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Society for International Development

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Society for International Development

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AED, International Relief and Develop, ACDI/VOCA, Development Gateway, SNV Netherlands Develop

The Society for International Development (SID), founded in Washington, D.C., United States, in 1957, is committed to stimulating dialogue and cooperation on global development issues, enhancing skills, knowledge and understanding among development practitioners, and providing a network for individuals and organizations working in various sectors of international development. Over the years, SID has consistently been at the forefront of shaping the theory and practice of development, challenging existing practices and suggesting alternative approaches.

Contents

Today, SID’s programme of work reflects the growing questioning of development as a point of reference for meaningful North-South dialogues. Accordingly, the Society’s focus has shifted from debates on how to advance development, to ways of opening up spaces for a reflection on how to ensure an agenda for social justice can be carried forward in a climate that is increasingly conservative and inward looking.

SID has a strong and vibrant network of individual and institutional members, local chapters and partner organisations, in more than 80 countries. It works with more than 100 associations, networks and institutions involving academia, parliamentarians, students, political leaders and development experts, both at local and international level.

SID’s consultative status The relevance of the society’s programmes is officially recognized by the special status that SID enjoys with the United Nations. SID enjoys the highest consultative status, Category I, with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) as the Society operates in most fields of involvement of the United Nations. SID is a member of the board of the Conference of Non-Governmental Organizations in Consultative Status with ECOSOC (CONGO). SID additionally maintains consultative status with the Council of Europe, IFAD, International Labour Organization, FAO, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, UNEP, UNESCO, UNFPA and UNICEF.

Secretariat

The SID Secretariat has been based in Rome since 1979. Additionally, SID opened a Regional Office for Eastern and Southern Africa in Nairobi in 2003.

Governing Council

SID members elect the SID Governing Council via a mail ballot every four years. The current council for the 2012-2015 period is:

  • President: Mr.Juma Volter Mwapachu, Society for International Development, Tanzania
  • Vice President: Jean Gilson, Senior Vice President, Strategy and Information Technology at DAI
  • Treasurer: Mr. René Grotenhuis, Chief Executive Officer Cordaid, The Netherlands
  • Managing Director: Mr. Stefano Prato, Society for International Development
  • SID Journal Development

    Development (ISSN 1011-6370, eISSN: ISSN 1461-7072) is the flagship quarterly journal of the Society for International Development (SID), published by the Palgrave Macmillan press. Since 1957 Development has explored the cutting edge issues of human-centred development. With alternative perspectives on civil society, development policy and community based strategies for livelihoods, gender and social justice, Development keeps readers up to date on the challenging issues of today's rapidly changing world.

    SID Forum

    The Forum is the blog space of the Society for International Development devoted to collect and generate different opinions on topical issues and events of development. Created in 2010 and led by the SID Secretariat, the Forum is a response to the numerous requests of sharing and networking within and around the SID network. It is the knowledge and resource sharing space of SID dedicated to all its members, chapters, partners and friends worldwide.

    Membership

    Join the Society for International Development and you will be part of a large and lively global network of individuals and institutions interested in development! Most SID members are organised into local chapters through which they have the opportunity to engage in development initiatives and events (such as conferences, seminars, lecture series, round tables, advocacy campaigns, charity events) in their locale maintaining a strong link with the territory. If there is no chapter in the country or region where you live, you are welcome to join SID through the international secretariat.

    Washington D.C. Chapter

    The Washington D.C. Chapter is the largest and most active chapter of the Society for International Development, with 150 member organizations and over a thousand individual members. SID-Washington's twenty-two regional and topical workgroups hold monthly events which connect a global forum of international development practitioners. SID-Washington is a leading international development membership organization that provides a space for dialogue and bridges a dynamic community of individuals and institutions working in international development.

    SID-Washington is committed to three principal objectives:

  • Stimulating dialogue and cooperation on global development issues
  • Enhancing skills, knowledge and understanding among development practitioners
  • Providing a network for individuals and organizations working in various sectors of international development
  • In pursuing this mission, SID-Washington bridges diverse constituencies (including academia, policy makers, progressive business sector, and multilateral institutions) in order to serves as a knowledge broker that supports the generation, exchange and dissemination of ideas.

    Notable event speakers

  • J. Brian Atwood, former Administrator of USAID and currently Dean of the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs
  • Paul Collier, CBE, Director of the Centre for the Study of African Economies and author of The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries are Failing and What Can Be Done about It
  • Amb. John J. Danilovich, Chief Executive Officer, Millennium Challenge Corporation
  • Dr. Kemal Derviş, former Administrator of the UNDP and currently Director of the Global Economy and Development Program at the Brookings Institution
  • Dr. William Easterly, author of The White Man's Burden: Why the West's Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good
  • Michael Fairbanks, Co-Founder of SEVEN and co-author of Plowing the Sea, Nurturing the Hidden Sources of Advantage in Developing Nations
  • Richard Feachem, KBE, FREng, Director of the Global Health Group
  • Henrietta H. Fore, former Under-Secretary of State and former Acting Administrator of USAID
  • Dr. Francis Fukuyama, Director of the International Development Program at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies and author of The End of History and the Last Man
  • Amb. Zalmay Khalilzad, former United States Ambassador to the United Nations
  • Former U.S. Representative Jim Kolbe, former Chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Foreign Operations
  • Dr. Carol Lancaster, Interim Dean of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service and former Counsel to the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board
  • U.S. Representative Nita Lowey, Chair, House Appropriations Subcommittee on Foreign Operations
  • Ad Melkert, Under-Secretary General of the UN and Associate Administrator of UNDP
  • Andrew Natsios, former USAID Administrator and President's Special Envoy for Sudan
  • Amb. John D. Negroponte, former Director of National Intelligence and former Deputy Secretary of State
  • U.S. Representative David Obey, Chairman, House Appropriations Committee.
  • Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala former Finance Minister and former Foreign Minister of Nigeria
  • Anne-Marie Slaughter, Director of Policy Planning at the U.S. Department of State
  • Aaron S. Williams, Director of the Peace Corps
  • Buenos Aires Chapter

    The Buenos Aires Chapter (SID-Baires) was created at the end of 1957, by a group of Argentinean intellectuals and scholars – like the economist Raul Prebish – committed to promote critical thinking and dialogue around development ideas on the eve of the increased attention and interest to new strategies for development, taking place in Argentina – at that time run by the Desarrollista government of Arturo Frondizi – as well as in the rest of the world. The chapter – known as “Argentine Chapter” changed the name to “Buenos Aires Chapter” in 2000, following the creation of two new chapters in the cities of Rosario and La Plata. The Buenos Aires Chapter is one of the oldest chapter of SID that has engaged consistently and continuously for more than 50 years in activities and programmers addressing development questions and processes from a both national and international perspective.

    Mission

    The Buenos Aires Chapter seeks to become a hub for holistic, multi-disciplinary and multi-sectoral thinking able to contribute to the construction of a vision of development that is harmonic, inclusive and sustainable.

    Activities

    SIDbaires is divided in departments that debate and produce critical thinking and propose public policies for Argentina’s complex reality. A series of policy dialogues are carried out with the aim of exploring and better understanding what model of development is suitable for Argentina and for Latin America as a whole. In that effort, the Chapter has set up a virtual newsroom to produce opinion pieces and analysis – published on the national press - presenting the main findings and key issues emerging in the discussions. SIDbaires members are key rising figures in business, union and government circles.

    In September 2010, the first issue of SIDbaires' new magazine, Qué? Hacer para el Desarrollo, was launched.

    Foundation and mission

    The Society for International Development in the Netherlands (SID NL) is a debate-driven network organisation founded in 1991. SID NL aims at providing a platform where civil society, NGOs, students, academics, private partners, government officials, politicians and media meet and have the opportunity to share and discuss their commitment to successful international cooperation and development. By creating a platform for discussion for future-oriented and creative advocates, SID NL tries to sharpen the thinking on international development. By bringing together a mix of stakeholders, SID NL is an important actor in the debate on international development cooperation in the Netherlands, influencing decision-makers and informing the public.

    Activities

    SID NL organises lectures, debates and conferences on international cooperation development. Each activity provides the audience with the opportunity to enter into a debate with influential (international) speaker(s).

    SID Lectures

    Series of lectures discussing a specific subject from multiple perspectives. The lectures take place at the VU University Amsterdam. Each series of lectures has a common theme:

  • 2004-2005: Security and Development
  • 2005-2006: Religion, Development and International Relations
  • 2006-2007: Democracy and Development
  • 2007-2008: Emerging Global Scarcities and Power Shifts
  • 2008-2009: Economic Growth and the Common Good
  • 2009-2010: Common Goods in a Divided World
  • 2010-2011: Global Values in a Changing World
  • 2011-2012: The State in a Globalizing World
  • 2012-2013: The Private Sector and Development
  • 2013-2014: Dispersed Power in a World in Transition
  • As of September 2014, the lectures will take place at the ISS Erasmus University in The Hague.

  • 2014-2015: New spaces for international engagement in a globalised world
  • Lunch meetings

    With the monthly Bread&Brains meetings, SID NL creates an informal meeting place for representatives of (international) organisations, NGOs, knowledge institutes, governments and others to connect and discuss topical issues in the field of international cooperation and development. The lunch meetings take place in the Humanity House in the Hague. Prominent speakers from and working in the Netherlands are invited to share their views, while visitors can enjoy an organic lunch and have the opportunity to engage in a debate on pressing issues in the field of international cooperation, development, and peace and justice.

    Notable event speakers

  • Dr. Ben Bot, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands
  • Dr. Denis Broun, Executive Director of UNITAID
  • Dr. J. Brian Atwood, Former Chair of the OECD Development Assistance Committee
  • Mr. Bert Koenders, Former Minister for Development Cooperation of the Netherlands and current Special Representative and Head of the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA).
  • Prof. Dr. Thomas Pogge, author of ‘World Poverty and Human Rights’
  • Mrs. Agnes van Ardenne, Former Minister for Development Cooperation of the Netherlands
  • Prof. Paul Collier, Director for the Centre for the Study of African Economies at the University of Oxford
  • Dr. Jan Pronk, Former Minister for Development Cooperation of the Netherlands and former Special Representative and Head of Mission for the United Nations Mission in Sudan
  • Dr. Inge Kaul, Adjunct professor at the Hertie School of Governance
  • Prof. Dr. He Wenping, Director of African Studies section, Institute of West-Asian & African Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
  • Mr. Anwar Ibrahim, Former Deputy Prime Minister and former Finance Minister of Malaysia
  • Mr. Ad Melkert, Former Minister of Social Affairs and Employment of the Netherlands and former Special Representative of the Secretary-General of the United Nations in Iraq
  • Mrs. Manuela Monteiro, Former Director of Hivos
  • Judge Song Sang-Hyun, President of the International Criminal Court in the Hague
  • Dr. Jan-Peter Balkenende, Former Prime-Minister of the Netherlands
  • Dr. Benjamin Barber, Author of "Why Mayors Should Rule the World"
  • Ms. Lilianne Ploumen, Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation of the Netherlands
  • Other activities

  • The organisation of ad hoc debates and panel discussions on topical issues
  • The organisation of expert meetings, where invitees debate a particular issue. Expert meetings have taken place on topics such as global citizenship, migration and performance based aid
  • The organisation of network events
  • The publication of reports
  • References

    Society for International Development Wikipedia