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Partners
Partners In Health (PIH) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation with a presence in Latin America, the Caribbean, Russia, and the United States. We coordinate innovative programs to combat AIDS and women's health problems in rural Haiti and urban Massachusetts, groundbreaking tuberculosis treatment projects in the prisons of Siberia and the shantytowns of Lima, and health policy initiatives on a global scale.
ONE is a new effort by Americans to rally Americans – ONE by ONE – to fight the emergency of global AIDS and extreme poverty. ONE is students and ministers, punk rockers and NASCAR moms, Americans of all beliefs and every walk of life, united as ONE to help make poverty history. ONE believes that allocating an additional ONE percent of the U.S. budget toward providing basic needs like health, education, clean water and food would transform the futures and hopes of an entire generation in the world's poorest countries. ONE also calls for debt cancellation, trade reform and anti–corruption measures in a comprehensive package to help Africa and the poorest nations beat AIDS and extreme poverty.
Through the William J. Clinton Foundation, President Clinton promotes the values of fairness and opportunity for all. His vision is the Foundation's mission: to strengthen the capacity of people in the United States and throughout the world to meet the challenges of global interdependence. Together with the generosity of citizens and volunteers, President Clinton and the Foundation are vigorously working to advance those principles that move us beyond differences to a common future of shared responsibility, shared benefits, and shared values.
Americans for Informed Democracy (AID) is a non-partisan 501(c)(3) organization working to raise global awareness on more than 500 U.S. university campuses and in more than 10 countries. AID fulfills its mission by coordinating town hall meetings on America's role in the world, hosting leadership retreats, and publishing opinion pieces and reports on issues of global importance. Through these efforts, AID seeks to build a new generation of globally conscious leaders who can shape an American foreign policy appropriate for our increasingly interdependent world. AID is supported by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Open Society Institute, DarMac Foundation, Hewlett Foundation, Connect US and its many participating universities.
The FORGE program aims to harness the potential of youth as catalysts of social change. By creating a space for diverse youth to connect, collaborate, and innovate in response to a common cause, FORGE hopes to empower the leaders of the future and unite them in pursuit of their vision.
YouthAIDS, an HIV/AIDS education and prevention initiative of Population Services International (PSI), targets at risk youth between the ages of 15-24 with positive, upbeat messages of abstinence, consistent and correct condom use for sexually active you adults and delayed sexual debut. YouthAIDS uses media, pop culture, music, theatre and sport to reach 600 million young people in more than 60 countries with life-saving messages, products, services and care.
The mission of Peninsula Community Foundation® (PCF) is to connect people ideas and resources for the common good. Today, PCF is one of the largest and fastest-growing community foundations in the country. We offer all the philanthropic, grantmaking, financial, and tax expertise needed to engage in effective, inspired charitable giving.
It is the mission of The Global Medical Relief Program:
Students Partnership Worldwide (SPW) provides targeted HIV prevention programs in isolated, rural communities in Africa and South Asia, reaching over 400,000 young people directly every week for an annual cost of just $9 per child. It reaches these communities through over 850 professionally-trained peer educators, all aged between 18 and 28. Uniquely, the majority (85%) of SPW peer educators are highly-motivated African and Asian youth volunteering in their own countries. They are joined by young American volunteers who bring valuable complementary skills and – in return – gain first-hand experience in rural health programs that they ultimately bring back to the US. Working in pairs for 7-9 months, these motivated young leaders work full-time for SPW leading education and behavior change programs that reduce HIV incidence and increase access to health services for youth most at risk. |
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