Search form
Number of partners: 904
Sort by:
-
Special Secretariat for the Protection of Unaccompanied Minors (SSPUAM Greece)
SSPUAM
Special Secretariat for the Protection of Unaccompanied Minors - SSPUAM, Ministry of Migration and Asylum, Greece -
Street to Apartment Association
ULE
At the Street to Apartment Association, we believe that everyone needs a place to call home. Safe housing is an essential condition for a dignified life. We believe that with a fair distribution of resources, a society of solidarity can provide decent housing for all. To this end, we develop and operate model programs in which we provide independent housing to homeless and needy people. We cooperate with municipalities and private individuals, operate a network of social rental housing and a housing agency. -
Sudan Civil Registry
Civil Registry
Presented by the Ministry of Interior in Aug 2011, first describe the strategy an political commitments of developing civil registration and vital statistics system, then talk about the system in detail, followed by associated challenges and conclusion. -
Sudan Council of Churches
SCC
The Sudan Council of Churches (SCC) is an organization comprising six churches located in Southern Sudan: the Roman Catholic Church, Episcopal Church of the Sudan, Presbyterian Church of Sudan, African Inland Church, Sudan Pentecostal Church, and Sudan Interior Church. Formed in 1989–1990 under Bishop Paride Taban, the NSCC has acted as a facilitator in peace negotiations during the Second Sudanese Civil War. Along with its stated goal of Christian fellowship, it is active in reconciliation advocacy and human rights.[1] The SCC most widely reported success was the negotiation of an end to inter-ethnic fighting among Nuer in 1999. The Wunlit negotiations led to the creation of the South Sudan Liberation Movement, which declared itself neutral in the conflict. According to John Prendergast of the International Crisis Group, what progress has been made in reconciling the factions that resulted when Riek Machar and Lam Akol's defected from the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) in 1994 is largely the result of the work of the SCC.[2] However, the European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council, an organization that largely takes a pro-government stance, states that the SCC is overly entangled with the political leadership and goals of the SPLA.[3] It is a member of the Fellowship of Christian Councils and Churches in the Great Lakes and Horn of Africa.