for the Americas U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants U.S. Foundation of the University of the Valley of Guatemala U.S. Grains Council The U.S.-Ukraine Foundation Under the Baobab Tree, Inc. Union Rescue Mission The United Armenian Fund United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia United Methodist Committee on Relief of GBGM-UMC United Nations Foundation United Palestinian Appeal, Inc. UNITED SIKHS United States International Council on Disabilities United Ukrainian American Relief Committee United Way Worldwide Viet-Nam Assistance for the Handicapped Vietnamese American Foundation Vietnamese-American Education and Culture Foundation Village Care International VillageReach Visions in Action VisionSpring, Inc. The Voice of the Martyrs Volunteers of America Southeast, Inc. Water First International Water For People Water Missions International Water.org, Inc. WaterAid America, Inc. WellShare International
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
1,273,615 602,726
304,686 4,916,407
5,283,421 16,500,000
1,149,148
54,347
3,327
442,895
15,594,983
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 1,709 5,579,044 1,784,301 9,393,851 627,838 1,414,632 4,125,752 1,044,512 7,584,697 31,217,817 1,541,121 19,306,372 812,365 326,388 45,908,000 33,071,557 12,982,758 91,798,357 135,853,781 5,780,645 816,412 422,063 722,139 91,864,220 1,703,725 56,286 3,100 579,662 2,000,146 690,489 1,553,246 49,532,088 62,062,428 1,029,738 12,317,196 9,438,063 4,064,571 1,375,606 3,221,028
Expenses Administrative and Management 569 230,015 188,840 967,652 76,690 160,549 271,858 169,455 580,100 91,100 87,722 916,212 204,999 5,714 1,963,000 205,895 1,199,797 4,820,475 7,415,519 120,683 62,673 23,619 34,529 7,447,892 422,222 15,141 222 13,413 209,673 91,948 430,263 3,581,760 3,512,920 34,406 872,844 313,865 666,655 496,009 414,480
Private Contributions 569 1,551,240 325,886 4,855,143 429,250 1,320,369 3,338,895 285,046 1,583,617 361,296 461,565 5,376,227 198,157 326,388 15,250,000 2,046,061 1,596,219 70,879,049 108,674,377 878,843 816,018 211,415 239,245 54,961,741 78,160 56,286 3,100 496,462 1,324,758 30,562 1,222,995 36,520,542 370,462 1,024,063 10,819,426 7,296,496 3,993,382 1,184,367 400,644
Private Revenue 618,051 950 -13,249 84,100 24,578 74,081 54,796 43,768 3,038,963 293,753 378,441 261,760 252,000 2,976 11,081,853 1,498,040 8,058,068 213,699 394 210,648 132,974 36,178,047 7,017
Overseas Programs 1,140 3,692,089 1,540,820 6,229,585 335,589 846,094 3,329,803 874,858 5,774,699 708,835 928,717 14,840,564 576,480 323,036 27,489,000 32,851,483 2,928,519 34,862,421 75,067,363 5,450,332 94,935 2,112 630,254 30,506,283 1,507,203 25,786 4,000 538,110 1,531,264 665,086 1,109,051 26,629,941 767,522 5,517,895 4,970,177 3,247,993 3,088,188 2,268,853
Fund Raising 142,264 23,625 369,975 38,073 114,535 627,107 34,583 62,900 242,893 39,558 10,596 302 5,111,000 37,779 351,301 938,646 5,661,508 111,107 19,997 25,091 2,090,195
Total Expenses 1,709 8,070,907 1,753,285 7,567,212 606,453 1,413,997 4,228,768 1,078,896 7,375,079 31,736,401 1,055,997 19,288,624 812,229 329,052 48,715,000 33,095,157 5,231,244 51,505,403 106,808,964 5,692,622 489,635 322,813 728,169 94,993,762 1,943,325 40,927 4,222 569,240 1,881,044 1,038,671 1,911,491 43,185,477 59,216,510 1,075,503 11,302,064 6,478,011 5,028,425 4,263,964 3,292,462
28,467 3,624,356
156,101 292,819
957,380 30,693,573 3,531,848 20,154 14,152,000 751,627 10,883,861 18,664,574 10,500 312,030 297,082 38,295 54,949,392 13,900
1,016,950 2,598,008
181,512 469,400
349,920 542,920
64,654 169,385 102,045 108,782 11,005,292 336,461 679,070 1,269,526 29,006 18,873 504,421
35,000,614
9,589,211
398,689
18,546 506,003 57,313 221,469 2,006,254 1,170,697 5,675 818,700 872,041 42,183 28,668 42,118
17,717 140,107 372,177 2,740,621 49,581 143,629 1,232,728 497,832 491,376 243,771 38,193
Agency White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood, Inc. Wildlife Conservation Society Winrock International Institute for Agricultural Development Women for Women Women's Global Education Project World Association for Children and Parents World Cares Center, Inc. World Concern Development Organization The World Conference of Mayors, Inc. World Conference of Religions for Peace World Education, Inc. World Emergency Relief World Environment Center World Health Imaging, Telemedicine & Informatics Alliance World Help World Hope International World Institute on Disability World Learning World Lung Foundation, Inc. World Medical Relief, Inc. World Neighbors, Inc. World Rehabilitation Fund, Inc. World Relief Corporation of National Association of Evangelicals World Resources Institute World Services of La Crosse, Inc. World Society for the Protection of Animals World Vision, Inc. World Wildlife Fund, Inc. WorldTeach, Inc. WSOS Community Action Corporation, Inc. Youth Crime Watch of America ZOE Zoological Society of Milwaukee County GRAND TOTAL
USAID Contracts
3,103,891
4,425,910
1,251,154
762,289 16,028,987
18,542,494 760,093
49,932,657
11,638,583
73,190,157 18,769,503
1,537,775
178,351,793
179,488,415 2,469,061,862
460,046,525
1,413,524,361
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 121,985 49,821,991 5,115,287
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 3,469,004 228,617,669 84,744,474 32,038,534 252,848 4,642,665 513,674 7,261,601 56,503 4,908,848 31,488,980 23,338,726 1,297,215 1,072,800 125,119,444 12,869,830 2,284,427 114,425,577 57,889,653 20,429,593 5,706,505 1,193,577 67,909,651 41,382,460 1,243,097 8,894,869 1,040,545,875 235,041,815 3,419,399 30,156,869 401,903 1,961,679 10,090,873 27,821,244,271
Expenses Administrative and Management 785,812 22,131,923 7,925,166 2,861,880 20,171 205,665 53,336 934,611 17,920 472,859 5,015,452 575,319 380,787 65,154 2,361,211 968,864 359,254 12,267,107 838,929 126,913 721,634 189,035 6,371,473 3,570,559 203,647 46,840,000 21,016,320 194,130 1,539,323 114,413 230,978 366,765 1,529,071,134
Private Contributions 2,289,710 61,860,310 476,658 30,080,674 241,917 667,076 509,053 1,340,812 56,503 1,054,745 8,806,427 1,905,951 691,250 1,056,000 10,830,437 8,288,821 261,745 5,660,515 117,637 168,024 2,698,899 143,716 22,295,329 28,167,558 772,413 5,883,125 579,290,423 127,673,612 99,302 2,332,902 80,067 1,944,549 9,660,767 8,296,783,640
Private Revenue 236,532 92,921,691 17,355,049 36,131 85 3,818,193 159 127 452,934 5,640,639 74,647 216,555 206,743 1,191,789 211,779 50,228,816 57,772,016 787,127 814,287 37,568 13,665,456 2,506,607 6,929 240,381 20,355,000 23,570,500 1,274,456 5,010,890 43,491 3,354 428,606 5,022,856,941
Overseas Programs 4,608,545 78,136,503 63,623,345 19,626,365 121,045 3,104,469 72,300 6,322,119 11,946 4,650,564 23,990,580 20,226,256 611,439 263,231 121,810,940 11,154,317 146,905 40,333,741 35,679,929 15,894,085 4,630,943 961,924 29,886,376 30,274,943 1,231,198 6,681,721 732,140,000 174,538,116 2,959,256 365,459 23,023 904,250 157,288 17,273,957,753
Domestic Programs 107,353,544 13,114,480 339,807 997,791 311,260 24,087 2,025,244 2,158,580 161,022 58,451 2,438,365 1,765,152 60,500,611 4,328,064
Total Expenses 5,846,641 214,329,729 84,662,991 28,337,697 158,636 4,619,590 478,072 7,256,730 53,953 5,736,509 31,363,868 23,831,824 1,288,670 426,156 124,901,336 15,413,884 2,437,940 113,101,459 36,847,763 20,461,071 6,266,719 1,152,639 64,711,026 37,375,949 1,231,198 8,765,723 1,002,320,000 224,260,469 3,155,413 29,871,069 379,952 1,246,268 9,000,347 26,870,526,133
1,243,159
613,086 332,592 871,669 135,422 39,320 729,185 852,338 166,629 328,905 112,009 914,142 1,680 4,010,070 2,333,491 1,810,825 104,311,000 25,967,710 2,027 10,825 35,306 111,040 63,231 1,079,865,319
19,474,442 2,193,319 7,554,119 7,402,489 2,771,363 45,009,099 17,021,831 2,045,641 20,000 13,776 1,500 7,607,645,804 250,150 673,268 463,755 251,179,000 46,816,208 284,230
153,158,765
2,038,788,390
INTERNATIONAL
PRIVATE VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS
REGISTRY The rules governing the registration of nongovernmental, nonprofit agencies engaged in voluntary foreign aid are promulgated in the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 22, Part 203. The International PVO Registry consists of the following agencies.
the Americas, and Europe. In December 2003, the organization established a secretariat in Johannesburg, South Africa. ActionAid works with local partners, helping poor women and men gain their rights to food, education, human security, just and democratic governance, and health care. The organization's 350,000 supporters share its commitment, providing 70 percent of its income. ActionAid's partners range from small community groups to international networks, and its national and international campaigns highlight issues that affect poor people and influence the way that governments and international institutions work.
ACTIONAID INTERNATIONAL
Mr. James Beale Head, International Partnership Development 33-39 Bowling Green Lane London EC1R 0BJ UNITED KINGDOM TEL: (44-203) 122 0561 FAX: (44-207) 278 5667 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.actionaid.org Fights poverty worldwide. Formed in 1972, ActionAid is an international development agency that last year helped more than 13 million of the world's poorest people in more than 40 countries. ActionAid is owned by national affiliates working with partners in Africa, Asia,
Implements more than 100 long-term projects and relief activities in 35 developing countries through partnerships with 26 local institutions and in collaboration with governmental, nongovernmental, and intergovernmental institutions. Founded in 1972, AVSI's main areas of intervention are the rehabilitation of urban slums; education and training; childhood development and care, including psychosocial care in post-conflict situations; health care, including HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention; and support for small enterprises. The AVSI method centers on supporting the entire person through participatory and holistic services. AVSI holds general consultative status with the Economic and Social Council, Industrial Development Organization, UNICEF and is on the nongovernmental organization special list of the International Labor Organization. AVSI is a prime implementer of a four-country orphans and vulnerable children program within the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.
Communities Affected by Armed Conflict in Nepal project, which runs through May 2013, and the Human Resources for Health project, which engages civil society organizations to support national health workforce policies, strategies, capacity building, and skills transfer and runs through January 2014.
Works for a world governed by solidarity, equity, and peacea world that respects the rights and dignity of every human being. Accordingly, CACH is committed to the Millennium Development Goals and to ensuring that all people, regardless of race, sex, religion or political persuasion, have access to food, water, shelter, health care, education, and work. CACH works in Switzerland and abroad in support of the deprived, poor, and most vulnerable people, providing emergency relief as well as long-term development assistance.
through economic development; democracy, human rights, and conflict prevention and mitigation; social and community development; environment and natural resources management; and humanitarian relief and rehabilitation. CECI recruits and trains volunteers and raises funds for its various development activities. Furthermore, CECI is involved in raising awareness about international development issues in Canada.
CHRISTIAN AID
Ms. Loretta Minghella, Director 35 Lower Marsh, Waterloo P.O. Box 100 London SE1 7RT UNITED KINGDOM TEL: (44-207) 620 4444 FAX: (44-207) 620 0719 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.christian-aid.org.uk Tackles the causes of poverty and injustice through advocacy, campaigning, and education. Established by churches in Britain and Ireland, Christian Aid works in more than 60 of the world's poorest countries. Christian Aid tells the stories from the communities it assists, communicating the struggles they face and the victories they achieve. Christian Aid works on long-term development projects with people and communities regardless of race or creed, wherever the need is greatest.
communities, organizations, and governments in Africa and Southeast Asia to direct their own development toward a peaceful future.
CONCERN UNIVERSAL
Dr. Ian Williams, Executive Director 21 King Street Hereford HR4 9BX UNITED KINGDOM TEL: (44-143) 235 5111 FAX: (44-143) 235 5086 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.concern-universal.org
Challenges poverty and inequality by supporting practical actions that enable people to improve their lives and shape their futures. Founded in 1976, Concern Universal currently works in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. By working directly with partners and communities to identify real opportunities for lasting and positive change, Concern Universal facilitates a variety of projects that promote a number of issues, including food security, access to water and sanitation, and the respect for human rights. Concern Universal's vision is a world where justice, dignity, and respect prevail for all.
committed to two cross-cutting policies: a rights-based approach and gender equality. DCA is associated with more than 50 international networks and alliances, and its partnerships ensure that emergency and development programs effectively target the neediest people and that activities become locally sustainable. DCA is an independent nonprofit organization financed by private donations and the Danish Government (Danida), the United Nations, the European Union, and other bilateral donors. The organization has a long-term framework agreement with Danida and a framework partnership agreement with the Humanitarian Aid Office of the European Commission.
DANCHURCHAID DCA
Mr. Henrik Stubkjaer, Secretary General Norregade 15 1165 Copenhagen K DENMARK TEL: (45) 33 15 28 00 FAX: (45) 33 18 78 26 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.danchurchaid.org Mobilizes popular and political support and influences decision makers at local, national, and global levels to improve conditions for the world's poorest people. Internationally, DCA focuses on five program areas: right to food, political space, HIV/AIDS, humanitarian assistance, and mine action. The organization is
employment. ReachUp!, the organization's signature entrepreneurship program, is delivered in a cost-effective manner by recent university and college graduates and integrates ICT and life and workforce skills to provide participants with the tools and capabilities they need to build successful, sustainable livelihoods. DOT's core education program, TeachUp!, seeks to improve learning outcomes by training college graduates to support teachers and administrators as they integrate technology into the classroom.
HIV/AIDS prevention services, medical assistance and, in Malawi and Zambia, agricultural training and inputs to increase food security. The organization also helps in times of crisis, providing support after earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, and other catastrophic emergencies. Global Concern is a Christian faith-based organization, and its programs are open to all people, without regard to religion, race, caste, or gender.
belongs to the international Action Contre La Faim network, created by a group of journalists and intellectuals in Paris in 1979 and comprising ACF USA, ACF UK, ACF Canada, and ACF France. ACH relies on the skills of more than 900 professionals, including specialists in the fields of nutrition, agriculture, water and sanitation, and public health, to develop programs that are adapted to the needs of the people it serves. ACH's prime objectives are to assist the world's most vulnerable people and to sensitize people in industrialized countries about the scale of hunger in the world. The organization's ultimate goal is to enable needy people to regain autonomy and self-sufficiency as quickly as possible.
humanitarian agency, has responded to nearly every major natural and manmade disaster. The organization is currently operational in Africa, Asia, and Central America. Working on an administration cost base of less than 5 percent, GOAL is involved in relief, rehabilitation, and development programs covering a wide spectrum of activities, including primary health care, HIV/AIDS, nutrition, water and sanitation, shelter, education, and the rehabilitation of street children. GOAL is nondenominational, nongovernmental, and nonpolitical.
GOAL
Mr. John O'Shea, CEO 12 Cumberland Street P.O. Box 19 Dun Laoghaire, Co. Dublin IRELAND TEL: (353-1) 2809779 FAX: (353-1) 2809215 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.goal.ie Alleviates the suffering of the poorest of the poor. Since its inception in 1977, GOAL, an international
HANDICAP INTERNATIONAL HI
Mr. Jean-Marc Boivin, Executive Director 14, avenue Berthelot 69361 Lyon Cedex 07 FRANCE TEL: (33-4) 78 69 79 79 FAX: (33-4) 26 68 75 25 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.handicap-international.org Works throughout the worldin 63 countrieswith disabled people, vulnerable groups, and populations affected by poverty, conflicts, or natural disasters. HI intervenes in emergency contexts requiring the immediate mobilization of resources and in longer-term development and reconstruction contexts, aiming to ensure access to health care, education, employment, leisure activities, and a role in the community for all, without discrimination. In addition, HI is active in demining, mine-awareness education programs, and advocacy campaigns.
community for all. In addition, HI Federation is active in demining efforts, mine-awareness education programs, and advocacy campaigns.
and shelter. The organization also focuses on reconstruction and livelihoods, linking stakeholder participation, agricultural improvements, and capacity building to these efforts. HELP promotes gender equality throughout its programming, and all initiatives encourage close cooperation between local partners, nongovernmental organizations, and individuals familiar with local conditions, culture, and needs.
nongovernmental organization (NGO) that advocates for rights-based policies and durable solutions directly and through a worldwide network of member Bishops' Conferences and alongside government and NGO partners. Program activities include reintegration assistance for refugees and returnees; refugee resettlement and cultural orientation; special assistance to unaccompanied minors, the elderly, the disabled, and other vulnerable displaced people; counter trafficking and rescue; gender-based violence prevention; emergency response and disaster risk reduction programs; capacity building for local NGOs; government-institution building; and advocacy.
ways. Currently, Interpeace has programs in Africa, Central America, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia.
Promotes rainwater harvesting as a means for climate change adaptation and as a water resource. Working within the Integrated Water Resources Management framework, IRHA promotes the management of rainwater as a precious resource, implementing and facilitating projects and programs to bring about synergies between rainwater harvesting managers and other partners. IRHA also works at all levels in the area of public advocacy, promoting the inclusion of rainwater harvesting in development and climate change adaptation programs.
providing nutritious meals daily to more than 552,000 children in five countries at preschools, schools, orphanages, malnutrition clinics, and hospitals. The organization cares for orphans and vulnerable children and supports HIV/AIDS education, agricultural development programming, and other relief and economic development activities. In addition, JAM drills boreholes to provide clean water for communities, manages a fleet of trucks and aircraft to transport assistance, and operates several processing facilities that use locally resourced commodities to produce nutritious food products. JAM partners with local communitybased organizations and government to accomplish its goals.
capacity building, cross-border communication, and ongoing assistance. The organization supports a worldwide strategic approach to sustainable development by developing innovative and effective programs that address the root causes of poverty, involving local residents in community building and empowering vulnerable populations through advocacy at local, national, and international levels.
sanitation, reconstruction, rehabilitation, and household and food security and help affected communities reestablish and sustain their ways of life. Medair assists in situations that are often complex in nature, such as those arising from armed conflict or natural disaster. The organization strengthens local capacities by employing and training local staff, purchasing local materials, and involving the communities it serves in the design, management, and implementation of programs. Since 2001, Medair has maintained the International Organization for Standardization's 9001 certification for quality management.
MEDAIR
Mr. James Ingram, CEO Chemin du Croset 9 1024 Ecublens SWITZERLAND TEL: (41-21) 694 35 35 FAX: (41-21) 694 35 40 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.medair.org Provides emergency relief and rehabilitation to people and communities, often in forgotten or remote areas hit by crisis. Medair's relief efforts focus on health, water,
projects directly and works with and through local and international partners to enhance the relevance, impact, and sustainability of its programs. Founded in 1991 and headquartered in Denmark, Mission East's Christian basis is worked out through "values in action," which include honesty, integrity, compassion, valuing the individual, and respect for all people.
combat political oppression and unequal distribution of resources. NPA also focuses on mine action, including the clearance of landmines, cluster munitions, and other explosive remnants of war and political activity to increase support for implementation of the AntiPersonnel Mine Ban Treaty and the Convention on Cluster Munitions. The organization systematically emphasizes environment, gender, and HIV/AIDS as cross-cutting issues throughout all of its programs. NPA is guided by values of national and international solidarity, human dignity, freedom, and equality and has ongoing programs in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America.
founded by the nongovernmental organization (NGO) sector and now consists of a network of over 180 NGOs in 40 countries. The organization bases its work around the Principles of the People In Aid Code of Good Practice, the NGO sector's accepted quality standard for improving people management and human resources practice. People In Aid conducts research, produces template policies, organizes learning events, facilitates online learning and peer exchange, and more. People In Aid recognizes the commitment of NGOs to improved practice through an objective certification process. Among the largest of the sector's transnational membership organizations, People In Aid works internationally and its Board of Trustees includes staff from Oxfam, World Vision International, and the British Red Cross.
PEOPLE IN AID
Mr. Jonathan Potter, Executive Director The Resource Centre 356 Holloway Road London N7 6PA UNITED KINGDOM TEL: (44-203) 095 3950 FAX: (44-307) 697 9580 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.peopleinaid.org Advocates, supports, and recognizes good practice in the management of people in the humanitarian and development sector worldwide. People In Aid was
POWER INTERNATIONAL formerly Prosthetic and Orthotic Worldwide Education & Relief
Ms. Sarah Hodge, CEO 85 Basepoint, Cressex Business Park, Lincoln Road High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire HP12 3RL UNITED KINGDOM TEL: (44-149) 461 4604 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.powerinternational.org Empowers disabled people in developing countries and their representative organizations through training in disability rights and awareness, self-awareness, and financial and management techniques coupled with microfinance initiatives. POWER International's work strengthens the capacity of self-help groups that represent disabled people to manage services costeffectively. The organization's aims are to ensure equality of opportunity, to put into place appropriate legislation where none exists, and to see that existing legislation that protects the disabled community is enforced. POWER International has ongoing capacitybuilding and awareness-raising programs in the Lao PDR, Mozambique, and Zambia and start-up programs in Malawi and Zimbabwe.
institutional systems for innovation and use of technology. Practical Action works directly in four regions of the developing world: East Africa, southern Africa, Latin America, and South Asia, with particular concentration on the countries of Bangladesh, Kenya, Nepal, Peru, Sri Lanka, Sudan, and Zimbabwe. Practical Action's U.K. office operates development awareness, knowledge-sharing, and advocacy programs and engages in publishing and consultancy activities.
QUESTSCOPE
Dr. Curtis Rhodes, Jr., International Director Tenison House 45 Tweedy Road Bromley, Kent BR1 3NF UNITED KINGDOM TEL: (96-26) 461 8951 FAX: (96-26) 461 8952 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.questscope.org Transforms the future of vulnerable youth in the Middle East by equipping them with the resources and hope they need to become compassionate and productive citizens. Questscope focuses on "putting the last, first" by providing dropouts, street kids, vulnerable women, and others with a second chance for a better life. Over the past two decades, Questscope has developed welltested methods that work in Middle East communities.
PREMIERE URGENCE
Mr. Thierry Mauricet, Managing Director 9 bis, rue Georges 92250 La Garenne-Colombes Paris FRANCE TEL: (33-1) 55 66 99 66 FAX: (33-1) 55 66 99 60 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.premiere-urgence.org Provides humanitarian assistance to the most vulnerable populations affected by natural and manmade disasters. Premiere Urgence delivers essential relief aidincluding food items, nonfood items, and sheltersto disaster zones quickly, cost-effectively, and with the strictest application of control and monitoring procedures. In addition to its emergency phase activities, Premiere Urgence's field team implementsafter assessment of the situation with all local actorsprograms in the areas of rehabilitation, medical infrastructure, water and sanitation management, and income generation. The organization has a workforce of 70 expatriates in the field and more than 1,000 local staff members in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.
PRACTICAL ACTION
Mr. Simon Trace, CEO The Schumacher Centre Bourton Hall, Bourton-on-Dunsmore, Rugby Warwickshire CV23 9QZ UNITED KINGDOM TEL: (44-192) 663 4400 FAX: (44-192) 663 4401 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.practicalaction.org Uses technology to challenge poverty. Practical Action works with poor people to build their capabilities, improve their access to technical options and knowledge, and help them influence the social, economic, and
strategic areas: (1) basic education and child development; (2) health promotion and disease prevention; (3) conflict resolution and peace building; and (4) community development and participation.
and greater integration into markets. In 2009, the organization supported more than 50 projects in nine countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Assistance addresses needs for agricultural and marketing advice, irrigation systems, and seed development. In addition, Self Help Africa provides support for agricultural cooperatives, savings and credit cooperatives, and small business and community development initiatives.
more than 1,700 food companies in more than 76 countries worldwide to adopt sustainable practices.
waythrough projects for prevention and treatment of blindness, inclusive education, vocational training, and income generation. The organization works under the conviction that disabled people, who in many countries have fewer options with respect to basic social services and who often belong to the most vulnerable groups, have the right to be included in society. Local partners from eye care providers to community organizations manage the organization's daily program activities. Light for the World is a knowledge broker between policymakers and disabled people, a facilitator and integrator of institution-strengthening efforts, and a funder of projects that generate impact.
STICHTING ZOA
Mr. Johan Mooij, CEO Sleutelbloemstraat 8 7322 AG Apeldoorn NETHERLANDS TEL: (31-55) 366 33 39 FAX: (31-55) 366 87 99 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.zoa-international.com Works in the areas of livelihoods and food security, basic education, and water, sanitation, and hygiene. ZOA also provides relief aid and shelter during emergencies. The organization implements its rehabilitation activities through in-country programs and local partners, and programming addresses cross-cutting issues such as
gender equality, inclusion, and peace building. ZOA is working in Afghanistan, Cambodia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Liberia, Sri Lanka, South Sudan, Sudan, Thailand, and Uganda and actively supports partner organizations in Burma (Myanmar), Burundi, Haiti, and Pakistan with funding and personnel. All of these countries have had to contend with chronic conflicts, the influx of refugees from neighboring countries, or major disasters.
TEARFUND
Mr. David Bainbridge, International Director 100 Church Road Teddington, Middlesex TW11 8QE UNITED KINGDOM TEL: (44-208) 977 9144 FAX: (44-208) 943 3594 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.tearfund.org Relieves poverty, suffering, and distress and prevents disease and ill health. Tearfund, a Christian relief and development agency, works in partnership with nearly 300 civil society organizations in approximately 50 countries in Africa, the Caribbean, Eurasia, and Latin America. In addition, the organization has its own operational disaster management capability in five locations. Tearfund works to eradicate poverty by integrating the approaches of community development, disaster management, advocacy, and enterprise development.
million Swiss francs is supported mainly through private donations from Switzerland and institutional funds from the Swiss Government, the European Union, USAID, and other international organizations.
Improves the well-being of populations in vulnerable regions of developing countries by improving animal health and production. All VSF-Belgium's activities are developed with local partners, in both development and emergency contexts, and community members participate in project management and decision making. Field activities include disease eradication, developing decentralized animal health networks, training schemes, livestock marketing, dairy production, conflict prevention, water development, and other efforts. Programs have a strong capacity-building focus to ensure long-term sustainability. VSF-Belgium welcomes cooperation with public or private organizations and local groups. To increase solidarity, the organization also works to raise Europeans' awareness of international development issues. VSF-Belgium is a founding member of the VSFEuropa network.
growth by providing employment in rural areas, increase health and food security, and facilitate sustainable management of natural resources. VSF-CICDA also advocates for greater justice in the international sphere and includes agriculturalists in its efforts to change policies and practices that breed poverty and injustice.
Supports and strengthens the protective environment for children who, as a result of conflict, live with a combination of insecurity, poverty, and exclusion. WCUK works with street children, child-headed households, children conscripted into armed groups, disabled children, and children in prison as well as with marginalized youths up to the age of 24. The organization focuses on long-term, sustainable, community-based projects and works independently or in partnership with other agencies to provide practical and effective resolutions. WCUK has funded a host of nongovernmental organizations and projects around the world. WCUK was founded in response to the plight of children caught in the conflict in the former Yugoslavia, and the organization looks forward to a world in which the lives of children are no longer torn apart by war.
communities and organizations. By incorporating participatory methodologies and building the capacity of local partners, WCC is able to ensure the delivery of appropriate, sustainable, and effective development projects.
institution strengthening. With more than three decades of experience in international development, WUSC is recognized as one of Canada's leading NGOs in the design, implementation, and management of education, capacity-building, and development projects. WUSC is unique among Canadian development organizations because of its ability to link Canada's universities and colleges with overseas development and capacity-building activities. Reaching across Canada, WUSC's network includes more than 50 post-secondary institutions, 80 local committees (campus-based groups), and individual alumni to connect members and leaders to development initiatives.
INTERNATIONAL
PRIVATE VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS
44% 51% 5%
Financial data was provided by USAID-registered organizations.
81%
USAID Support
Other Support
Agency Action Contre La Faim ActionAid International Agence d'Aide la Coopration Technique Et au Dveloppement Association for Aid and Relief, Japan The Association of International Aid Services ASVI Foundation Britain-Nepal Medical Trust Canadian Executive Service Organization Canadian Physicians for Aid and Relief Caritas Switzerland Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Caucasus Nature Fund Centre Canadien d'tude et de Coopration Internationale ChildsLife International, Stichting Christian Aid Christian Outreach Comitato Internazionale Per Lo Sviluppo Dei Popoli Concern Universal Cooperazione e Sviluppo Cooperazione Internazionale DanChurchAid Danish Refugee Council Deutsche Welthungerhilfe e.V. Digital Opportunity Trust Dorcas Aid International The Evangelical Alliance Relief Fund Every Home Global Concern, Ltd. Fondation Hirondelle Media for Peace and Human Dignity Food and Agricultural Research Management Limited The Foundation for the Refugee Education Trust Fundacin Accin contra el Hambre Gender and Water Alliance Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition GOAL Groupe de Recherch et d'Echanges Technologiques Handicap International Handicap International Federation The Hazardous Area Life-Support Organization Trust Health Limited
USAID Contracts
Foreign Government 44,189,565 66,490,000 25,277,556 4,117 145,895 7,189,801 724,103 967,665 8,519,582 2,859,000
Host Government 4,758,440 16,301,000 34,424,786 2,758,158 2,837,863 7,638,070 6,071,428 25,709 22,323,865 11,693,000 17,221,198
2,697,447
450,158 2,264,258 315,000 13,037,121 3,014,878 2,550,000 1,272,608 220,042 474,048 1,752,180 740,569 5,258,769 4,215,619 6,693,000 2,364,739 8,123,558 4,040,386 17,739,985 37,441,055 24,344,456 61,428,398 89,387,742 26,531 220,446 44,018 7,498,000 724,179 31,270,751 277,719 1,117,030 19,409,975 9,636,747 33,570,086 33,570,086 893,000 3,073,483
19,831,000 362,662 4,628,689 11,066,137 62,891 1,320,892 63,127,821 3,871,535 151,852 1,759,643 7,040,557 2,892,535 4,739,229 1,022,162 2,607,052 15,745,388 1,334,917 18,788,601 19,787,542 21,529,000 2,941,134
19,142,000 294,162 4,429,114 1,364,799 5,656,818 2,145,357 38,379,608 5,085,557 73,538,971 939,411 647,167 264,634 585,874 1,705,000 15,536,692
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 136,577,001 307,008,000 137,912,854 7,862,739 5,121,563 45,743,292 857,812 10,306,224 3,274,432 101,747,091 77,998,000 798,023 37,270,129 4,533,007 157,642,000 5,495,031 25,665,563 19,661,892 34,198,474 46,497,577 93,697,587 204,784,606 274,528,515 4,362,291 21,905,413 9,611,847 1,746,579 8,677,684 12,799,008 5,649,929 60,211,929 1,315,162 27,937,746 97,554,611 25,771,551 108,477,787 108,477,787 33,646,000 8,363,021
Expenses Administrative and Management 3,964,074 52,621,000 6,138,448 392,871 1,588,053 4,750,663 50,513 788,486 348,516 4,558,023 625,000 217,391 4,018,916 66,340 1,195,000 77,489 1,280,025 56,475 1,345,803 3,628,700 10,471,474 17,719,857 18,720,280 252,481 278,556 1,467,935 345,165 837,290 207,000 887,527 5,395,566 323,157 4,402,548 3,365,140 7,770,990 10,154,356 10,154,356 863,000 70,311
In-Kind Contributions
Private Contributions 6,774,528 186,649,000 6,429,583 3,638,827 1,101,255 24,169,160 97,687 113,246 1,617,691 59,321,872 61,856,000 290,161 3,182,161 1,035,836 101,555,000 1,167,967 8,242,176 230,308 10,738,780 3,838,093 29,951,898 8,230,397 97,579,064 3,255,115 13,821,491 7,631,958 1,248,152 600,224 3,537,000 214 6,245,486 7,340 22,581,364 17,369,950 186,014 9,767,434 9,767,434 2,519,000 3,322,479
Private Revenue 67,725,985 14,932,000 1,529,439 577,422 973,370 36,022 961,646 213,209 9,317,514 927,000 507,862 108,669 7,871,000 32,893 21,984 2,486,214
International Programs 110,337,076 198,742,000 129,977,386 4,756,017 4,015,678 40,156,157 1,141,553 6,940,009 2,385,693 59,111,420 54,774,000 474,158 32,736,996 4,396,285 91,420,000 4,752,325 23,652,741 15,928,456 28,925,540 42,240,905 73,166,927 176,069,957 209,446,372 3,832,685 20,671,620 6,860,729 1,121,665 7,835,306 10,209,000 4,709,219 52,088,470 647,887 23,828,865 86,394,871 17,938,568 90,065,548 90,065,548 31,239,000 9,624,619
Domestic Programs
Fund Raising 13,036,919 44,751,000 833,074 181,000 548,792 30,670 851,070 4,080,161 9,481,000 144,968 233,143 378,782 23,257,000 346,745 50,924 755,084 2,481,249 625,757 10,488,665 3,097,484 7,123,721 15,946 484,518 42,567 1,296,000 2,466,699
Total Expenses 127,338,069 296,114,000 136,948,908 6,014,510 5,603,731 45,710,421 1,222,736 10,678,677 3,614,944 99,786,448 74,469,000 836,517 37,167,479 4,841,407 144,441,000 5,176,559 25,665,563 16,740,015 34,554,792 46,495,362 94,127,066 196,887,298 236,259,968 4,101,112 21,555,380 9,268,370 1,651,488 8,672,596 11,712,000 5,596,746 59,950,735 971,044 28,231,413 91,036,098 25,709,558 103,350,166 103,350,166 32,102,000 10,247,075
469,540
684,622 254,809 2,950,182 29,665 32,036,844 9,589,000 178,424 28,569,000 681,873 1,802,200
3,159,904
7,257,631
59,000
281,056 61,653,664 5,935,584 167,765 741 220,246 13,347 205,919 8 2,014,937 7,941 632,300 1,824,717 7,070,077 41,657,847 41,657,847 259,000 -2,196,049
1,643,275 1,643,275
USAID Support
Other Support
Agency HELP - Hilfe zur Selbsthilfe e.V. HelpAge International International Alert International Catholic Migration Commission International Peacebuilding Alliance International Planned Parenthood Federation International Rainwater Harvesting Alliance International Society for Prosthetics and Orthotics International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease Istituto per la Cooperazione Universitaria - ONLUS Joint Aid Management Kindernothilfe e.V. KNCV Tuberculosis Foundation LifeLine Network International Malteser Hilfsdienst e.V. Marie Stopes International Medair Mdecins du Monde Medical Emergency Relief International Mission st Motivation Charitable Trust Norwegian Church Aid Norwegian People's Aid PAI - Partner Aid International e.V. Peace Winds Japan People in Need POWER International Practical Action Premiere Urgence Questscope Right To Play International Save the Children Fund, United Kingdom Self Help Africa Socit de Coopration Pour Le Dveloppement International Stichting Center for Democracy and Reconciliation in SouthEast Europe Stichting Fairfood International Stichting Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflict Stichting Light for the World Nederland Stichting Press Now
USAID Grants
USAID Contracts
Host Government 25,767,380 2,917,000 2,891,465 670,486 15,946,000 99,601 1,441,760 3,053,398 2,760,101
203,946 2,348,216
186,744 12,310,101 580,300 363,614 27,530,840 184,689 17,142,727 7,700,799 984,020 410,035 639,139 1 1,269,195 6,585,175 15,364,636 4,658,000 10,477,681 37,426,626 129,392 704,290 23,957,000 6,921,382 2,373,279 1,589,654 640,063 995,103 8,829,980 43,379,213 1,128,094 155,874 32,306,735 2,724,911 164,824 31,396 2,418,573 12,597,000 7,189,027 29,396,428 7,288,072 3,566,557
9,412,583 4,999,000 1,929,393 2,134,626 16,565,400 3,249,029 79,448,000 67,559,000 653,542 5,832,258 3,863,072 5,668,005 408,713 1 3,720,879 8,415,392
18,588,432
8,006,832 13,793,781 410,697 140,968 10,194,856 157,037,122 67,437 739,886 219,210 104,120 621,829 422,880
66,499,281
1,335,946
40,191
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 34,238,732 34,259,000 15,234,873 21,775,000 23,244,194 124,201,000 392,359 887,885 61,841,975 6,410,908 30,217,284 100,887,006 38,506,639 286,881 71,340,946 200,907,000 42,080,378 92,622,339 92,063,585 8,429,741 4,420,262 139,574,000 133,951,101 3,142,544 7,278,420 27,062,884 1,294,411 34,005,200 58,819,823 3,612,823 28,777,502 464,106,177 9,396,195 11,408,831 380,666 3,482,407 2,953,832 6,726,191 6,665,722
Expenses Administrative and Management 618,664 355,000 3,206,151 3,100,000 2,368,655 9,883,000 35,674 331,493 6,579,963 72,768 1,361,204 4,425,673 1,533,730 34,800 1,702,122 865,000 3,640,528 4,908,566 375,122 1,210,524 472,987 9,674,000 4,083,000 237,612 1,341,765 889,733 156,934 491,341 3,357,828 454,207 1,989,355 27,721,047 408,818 1,392,787 68,511 519,567 127,911 125,782 336,552
In-Kind Contributions
Private Contributions 5,669,249 32,000 735,435 9,290,000 323,072 4,452,000 286,045 243,804 11,865,707 1,013,117 12,065,984 93,558,327 3,783,306 286,421 20,006,772 53,197,000 10,295,383 55,927,207 19,484,644 1,484,763 1,109,840 30,375,000 2,219,000 745,368 3,594,449 8,836,107 108,794 5,432,398 2,064,377 907,589 17,589,490 168,940,679 2,882,968 1,098,104 63,652 2,931,038 60,134 4,517,483 1,330,207
International Programs 31,949,617 25,105,000 14,592,293 18,679,000 20,376,034 114,180,000 191,276 460,178 54,732,549 5,565,393 25,797,763 61,390,339 26,584,501 244,687 31,913,151 113,998,000 34,899,316 59,661,330 88,819,508 7,075,165 2,686,738 108,522,000 97,534,000 2,718,981 4,757,497 17,670,870 663,518 27,833,000 55,574,332 3,117,617 17,759,626 358,376,029 7,779,330 9,585,597 338,683 2,268,962 1,644,286 6,785,761 6,380,338
Total Expenses 33,319,504 31,434,000 17,990,752 21,779,000 22,991,466 126,760,000 241,766 791,671 61,327,660 5,638,161 27,910,687 74,669,068 37,356,164 280,341 69,218,768 194,854,000 39,845,043 88,406,786 92,669,113 8,522,490 4,370,581 129,537,000 134,679,000 2,979,028 7,808,584 27,005,660 912,622 33,584,400 59,140,099 3,701,823 28,396,044 424,270,818 10,421,470 11,161,998 409,529 3,085,893 2,923,398 7,393,193 6,844,998
215,200 1,351,140
231,000 12,961 4,216,000 6,713 242,137 27,699,780 9,232 18,238 2,935,769 607,318 460 23,592,028 124,598,000 483,994 3,962,483 14,622 1,542,906 5,794,000 17,979,000 23,897 1,400,730 2,985,472 190,514 1,638,305 287,217 218,772 12,790,901 247,272 26,217 7,114 43,876 200,473
14,816
15,148 751,720 6,211,441 799,713 474,144 221,000 1,305,199 13,958,222 3,474,483 236,801 1,210,856 4,531,000 5,256,000 22,435 800,533 259,147 92,170 3,588,596 207,939 129,999 3,091,189 38,173,741 493,924 2,335 210,688 63,956 481,650 128,108
USAID Support
Other Support
Agency Stichting Reformatorishe Hulpaktie Woord en Daad Stichting ZOA Swisscontact, Swiss Foundation for Technical Cooperation Tearfund Terre des Hommes Foundation Triangle Gnration Humanitaire Vtrinaires Sans Frontires - Belgium Vtrinaires Sans Frontires - Centre International Vtrinaires Sans Frontires - Germany Vtrinaires Sans Frontires - Switzerland War Child War Child Canada Windle Trust International Women for Water Partnership World University Service of Canada Y Care International Youth Challenge International GRAND TOTAL
USAID Contracts
International Agencies 7,275,657 12,559,000 12,015,000 23,363,513 10,769,247 3,549,004 8,894,552 1,262,624 1,607,487 1,308,212 2,798,544 197,727 15,042 2,157,280
Foreign Government 1,221,421 1,016,124 6,000,037 16,690,000 558,035 207,338 1,028,120 4,188,695 1,568,785 248,393 284,379 904,146 10,819,408 640,837 503,952 785,927,667
Host Government 7,910,570 13,872,049 21,089,000 5,876,000 8,891,336 1,545,726 4,603,090 3,854,935 960,858 1,399,673 763,359 12,061,814 174,775 701,424,515
5,355 6,273
213,952,619
25,229,681
58,873,153
827,732,043
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 49,258,673 38,108,829 47,985,000 98,368,000 64,859,822 16,041,453 11,505,317 19,503,779 6,413,163 5,781,325 4,493,249 7,416,230 4,043,049 978,293 29,181,669 5,905,841 1,851,394 4,634,271,559
Expenses Administrative and Management 1,027,583 1,467,492 -37,000 5,719,000 3,778,981 850,945 822,045 1,087,110 392,853 913,227 42,945 391,580 254,584 142,054 2,454,618 1,057,357 553,861 302,776,384
In-Kind Contributions
Private Contributions 31,907,543 15,153,450 6,386,000 52,021,000 31,679,902 1,306,329 1,721,984 3,307,155 961,844 923,120 2,936,158 1,980,062 2,941,176 24,554 1,137,186 5,088,073 484,636 1,438,438,430
International Programs 42,248,684 30,543,318 48,105,000 77,219,000 52,740,270 14,790,167 10,070,888 16,461,978 5,762,623 5,859,187 3,344,827 5,560,881 2,935,199 657,126 11,450,985 2,791,734 1,513,504 3,572,948,887
Fund Raising 1,519,561 1,721,838 797,000 7,548,000 5,001,175 31,050 576,818 447,017 32,286 57,755 659,450 194,515 46,111 22,280 92,933 879,016 241,613,394
Total Expenses 46,552,822 35,462,604 48,865,000 90,486,000 64,160,363 15,672,162 11,469,751 18,755,920 6,187,762 6,830,169 4,452,978 7,455,296 4,065,352 975,495 29,164,531 5,260,952 2,106,616 4,420,756,768
2,639,937
1,301,579
759,815
486
UNITED STATES
COOPERATIVE DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS
REGISTRY CDOs as part of the larger PVO community will be listed in the U.S. PVO Registry. In order to be listed in the Registry as a CDO, the CDO must comply with the annual documentation requirements in the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 22, Part 203. The following CDOs are included in the U.S. PVO Registry.
ACDI/VOCA
Mr. Carl Leonard, President and CEO 50 F Street NW, Suite 1075 Washington, DC 20001 TEL: (202) 469-6200 FAX: (202) 469-6257 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.acdivoca.org Fosters broad-based economic growth, raises living standards, and creates vibrant communities. ACDI/VOCA's technical and management assistance enables organizationswhether enterprises, financial institutions, or cooperativesto manage and finance themselves and succeed in the global economy. Areas of expertise include food security, agribusiness, enterprise development, financial services, and community development. Long known for its work in the areas of agricultural development and food security, ACDI/VOCA has gained prominence for value chain approaches to enterprise development and poverty reduction, establishment of sustainable financial institutions, and participatory community strengthening, especially in conflict-affected areas. ACDI/VOCA implements 98 projects in 40 countries on behalf of public, private, and multilateral funders.
development assistance that promotes local economic development and fosters grassroots community participation. Using businesslike approaches and democratic principles, CHF helps bolster the capacity of microenterprises, governments, cooperatives, and nongovernmental organizations to tackle social, environmental, and infrastructural issues on their own, while strengthening community participation and cohesion. CHF applies these principles effectively in many contexts, such as post-conflict emergency recovery and reconstruction, natural disaster response, mitigation of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and focused assistance for low-income artisans.
ICMIF/AMERICAS
Mr. Edward Potter, Executive Director 8400 Westpark Drive, 2nd Floor McLean, VA 22102-5116 TEL: (703) 245-8077 FAX: (703) 610-0211 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.icmifamericas.org Provides support and assistance to member-owned cooperative and mutual insurance companies that provide risk-mitigation and financial protection services to underserved low-income populations in Latin America and the Caribbean. By forming cooperative and mutual insurance companies through credit unions, cooperatives, labor unions, and farmers groups, ICMIF/Americas members create a sustainable and highly effective way to develop appropriate insurance products for the personal and business risks of low-income people.
CHF INTERNATIONAL
Mr. David A. Weiss, CEO 8601 Georgia Avenue, Suite 800 Silver Spring, MD 20910 TEL: (301) 587-4700 FAX: (301) 587-7315 EMAIL: [email protected] WEB: www.chfinternational.org Stimulates long-lasting positive change in low- and moderate-income communities around the world, helping them to improve their social, economic, and environmental conditions. Using a participatory, demand-driven approach, CHF International has worked in 115 countries since 1952, providing innovative
technologies, develops low-cost design adaptations, and uses renewable energy resources where appropriate. Other services NRECA provides include developing national rural electrification plans and training local electric utility employees in electric utility management, accounting, engineering, operations, and maintenance. NRECA maintains offices in 6 countries and currently has projects in 14 countries. Domestic NRECA member cooperatives generate, transmit, and distribute electricity to more than 42 million consumers in the United States.
UNITED STATES
COOPERATIVE DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS
51%
Other Other USG Grants 4,977,637 7,877,098 860,994 3,897,114 2,019,222 19,632,065
Agency ACDI/VOCA CHF International ICMIF/Americas National Cooperative Business Association National Rural Electric Cooperative Association World Council of Credit Unions, Inc. GRAND TOTAL
5,402,282
1,755,157 9,345,005
Support Other USG Contracts Other Government & International Organizations 15,046,576 14,350,494 1,475,169 371,767 7,728,130 38,972,136
Private Support Total Support and Revenue 140,961,346 226,751,869 1,201,582 23,243,880 178,173,046 38,332,768 608,664,491
Expenses Administrative and Management 19,675,974 18,706,879 249,236 1,255,868 3,980,187 140,504,992 17,673,436 849,946 141,760,860 61,135,658
In-Kind Private Contributions Contributions 579,795 482,982 1,190,618 1,893,588 378,284 50,000 1,735,682 548,619 6,656,651 2,148,697 11,367,522
Domestic Programs
3,758,029
ON FRONT COVER A worker surveys a USAID-funded housing site near the Caracol Industrial Park in northern Haiti on Nov. 10, 2011. USAID Photo by Kendra Helmer, 2011.
ON BACK COVER This photo tied for second place in the USAID/FrontLines 50th anniversary photo contest. Local community members from outside of Dalanzadgad, Mongolia, often travel into town to join in USAIDs entrepreneurial activities, including craft and furniture production, which results in skills building and economic strengthening. Camels are the preferred mode of travel into the local villages because they are able to carry many items, helping to ease the travel burden into Dalanzadgad. USAID Photo by James Orlando, 2007.
Registration does not refer to programmatic capability, nor does it confer any official status or approval. It is not the purpose of registration to make, or enable to be made, any representation to the public concerning the meaning of being registered. Registration may be terminated by USAID if registrant uses promotional material or advertisements suggesting USAIDs endorsement.
U.S. Agency for International Development 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20523 Tel: (202) 712-0000 Fax: (202) 216-3524 www.usaid.gov