Our Partners
UAGPAN collaborates with willing partners globally. These partners include universities, governments, groups, international organizations - both public and private. These partners do seemingly have the same aspirations as UAGPAN.
PARTNER 1
The United Nations Office of Partnerships serves as a passage for partnership building between the private sector, foundations and other non-State actors .. As a link between the private sector, foundations and other non-State actors, the United Nations Office for Partnerships acts as a link for partnership building. That is why UAGPAN collaborates with its offices in order to perform actions that are advantageous to groups, women, children and several other national actors. UAGPN is indeed elated that the United Nations is pursing goals related to policies and goals that channel efforts towards aspirations that our organization seeks to accomplish.
Website: https://www.un.org/partnerships/
Partner 2
Partnerships with UAGPAN and the U. S. Policy Perspective
UAGPAN also partners with nations through their leadership. This way it may influence their polls that affect their people, make recommendations to them, create customized policy materials that would enhance good legislation, rule of law and governorship. UAGPN enables leaders, legislators, senators, governor, local governments with the tools they need for success and development of their catchment areas for the well-being of their people based on advanced democratic policy framework.
View, “US AFRICA RELATIONS: A NEW FRAMEWORK”
Website: https://www.csis.org/analysis/new-us-policy-framework-african-century
Partner 3
RESEARCH AND INSTITUTIONAL PARTNERS
As a think tank, the organization reaches out to universities and other institutional partners in its endeavor to ensure that it utilizes updated and cogent information in its policy innovation work. Through partnership in research and quasi areas and activities, its work in enhanced to credible and authentic heights.
Any global organnization could partner with our charity / organization. Universities and quasi institutions of interest could partner with UAGPN in its work economically, non-profit work, international and national collaborations, and other spheres particularly in developing nations.
The Brookings Institute for Public Policy and the Center for Strategic and International studies are among the majors that could partner with UAGPAN.
Search for and Read, “A New US Policy for the African Century” at www.csis.org.
Click Below.
Website: wwwhttp://.csis.org.
Partner 4
CHARITIES
For the above reasons, charity work have become a global issue of a large scale that cannot be tackled uniquely by the Red Cross, Medicines sans Frontiers, Churches, etc. It has become a global responsibility that deserves many hands on deck. Partnerships in this sphere has also increased. That is why UAGPN has deemed it fit to partner with other local and international entities.
It is evidently clear and glaring that Sub-Saharan Africa, like the Middle East a while back, particularly Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Burkina Faso, and others in the South and Central parts of Africa including Madagascar are undergoing economic hardship and many other developmental challenges. Boko Haram, Islamic State in West Africa -ISWAP, Fulani Herdsmen, etc., have caused extreme suffering due to terrorist activities. Many people have been displaced due to land-seizure, arson, burning of homes and farmlands, fear of torture and instant demise. Scores of Children, pregnant women, youths in their tens of thousands are not spared.
In fact, the situation is not unique to Africa, but is also rife in other developing nations in the Middle East and Asia to mention a few more. Additionally, the devastations of Climate change such as forest and wild fires extending to cities in the United States, Australia, storms, hurricanes in floods in Europe and more have become causes of much concern.
View, “The State of Some African IDP Camps and How They Receive Help”
Click Below
Website: https://youtu.be/0SuVRwMVsds
Partner 5
ADVOCACIES
Since UAGPAN uses our advocacy work and campaigns to help citizens in need, promote policies, draw attention to and foster our mission and objectives. We may partner with other organizations with seeming similarities to demand justice, equity and correct processing and implementation of the rule of law. Such partners include the National Advocacy Network, We partner with Disability, Training, Legislative, Human Rights, Jurisprudential, etc., networks
Partner 6
BUSINESSES / BANKS / Personalities
Partnerships with business and financial entities enable us to seek financial empowerment, jobs, internships and soft loans to small businesses, women and youths.
We welcome groups, individuals, organizations and others who may wish to promote our cause and support our Mission. PARTNER, DONATE and VOLUNTEER to UAGPAN renders support to millions of people in humanitarian crisis across the globe.
Kindly CLICK Below to view the “Faces of Nigeria,” a country that is very wealthy, but the majority of her citizens are wallowing in poverty due to policy compromizations. To make matters worse the threat and activities of terrorists have aggravated the already bad situation. Nigeria and so many other nations in Africa are facing the same predicament and is among the group of poor nations where many are facing poverty, humanitarian crisis and the average per capita income very depressing.
Website: https://www.worldbank.org/Partner 8
These partners include youths women, children and others in dire need. CLICK DONATE to HELP.
The Boko Haram insurgency has jeopardized lives and displaced nearly 2.4 million people in the Lake Chad Basin.
Although the Nigerian military has regained control in parts of the country’s north-east, civilians in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger continue to be affected by grave violations of human rights, widespread sexual and gender-based violence, forced recruitment and suicide bombings.
304,562
Nigerian refugees
Over 2.1 million
internally displaced in Nigeria
Over 778,000
internally displaced in Cameroon, Chad and Niger
Updated 31 December 2020
Political unrest in Burundi took a deadly turn in 2015 after the president announced plans to seek a third term. Street protests led to violent clashes, and hundreds of thousands fled to nearby countries in search of safety.
Over 333,700
refugees
US$296 million
UNHCR and multi-agency funding appeal
Updated 31 July 2020Also Click on the Website below to view the plight of Refugees and INTERNALLY DISPLACED Persons in IDP Camps globally. PLEASE SUPPORT OUR EFFORTS.
The number of refugees and asylum-seekers from the North of Central America (NCA) has soared in the last five years.
Worsening crime and violence fuelled by drug cartels and gangs accounts for much of the increase, along with fragile institutions, and increasing inequalities.
In Nicaragua, political persecution and human rights violations have been driving a new large-scale displacement.
Around 470,000
refugees and asylum-seekers from the North of Central America worldwide
(Government figures)
Over 97,000
refugees and asylum-seekers in Mexico
Over 318,000
internally displaced people in Honduras and El Salvador
(Government figures)
Over 102,000 Websites
anticipated global links speak to hunger.