Community of Friends, Inc is a 501c3 dedicated to inclusion, awareness, and opportunities for developmentally disabled individuals. This slideshow will showcase their activities in Baldwin, LA and the surrounding communities.
The document provides information about the Twentieth Century Club of Alabama, including its history, leadership, and activities. It lists the club's officers from 2008-2010 and describes several of the club's community service projects from 2008-2009, such as an annual Santa's Workshop for children and fundraising events like BunnyTales. It also outlines some of the club's monthly programs focused on topics like conservation, international issues, health, and the arts.
Stephen R. Been grew his father's homebuilding business into one of the largest in Atlanta and supports the Frank Ski Kids Foundation with his success. Founded by radio host Frank Ski, the Foundation works to expose kids to their futures through school programs. His brothers recently launched a reading program at an elementary school where they host quarterly reading circles for third graders focused on African American authors followed by interactive activities. The Foundation also holds an annual youth bowl competition between teams where the winner receives $20,000 for funding youth activities, distributing over $180,000 to date.
Cherry has spent 18 years promoting PRN Home Care which provides in-home services for seniors. She co-published the R.I.P.E. Guide and organizes the annual R.I.P.E. Conference, now in its sixth year. In her community roles, Cherry has assisted many organizations and led the redevelopment of the Lighthouse BPW, one of the oldest women's organizations on the Gulf Coast.
The document summarizes the minutes from a city council meeting in Bridgeport, Texas. It discusses filling a vacant council seat, thanking local organizations, and quarterly reports from the Downtown Manager, Parks & Recreation Department, and Library. The council also discussed a proposed contract with the Chamber of Commerce to manage programs funded by hotel occupancy taxes.
The Logan Square Neighborhood Association (LSNA) is a nonprofit community organization that works to advance social justice through leadership development, community engagement, and diversity. It serves over 8,500 children and adults through various programs. These include a parent mentor program in schools, after school community learning centers, training local parents to become teachers, and providing social services around issues like foreclosure prevention, immigration, and health care. The organization also works to develop grassroots leadership to address issues impacting the community like affordable housing, education, jobs, and safety. A key part of its work is the annual "I Love Logan Square" fundraising party and live auction that raises funds for its general operating expenses.
The document discusses plans for a new settlement library project in West Virginia. It notes that the local community has high poverty rates and lacks nearby access to educational and social services. The strategic aims of the project are to support the community, create a multi-service institution, promote literacy, establish technology access, provide lifelong learning resources, serve as an information hub, and preserve local culture and history. The project aims to make the library sustainable over the long term by strengthening advocacy, partnerships, and marketing.
Annual report of the Chicago Community Trust, a community foundation dedicated to improving our region through strategic grant making, civic engagement and inspiring philanthropy.
The document provides information about the Twentieth Century Club of Alabama, including its history, leadership, and activities. It lists the club's officers from 2008-2010 and describes several of the club's community service projects from 2008-2009, such as an annual Santa's Workshop for children and fundraising events like BunnyTales. It also outlines some of the club's monthly programs focused on topics like conservation, international issues, health, and the arts.
Stephen R. Been grew his father's homebuilding business into one of the largest in Atlanta and supports the Frank Ski Kids Foundation with his success. Founded by radio host Frank Ski, the Foundation works to expose kids to their futures through school programs. His brothers recently launched a reading program at an elementary school where they host quarterly reading circles for third graders focused on African American authors followed by interactive activities. The Foundation also holds an annual youth bowl competition between teams where the winner receives $20,000 for funding youth activities, distributing over $180,000 to date.
Cherry has spent 18 years promoting PRN Home Care which provides in-home services for seniors. She co-published the R.I.P.E. Guide and organizes the annual R.I.P.E. Conference, now in its sixth year. In her community roles, Cherry has assisted many organizations and led the redevelopment of the Lighthouse BPW, one of the oldest women's organizations on the Gulf Coast.
The document summarizes the minutes from a city council meeting in Bridgeport, Texas. It discusses filling a vacant council seat, thanking local organizations, and quarterly reports from the Downtown Manager, Parks & Recreation Department, and Library. The council also discussed a proposed contract with the Chamber of Commerce to manage programs funded by hotel occupancy taxes.
The Logan Square Neighborhood Association (LSNA) is a nonprofit community organization that works to advance social justice through leadership development, community engagement, and diversity. It serves over 8,500 children and adults through various programs. These include a parent mentor program in schools, after school community learning centers, training local parents to become teachers, and providing social services around issues like foreclosure prevention, immigration, and health care. The organization also works to develop grassroots leadership to address issues impacting the community like affordable housing, education, jobs, and safety. A key part of its work is the annual "I Love Logan Square" fundraising party and live auction that raises funds for its general operating expenses.
The document discusses plans for a new settlement library project in West Virginia. It notes that the local community has high poverty rates and lacks nearby access to educational and social services. The strategic aims of the project are to support the community, create a multi-service institution, promote literacy, establish technology access, provide lifelong learning resources, serve as an information hub, and preserve local culture and history. The project aims to make the library sustainable over the long term by strengthening advocacy, partnerships, and marketing.
Annual report of the Chicago Community Trust, a community foundation dedicated to improving our region through strategic grant making, civic engagement and inspiring philanthropy.
This document provides information about upcoming events and programming for the National Association of Social Workers (NASW) Michigan chapter in March 2015, which is Social Work Month. It includes details about the annual conference in Kalamazoo on April 8-10, regional social work meetings across Michigan celebrating the profession, and continuing education opportunities on various topics. The document also lists the board of directors and staff for the NASW Michigan chapter.
Community Garden Project Planned for South Amboy YMCA (The Suburban)Jacqueline Durett
A community garden project is being planned at the South Amboy YMCA through a partnership with the South Amboy Community Garden group. A $1,761 grant from Stop & Shop will be combined with donations from local businesses to create a rainbow vegetable garden at the YMCA with different colored vegetables that provide nutritional value. The garden will involve participation from YMCA youth and seniors and aim to be a cross-generational project. Produce from the garden will be donated to senior residents at a local manor.
The Burton Street Community in Asheville, NC was founded in 1912 by civic leader E.W. Pearson as one of the first African-American neighborhoods in the city. It was initially seen as a rural area with farms and livestock. Pearson had a profound impact through his civil rights work and establishing the annual Buncombe County agricultural fair. The neighborhood school was a focal point of the community until closing in the 1970s, after which the neighborhood began to decline due to abandoned homes and drug issues. In recent years funding has supported revitalization efforts including renovating the community center and implementing traffic calming measures.
Inuit Outreach Project Background for Trip to Inukjuak Sept 11 2014ConnieJK
The Halton Hills Anglican Cluster Inuit Outreach Project aims to help Inuit communities through outreach and promoting justice. It provides essential items like clothing, food and baby supplies to Inuit in need and supports education and employment opportunities. Since 2010, the project has delivered over 6 tons of donations in over 800 boxes to 4 Inuit communities, organizing volunteer drivers, donors, and partnerships with churches and organizations. The project seeks to build relationships with Inuit communities to better understand and address their needs through visits, community involvement, and sharing stories of impact.
The FY 17 document summarizes the activities of the City of Killeen Commission for Volunteers. It lists the president and members of the commission and its four program committees. It then provides details on the chairs and activities of the Youth Advisory Council, Keep Killeen Beautiful, and the Community and Killeen Volunteer Initiative committees. Finally, it provides impact statistics for volunteer efforts coordinated by the commission, including hours volunteered and cost savings.
The Essex Hudson Chapter of Jack & Jill of America will host Tea à la Mode on April 15th at the Hilton Short Hills. The event will include a silent auction, live auction, and fashion show to benefit the American Red Cross, NJ SEEDS, and the Jack & Jill of America Foundation. Actresses Angela Bassett, Mo'Nique, and Regina Taylor are scheduled to appear. The event supports disaster relief efforts and an organization that prepares underprivileged students for secondary education. Tickets are $80 each and available online or by contacting the chapter.
This document discusses Kristen Cosgrove's Global Community Day project which organizes volunteer service events for alumni of Saint Joseph's University and Villa Maria Academy. In 2012, volunteers helped renovate facilities at Camilla Hall in Malvern, PA and the Incarnation School in Philadelphia. Kristen's son Josh participated and helped move items for a flea market sale since the school was closing. The document encourages community service and notes that Josh and his sister will participate in an upcoming fundraiser for Chester County Hospital.
1. Mr. Rajiv Kathet is a social worker from Nepal who established the Forward Youth Forum in 2071 BS to provide social services to the community.
2. Some of the services provided by the Forward Youth Forum under Mr. Kathet's leadership include blood donation camps, disaster relief efforts, financial support for medical treatments, environmental conservation activities, and donations to schools and temples.
3. Mr. Kathet continues social work through the Forward Youth Forum with the goal of developing a better society and helping those most in need.
COMMUNITY ACTION PARTNERSHIP: MOLINA FOUNDATION BOOK FAIRjerianasmith
Last May, Community Action Partnership of San Bernardino partnered for the second year in a row with the Molina Foundation to present the 2019 Summer Book Fest and Resource Fair.
The document summarizes various programs and events from ACCESS, a nonprofit that provides food, warmth and shelter to those in need. It discusses upcoming events like the Mayors United event and Disc Jam, recaps recent events like the Stamp Out Hunger food drive, and highlights programs like housing assistance, cooking classes, and fresh produce from community gardens. It also profiles a local veteran who received rental assistance and a family who achieved homeownership after years working with ACCESS programs.
In 2011, over 500 GolinHarris employees from around the world volunteered nearly 25,000 hours for Al's Day, an annual community service initiative honoring the company's founder. Offices carried out service projects from May to July, including donating time and supplies to schools, homeless shelters, food banks, and other charities. Activities ranged from painting and cleaning facilities to preparing and delivering meals to those in need. The global event demonstrated the company's commitment to improving communities through volunteer work on and around founder Al Golin's birthday each year.
The document discusses definitions of access and advocacy from library organizations and how those definitions can be applied in practice. It provides definitions of access as ensuring materials and buildings meet ADA regulations and of advocacy as building partnerships to promote library programs. Alternative definitions frame access as ensuring all students can equitably access resources and advocacy as civic librarianship and community outreach. Examples are given of how libraries have increased access through mobile libraries in low-income neighborhoods and how advocacy can help reduce summer learning loss for low-SES students through reading programs.
Service development and delivery for indigenous communities resulted in a form named, 'Library in a Box.' The report shows providing library service to daycares, youth groups, families, schools, and adult learning groups. The report demonstrates the passion, commitment and determination of volunteers to expand the reach of library service for indigenous communities. Most important the need, capacity and high consumption of library service in indigenous communities. Read more at http://libraryinaboxservice.blogspot.ca/
The Spokane Edible Tree Project aims to map and harvest fruit from trees across Spokane County to provide food for those in need. They received a grant from the Smith-Barbieri Progressive Fund to expand their fruit mapping initiative. So far they have mapped over 7,500 fruit and nut trees and bushes across the county. Their goal is to collect hundreds of thousands of pounds of fruit each year to donate to food banks and distribute to hungry community members.
The Spokane Edible Tree Project aims to map and harvest fruit from trees across Spokane County to provide food for those in need. They received a grant from the Smith-Barbieri Progressive Fund to expand their mapping of fruit-bearing trees throughout the county, which currently numbers over 7,500 trees. The project collects unpicked fruit from orchards and homeowners that would otherwise go to waste, and distributes it to food banks and those experiencing hunger. Their goal is to collect hundreds of thousands of pounds of fruit annually to help meet the growing need in Spokane County.
In Concert Building Valuable Community PartnershipsWiLS
The document discusses building community partnerships through the library. It provides examples of how the College of Menominee Nation Library and the Luck Public Library & Historical Museum partnered with local organizations.
The CMN Library director discusses hosting community events to attract patrons after expanding into a new building. This helped form partnerships with local schools and organizations. The Luck Library director explains how sharing a building with the historical museum provides synergies and draws more community members. The Kenosha Library director outlines their successful partnerships for the NEA Big Read program, including distributing books and hosting various events with local groups.
VIDES Philippines Volunteers Foundation, Inc. is a non-profit organization established in 1995 that engages local and international volunteers in development, education, and solidarity initiatives. It offers various livelihood and scholarship programs to support young people and families. It also organizes medical missions, youth activities, and community projects focused on rights, sustainability and disaster relief.
St. Basil the Great, who founded the Sisters of Saint Basil the Great in the 4th century, was an advocate for social justice and education. He established a "New City" to help the poor with housing, healthcare, and other services. Manor College was founded by the Sisters of Saint Basil the Great in 1947 and carries on St. Basil's mission through its curriculum, events focused on social justice issues, and community service projects benefiting those in need. A fall symposium at Manor discussed social justice topics like access to legal aid, and the school's founders day included a food drive for a women's shelter.
The document is an annual report from Jubilee Park & Community Center, highlighting their accomplishments in 2017 and sharing stories of community members who have benefited from their programs. It discusses how Jubilee launched their first mental health program, won awards for their work, and celebrated their 20th anniversary with nearly 800 attendees. It also profiles several community members, like Natiki who was able to buy her first home in the neighborhood thanks to Jubilee's work, and teachers like Karla who now works at the local elementary school that Jubilee supports. The report emphasizes Jubilee's impact in strengthening the community through education, housing, and other programs over the past 20 years.
This document provides information about upcoming events and programming for the National Association of Social Workers (NASW) Michigan chapter in March 2015, which is Social Work Month. It includes details about the annual conference in Kalamazoo on April 8-10, regional social work meetings across Michigan celebrating the profession, and continuing education opportunities on various topics. The document also lists the board of directors and staff for the NASW Michigan chapter.
Community Garden Project Planned for South Amboy YMCA (The Suburban)Jacqueline Durett
A community garden project is being planned at the South Amboy YMCA through a partnership with the South Amboy Community Garden group. A $1,761 grant from Stop & Shop will be combined with donations from local businesses to create a rainbow vegetable garden at the YMCA with different colored vegetables that provide nutritional value. The garden will involve participation from YMCA youth and seniors and aim to be a cross-generational project. Produce from the garden will be donated to senior residents at a local manor.
The Burton Street Community in Asheville, NC was founded in 1912 by civic leader E.W. Pearson as one of the first African-American neighborhoods in the city. It was initially seen as a rural area with farms and livestock. Pearson had a profound impact through his civil rights work and establishing the annual Buncombe County agricultural fair. The neighborhood school was a focal point of the community until closing in the 1970s, after which the neighborhood began to decline due to abandoned homes and drug issues. In recent years funding has supported revitalization efforts including renovating the community center and implementing traffic calming measures.
Inuit Outreach Project Background for Trip to Inukjuak Sept 11 2014ConnieJK
The Halton Hills Anglican Cluster Inuit Outreach Project aims to help Inuit communities through outreach and promoting justice. It provides essential items like clothing, food and baby supplies to Inuit in need and supports education and employment opportunities. Since 2010, the project has delivered over 6 tons of donations in over 800 boxes to 4 Inuit communities, organizing volunteer drivers, donors, and partnerships with churches and organizations. The project seeks to build relationships with Inuit communities to better understand and address their needs through visits, community involvement, and sharing stories of impact.
The FY 17 document summarizes the activities of the City of Killeen Commission for Volunteers. It lists the president and members of the commission and its four program committees. It then provides details on the chairs and activities of the Youth Advisory Council, Keep Killeen Beautiful, and the Community and Killeen Volunteer Initiative committees. Finally, it provides impact statistics for volunteer efforts coordinated by the commission, including hours volunteered and cost savings.
The Essex Hudson Chapter of Jack & Jill of America will host Tea à la Mode on April 15th at the Hilton Short Hills. The event will include a silent auction, live auction, and fashion show to benefit the American Red Cross, NJ SEEDS, and the Jack & Jill of America Foundation. Actresses Angela Bassett, Mo'Nique, and Regina Taylor are scheduled to appear. The event supports disaster relief efforts and an organization that prepares underprivileged students for secondary education. Tickets are $80 each and available online or by contacting the chapter.
This document discusses Kristen Cosgrove's Global Community Day project which organizes volunteer service events for alumni of Saint Joseph's University and Villa Maria Academy. In 2012, volunteers helped renovate facilities at Camilla Hall in Malvern, PA and the Incarnation School in Philadelphia. Kristen's son Josh participated and helped move items for a flea market sale since the school was closing. The document encourages community service and notes that Josh and his sister will participate in an upcoming fundraiser for Chester County Hospital.
1. Mr. Rajiv Kathet is a social worker from Nepal who established the Forward Youth Forum in 2071 BS to provide social services to the community.
2. Some of the services provided by the Forward Youth Forum under Mr. Kathet's leadership include blood donation camps, disaster relief efforts, financial support for medical treatments, environmental conservation activities, and donations to schools and temples.
3. Mr. Kathet continues social work through the Forward Youth Forum with the goal of developing a better society and helping those most in need.
COMMUNITY ACTION PARTNERSHIP: MOLINA FOUNDATION BOOK FAIRjerianasmith
Last May, Community Action Partnership of San Bernardino partnered for the second year in a row with the Molina Foundation to present the 2019 Summer Book Fest and Resource Fair.
The document summarizes various programs and events from ACCESS, a nonprofit that provides food, warmth and shelter to those in need. It discusses upcoming events like the Mayors United event and Disc Jam, recaps recent events like the Stamp Out Hunger food drive, and highlights programs like housing assistance, cooking classes, and fresh produce from community gardens. It also profiles a local veteran who received rental assistance and a family who achieved homeownership after years working with ACCESS programs.
In 2011, over 500 GolinHarris employees from around the world volunteered nearly 25,000 hours for Al's Day, an annual community service initiative honoring the company's founder. Offices carried out service projects from May to July, including donating time and supplies to schools, homeless shelters, food banks, and other charities. Activities ranged from painting and cleaning facilities to preparing and delivering meals to those in need. The global event demonstrated the company's commitment to improving communities through volunteer work on and around founder Al Golin's birthday each year.
The document discusses definitions of access and advocacy from library organizations and how those definitions can be applied in practice. It provides definitions of access as ensuring materials and buildings meet ADA regulations and of advocacy as building partnerships to promote library programs. Alternative definitions frame access as ensuring all students can equitably access resources and advocacy as civic librarianship and community outreach. Examples are given of how libraries have increased access through mobile libraries in low-income neighborhoods and how advocacy can help reduce summer learning loss for low-SES students through reading programs.
Service development and delivery for indigenous communities resulted in a form named, 'Library in a Box.' The report shows providing library service to daycares, youth groups, families, schools, and adult learning groups. The report demonstrates the passion, commitment and determination of volunteers to expand the reach of library service for indigenous communities. Most important the need, capacity and high consumption of library service in indigenous communities. Read more at http://libraryinaboxservice.blogspot.ca/
The Spokane Edible Tree Project aims to map and harvest fruit from trees across Spokane County to provide food for those in need. They received a grant from the Smith-Barbieri Progressive Fund to expand their fruit mapping initiative. So far they have mapped over 7,500 fruit and nut trees and bushes across the county. Their goal is to collect hundreds of thousands of pounds of fruit each year to donate to food banks and distribute to hungry community members.
The Spokane Edible Tree Project aims to map and harvest fruit from trees across Spokane County to provide food for those in need. They received a grant from the Smith-Barbieri Progressive Fund to expand their mapping of fruit-bearing trees throughout the county, which currently numbers over 7,500 trees. The project collects unpicked fruit from orchards and homeowners that would otherwise go to waste, and distributes it to food banks and those experiencing hunger. Their goal is to collect hundreds of thousands of pounds of fruit annually to help meet the growing need in Spokane County.
In Concert Building Valuable Community PartnershipsWiLS
The document discusses building community partnerships through the library. It provides examples of how the College of Menominee Nation Library and the Luck Public Library & Historical Museum partnered with local organizations.
The CMN Library director discusses hosting community events to attract patrons after expanding into a new building. This helped form partnerships with local schools and organizations. The Luck Library director explains how sharing a building with the historical museum provides synergies and draws more community members. The Kenosha Library director outlines their successful partnerships for the NEA Big Read program, including distributing books and hosting various events with local groups.
VIDES Philippines Volunteers Foundation, Inc. is a non-profit organization established in 1995 that engages local and international volunteers in development, education, and solidarity initiatives. It offers various livelihood and scholarship programs to support young people and families. It also organizes medical missions, youth activities, and community projects focused on rights, sustainability and disaster relief.
St. Basil the Great, who founded the Sisters of Saint Basil the Great in the 4th century, was an advocate for social justice and education. He established a "New City" to help the poor with housing, healthcare, and other services. Manor College was founded by the Sisters of Saint Basil the Great in 1947 and carries on St. Basil's mission through its curriculum, events focused on social justice issues, and community service projects benefiting those in need. A fall symposium at Manor discussed social justice topics like access to legal aid, and the school's founders day included a food drive for a women's shelter.
The document is an annual report from Jubilee Park & Community Center, highlighting their accomplishments in 2017 and sharing stories of community members who have benefited from their programs. It discusses how Jubilee launched their first mental health program, won awards for their work, and celebrated their 20th anniversary with nearly 800 attendees. It also profiles several community members, like Natiki who was able to buy her first home in the neighborhood thanks to Jubilee's work, and teachers like Karla who now works at the local elementary school that Jubilee supports. The report emphasizes Jubilee's impact in strengthening the community through education, housing, and other programs over the past 20 years.
NCompass Live - April 1, 2020
http://nlc.nebraska.gov/NCompassLive/
The Rural Library Service & Social Wellbeing project is moving from data collection to resource development - and we need your help! In this session find out what we've learned through talking with hundreds of rural community members around the country, how it could influence rural library service, and how YOU can help by beta testing resources developed from this research.
Presenters: Margo Gustina, Special Projects Librarian, Southern Tier Library System and Eli Guinnee, State Librarian, New Mexico State Library.
The 12th annual URI Greek Life Philanthropy Week was held from November 16-23 and raised $15,984.59 and over 1,000 items for St. Mary's Home for Children through a series of events paired fraternities and sororities. Events included a Lego building competition, Family Feud game, dance competition, date auction, and dodgeball tournament. Money and items raised will help St. Mary's provide therapeutic services and classroom items for the children in their residential, educational, and outpatient programs in North Providence, Rhode Island. Student leaders expressed excitement for the impact of fundraising and bringing the Greek community together through Philanthropy Week.
The document outlines a campaign plan to increase awareness and involvement for the Eastern Idaho Community Action Partnership (EICAP) food pantry. The plan includes hosting a community event called "Walking in Their Shoes" to educate the public, improving social media presence, implementing regular food drives, and creating a volunteer schedule to better engage the community and increase donations. The year-long campaign aims to reach local businesses, college students, and families to support EICAP's mission of fighting hunger.
Insight News Developing Digital Agendas and Strategies for the Decade of Afro...The_Afrolatino_Project
This summary provides the key details from the document in 3 sentences:
The article discusses Dr. Umar Johnson's lecture at the Minneapolis Urban League about how America's schools are designed to miseducate, mistreat, misdiagnose and mislabel children of color. Johnson argues that racist policies in schools harm African American children. The event was well attended, with double the expected number of people showing up to hear Johnson discuss how to save Black children.
Food safety, prepare for the unexpected - So what can be done in order to be ready to address food safety, food Consumers, food producers and manufacturers, food transporters, food businesses, food retailers can ...
UN WOD 2024 will take us on a journey of discovery through the ocean's vastness, tapping into the wisdom and expertise of global policy-makers, scientists, managers, thought leaders, and artists to awaken new depths of understanding, compassion, collaboration and commitment for the ocean and all it sustains. The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
United Nations World Oceans Day 2024; June 8th " Awaken new dephts".Christina Parmionova
The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Indira awas yojana housing scheme renamed as PMAYnarinav14
Indira Awas Yojana (IAY) played a significant role in addressing rural housing needs in India. It emerged as a comprehensive program for affordable housing solutions in rural areas, predating the government’s broader focus on mass housing initiatives.
Combined Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) Vessel List.Christina Parmionova
The best available, up-to-date information on all fishing and related vessels that appear on the illegal, unregulated, and unreported (IUU) fishing vessel lists published by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) and related organisations. The aim of the site is to improve the effectiveness of the original IUU lists as a tool for a wide variety of stakeholders to better understand and combat illegal fishing and broader fisheries crime.
To date, the following regional organisations maintain or share lists of vessels that have been found to carry out or support IUU fishing within their own or adjacent convention areas and/or species of competence:
Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)
Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT)
General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM)
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC)
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT)
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC)
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (NAFO)
North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAFC)
North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC)
South East Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (SEAFO)
South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organisation (SPRFMO)
Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA)
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)
The Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List merges all these sources into one list that provides a single reference point to identify whether a vessel is currently IUU listed. Vessels that have been IUU listed in the past and subsequently delisted (for example because of a change in ownership, or because the vessel is no longer in service) are also retained on the site, so that the site contains a full historic record of IUU listed fishing vessels.
Unlike the IUU lists published on individual RFMO websites, which may update vessel details infrequently or not at all, the Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List is kept up to date with the best available information regarding changes to vessel identity, flag state, ownership, location, and operations.
8. "the practice or policy of providing equal access to opportunities and resources
for people who might otherwise be excluded or marginalized, such as those who
have physical or mental disabilities and members of other minority groups."
Definitions from Oxford Languages