Posts Tagged ‘International Service’

Volunteer for International Women’s Day

Thursday, March 8th, 2012

Happy International Women’s Day! Today countries around the world celebrate the contributions of women to the strength of history and their nations. American women have played a unique role throughout the history of the country by providing the majority of the volunteer labor force. They were particularly important in the establishment of early charitable, philanthropic, and cultural institutions.

Juliette Gordon Low Low started the first Girl Scout troop in 1912. Low brought girls of all backgrounds into the out-of-doors, giving them the opportunity to develop self-reliance and resourcefulness. She encouraged girls to prepare not only for traditional homemaking, but also for possible future roles as professional women—in the arts, sciences and business—and for active citizenship outside the home. Girl Scouting welcomed girls with disabilities at a time when they were excluded from many other activities.

Lillian Wald Often called the “mother of public health nursing”, Wald the Visiting Nurse Service of New York in 1893 on New York’s Lower East Side, when it was the world’s most densely populated slum. Wald blazed a trail for a multicultural workforce, and pioneered American social work to establish the Henry Street Settlement House, which was nonsectarian and would charge fees only to those who could pay.

Despite the contributions of these women, and countless others, women still face hardships in our country and across the world. This International Women’s Day, take some time to do good for women.

Volunteer at a women’s shelter Women’s shelters are often under-served and underfunded, while domestic abuse is the leading cause of injury among women 15 to 44 years old in the United States. One woman is beaten by her husband or partner every 15 seconds in the United States, and 1 in 4 women will experience domestic violence in her lifetime. Consider spending some of your volunteer time at a women’s shelter.

Invest in women with microfinancing Consider making your next donation a loan, through a microfinancing organization, like Kiva or WAM (Women Advancing Microfinancing). Women are a significant untapped resource for creating opportunity that can change lives. And yet millions across the world struggle to access the resources they need and deserve to jumpstart change.

Organize a feminine hygiene product drive Domestic violence shelters and homeless shelters often face  a shortage of feminine hygiene products. The lack of these products prevents women from attending work and school. Find out which organization in your community could most benefit from your donation and start a collection. To take this project world wide, check out Pads4Girls, which provides reusable pads for girls in developing nations so they can continue to attend school.

Find an International Women’s Day event near you! What will you be doing to celebrate women today? Let us know in the comments below!

Revolutionizing a Global Movement of the Heart

Friday, February 18th, 2011

volunteer volunteering, volunteerismToday’s post comes from Gared Jones, Points of Light Instute‘s Vice President of Global Service.

In November 1997 the United Nations General Assembly declared that 2001 would be the International Year of the Volunteer.  It is striking to me that in September of 2001 the World Trade Center and Pentagon tragedies occurred and in the wake of the disaster we saw one of the greatest outpourings of citizen compassion and support the world has ever seen.

It was the events of September 11, 2001, and the handful of days that followed while I was stuck in a hotel room in Houston waiting for the airports to reopen, that led to my retirement from management consulting and sojourn to India to join Ashoka – initially as a volunteer – and seek to “figure out” how social change can transpire on the grandest scale.

A few weeks ago I boarded a plane for Singapore and arrived 26 hours later to attend IAVE’s World Volunteer Conference. The conference kicked off the tenth anniversary celebrations for the International Year of the Volunteer.

More than a thousand participants from nonprofit organizations, corporations, government, and academia came together to share and learn best practices in volunteer engagement, strategies for cross-sector collaboration, and inspiring stories of individual impact.  The proceedings were impeccably well organized by the National Volunteer and Philanthropy Center of Singapore and IAVE, and transacted on the backdrop of local preparations for Chinese New Year and Singapore’s extraordinary cuisine.

For me, the conference was a space far from home – ten years after my departure for India – to reflect on how one changes the world.  And, specifically, to discern how Points of Light Institute can accelerate and deepen its impact internationally, and, in particular, through HandsOn Network in Asia.

So what did I learn?

I learned that the HandsOn model (creating structured, short-duration opportunities with nonprofit organizations for members of the community to make an impact on issues they care about) is a new and powerful idea in many international contexts, and one that is transforming the way citizens can be of service.  Singapore Cares has recruited more than 15,000 volunteers in its first year of operation.  Keynote speaker and former Prime Minister of Singapore, Goh Chok Tong, identified “flexible, bite-sized” volunteering as one of three trends transforming community engagement in the country.

I learned that some of the most compelling innovations in volunteering are being generated by international HandsOn action centers.  Two of the five finalists in UBS’s “Pitch” competition for $75,000 investment funding for a new initiative were members of HandsOn Network:  HandsOn Manila and HandsOn KoreaHandsOn China was highlighted in multiple conference sessions for its entrepreneurial approach to growing volunteerism in China.

I learned how deeply many of Points of Light Institute’s corporate partners (including UPS, Kraft, Pfizer, Lilly, and Disney) are making their unique impact in countries around the world. UPS has mobilized its global workforce of more than 400,000 employees to contribute 1.2 million hours toward building healthy, prosperous communities in the 200 countries where they work.  Kraft leverages a network of 250 internal leaders to orchestrate its Make a Delicious Difference Week with more than 350 local nonprofit organizations around the world.

And I learned that nothing beats looking into someone’s eyes, and sharing a smile, when working to strengthen a network.  More than anything, it is these glimmers that I still carry with me.

I returned home with a sense that the sector as a whole is on the cusp of a collective “ah hah” around how all of our efforts in heart, mind and hands; organization, corporation, and institution; Asia, the Americas, and Europe; technology, program, and evaluation… are converging to revolutionize a global movement of the heart.

That there is an impatient rumbling for “what’s next.”

It is on this journey that I have now embarked.  I look forward to sharing in it – and sharing a smile – with you.

If you are looking for ways to connect more deeply with this global movement, I would encourage you to get involved in the Get HandsOn’s Follow the Leader and try to win a volunteer vacation with HandsOn Manila.  I would also encourage you to indicate your commitment to service by signing the ServiceWorld Declaration.

It’s Up To You

Monday, June 28th, 2010

By Michelle Nunn, CEO, Points of Light Institute

We stand at a moment that brings decades of leadership to fruition.

Thousands of individuals have worked to bring volunteer participation to historic high thresholds, to pass unprecedented legislation that expands national service, and creates new platforms for investment in our civic infrastructure.

Many of you have been a part of the legion’s that have created this moment, but whether you have been a part of the history of this movement, it’s destiny is and will be up to us.

Realizing the fullness of this moment’s potential is in our hands.

Together we will determine whether this moment of civic promise is fulfilled.

As a sector, we need to think about:

  • The innovative ways that social media and technology are being used to rapidly mobilize volunteers in innovative ways;
  • The emerging global service movement, with a proposed International Service Impact Fund to increase capacity. Global volunteerism is  pulled towards entrepreneurial and innovative efforts as the number of volunteers and local organizations around the world increases;
  • The Millennials, who are just entering the workforce, are poised to become the great service generation. They are global, service minded, and seek to make a difference. They are tech-savvy.  They are the next largest generation after the baby boomers, so they will have strength in numbers to apply to causes that resonate with their passions.

We must demonstrate that we can extend the scale of our work to encompass hundreds of thousands of additional national service members and we must embrace millions of new volunteers.

We must work to ensure that through this  extended capacity, we demonstrate that service is a central strategy in addressing our national and international priorities.

I believe that we must continue to both demonstrate and document how service is a strategy for healthy communities and a strategy for solutions to tough challenges.

I think it is important that we reaffirm that we know that service and civic participation are core to vibrant democracies, and that civic networks and social capital are at the heart of strong communities and fundamental to individual development.

We know that service and the quality of empathy are fundamental to human emotional and intellectual human development- it makes us smarter, healthier, happier, and live longer.

We know that service to others is the primary shared spiritual value across all faith traditions.

Service is what makes us fully human.

As a service community we must continue to expand the research that makes these dimensions of civic participation evident and well understood.

I believe that as a service community, we must also embrace a broader understanding of service and civic engagement.

Individuals don’t think about how they create change in the narrow silos that our nonprofit community often acts within.

People think about how they can use their time, their passions, their skills, their purchasing power, and their voice to create change.

President Bush 41 said that

“We can find meaning and reward by serving some higher purpose than ourselves, a shining purpose, the illumination of a Thousand Points of Light…We all have something to give. So, if you know how to read, find someone who can’t. If you’ve got a hammer, find a nail. If you’re not hungry, not lonely, not in trouble, seek out someone who is. Join the community of conscience. Do the hard work of freedom. And that will define the state of our Union… What government can do alone is limited, but the potential of the American people knows no limits.”

President Obama said last fall at our Presidential Forum in Houston,

“In the end, when it comes to the challenges we face, the need for action always exceeds the limits of government. While there’s plenty that government can do and must do to keep our families safe, and our planet clean, and our markets free and fair, there’s a lot that government can’t — and shouldn’t — do. And that’s where active, engaged citizens come in. That’s the purpose of service in this nation.”

And his point is one I want to emphasize today: that “service isn’t separate from our national priorities, or secondary to our national priorities — it’s integral to achieving our national priorities. It’s how we will meet the challenges of our time.”

The 2010 National Conference on Volunteering and Service kicks off in New York City today. Visit the website for highlights and updates from the nation’s largest, annual gathering on service and civic engagement!