Areas of expertise & Fields of activity:
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Economic and Social:
Aging
Agriculture
Atomic Energy
Biodiversity
Business and Industry
Children
Citizenship and Governance
Climate Change
Coorporate Accountability
Crime Prevention
Criminal Justice
Culture
De-mining
Debt Relief
Decolonization
Development
Disabled Persons
Disarmament
Drug Control
Economics and Finance
Education
Energy
Environment
Extreme poverty
Family
Financing for Development
Food
Governance
HIV/AIDS
Habitat
Human Rights
Humanitarian Affairs
Indigenous Peoples
Industrial Development
Information
Intellectual Property
International Law
International Security
Justice
Labour
Law of the Sea and Antarctica
Least Developed Countries
Media
Micro-Credit
Migration
Minority Rights
New Global Institutions
Outer Space
Peace and Security
Population
Private Sector
Refugees
Religion
Safety
Science and Technology
Social Development
Sports for Peace and Development
Statistics
Sustainable Development
Taxation Policy
Technical Cooperation
Torture
Trade and Development
United Nations Funding
United Nations Reform
Values
Violence
Volunteerism
Water
Women
Women/gender Equality
Youth
Financing for Development:
Addressing systemic issues
External debt
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 health
Women and poverty
Women and the economy
Women and the environment
Women and the media
Women and the media
Women in power and decision-making
Population:
International migration
Morbidity and mortality
Population distribution and internal migration
Population growth
Population structure
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:
Aging
Conflict
Cooperative
Disabled persons
Employment
Indigenous issues
Information and Communications Technologies
Poverty
Social policy
Technical cooperation
Youth
Statistics:
Civil registration systems
Country or region codes
Crime and criminal justice statistics
Demographic and social surveys
Development indicators
Disability Statistics
Environmental Accounts
Geographical names
Household Statistics
Informal Sector Statistics
International Comparison Programme
International Economic and Social Classifications
International migration
Labour and Compensation
Methodological publications in statistics
National accounting
Official statistics, principles and practices
Population and housing censuses
Poverty statistics
Price and Quantity Statistics
Services Statistics
Social Statistics and Social Monitoring
Statistical activities classification
Statistics on international trade in services
Time-use statistics
Sustainable Development:
Agriculture
Atmosphere
Biodiversity
Biotechnology
Capacity-building
Climate change
Consumption and production patterns
Demographics
Desertification and Drought
Disaster management and vulnerability
Education
Energy
Finance
Forests
Freshwater
Gender equality
Health
Human settlements
Indicators
Industrial development
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.)
Mining
Mountains
Oceans and seas
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
Toxic chemicals
Trade and environment
Transport
Waste (hazardous)
Waste (radioactive)
Waste (solid)
Waste Management
Peace and Development in Africa:
Development in Africa
Peace in Africa
Conflict Resolution in Africa:
Conflicts Resolution
NEPAD:
Agriculture and Food Security
Climate Change and Natural Resource Management
Crosscutting issues (Gender and Capacity Development)
Economic and Corporate Governance
Human Development
Regional Integration and Infrastructure
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Geographic scope: |
International
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Country of activity: |
Belgium
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Mali
Nicaragua
Country Not Available
Kiribati
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Uzbekistan
Liechtenstein
Comoros
Somalia
Bolivia (Plurinational State of)
Gabon
Kyrgyzstan
Syrian Arab Republic
India
United Republic of Tanzania
Portugal
Sierra Leone
Saint Lucia
Holy See
Spain
Sudan
Nauru
Liberia
Sao Tome and Principe
Mozambique
Bhutan
Cyprus
Libya
Qatar
San Marino
Uruguay
Ghana
Guinea Bissau
Philippines
Angola
China
Niger
Pakistan
Guyana
Greece
Antigua and Barbuda
Latvia
Gambia
Mexico
Suriname
Benin
Argentina
South Africa
Mauritius
Kazakhstan
Cameroon
Central African Republic
Afghanistan
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Iraq
Poland
Egypt
Lesotho
Saint Kitts and Nevis
United Arab Emirates
Bangladesh
Azerbaijan
Hungary
Micronesia (Federated States of)
Dominica
Mongolia
Nigeria
Congo
Andorra
North Macedonia
Bahrain
Namibia
Zambia
Fiji
Chile
Barbados
Maldives
Tuvalu
Canada
Singapore
Cuba
Kenya
Monaco
Germany
Nepal
Togo
Tunisia
Lao People's Democratic Republic
Eswatini
Croatia
Djibouti
Solomon Islands
Switzerland
Finland
Netherlands
Slovenia
Ireland
Zimbabwe
Brazil
France
Guatemala
Australia
Burundi
Belize
Eritrea
Saudi Arabia
Algeria
State of Palestine
Georgia
Armenia
Peru
Senegal
Chad
Bulgaria
Haiti
Morocco
Brunei Darussalam
Samoa
Japan
Oman
Italy
Mauritania
Estonia
Cape Verde
Türkiye
Luxembourg
Malta
Viet Nam
Trinidad and Tobago
Belarus
Cambodia
Iceland
Sri Lanka
Tajikistan
Jordan
Czechia
Iran (Islamic Republic of)
Botswana
Malaysia
Myanmar
Slovakia
Palau
Ecuador
Lebanon
Republic of Moldova
Honduras
Serbia
Sweden
Timor-Leste
Thailand
-
Indonesia
Rwanda
Vanuatu
Denmark
Uganda
Côte D'Ivoire
South Sudan
Seychelles
Turkmenistan
Costa Rica
Ukraine
Israel
Norway
Papua New Guinea
Burkina Faso
Romania
Montenegro
Ethiopia
Jamaica
El Salvador
Russian Federation
Republic of Korea
Austria
Albania
Lithuania
Malawi
Bahamas
Madagascar
Colombia
Panama
Equatorial Guinea
Tonga
Guinea
Marshall Islands
Kuwait
Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of)
Paraguay
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Yemen
Dominican Republic
United States of America
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
New Zealand
Grenada
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Other geographic areas of activity: |
Jammu and Kashmir
Kosovo
Occupied Syrian Golan
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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: |
1992 |
Organizational structure: |
International Action Center (IAC)
organization Last updated: March 4, 2020
Overview
Staffed by members of the Workers World Party, a Marxist-Leninist vanguard
Founded by former Attorney General Ramsey Clark
Founded in 1992 by Ramsey Clark, the International Action Center (IAC) is a fiercely “anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist” organization that provides “information, activism & resistance to U.S. militarism, war & corporate greed” while supporting “struggles against racism & oppression within the United States.” Closely allied with the the Marxist-Leninist Workers World Party, IAC aims to “end human suffering caused by living under a [capitalist] system that puts profit before people’s needs” — a system whose hallmarks include “multi-national corporations and banks” that “extract resources and debt payments from the rest of the world” while “the Pentagon and CIA protect their wholesale plunder.” Claiming that America victimizes and oppresses nonwhite minorities both at home and overseas, IAC maintains that “the best way to fight U.S. imperialism abroad is to stand in full solidarity with people of color living within U.S. borders.” Toward that end, the Center aims to form a “progressive movement” in service of a broad coalition of victim groups whose “struggles” are purportedly “connect[ed].” These include “communities of color, women, lesbian, gay, bi and trans people, youth and students, immigrant and workers’ organizations in order to build a progressive movement for social justice and change.” |
Number and type of members: |
International Action Center (IAC)
organizationLast updated: March 4, 2020
Overview
Staffed by members of the Workers World Party, a Marxist-Leninist vanguard
Founded by former Attorney General Ramsey Clark
Founded in 1992 by Ramsey Clark, the International Action Center (IAC) is a fiercely “anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist” organization that provides “information, activism & resistance to U.S. militarism, war & corporate greed” while supporting “struggles against racism & oppression within the United States.” Closely allied with the the Marxist-Leninist Workers World Party, IAC aims to “end human suffering caused by living under a [capitalist] system that puts profit before people’s needs” — a system whose hallmarks include “multi-national corporations and banks” that “extract resources and debt payments from the rest of the world” while “the Pentagon and CIA protect their wholesale plunder.” Claiming that America victimizes and oppresses nonwhite minorities both at home and overseas, IAC maintains that “the best way to fight U.S. imperialism abroad is to stand in full solidarity with people of color living within U.S. borders.” Toward that end, the Center aims to form a “progressive movement” in service of a broad coalition of victim groups whose “struggles” are purportedly “connect[ed].” These include “communities of color, women, lesbian, gay, bi and trans people, youth and students, immigrant and workers’ organizations in order to build a progressive movement for social justice and change.” |
Affiliation with NGO networks: |
international action center USA |
Funding structure: |
Membership fees or dues
Other sources
Fundraising campaigns
Fees for education and training services
Grants from Governments
Fees for providing consulting or research services
Product sales and business services
Funds from Religious Institutions
Funds from other Non-Governmental Organizations
Donations and grants from domestic sources
Foreign and international grants
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Funding structure other: |
donation |