Areas of expertise & Fields of activity:
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Economic and Social:
Aging
Biodiversity
Business and Industry
Citizenship and Governance
Climate Change
Coorporate Accountability
Culture
Development
Disarmament
Economics and Finance
Education
Energy
Environment
Extreme poverty
Financing for Development
Food
Governance
Habitat
Human Rights
Indigenous Peoples
Intellectual Property
Peace and Security
Social Development
Sustainable Development
United Nations Reform
Values
Water
Women
Financing for Development:
Addressing systemic issues
Increasing financial and technical cooperation for development
Mobilizing domestic financial resources for development
Mobilizing international resources for development
Gender Issues and Advancement of Women:
Capacity building
Human rights of women
Institutional mechanisms for the advancement of women
Women and the economy
Women in power and decision-making
Social Development:
Conflict
Cooperative
Employment
Indigenous issues
Information and Communications Technologies
Poverty
Social policy
Technical cooperation
Sustainable Development:
Agriculture
Atmosphere
Biodiversity
Biotechnology
Capacity-building
Climate change
Consumption and production patterns
Education
Energy
Finance
Forests
Freshwater
Gender equality
Health
Human settlements
Indicators
Information for decision-making and participation
Institutional arrangements
Integrated decision-making
International cooperation for an enabling environment
International law
Land management
Major Groups
Marine Resources
Means of Implementation (Trade, Finance, Technology, Tranfer, etc.)
Mountains
Oceans and seas
Partnerships
Poverty
Protecting and managing the natural resources
Rural Development
Sanitation
Sustainable development in a globalizing world
Waste Management
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Geographic scope: |
International
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Millennium Development Goals: |
Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases
Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
Achieve universal primary education
Promote gender equality and empower women
Reduce child mortality
Improve maternal health
Ensure environmental sustainability
Develop global partnership for development
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Mission statement: |
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Year established: |
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Year of registration: |
2010 |
Organizational structure: |
A Board consisting of minimally a Chair, Treasurer and Secretary. From the beginning, we have always also had 2-6 Board Members. Its function is to coordinate the activities and expansion of the Network and to pay its few official bills (web site, registration fees). The All-Win Network (as well as the Commons Cluster of the UN NGO Major Group within which the Stichting All Win Network Foundation plays an active role, are unifying networks of individuals and representatives of organisations whose participants share the same values (the well-being of all people and nature and a commons approach). The networks empower quite diverse participants to achieve much more than they can achieve on their own. With our global mission to create an all-win world, we work with groups on a basis of equality with quite different specialities and financial wherewithal. Each initiative is therefore decided by the relevant participants, using an open, participatory, commons approach and financed to the degree possible in kind, rather than with money. International initiatives are organized using free IT modalities and email lists. Our Instant Response Network summarizes and broadcasts relevant UN meetings that are available via the Internet to enable people worldwide to “think along” with the issues being dealt with at the UN. Participants send their insights to a web page opened for each separate issue and from their input reports are formulated and submitted to relevant Governments when they can be of maximum use (e.g. just before a relevant UN conference.) Since our inception in 2002 we have had the Emma Centrum as a venue for our activities, centrally located in Utrecht, the Netherlands and within easy reach also of Belgium and Germany. |
Number and type of members: |
We are a growing network with some 1300 on our mailing list, many of which represent (ECOSOC accredited organisations) organizations which work together both on ongoing initiatives and on a project basis. These individuals come from Asia, Australia, Europe, the USA, Canada, South American and Africa—mostly from Europe and the USA. All participants come from quite diverse areas of focus, while sharing the all-win approach to life. Their specialities include: sustainable development, including world citizenship, governance structures, sustainable living communities, Human Rights, gender issues, diverse forms of commons and how these contribute to a green economy, biodiversity,material and spiritual development. poverty eradication, alternative funding mechanisms for development, food sovereignty, Ubuntu, peaceful conflict resolution, communicating with Nature, integration of Nature into the SDGs, and much more. The all-win approach to life stresses the integral unity between all that is and focuses on ways in which the well being can be achieved for all—people and nature. |
Affiliation with NGO networks: |
Founded by two ECOSOC accredited NGOs--The Ass. of World Citizens and the Institute for PlanetarySynthesis,,we benefit from the NGO email list, IISD and Stakeholder Forum news bulletins, and various other UN sustainable development platforms |
Funding structure: |
Other sources
Fees for education and training services
Product sales and business services
Funds from other Non-Governmental Organizations
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Funding structure other: |
Voluntary donations. Fees to attend our (educational) events. Mostly participants in our networks help to pay for participation in UN conferences. For rich and poor to collaborate equally we are funded in kind, sometimes through alternative currencies. |