Transparency
International India (TII)
works in over 100 countries to end the injustice of corruption
by promoting transparency, accountability and integrity.
Transparency
International India (TII)
National
Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC):
NACC first investigates/probes the Complaint/ problem of crime
corruption / injustice impartially and reaches the truth. Then,
without any delay, it inform the same to the supreme authorities
like President, Prime Minister, Home Minister, Chief Minister,
Governor's, DGP and other concerned Police / Civil / Judicial
Grievances by drawing Government's attention towards the concerned
problem. This is effective re-dressal of public grievances by
drawing Government's attention towards the concerned problem.
Anti-Corruption Investigation Bureau
(ACIB)
Promoting justice, transparency, and accountability in all facets
of society. Established with the mission to combat corruption
and uphold the principles of fairness and equality, organization
serves as a beacon of hope for individuals and communities seeking
to protect their rights and freedoms.
Citizen Rights Protection Council (CRPC):
CRPC works to protect citizen rights and combat corruption,
providing information to various government agencies and media
outlets. They also provide support to victims of corruption.
Anti Corruption
Foundation of India:
ACF helps local, national and even international law enforcement
officials in their constant effort to curtail the activities
of a crime syndicate, rockets, organized gangs, smugglers and
law-breaking in general. It provides Corruption Information
to honorable president, prime minister, Home minister, chief
minister, chief Justice, Lok Sabha president, Supreme Court,
High Court, Income Tax Department, Vigilance Department, Crime
Branch C.B.I. Raw, I.B, C.I.D, Print Media, Electronic Media,
Senior Journalist, Police and its administration etc.
India Against
Corruption (IAC)
Common strategies
used by anti-corruption NGOs:
Research and Advocacy : Many NGOs conduct research on corruption
issues and advocate for policy changes to address them.
Public Awareness Campaigns : They raise awareness about corruption
and its impact on society, often through educational programs
and outreach activities.
Victim Support : Some NGOs provide support to individuals who
have been affected by corruption, offering legal advice and
assistance.
Collaboration with Government Agencies : NGOs often work with
government agencies and law enforcement to investigate and address
corruption cases.
Monitoring and Reporting : Many NGOs monitor government activities
and report on corruption issues to the public and relevant authorities.
As of now,
we share the programmes of only NGOs, Government, UN social
issuewise because they are actual social doctors doing social
operations and do not include corporates, funding agencies,
philanthropists, celebrities who are typically social hospitals
who partner with NGOs. We may decide to include social hospitals
later.
We include celebrities issuewise because celebrities may or
may not be money donors but they certainly add reputation value
to the NGO they help or the issue they help. Again, because
of privacy of celebs, we do not share their address but if they
have an NGO of their own, then share NGO link.
Everyone values and follows celebs from film or sports. We want
them to at least know Great People working in the social sector.
We share only global or national social greats (this does not
mean that leader of every organisation which works at national
level). Social greats can be founder or CEO of organisations
as well as founders who left mother earth but their work is
carried forward.
More specifically
when government leaders visit other countries, they or their
senior representative must meet social greats like usually they
meet only political leaders, business leaders or business associations.
They must realise that these social greats really are development
leaders and their work can be replicated, scaled up in every
country.
We plan
to share 100 000 social programmes between 1st January 2026
to 31st March 2027 and can share many more programmes if the
NGO response is good. And we link the programmes to the official
link of the organisation so that donors and volunteers can contact
them directly.
We share the programmes of NGOs named alphabetically, but understanding
the need of donors & volunteers to be country specific,
we share the programmes countrywise but in alphabetical order.
This means programmes of NGOs in Afghanistan first and Zimbabwe
last. (Of course within the country it is alphabetical)
Though India is our global example, we share the programmes
countrywise. But within India, we will share the state , UT
of the NGO so that donors & volunteers know which state
the NGO is from. We do not share the name of the districts in
India where the NGO works because many NGOs might work in 2
or 3 or more districts in that state but if the NGO works in
more than one State or UT, we will share the names of those
states.
We have shared NGOs in India districtwise separatelty where
we have mentioned NGO name and programme areas from government
sources but we have not shared actual programmes in districts
of India. They are shared issuewise with link to the NGO. If
the NGO has no official website, then we share their name districtwise
and not mention them in issuewise NGOs for obvious reasons.
Most
of the people in the world follow religions, but still we do
not have religion and politics as social issue.
If an NGO works in many social issues including work for any
specific religion, we share their social issue programmes except
religious
programmes issuewise. And this applies to all NGOs in all countries.
But we do not share social programmes of political parties because
every political party is supposed to take care of social, health
and climate issues of all citizens, so they directly or in collaboration
with others work on all social, health and climate issues.
Please note
that we leave it to donor or volunteer to check credibility
of the NGO because they are donating money and time which is
valuable. We do so because we have realised that credit rating
of just one NGO will take anywhere between 3 to 6 months and
we can not send our person regularly to visit the donors, volunteers,
communities, local media, government to check credibility of
an organisation.
Communicate
with us through Datacentre@CSRidentity.com
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