Areas of expertise & Fields of activity:
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Economic and Social:
Agriculture
Business and Industry
Children
Climate Change
Coorporate Accountability
Crime Prevention
Culture
Development
Disabled Persons
Drug Control
Economics and Finance
Education
Environment
Extreme poverty
Food
HIV/AIDS
Trade and Development
Values
Violence
Water
Women
Women/gender Equality
Youth
Financing for Development:
Addressing systemic issues
Increasing financial and technical cooperation for development
International Cooperation in Tax Matters
International Trade as an engine for development
Mobilizing domestic financial resources for development
Mobilizing international resources for development
Gender Issues and Advancement of Women:
Advocacy and outreach
Capacity building
Education and training of women
Human rights of women
Indigenous women
Information and communication technologies
Institutional mechanisms for the advancement of women
Men and boys
Millennium Development Goals
Policy advice
Research
Service provision
The girl child
Trafficking in women and girls
Violence against women
Women and HIV/AIDS
Women and armed conflict
Women and poverty
Women and the economy
Women and the environment
Women and the media
Women in power and decision-making
Population:
Reproduction, family formation and the status of women
Public Administration:
Ethics, Transparency and Accountability
Governance and Public Administration
Knowledge Systems and E-government
Public Financial Management
Public Service and Management Innovation
Socio-Economic Governance and Management
Social Development:
Conflict
Cooperative
Disabled persons
Employment
Indigenous issues
Poverty
Social policy
Technical cooperation
Youth
Sustainable Development:
Agriculture
Capacity-building
Climate change
Consumption and production patterns
Desertification and Drought
Disaster management and vulnerability
Education
Energy
Finance
Forests
Freshwater
Gender equality
Health
Human settlements
Industrial development
Information for decision-making and participation
International cooperation for an enabling environment
International law
Land management
Major Groups
Means of Implementation (Trade, Finance, Technology, Tranfer, etc.)
Partnerships
Poverty
Protecting and managing the natural resources
Rural Development
Sanitation
Science
Sustainable Tourism
Sustainable development for Africa
Sustainable development in a globalizing world
Sustainable development of SIDS
Technology
Trade and environment
Waste Management
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Geographic scope: |
International
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Country of activity: |
Nigeria
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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: |
2012 |
Organizational structure: |
Structure of HBB
HBB is a charity whose Trustees are legally responsible under the Charities Acts for all the organisation's activities. HBB is also incorporated as a limited company and must comply with the requirements of the Companies Acts. In this note Help Beyond Borders refers to HBB.
Governance
The Council and the Trustees
HBB's Trustees form Council, which is the governing body of HBB, and meets approximately five times a year. Trustees, who are all unpaid volunteers, are responsible in law for everything HBB does. These responsibilities include:
1. to approve strategy
2. to ensure that HBB abides by its charitable aims and constitution, and operates within the law;
3. to be ultimately accountable for the overall management of HBB;
4. to ensure that income and assets are used to help HBB's beneficiaries, and that its finances are properly and effectively managed and monitored;
5. to set policy and objectives, and to ensure the monitoring of their implementation and evaluation of the results;
6. to preserve HBB's good name and reputation.
There are between 10 and 15 members of Council. Trustees currently serve on Council for three years with the possibility of a second consecutive term of up to five years. This can be extended if a trustee is appointed Chair, Vice Chair, or Treasurer within their existing terms.
The Association
As a company, HBB has members. The membership is called Association.
The Association can have up to 32 members. It is made up of all the current Trustees, plus around 20 other members. The Association has powers to remove and replace Trustees in the event of a major failure or default on the part of Council.
Organisation and Management
The Chief Executive of HBB is responsible to Trustees for the management of HBB. Reporting to her are the six Directors of the HBB Divisions as follows.
The International Division is responsible for implementing emergency and development programmes
The Trading Division is responsible for making as much money as possible to overcome poverty and suffering by maximizing the value of the gifts of time, product and money that are given to HBB by its volunteers, donors and customers.
The Fundraising and Supporter Marketing Division is responsible for fundraising from individual and institutional donors together with communications work to raise supporters’ awareness of the issues that HBB faces in its work.
The Campaigns and Policy Division works with others to overcome poverty and suffering by promoting lasting change in policy, practice, ideas, beliefs and behaviour. The division has a strong focus on addressing gender inequality.
The Finance and Information Systems Division is responsible for organisation-wide finance and information systems matters, such as standards, systems and reporting.
The Corporate Human Resources (CHR) Division leads work in Human Resources teams in all Divisions on delivering HBB's HR strategies and organisational development. The division has specific responsibilities for employee relations, compensation and benefits, human resources management information, diversity, and corporate learning and development.
Staff and Volunteers
There are over 150 HBB volunteers in Nigeria, working in various roles throughout the organisation. Approximately 60 staff are employed by HBB in Nigeria, with around 27 staff based at HBB House in Benin City. There are no staff working outside Nigeria in the main time.
HBB International
We’re people who are dedicated to ending all kinds of suffering and hardship worldwide.Our common ground is that we are all humans dealing with similar issues in our lives. we seeks to care for and support each other, provide tools to help each other in any way possible. We make sure to have personal commitment to the people we help by spending time with them and making them feel more appreciated. |
Affiliation with NGO networks: |
Saore Helping Hand Foundation |
Funding structure: |
Product sales and business services
Donations and grants from domestic sources
Foreign and international grants
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