Search form

Number of partners: 947

  • AIDRom

    AIDRom

    AIDRom

    AIDRom's mission reflects the organization’s “ethos”: “convening churches and civil society for a common response to social problems in Romanian society.” Guided by AIDRom's mission statement, the objectives follow the Paths for Inter-Christian and Interreligious Dialogue, laying a solid foundation for our interfaith conferences and consultations, for ecumenical prayer, and for the formation of young laypeople and future priests.
  • DLA Piper Hungary

    DLA Piper Hungary

    DLA Piper

    DLA Piper is a global law firm that gives free advice to nonprofits, UN agencies, intergovernmental organizations and social enterprises. The company supports social and economic development, sound legal institutions and women's advancement in under-resourced regions.
  • Development for Peace Organization

    Development for Peace Organization

    DPO

    Development For Peace Organization (DPO) is an Ethiopian National Organization, established in Addis Ababa in 2020, and the organization is officially registered in accordance with legislation on the Agency for Civil Society Organizations by the registration number 5164. Our organization is legally registered to work in Ethiopia as a National NGO (Reg. 5164) and as an INGO in South Sudan (Reg. 4178), Somalia (Reg. NGOD/Moifar0422/022), and Kenya (OP.218/051/22-400/12732). It is also under registration process in Sudan, Yemen, and Rwanda. The organization is officially registered with a mission to strive to meet the humanitarian and developmental needs of societies regardless of race, color, religion, or cultural background.
  • Hungarian Civil Liberties Union

    Hungarian Civil Liberties Union

    HCLU

    The Hungarian Civil Liberties Union (HCLU, Hungarian: Társaság a Szabadságjogokért, abbreviated TASZ) is a Hungarian human rights NGO. Since its foundation in 1994, it has been working for everybody being informed about their fundamental human rights and empowered to enforce it against the undue interference by those in position of public power.
  • ACAPS

    ACAPS

    ACAPS

    ACAPS enables crisis responders to better understand and thereby better address the world's disasters.
  • Dan Church Aid

    Dan Church Aid

    DCA

    DCA works with climate action from Copenhagen to Harare, from Kathmandu to Bamako, and from forests and villages to conference halls and government offices. Every day we see how climate change and environmental damage are getting worse, and how it’s the most vulnerable people who suffer the most. These interconnected challenges are not just future threats, they are already disrupting lives, livelihoods, and ecosystems in the communities we serve.
  • Good Neighbors Tanzania

    Good Neighbors Tanzania

    GNTZ

    Good Neighbors exists to make the world a place without hunger, where people live together in harmony. Good Neighbors respects the human rights of our neighbors suffering from poverty, disasters and oppression, and helps them to achieve self-reliance and enable them to rebuild hope. Good Neighbors International (GNI) was founded in Korea in 1991 and operates in 51 countries across Africa, Asia, and Latin America. As the first North-East Asian NGO in General Consultative status with the United Nations Economics and Social Council (UN ECOSOC), GNI has a long history of partnership with UN agencies, among all WFP, UNHCR, UNDP, UNESCO, UNICEF, UNCDF, UNOPS, UNFPA, and IOM. GNI is the largest NGO partner of the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) in terms of funding and operation. Good Neighbors Tanzania (GNTZ) opened its office in 2005 with NGO approval from Tanzania central government to carry out community development projects, including education, water and sanitation, health, income generation, advocacy, and humanitarian assistance for children and local residents. Since 2005, GNTZ has implemented socio-economic development projects in Dar es Salaam, Pwani, Mwanza, Shinyanga, Dodoma, Songwe, Mbeya, Unguja, Pemba, and Kigoma providing comprehensive support through an inclusive and participative process denominated Community Development Programs (CDPs). GNTZ has worked closely with local stakeholders, including local governments, vendors, and community leaders, and is an implementing partner of WFP, UNHCR, UNESCO, KOICA, and UNCDF. Currently, GNTZ operates in 6 regions and Zanzibar, employing 11 Community Development Projects (CDPs) through 6 Project-based sub-offices (Dar Es Salam (Head Office), Dodoma, Kigoma, Mwanza, Songwe, and Zanzibar).