Updates

Press release: CIVICUS World Assembly delegates express disappointment at India's new curbs on civil society.
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CIVICUS writes Jacob Zuma, demands South African support for the Resolution on Freedom of Association and Assembly at the UN Human Rights Council in September 2010. Read letter here

 
"Momentum to reclaim civil society space was evident at CIVICUS' World Assembly"
By Rowena McNaughton, Media Officer, CIVICUS
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Lessons for National Associations from the CIVICUS World Assembly
By David Kode, Coordinator for CIVICUS' Affinity Group of National Associations (AGNA)
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CIVICUS Day 4: We don't have a plan B because we don't have a planet B
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Civil society watchdogs crucial in new global order
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The world hits home at CIVICUS
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CIVICUS World Assembly Debate and Deliberation
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Press Statement by the Morong 43 detainees from Camp Bagong Diwa
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Press Release:
Civil society finds new resolve in working together at CIVICUS World Assembly to solve global crises

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The fundamental building block for CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation was the 1991 decision of a group of civil society leaders from across the world to reinforce and support the virtual expansion of citizen participation in every region of the globe. This 20-member group, serving as a steering committee for translating this idea into organisational reality, included Miguel Darcy of Brazil, Horst Niemeyer of Germany, Eddah Wacheke Gachukia of Kenya, Tadashi Yamamoto of Japan, Farida Allaghi of Saudi Arabia and Brian O'Connell of the United States. They agreed to test the potential for a global alliance of individuals and organisations which might strengthen civil society institutions, advocate for the cause of civil society among the world's decision-makers, and stimulate dialogue among civil society organisations and across the nonprofit, business and public sectors.

By mid-1993, the formative work was completed at Barcelona, marked by the first meeting of the founding Board of Directors of CIVICUS, which was composed of distinguished figures in civil society drawn from 18 countries on six continents.

Since 1993, CIVICUS has built successively on important achievements. These include preparation of regional reports on the status of civil society (1994); publication and global distribution of Citizens--Strengthening Global Civil Society (1995), the organisation's first world report on the state of civil society; regional consultations of members; two World Assemblies (Mexico City in 1995 and Budapest in 1997) of members and allies; an expanding membership (400 by end of 1997) of organisations and individuals across the world; a growing publication record and groundbreaking work by three special Task Forces in 1996 and 1997 on increasing understanding and visibility of the sector, the legal principles necessary for the sector's empowerment, and enhancing the sector's resource base.

CIVICUS has worked for over a decade to strengthen citizen action and civil society throughout the world, especially in areas where participatory democracy and citizens' freedom of association are threatened. CIVICUS has a vision of a global community of active, engaged citizens committed to the creation of a more just and equitable world. This is premised on the belief that the health of societies exists in direct proportion to the degree of balance between the state, the private sector and civil society.

Originally based in Washington, DC, USA, CIVICUS has now established its global headquarters in Johannesburg, South Africa.


CIVICUS turned 16 years old on the !
We received opinions and reflections from some of our members of their experience of CIVICUS over the past 16 years.
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