[Οι ΦΙΛΟΙ της ΦΥΣΗΣ/ Naturefriends Greece συμμετέχουν στους OWINFS και συνυπογράφουν την επιστολή προς τον Παγκόσμιο Οργανισμό Εμπορίου/ΠΟΕ. Διαβάστε και ΕΔΩ την επιστολή των 453 φορέων. Οι ΦτΦ/NFGR είναι ο μοναδική οργάνωση από την Ελλάδα που συνυπογράφει την επιστολή.
Μεγάλο ενδιαφέρον έχει η άποψη του John Hilary, Executive Director του Οργανισμού War on Want που δημοσιεύτηκε στις 15/12/2015, ημέρα έναρξης των εργασιών του ΠΟΕ στο Ναϊρόμπι. Ο John Hilary θεωρεί ότι ο ΠΟΕ στον 21ο αιώνα δεν βελτιώνεται και πως πρέπει να διαλυθεί. Το άρθρο του "Want to know how to really tackle climate change? Pull the plug on the World Trade Organisation - The WTO brought us the 2008 crash and TTIP - we must bring it to a halt in order to tackle climate change" ΕΔΩ.
Οι ΜΚΟ που συμμετέχουν στη σύνοδο ΕΔΩ
EU Cuncil: First Council conclusions on the 10th World Trade Organization Ministerial Conference [ΕΔΩ]
Global Civil Society letter on the
Nairobi Ministerial of the World Trade Organization (WTO)
December
09, 2015
Dear
Members of the WTO,
As
members of 453 civil society organizations including trade unions,
environmentalists, farmers, development advocates, and public interest groups from
over 150 countries, we are writing today to express extreme alarm about the
current situation of the negotiations in the WTO. We urge you to take seriously
the need for the upcoming Nairobi Ministerial to change existing WTO rules to
make the global trading system more compatible with people-centereddevelopment,
and to forestall efforts by some developed countries to abandon the development
agenda and replace it with a set of so-called “new issues” that actually are non-trade
issues that would impact deeply on domestic economies and constrain national
policy space required for development and public interest.
Governments
from around the world recently endorsed the Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs) negotiated through the United Nations. These include key goals such as reducing
poverty and inequality; eradicating hunger;and ensuring universal access to
essential services such as health care, education, water, and energy. In order
to achieve these goals, countries must have the policy space to invest in
domestic agricultural production to achieve food security and food sovereignty;
to regulate the financial sector to ensure financial stability; to scale up
public provision of essential services to guarantee education, health, water,
and energy access; to harness the power of government procurement to promote
small and medium enterprises (SMEs); to utilize tax revenues, including
tariffs, strategically to foment sustainable development and the creation of
jobs with decent work; and to ensure that foreign investment serves the
interests of the national development plan. However, this policy space is
currently constrained by existing WTO rules which the vast majority of WTO
members, which are developing countries, have been demanding must be changed,
and are further threatened by an effort by a tiny number of developed countries
to replace the development mandates with “new issues” designed to further
increase transnational corporate profit margins.
As
civil society organizations, we have witnessed firsthand in our communities the
negative impacts of 20 years of some existing WTO policies which have largely
favored the interests of the developed world over the development interests of
the developing world. This has particularly led to rising inequalities both
within and among countries; the contributions of increased trade to climate
change; the financial deregulation that led to the 2008 global economic crisis
and the ongoing crises of food insecurity and joblessness, to name a few. Many
of our organizations have called repeatedly for the WTO to be replaced with an
institution that regulates corporate trade for the benefit of workers, farmers,
communities, and the environment, rather than disciplining states for the
narrow goal of increasing trade. At the same time, we must ensure that the
WTO’s model of restricting national policy space in favor of corporate trading
rights must not be expanded, but rather pruned back. That is why it is so
urgent at this time to ensure that the Nairobi Ministerial deliver on removing
WTO obstacles to development by fulfilling the development mandate in terms of
strengthening and making effective the Special and Differential Treatment (SDT)
for all developing countries, and affirming developing countries’ rights to
food security, while forestalling the corporate agenda of abandoning
development in favor of a corporate wish list of “new issues.”
Success in Nairobi: Fulfilling the
Development Mandate by Strengthening SDT for All Developing Countries, Removing
WTO Obstacles to Food Security, and Operationalizing Benefits for the Least
Developed Countries (LDCs)
This
year, a group of 90 (G90) developing countries made concrete proposals for
changes to existing WTO rules that would remove some WTO constraints onnational
pro-development policies. Many of these proposals parallel the civil society
demands encompassed in the Turnaround
Statement endorsed by hundreds of civil society groups from around the
world. Reports from Geneva indicate that a tiny number of high-income WTO
members are attempting to decide for themselves which developing countries
should be able to utilize these flexibilities, dividing developing countries
according to non-existent, subjective criteria and attempting to treat
so-called “emerging markets” as if they were already developed. This approach
has no basis in WTO law, in development policy, nor in economic reality. In
fact, 70 percent of the world’s poor live in so-called “middle income”
countries; narrowing the scope of the G90’s special and differential treatment
proposals would condemn a billion people to living under WTO rules
inappropriate for their level of development, without the flexibilities and
policy space requisite for their countries to achieve the multilateral SDGs. For
those reasons, SDT should be strengthened and made operational for all
developing countries, while providing additional flexibilities to LDCs that
attend to their specific development, financial and economic needs. The WTO
Ministerial will be a failure for development if the full package of G90
proposals for all developing countries is not agreed to in Nairobi.
Even
worse, just one WTO member – the United States – appears to be not only
refusing to agree to the full G90 package, but also working to ensure that the
development mandate in the WTO is permanently abandoned. While a lack of
agreement on the G90 package of proposals by Nairobi would indicate a failure
of the Ministerial from a development perspective, the abandonment of the entire development
mandate would lock out the potential to fulfill this mandate in the future, thus
locking the world into the existing inequalities and imbalances forever – at
the behest of one member of the WTO, an institution that claims to operate by
consensus.
Likewise,
many of those same impoverished people in developing countries and LDCs alike
continue to suffer from food insecurity. Since the Bali Ministerial in December
2013, developing countries and anti-hunger advocates and farmers around the
world (including in the United
States) have worked to ensure that developing countries would be unshackled
from WTO rules which severely constrain their ability to invest in public
stockholding programs, even though such investments are explicitly called for
in the SDGs in order to reduce rural and urban hunger. WTO members agreed to
find a permanent solution to the issue of public stockholding for food security
by December 31, 2015. The G33 group of 45 developing countries has made a
workable proposal to remove limits on developing countries’ investing in their
own food security by categorizing public stockholding for food security in the
so-called “Green Box,” and this must be adopted by the Nairobi Ministerial. The
WTO Ministerial will be a failure from a development perspective if this simple
step towards food sovereignty is not agreed to in Nairobi.
In
one of the most hypocritical positions in the history of global trade
negotiations, some developed countries are not only opposing the right of poor
countries to feed themselves, but also refusing to reduce domestic supports on
exported agricultural production that damages other countries’ domestic
markets. In fact, the promise to reform global agricultural trade was the
primary reason that developing countries even agreed to launch the Doha Round. Fourteen
years later, some developed countries continue to subsidize agricultural exporting
corporations in ways that damage farmers in developing countries, whose
governments are not allowed (or cannot afford) such subsidies. We support the
concept of food sovereignty, in which countries should be allowed to undertake
domestic supports of agricultural production, but no country should be allowed
to export subsidized food in a way that damages other countries’ markets.The
WTO Ministerial will be a failure from a development perspective if the
disciplining of domestic supports that damage other countries’ markets is not
agreed to in Nairobi.
At
the same time, the havoc wreaked on developing country agricultural markets due
to dumping of subsidized products calls out for an immediate solution. The G33’s
proposal to create a Special Safeguard Mechanism (SSM) that would allow
developing countries to protect their food security, farmers’ livelihoods, and
rural development, would be another important step towards restoring countries’
food sovereignty that has been so eroded by the current imbalances in the WTO
rules. The WTO Ministerial will be a failure from a development perspective if
a workable, practical SSM along the lines of the G33 proposal is not agreed to
in Nairobi.
Even
in the area that all WTO members should be able to agree on – ensuring benefits
for the LDCs – consensus has not yet been reached. Although it was a priority
mandate for the post-Bali period, the small LDC package agreed in Bali has yet
to be operationalized, including ensuring 100 Duty Free, Quota Free (DFQF)
market access for LDCs exports; providing actual binding commitments for the
LDC services waiver, and full simplification of the Rules of Origin (RoO). In
addition, cotton farmers in Africa have been damaged for years due to the
subsidies that rich countries have agreed to discipline in an “expedited”
manner. The WTO Ministerial will be a failure from a development perspective if
the disciplining of subsidies in cotton is not agreed to in Nairobi, along with
the operationalizing of all aspects of the full LDC package.
Introducing a Corporate Wish List of “New
Issues” Must be Off the Table at Nairobi
We
can all agree that global trade has evolved significantlysince the Doha Round
was launched in 2001. Unfortunately, many workers and farmers are still
laboring under the rules negotiated in the mid-1990s – to which many developing
countries and civil society around the world objected at the founding of the
WTO. It is vastly inappropriate to mandate negotiations on new issues to the
benefit of the financial, technology, and logistics corporations a few WTO
memberswithout first addressing the inequities and imbalances in the current
WTO rules.
Many
of these issues have been explicitly rejected by the WTO membership in the
recent past, particularly the so-called “Singapore issues,” including
investment, competition policy, and transparency in government procurement. Civil
society has long opposed the international investment agreements (IIAs) which
privilege foreign investors over citizens, communities, the environment, and
the public interest generally, whether they appear in bilateral, plurilateral,
or multilateral forums. Multiple governments have taken heed of the explosion
of cases brought by investors against sovereign governments, and are re-shaping
national investment rules to ensure that they benefit the national interest. During
this time of shifting public debate on the negative impacts of such agreements,
it is outrageous to think of allowing this ejected topic back into the WTO.Similarly
with the topics of competition policy and opening up government procurement to
foreign corporations, which are advantageous predominantly to corporate
interests. Government procurement is an important engine for local development
and for addressing inequities within countries, and these goals should take
precedence over opening markets for transnational bidders.These are not
primarily trade issues and they must not be allowed on the agenda – and there
is not even any legal basis in the WTO to bring them in until after the
development demands of developing countries have been comprehensively
addressed.
Likewise
there appears to be an effort by some developed countries to bring issues that
many developing countries, and civil society around the world, have rejected in
bilateral or plurilateral so-called free trade agreements (FTAs) into the WTO.
This appears to include the idea of giving new “rights” to advanced technology
corporations to unlimited cross-border data transfers through e-commercetalks. A
few members also appear interested in imposing on the WTO membership including
disciplines (constraints) on state-owned enterprises (which can be a key engine
of domestic economic growth in many countries),and other so-called “new issues”
which have yet to be defined by members seeking the mandate nonetheless to
discuss them. The WTO Ministerial will be a failure from a development perspective if
“new issues” – including under the sneaky rubric of “discussions on global
value chains (GVCs) or the digital economy” – are agreed to in Nairobi as part
of the post-Ministerial agenda.
Civil
society has long witnessed and condemned the unfair negotiations process in the
WTO, in which the positions of powerful members are given predominance over the
positions and needs of the vast majority of members who are developing
countries, while the interests of workers, farmers, and the environment are
shunted to the background in favor of corporate profit objectives. It is most
unfortunate that under the current leadership, this phenomenon appears to have
become even worse, even though the Director General hails from a developing
nation.
Nairobi
will be a crucial arbiter of the future of the global trade system. Will the
WTO continue business as usual, in which the corporate interests of the
powerful countries dominate, and the development mandate is abandoned in favor
of talks on liberalization of new issues? Or will the WTO members heed the
needs of the LDCs; of the poor in all our countries; of farmers struggling to
make a living; of workers seeking decent work; and of the environment for our common
stewardship?
For the Ministerial to “work” for food,
jobs, and sustainable development, the necessary outcome is clear: the
transformation of the gross inequities in the global agricultural system must
begin, including: removing WTO obstacles to public stockholding for food
security; a concrete and workable SSM; and disciplining domestic supports and export
competition. Across the WTO, development demands must be met, including the
full scope of the G90 proposals for all developing countries, and the
operationalizing of the LDC package. The corporate and rich country government
agenda of permanently abandoning the development mandate must be forestalled,
along with the imposition of a set of already-rejected or ill-defined non-trade
“new issues.”
Sincerely,
Endorsers as of December 9, 2015
Ακολουθούν οι 453 υπογραφές. μεταξύ αυτών και των ΦΙΛΩΝ της ΦΥΣΗΣ/Naturefriends Greece της μοναδικής ελληνικής οργάνωσης που προσυπογράφει την επιστολή.
Ακολουθούν οι 453 υπογραφές. μεταξύ αυτών και των ΦΙΛΩΝ της ΦΥΣΗΣ/Naturefriends Greece της μοναδικής ελληνικής οργάνωσης που προσυπογράφει την επιστολή.
International Networks and
Organizations
1
|
ACP Civil Society Forum
|
The Forum is a coalition of 80 not-for-profit organisations
working on issues relating to ACP-EU development cooperation. It seeks to
cater for the diverse range civil society development issues within the wide
geographic coverage of the ACP group.
|
2
|
African Center for Trade, Integration and Development (ENDA
CACID), West Africa
|
Le Centre Africain pour le Commerce, l’Intégration et le
Développement (CACID) estcréé pour soutenir les efforts des pays africains
pour atteindre des objectifs de développement qui impactentpositivement et
durablement sur les conditions de vie de la majorité des citoyens, en
particulier des plus pauvres.
|
3
|
Amigos de la
Tierra América Latina y Caribe (ATALC)
|
Amigos de la
Tierra América Latina y Caribe (ATALC-Friends of the Earth (FoE) Latin
Amierica and Caribbean)
|
4
|
Arab NGO Network for Development (ANND)
|
ANND is a regional network, working in 12 Arab countries with
seven national networks (with an extended membership of 200 CSOs from
different backgrounds) and 23 NGO members
|
5
|
Asia Monitor Resource Centre (AMRC)
|
AMRC works to support a democratic and independent labour
movement in Asia, promoting the respect of labour rights, gender equality,
and active workers’ participation in work-related issues
|
6
|
Asian Farmers’ Association for Sustainable Rural Development
(AFA)
|
AFA is a regional alliance of 17 national federations and
organizations of small scale women and men farmers and producers from 13
countries in Asia.
|
7
|
Campaign2015+ International
|
Campaigning towards and beyond 2015 is the major thrust of
Campaign2015+ International.
|
8
|
Caribbean Development Activists Network of Women (Caribbean DAWN)
|
A regional network of community activists, development
practitioners and scholars. We work for gender justice and sustainable human
development. Caribbean Dawn provides a forum for analysis, reflection,
advocacy and research on important development.
|
9
|
Caribbean Network of Rural Women Producers (CANROP)
|
CANROP is the umbrella organization that embraces national
chapters of rural women’s associations in the Caribbean. These associations
had been established in response to the need to equip women with technical,
administrative and entrepreneurial skills as a means to improving their
socio-economic status and create employment in the rural areas in which they
live.
|
10
|
Caribbean Policy Development Centre (CPDC)
|
CPDC is a coalition of Caribbean non-governmental organizations.
It was established in 1991 to sensitize NGOs and the general public on key
policy issues and to impact policy makers on decisions which put the
interests of Caribbean people at the center of the Caribbean development
strategy.
|
11
|
Caribbean Youth Environment Network (CYEN)
|
CYEN is a regional organisation whose membership comprises youth
groups and individual youth. It aims
to promote youth in the Caribbean to take positive action on issues related
to environment and sustainable development.
|
12
|
Confederación
Latinoamericana y del Caribe de Trabajadores Estatales (CLATE)
|
CLATE - es una
organización sindical internacional que agrupa a los trabajadores estatales
de las hermanas naciones de América Latina, con pleno respeto de las
entidades afiliadas a ella, siendo encargada de fijar y ejecutar a nivel
latinoamericano, la política global y coordinada de la promoción de los
trabajadores estatales.
|
13
|
Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN)
|
DAWN is a network of feminist scholars, researchers and
activists from the economic South working for economic and gender justice and
sustainable and democratic development.
|
14
|
East African Health Platform (EAHP)
|
The EAHP is an advocacy forum for Private Sectors Organizations,
Civil Society Organizations, Faith Based Organizations and other interest
groups working on health in East Africa.
|
15
|
Eastern and Southern Africa Small-scale Farmer’s Forum (ESAFF)
|
ESAFF is a network of small holder farmers that advocate for
policy, practice and attitude change that reflects the needs, aspirations,
and development of small-scale farmers in east and southern Africa. ESAFF
operates in 13 countries.
|
16
|
Enda Tiers Monde
|
Enda is an international organization engaged in environment
development action in the third world.
|
17
|
European Federation of Public Service Unions (EPSU)
|
EPSU is the largest federation of the ETUC and comprises 8
million public service workers from over 265 trade unions; EPSU organises
workers in the energy, water and waste sectors, health and social services
and local and national administration, in all European countries including in
the EU’s Eastern Neighborhood. EPSU is the recognized regional organization
of Public Services International (PSI).
|
18
|
Food & Water Europe
|
Food & Water Europe monitors the practices of multinational
corporations that impact our food and water. We work with grassroots
organizations around the world to create a genuinely economically and
environmentally viable future.
|
19
|
Food Sovereignty Network South Asia (FSNSA)
|
FSNSA works to achieve Food Sovereignty right of peoples, communities
and countries to define their own agricultural, labour, fishing, food and
land policies which are ecologically, socially, economically and culturally
appropriate to their unique circumstances. It consist of NGOs/CSOs and
People's Movements of India, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and
Nepal.
|
20
|
Friends of the earth international (FoEI)
|
FoEI is the world’s largest grassroots environmental network
with over 2 million members and supporters around the world. It campaigns on today’s most urgent
environmental and social issues. FoEI challenge the current model of economic
and corporate globalization, and promote solutions that will help to create
environmentally sustainable and socially just societies.
|
21
|
Health Innovation in Practice
|
HIP seeks to promote and facilitate policy action around
needs-driven innovation for health at the country and regional level, as well
as across countries.
|
22
|
Internacional de
Servicios Públicos de Americas (ISP Americas)
|
En América del
Norte, Central y del Sur, y el Caribe la ISP cuenta con 140 organizaciones
sindicales afiliadas en 35 países, que representan a un total de 3,3 millones
de trabajadores afiliados.
|
23
|
International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN)
|
IBFAN is a 35-year old coalition working on the nutrition of
infants and young children. It serves as an interface between the network of
more than 273 not-for-profit non-governmental organisations in more than 168
countries, and the UN organizations, human treaty bodies and Geneva-based
international NGOs.
|
24
|
International Grail Justice in Trade Agreement Network
|
A coalition of groups working for peace and justice in 20
countries worldwide.
|
25
|
International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF)
|
ITF is a global union federation comprised of 700 unions representing
over 4.5 million transport workers from some 150 countries around the world.
|
26
|
International Union of Food, Agriculture, Hotel, Restaurant,
Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers (IUF)
|
The IUF is currently composed of 385 trade unions in 123 countries
representing a combined representational membership of over 12 million
workers (including a financial membership of 2.6 million).
|
27
|
LDC Watch
|
LDC Watch is a global alliance of national, regional and
international civil society organisations (CSOs), networks and movements
based in the Least Developed Countries (LDCs).
|
28
|
Mesa de
Coordinación Latinoamericana de Comercio Justo (RIPESS LAC)
|
La RIPESS es una
red intercontinental que vincula las redes de economía social y solidaria de
todas las regiones del planeta. Como red de redes, está compuesta de redes
intercontinentales (RIPESS-LAC, RIPESS-EU, RIPESS-NA, RAESS y ASEC) que a su
vez reúnen redes nacionales y redes sectoriales.
|
29
|
Movimiento
Mesoamericano contra el Modelo extractivo Minero -M4-Región Mesoamérica
|
MovimientoMesoamericano contra el ModeloextractivoMinero is a
network struggling against mega-mining and defending land and territories.
Most of our members are grassroots groups and local organizations working
daily with them to grow autonomous projects. We truly believe in
self-determination.
|
30
|
Pacific Network on Globalisation (PANG)
|
PANG is a Pacific regional network promoting economic justice in
globalisation with specific attention to:1) Accountability and transparency
in economic and trade policy processes, 2) Poverty eradication, 3) Equitable
development and sustainable livelihoods (opportunity, access, impact) and 4)
Food sovereignty and environmental sustainability.
|
31
|
Pan-African Baraza
|
Pan-African Baraza is a forum for amplifying the voices of
movements and organisations for social justice by reclaiming the past,
contesting the present and inventing the future.
|
32
|
PANOS Caribbean
|
Panos Caribbean is a regional organization which helps
journalists to cover sustainable development issues that are overlooked and
misunderstood.
|
33
|
Plataforma
Interamericana de Derechos Humanos, Democracia y Desarrollo (PIDHDD)
|
La PIDHDD es un
actor político, conformado por Capítulos Nacionales que articulan
organizaciones sociales e instituciones de la sociedad civil, que promueve la
plena vigencia y realización de los derechos humanos; Actualmente, se cuenta
con capítulos nacionales constituidos y en funcionamiento en 16 países del
continente americano: Argentina, Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Colombia,
Dominicana, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, México, Nicaragua, Paraguay,
Perú, Uruguay y Venezuela.
|
34
|
Public Services International (PSI)
|
Public Services International (PSI) is a global trade union
federation dedicated to promoting quality public services in every part of
the world. PSI brings together more than 20 million workers, represented by
650 unions in 150 countries and territories.
|
35
|
Public Services International (PSI), Africa and Arab Countries
Region
|
Africa and Arab countries form one of the four regions in the
PSI structure. PSI's 153 affiliated organisations in some 43 countries
represent a membership of around 1.5 million people here.
|
36
|
Public Services International in the Caribbean
|
23 trade union organisations in 20 countries and territories in
the Dutch, English, and French-speaking Caribbean. These organisations
represent over 60,000 women and men who deliver valuable public services.
|
37
|
Public Services International, Asia Pacific Region
|
PSI's Asia and Pacific region covers 122 unions in 22 countries
and related territories with a membership of two million workers.
|
38
|
Red de Educación
Popular Entre Mujeres Latinoamérica y Caribe (REPEM LAC)
|
REPEM LAC
desarrolla sus actividades en América Latina y el Caribe desde 1981. Es una
entidad civil sin fines de lucro que cuenta con la participación de 65
instituciones, organizaciones y grupos de mujeres en Argentina, Bolivia,
Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, México, Nicaragua, Panamá, Paraguay, Perú, República Dominicana,
Uruguay y Venezuela.
|
39
|
Red
Latinoamericana Mujeres Transformando la Economía (REMTE)
|
REMTE es un
espacio de articulación de redes y núcleos nacionales de once países de la
región, en el que participan mujeres urbanas y rurales, de ámbitos
académicos, ONG y organizaciones de base. Su propósito es contribuir a la
apropiación crítica de la economía por parte de las mujeres, y a la búsqueda
de alternativas basadas en la justicia económica y la justicia de género.
|
40
|
Réseau des Organisations Paysannes et des ProducteursAgricoles
de l'Afrique de l'Ouest (ROPPA)
|
Le Réseau des organisations paysannes et de producteurs de
l’Afrique de l’Ouest (ROPPA) a formellementétéfondé en juillet 2000 lorsd’une
rencontre à Cotonou qui a rassembléunecentaine de responsablespaysansmandatés
par leurs organisations. Il regroupe des organisations ou "cadres de
concertation" de 10 pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest (Bénin, Burkina Faso, Côte
d’Ivoire, Gambie, Guinée, Guinée-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Sénégal, Togo,).
|
41
|
Society for International Development (SID)
|
SID is an international network of individuals and organizations
founded in 1957 to promote social justice and foster democratic participation
in the development process. SID has over 30 chapters and 3,000 members in
more than 50 countries.
|
42
|
Society of Catholic Medical Missionaries
|
The Medical Mission Sisters are a religious congregation of
women in the Roman Catholic Church founded in 1925 and dedicated to providing
the poor of the world better access to health care.
|
43
|
South Asia Farmers Forum
|
South Asia Farmers Forum
|
44
|
South Asia Peasants Coalition
|
The South Asian Peasant Coalition (SAPC) is a network of peasant
organizations at the South Asian level committed to strengthen networks in
the interest of the people's movements in South Asia.
|
45
|
Third World Network (TWN)
|
Third World Network (TWN) is an independent non-profit
international network of organisations and individuals involved in issues
relating to development, developing countries and North-South affairs.
|
46
|
UNI AMERICAS
|
UNI Americas represents 4 million workers in the Americas and
the Caribbean. We are part of the 20-million strong UNI Global Union family
which has affiliated 900 unions in 140 countries globally.
|
47
|
West African Civil Society Platform on the Cotonou Agreement
(POSCAO)
|
West African Civil Society Platform on the Cotonou Agreement
(POSCAO)
|
48
|
Womantra
|
WOMANTRA is a community of Caribbean feminists througout the
Diaspora who are committed to working TOWARD gender justice ACROSS borders.
|
49
|
Women In Development Europe (WIDE+)
|
WIDE+ is the network that follows up the previous WIDE network
(a member of S2B), composed of feminists, NGO's, researchers, etc. that
advocate for a socially just economy.
|
National Organizations and
Networks
50
|
S.O.S.-CEDIA
|
Angola
|
51
|
Fórum das Organizações Não
Governamentais Angolanas (FONGA)
|
Angola
|
52
|
Directorate of Gender Affairs Crisis Centre
|
Antigua and Barbuda
|
53
|
Women Against Rape Inc.
|
Antigua and Barbuda
|
54
|
Gilbert Agricultural and Rural Development Centre (GARDC)
|
Antigua and Barbuda
|
55
|
Argentine Federation Of Commerce And Services Workers (FAECyS)
|
Argentina
|
56
|
Foro Ciudadano de Participación por la
Justicia y los Derechos Humanos
|
Argentina
|
57
|
Australian Fair Trade Investment Network (AFTINET)
|
Australia
|
58
|
Australian Communication Workers Alliance (ACWA)
|
Australia
|
59
|
New South Wales Nurses and Midwives’ Association
|
Australia
|
60
|
Australian Grail Justice and Trade Agreements Network
|
Australia
|
61
|
InformationsgruppeLateinamerika (IGLA)
|
Austria
|
62
|
Hollaback! Bahamas
|
Bahamas
|
63
|
World Merit
|
Bahamas
|
64
|
Bahamas Crisis Centre
|
Bahamas
|
65
|
Equality Bahamas
|
Bahamas
|
66
|
Bangladesh Krishok Federation
|
Bangladesh
|
67
|
Gonoshasthaya Kendra
|
Bangladesh
|
68
|
VOICE
|
Bangladesh
|
69
|
Equity and Justice Working Group
|
Bangladesh
|
70
|
Textile Garments Workers Federation
|
Bangladesh
|
71
|
Sramabikash Kendra
|
Bangladesh
|
72
|
Business and Professional Women’s Club of Barbados
|
Barbados
|
73
|
Caribbean Women’s Association (CARIWA) Barbados
|
Barbados
|
74
|
Save Foundation
|
Barbados
|
75
|
Barbados Association of Non Governmental Organizations
|
Barbados
|
76
|
Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA)
|
Barbados
|
77
|
Centre tricontinental (CETRI)
|
Belgium
|
78
|
SOS Faim
|
Belgium
|
79
|
CNCD-11.11.11 (Centre national de coopération au développement)
|
Belgium
|
80
|
Women’s Issues Network of
Belize (WINBELIZE)
|
Belize
|
81
|
Belize Enterprise for Sustainable Technology
|
Belize
|
82
|
Groupe de Recherche et d'Action pour la Promotion de l'Agriculture et du
Développement (GRAPAD)
|
Benin Republic
|
83
|
Centro de Estudios para el Desarrollo
Laboral y Agrario (CEDLA)
|
Bolivia
|
84
|
Botswana Council of Non Governmental Organisations (BOCONGO)
|
Botswana
|
85
|
Confederação dos Trabalhadores no
Serviço Público Federal (CONDSEF)
|
Brazil
|
86
|
Red Brasilera por la Integración de los
Pueblos (REBRIP)
|
Brazil
|
87
|
Instituto EQUIT - Genero, Economia y
Ciudadania Global
|
Brazil
|
88
|
InstitutoJustiça Fiscal
|
Brazil
|
89
|
Cadre de concertation des OSC pour le
suivi du CSLP (CdC/CSLP)
|
Burkina Faso
|
90
|
Civil Society Organization Network for Development (RESOCIDE)
|
Burkina Faso
|
91
|
Action Développement et IntégrationRégionale (ADIR)
|
Burundi
|
92
|
Independent Democracy of Informal Economy Association (IDEA)
|
Cambodia
|
93
|
Cambodian’s Civil Servant Association (CICA)
|
Cambodia
|
94
|
Africa Development Interchange Network (ADIN)
|
Cameroon
|
95
|
Conseil des ONG Agrees du Cameroun (CONGAC )
|
Cameroon
|
96
|
Common Frontiers
|
Canada
|
97
|
MiningWatch Canada
|
Canada
|
98
|
Fédération interprofessionnelle de la
santé du Québec-FIQ
|
Canada
|
99
|
Council of Canadians
|
Canada
|
100
|
ATTAC-Québec
|
Canada
|
101
|
Association Commerciale, Agricole, Industriel et du Service
(ACAISA)
|
Cape Verde
|
102
|
Conseil Inter ONG En Centrafrique
(CIONGCA)
|
Central African Republic
|
103
|
Centre d’Information et de Liaison des ONG (CILONG)
|
Chad
|
104
|
ObservatorioCiudadano
|
Chile
|
105
|
Chile SustentableFundacion
|
Chile
|
106
|
Confederación Nacional de Funcionari@s de Salud Municipal
(CONFUSAM)
|
Chile
|
107
|
Federacion de Vocales Región Centro
|
Colombia
|
108
|
Censat Agua Viva - Amigos de la Tierra
|
Colombia
|
109
|
Liga Nacional de Usuarios de Servicios
Públicos Domiciliarios (Liga USPD)
|
Colombia
|
110
|
Asociación de ServidoresPúblicosDepartamentales y Municipales de
Antioquia (ADEA)
|
Colombia
|
111
|
OrganizaciónFreskiemos el ambiente
|
Colombia
|
112
|
AsociacionAmbiente y Sociedad
|
Colombia
|
113
|
FederaciónVocalesRegión Centro y Distrito Capital
|
Colombia
|
114
|
Cook Islands Association of Non-Governmental Organisations
(CIANGO)
|
Cook Islands
|
115
|
Confederación de Trabajadores Rerum
Novarum (CTRN)
|
Costa Rica
|
116
|
Sindicato de Trabajadoras y Trabajadores de
la Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica (SITUN)
|
Costa Rica
|
117
|
Asociación Nacional de Profesionales en Enfermería (ANPE)
|
Costa Rica
|
118
|
Asociación Nacional de EmpleadosPúblicos y Privados (ANEP)
|
Costa Rica
|
119
|
Sociedad Económica de Amigos del País
|
Cuba
|
120
|
Ecumenical Academy
|
Czech Republic
|
121
|
Dominica National Council of Women
|
Dominica
|
122
|
Kalingo Carib Council
|
Dominica
|
123
|
Alianza ONG
|
Dominican Republic
|
124
|
Confederación Nacional de UnidadSindical (CNUS)
|
Dominican Republic
|
125
|
Conseil de Concertation des ONGs de Développement (CCOD)
|
DR Congo
|
126
|
Recherche et Action pour un DéveloppementMultisectoriel (RADEM)
|
DR Congo
|
127
|
Conseil National des ONG de Développement (CNONGD)
|
DR Congo
|
128
|
“Segundo Montes Mozo S.J.” (CSMM)
|
Ecuador
|
129
|
Red de Mujeres Transformando la Economia
(REMTE)
|
Ecuador
|
130
|
Jubileo 2000 Red
|
Ecuador
|
131
|
ConfederaciónSindical del Ecuador (CSE)
|
Ecuador
|
132
|
ObservatorioCiudadano de ServiciosPublicos
|
Ecuador
|
133
|
Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights (ECESR)
|
Egypt
|
134
|
Sindicato de Empresa Trabajadores de
ANDA (SETA)
|
El Salvador
|
135
|
Asociación General de Empleados Públicos
y Municipales (AGEPYM)
|
El Salvador
|
136
|
CESTA Amigos de la Tierra
|
El Salvador
|
137
|
Red de Ambientalistas Comunitarios de El
Salvador Racdes
|
El Salvador
|
138
|
Forum des ONG pour le Développement Durable (FONGDD)
|
Eq. Guinea
|
139
|
Cotonou Task Force
|
Ethiopia
|
140
|
Poverty Action Network in Ethiopia (PANE)
|
Ethiopia
|
141
|
Ecumenical Centre for Research, Education and Advocacy (ECREA)
|
Fiji
|
142
|
The Finnish NGDO Platform to the EU (Kehys)
|
Finland
|
143
|
Solidarité
|
France
|
144
|
Collectif STOP TAFTA
|
France
|
145
|
Concertation Nationale Des Organisations paysannes et des
Producteurs (CNOP)
|
Gabon
|
146
|
Worldview
|
Gambia
|
147
|
World Economy, Ecology & Development (WEED)
|
Germany
|
148
|
Chaos Computer Club (CCC)
|
Germany
|
149
|
Forschungs- und Dokumentationszentrum Chile-Lateinamerikae.V.
(FDCL)
|
Germany
|
150
|
Campact
|
Germany
|
151
|
Agricultural Workers Union of TUC
|
Ghana
|
152
|
Naturefriends
|
Greece
|
153
|
Grenada National Organization of Women (GNOW)
|
Grenada
|
154
|
Inter Agency Group of Development Organizations (IAGDO)
|
Grenada
|
155
|
Federation de Femmes Enterpreneurs et Affairs de la CEDEAO
(FEFA)
|
Guinea
|
156
|
Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisa
(INEI)
|
Guinea-Bissau
|
157
|
Guyana Association of Women Lawyers
|
Guyana
|
158
|
Help & Shelter
|
Guyana
|
159
|
Red Thread
|
Guyana
|
160
|
Women Across Differences (WAD)
|
Guyana
|
161
|
Christian Aid
|
Haiti
|
162
|
Programme de Plaidoyer Pour uneIntégration Alternative (PPIA)
|
Haiti
|
163
|
Centre de Recherche et d Action Pour le Developpement (CRAD)
|
Haiti
|
164
|
PlateformeHaïtienne de Plaidoyer pour un DéveloppementAlternatif
(PAPDA)
|
Haiti
|
165
|
Moana Nui Action Alliance
|
Hawaii
|
166
|
Globalization Monitor
|
Hong Kong
|
167
|
ATTAC Hungary
|
Hungary
|
168
|
All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS)
|
India
|
169
|
Alliance for Sustainable & Holistic Agriculture (ASHA)
|
India
|
170
|
IT for Change
|
India
|
171
|
Initiative for Health & Equity in Society
|
India
|
172
|
All India Drug Action Network .
|
India
|
173
|
Navdanya
|
India
|
174
|
Foundation for Science Technology & Ecology
|
India
|
175
|
Diverse Women for Diversity
|
India
|
176
|
Mahila Anna Swarajya
|
India
|
177
|
National Working Group on Patent Laws and WTO
|
India
|
178
|
Swadeshi Andolan
|
India
|
179
|
ActionAid India
|
India
|
180
|
Indian National Defence Workers Federation (INDWF)
|
India
|
181
|
BharatiyaKrishakSamaj (BKS) farmers’ union
|
India
|
182
|
Tamil Nadu Electricity Board Accounts and Executive staff Union
|
India
|
183
|
Andhra Pradesh VyavasayaVruthidarula Union (APVVU)
|
India
|
184
|
National Agricultural workers Forum (NAWF)
|
India
|
185
|
National Center for Labour
|
India
|
186
|
Sunray Harvesters
|
India
|
187
|
Gene Campaign
|
India
|
188
|
National Alliance of People's Movements (NAPM)
|
India
|
189
|
Right to Food Campaign
|
India
|
190
|
CIVIC Bangalore
|
India
|
191
|
PaschimBangaKhetMazdoorSamiti
|
India
|
192
|
Udayani
|
India
|
193
|
Centre for Equity Studies
|
India
|
194
|
AmanBiradari Trust
|
India
|
195
|
VikasSamvad, Bhopal
|
India
|
196
|
Chaupal, Chhattisgarh
|
India
|
197
|
JagritiAdvisari Dalit Samiti, Barwani, Madhya Pradesh
|
India
|
198
|
Center for Workers Education
|
India
|
199
|
Wada Na Todo Abhiyan (WNTA)
|
India
|
200
|
Environics Trust
|
India
|
201
|
Communist Party of India (M-L)
|
India
|
202
|
Navdanya
|
India
|
203
|
National Federation of Indian Women
|
India
|
204
|
Swami Sivananda Memorial Institute
|
India
|
205
|
All India Agricultural Workers Union
|
India
|
206
|
National Confederation of Officers Association of Central
PSUs
|
India
|
207
|
Sanchar Nigam Executives Association
|
India
|
208
|
New Trade Union Initiative (NTUI)
|
India
|
209
|
Swadeshi JagranManch
|
India
|
210
|
All India Drug Action Network (AIDAN)
|
India
|
211
|
All India Peoples Science Network (AIPSN)
|
India
|
212
|
All India Power Engineers Federation (AIPEF)
|
India
|
213
|
All India Progressive Women Association (AIPWA)
|
India
|
214
|
All India Students Association (AISA)
|
India
|
215
|
Forum Against FTAs
|
India
|
216
|
India FDI Watch
|
India
|
217
|
Indian Social Action Forum (INSAF)
|
India
|
218
|
Janpahal
|
India
|
219
|
Madhyam
|
India
|
220
|
The Centre for Community Economics and Development Consultants
Society (CECOEDECON)
|
India
|
221
|
Swadeshi Andolan
|
India
|
222
|
Programme on Women’s Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(PWESCR)
|
India
|
223
|
South Asian Dialogues on Ecological Democracy (SADED)
|
India
|
224
|
VasudevKutumbkum
|
India
|
225
|
The Hawkers Federation
|
India
|
226
|
Thanal
|
India
|
227
|
Socialist Party
|
India
|
228
|
All India Union of Forest Working People (AIUFWP)
|
India
|
229
|
Asha Parivar
|
India
|
230
|
Citizen News Service (CNS)
|
India
|
231
|
ShetkariSanghatana Paik
|
India
|
232
|
SedaneLabour Resource Center (LIPS)
|
Indonesia
|
233
|
Inspirator Muda Nusantara
|
Indonesia
|
234
|
Berdikari Institute
|
Indonesia
|
235
|
Indonesian Forum for Environment/Walhi
|
Indonesia
|
236
|
Action from Ireland
|
Ireland
|
237
|
Keep Ireland Fracking Free
|
Ireland
|
238
|
Trócaire
|
Ireland
|
239
|
Presentation Justice Network
|
Ireland
|
240
|
Galway One World Centre
|
Ireland
|
241
|
Comhlámh
|
Ireland
|
242
|
Terra Nuova
|
Italy
|
243
|
OsservatorioItalianosulla Salute Globale (OISG)
|
Italy
|
244
|
Alliance Pour la Reconstruction et le Developpement Post-Conflit
(ARDPC)
|
Ivory Coast
|
245
|
Association of Women’s Organization of Jamaica (AWOJA)
|
Jamaica
|
246
|
Fifty-One Percent Coalition
|
Jamaica
|
247
|
Jamaica Civil Society (Coalition) Forum
|
Jamaica
|
248
|
JFLAG – Women’s Empowerment for Change
|
Jamaica
|
249
|
Jamaica Household Workers’ Union
|
Jamaica
|
250
|
Jamaica Network of Rural Women Producers (JNRWP)
|
Jamaica
|
251
|
Jamaica Youth Advocacy Network
|
Jamaica
|
252
|
Grassroots Organizations Operating Together in Sisterhood
(GROOTS)
|
Jamaica
|
253
|
Quality of Citizenship Jamaica
|
Jamaica
|
254
|
Institute of Gender and Development Studies (IGDS)
|
Jamaica
|
255
|
SISTREN Theatre Collective
|
Jamaica
|
256
|
Women’s Committee of the G2K
(Jamaica Labour Party Youth
Arm)
|
Jamaica
|
257
|
Women’s Media Watch (WMW)
|
Jamaica
|
258
|
Woman Inc.
|
Jamaica
|
259
|
Women’s Resource and
Outreach Centre (WROC)
|
Jamaica
|
260
|
Young Women’s Leadership Initiative
|
Jamaica
|
261
|
Jamaica Community of Positive Women
|
Jamaica
|
262
|
Yokohama Action Research
|
Japan
|
263
|
Globalization Watch Hiroshima
|
Japan
|
264
|
Kenya Small Scale Farmers Forum (KESSFF)
|
Kenya
|
265
|
ECONEWS Africa
|
Kenya
|
266
|
Kenya Food Rights Alliance (KeFRA)
|
Kenya
|
267
|
Southern and Eastern African Trade Information and Negotiations
Institute (SEATINI) Kenya
|
Kenya
|
268
|
Bunge La Mwananchi Social Movement
|
Kenya
|
269
|
Mathare Social Justice
Centre
|
Kenya
|
270
|
Unga Revolution Movement
|
Kenya
|
271
|
Action Green for Trade and Sustainable Development (AGTSD)
|
Kenya
|
272
|
The Coalition for Constitution Implementation
|
Kenya
|
273
|
Econews Africa
|
Kenya
|
274
|
Kenya Debt Relief Network (KENDREN)
|
Kenya
|
275
|
National Council of NGOs
|
Kenya
|
276
|
AwaaZ
|
Kenya
|
277
|
Mazingira Institute
|
Kenya
|
278
|
Kiribati Association of Non-Governmental Organisation (KANGO)
|
Kiribati
|
279
|
Rural Self-help Development Association (RSDA)
|
Lesotho
|
280
|
Consumers Protection Association (CPA)
|
Lesotho
|
281
|
Policy Analysis and Research Institute of Lesotho (PARIL)
|
Lesotho
|
282
|
Patriot Vision in Action (PAVA)
|
Lesotho
|
283
|
Lesotho Council of NGOs (LCN)
|
Lesotho
|
284
|
United Textile Employees (UNITE)
|
Lesotho
|
285
|
West African Women Association (WAWA)
|
Liberia
|
286
|
Cercle de Coopération des ONG de développement
|
Luxembourg
|
287
|
Action Solidarité Tiers Monde (ASTM)
|
Luxembourg
|
288
|
SOS-Faim
|
Luxembourg
|
289
|
Cercle de Coopération
|
Luxembourg
|
290
|
Plate-Forme Nationale des Organisations
de la Societe Civile de Madagascar
|
Madagascar
|
291
|
Malawi Economic Justice Network (MEJN)
|
Malawi
|
292
|
Communication Workers Union of Malawi (COWUMA)
|
Malawi
|
293
|
Observateur de l'UnionAfricaine pour la composante des Droits
humains au Mali (RODADDHD)
|
Mali
|
294
|
Reseau des ONGs de Developpement et Associations de Defense des
Droits de L’homme et de la Democratie
(RODADDHD)
|
Mali
|
295
|
MUSONET
|
Mali
|
296
|
Foundation pour le Developpment au Sahel (FDS)
|
Mali
|
297
|
Marshall Islands Council of NGOs (MICNGOS)
|
Marshall Islands
|
298
|
GLOBE
|
Mauritania
|
299
|
Mauritius Trade Union Congress (MTUC)
|
Mauritius
|
300
|
Migration and Sustainable Development Alliance (MSDA)
|
Mauritius
|
301
|
Resistance & Alternatives
|
Mauritius
|
302
|
Center for Alternative Research and Studies (CARES)
|
Mauritius
|
303
|
Mauritius Council of Social Service (MACOSS)
|
Mauritius
|
304
|
Jóvenesfrente al G20
|
Mexico
|
305
|
Asociación Nacional de Industriales de
la Transformación (ANIT)
|
Mexico
|
306
|
Centro de Promoción y Educación
Profesional "Vasco de Quiroga"
|
Mexico
|
307
|
Sindicato Unico de Trabajadores del
Gobierno del Distrito Federal
|
Mexico
|
308
|
Asesoría e Investigación
|
Mexico
|
309
|
Grupo Tacuba
|
Mexico
|
310
|
Asociación Nacional de Empresas
Comercializadoras de Productores del Campo (ANEC)
|
Mexico
|
311
|
Red Mexicana de Acción frente al Libre
Comercio (RMALC)
|
Mexico
|
312
|
Red Nacional Género y Economía
|
Mexico
|
313
|
Siembra
|
Mexico
|
314
|
Mujeres para el Diálogo
|
Mexico
|
315
|
Unión Popular Valle Gómez
|
Mexico
|
316
|
Ombligo Verde, A.C.
|
Mexico
|
317
|
FSM Alliance of NGOs (FANGO)
|
Micronesia
|
318
|
RéseauEuromdMaroc des ONG
|
Morocco
|
319
|
National Forum for Mozambiquan NGOs and CBOs (TEIA)
|
Mozambique
|
320
|
Namibia Non-Governmental Organisations Forum Trust
|
Namibia
|
321
|
Nauru Island Association of NGOs (NIANGO)
|
Nauru
|
322
|
All Nepal Peasants' Federation (ANPFa)
|
Nepal
|
323
|
National Women Peasants Association
|
Nepal
|
324
|
Nepal Youth Peasants Association
|
Nepal
|
325
|
National Agriculture Labour Association
|
Nepal
|
326
|
Nepal Dalit and Landless farmers Association
|
Nepal
|
327
|
Union of Public Services in Nepal (UPSIN)
|
Nepal
|
328
|
Wemos foundation
|
Netherlands
|
329
|
Platform Aarde Boer Consument
|
Netherlands
|
330
|
Working group Food Justice
|
Netherlands
|
331
|
The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions TeKauaeKaimahi
|
New Zealand
|
332
|
It's Our Future: Kiwis against the TPPA
|
New Zealand
|
333
|
Association Nigérienne des Scouts de l Environnement du Niger
|
Niger
|
334
|
National Association of Nigerian Traders (NANTS)
|
Nigeria
|
335
|
Labour,Health and Human Rights Development Centre
|
Nigeria
|
336
|
Ogoni Solidarity Forum
|
Nigeria
|
337
|
CAFSO-WRAG for Development
|
Nigeria
|
338
|
National Association of Nigerian Traders (NANTS)
|
Nigeria
|
339
|
Niue Island (Umbrella) Association of NGOs (NIUANGO)
|
Niue
|
340
|
ATTAC
|
Norway
|
341
|
Campaign for the Welfare State
|
Norway
|
342
|
The Development Fund
|
Norway
|
343
|
Spire
|
Norway
|
344
|
Neitil EU (No to EU)
|
Norway
|
345
|
Fagforbundet (Norwegian Union of Municipal and General
Employees)
|
Norway
|
346
|
Baluchistan Rural Development & Research Society (BRDRS)
|
Pakistan
|
347
|
NOOR PAKISTAN
|
Pakistan
|
348
|
Grupo de Agroecología y Soberanía
Alimentaria de Panamá (GASA)
|
Panama
|
349
|
Sindicato de la Industria Eléctrica y
Similares de la República de Panamá (SITIESPA)
|
Panama
|
350
|
ColectivoVocesEcológicas (COVEC)
|
Panama
|
351
|
Unión Nacional de Consumidores y
Usuarios de la República de Panamá (UNCUREPA)
|
Panama
|
352
|
Federación Nacional de Asociaciones y
Organizaciones de Empleados Públicos (FENASEP)
|
Panama
|
353
|
Melanesian NGO Centre for Leadership (MNCL)
|
Papua New Guinea
|
354
|
Red Peruana de Comercio Justo y Consumo
Ético
|
Peru
|
355
|
Federación Nacional de Trabajadores del
Agua Potable (FENTAP)
|
Peru
|
356
|
Frente Regional Por la Defensa del Agua y la Vida Lambayeque
(FREDAV-LAM)
|
Peru
|
357
|
IDEALS
|
Philippines
|
358
|
Ecumenical Institute for Labor Education and Research, Inc.
(EILER)
|
Philippines
|
359
|
Coconut Industry Reform Movement, Inc. (COIR)
|
Philippines
|
360
|
Workers Assistance Center, Inc.
|
Philippines
|
361
|
Medical Mission Sisters
|
Philippines
|
362
|
Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR)
|
Philippines
|
363
|
Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU)
|
Philippines
|
364
|
WomanHealth
|
Philippines
|
365
|
FundacjaStrefaZieleni
|
Poland
|
366
|
ATTAC
|
Poland
|
367
|
Plataforma contra o Tratado
Transatlântico
|
Portugal
|
368
|
Rwanda Civil Society Platform
|
Rwanda
|
369
|
Samoa Umbrella for Non Governmental Organisation (SUNGO)
|
Samoa
|
370
|
Ole Siosiomaga Society Incorporated (OLSSI)
|
Samoa
|
371
|
Forum das Ong de São Tomé e Principe (FONG-STP)
|
Sao Tomé and Principe
|
372
|
ARCADE
|
Senegal
|
373
|
L'officeAfricain pour le développement et la coopération
(OFADEC)
|
Senegal
|
374
|
Plate-forme des acteurs non étatiques
pour le suivi de l'Accord de Cotonou au Sénégal
|
Senegal
|
375
|
Liaison Unit of the non-governmental organisations of Seychelles
(LUNGOS)
|
Seychelles
|
376
|
Civil Society Movement of Sierra Leone
|
Sierra Leone
|
377
|
Development Service Exchange (DSE)
|
Solomon Islands
|
378
|
South Durban Community Environmental Alliance
|
South Africa
|
379
|
Southern and Eastern African Trade Information and Negotiations Institute
(SEATINI)
|
South Africa
|
380
|
South African NGO Council (SANGOCO)
|
South Africa
|
381
|
Economic Justice Network of Foccisa
|
South Africa
|
382
|
Korean House for International Solidarity
|
South Korea
|
383
|
Community Empowerment for Progress Organization (CEPO)
|
South Sudan
|
384
|
Unión Universal DesarrolloSolidario
|
Spain
|
385
|
ATTAC
|
Spain
|
386
|
IntersindicalValenciana
|
Spain
|
387
|
ATTAC BIZKAIA
|
Spain
|
388
|
Unión Universal DesarrolloSolidario
|
Spain
|
389
|
Acció Ecologista-Agró (País Valencià)
|
Spain
|
390
|
Ong AFRICANDO
|
Spain
|
391
|
ConfederacionInterSindical
|
Spain
|
392
|
PlataformapelDret a Decidir del País Valencià
|
Spain
|
393
|
National Free Trade Union (NFTU)
|
Sri Lanka
|
394
|
Caribbean Association for Feminist Research and Action (CAFRA)
|
St. Lucia
|
395
|
Iyanola (St. Lucia) Council for the Advancement of Rastafari
Incorporated (ICAR)
|
St. Lucia
|
396
|
Saint Lucia Crisis Centre
|
St. Lucia
|
397
|
United and Strong
|
St. Lucia
|
398
|
Windward Islands Farmers’ Association (WINFA)
|
St. Vincent and the Grenadines
|
399
|
Foundation Ultimate Purpose (UP)
|
Suriname
|
400
|
StichtingProjekta
|
Suriname
|
401
|
Council for NGOs (CANGO)
|
Swaziland
|
402
|
Coordination Climat Justice Sociale
|
Switzerland
|
403
|
Forum Social Lémanique
|
Switzerland
|
404
|
Geneva Infant Feeding Association (GIFA)
|
Switzerland
|
405
|
International-Lawyers.Org
|
Switzerland
|
406
|
Alliance Sud
|
Switzerland
|
407
|
SyndicatAdetra
|
Switzerland
|
408
|
SolidaritéBosnie
|
Switzerland
|
409
|
Association citoyenne pour la défense des usagers du service
public (ACIDUS)
|
Switzerland
|
410
|
ATTAC-Suisse
|
Switzerland
|
411
|
ATTAC-Genève
|
Switzerland
|
412
|
Tanzania Trade and Economic Justice Forum (TTEJF)
|
Tanzania
|
413
|
Tanzania Organization for Agricultural Development (TOfAD)
|
Tanzania
|
414
|
Ecosystems-Based Adaptation for Food Security Assembly (EBAFOSA)
|
Tanzania
|
415
|
Eastern and Southern Africa Small-scale Farmer’s Forum (ESAFF)
|
Tanzania
|
416
|
Governance Links Tanzania
|
Tanzania
|
417
|
Civil Education is a Solution for Poverty and Environment
(CESOPE)
|
Tanzania
|
418
|
MtandaowaVikundivyaWakulima Tanzania (MVIWATA)
|
Tanzania
|
419
|
Tanzania Association of NGOs
|
Tanzania
|
420
|
Thailand Confederation Trade Union (TCTU)
|
Thailand
|
421
|
Worldview
|
The Gambia
|
422
|
The Asia Foundation
|
Timor-Leste
|
423
|
Ligue des consommateurs du Togo (LCT)
|
Togo
|
424
|
Grouped'Action et de Reflexion sur l'Environnement et le
Développement (GARED)
|
Togo
|
425
|
Civil Society Forum of Tonga (CSFT)
|
Tonga
|
426
|
Grassroots Organizations Operating Together in Sisterhood
(GROOTS)
|
Trinidad & Tobago
|
427
|
Network of NGOs Trinidad & Tobago
|
Trinidad & Tobago
|
428
|
Grassroots Organisations of Trinidad & Tobago (GOTT)
|
Trinidad & Tobago
|
429
|
Coalition Advocating for Inclusion of Sexual Orientation (CAISO)
|
Trinidad & Tobago
|
430
|
Caribbean Association for Feminist Research and Action (CAFRA)
|
Trinidad & Tobago
|
431
|
Tuvalu Association of NGOs (TANGO)
|
Tuvalu
|
432
|
Consumer Education Trust
|
Uganda
|
433
|
Southern and Eastern African Trade Information and Negotiations
Institute (SEATINI) Uganda
|
Uganda
|
434
|
Coalition for Health Promotion and Social Development (HEPS)
|
Uganda
|
435
|
National Justice & Peace Network
|
UK
|
436
|
GMB Trade Union
|
UK
|
437
|
Banana Link
|
UK
|
438
|
StopTTIP
|
UK
|
439
|
Comisión Nacional en Defensa del Agua y
la Vida (CNDAV)
|
Uruguay
|
440
|
ComisiónMultisectorial
|
Uruguay
|
441
|
Oakland Institute
|
USA
|
442
|
Medical Mission Sisters
|
USA
|
443
|
Americas Program of the Center for International Policy
|
USA
|
444
|
Institute for Policy Studies, Global Economy Project
|
USA
|
445
|
Friends of the Earth, U.S
|
USA
|
446
|
Popular Resistance
|
USA
|
447
|
Vanuatu Association of NGOs (VANGO)
|
Vanuatu
|
448
|
Scode
|
Vietnam
|
449
|
Yemen
|
|
450
|
Zambia Council for Social Development (ZCSD)
|
Zambia
|
451
|
Centre for Trade Policy and Development (CTPD)
|
Zambia
|
452
|
Southern and Eastern African Trade Information and Negotiations
Institute (SEATINI)
|
Zimbabwe
|
453
|
National Association of NGOs (NANGO)
|
Zimbabwe
|
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