International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Development Action Group (DAG)

Established in 1986, DAG is a Cape Town-based, South African non-profit, non-governmental organisation with a mission to support and advocate for community-led development addressing economic, social and spatial imbalances. DAG has been at the forefront of urban development initiatives for more than 30 years. Established to resist apartheid spatial planning and evictions in the late 1980s, the organisation focus has been responsive to the ever-widening socio spatial inequalities in South Africa cities.
International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Development Workshop

Founded in 1973, the Development Workshop (DW) has worked in over forty countries on human settlements development projects, research and policy advocacy. DW was a founding member of the Habitat International Coalition (HIC) and has remained an active member of HIC in the defense of women's and land rights.
International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Habitat International Coalition (HIC) - Housing and Land Rights Network

Habitat International Coalition (HIC) is an independent international non-profit Coalition of organisations and individuals working in the field of human settlements. Originally known as ‘The NGO Committee on Human Settlements’, it was organized in 1976 as a nongovernmental counterpart to the UN Commission on Human Settlements, and both emerged from the process of convening the first UN Habitat conference at Vancouver (Canada), in 1976.

International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Habitat for Humanity International (HfHI)

Habitat for Humanity is a non-profit, ecumenical Christian ministry that builds with people in need regardless of race or religion. Through volunteer labor and donations of money and materials, Habitat builds and rehabilitates simple, decent houses with the help of the homeowner families.

International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Groupe de recherche et d'echanges technologiques (GRET)

Founded in 1976, Groupe de recherche et d'echanges technologiques (GRET) is an international development NGO, governed by French law, which acts from work on the ground all the way up influencing policy, with the aim of providing durable and innovative answers to the challenges of poverty and inequalities.

International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA)

The Federation of Women Lawyers Kenya (FIDA Kenya) is a non-profit, non-partisan, and non-governmental membership organization, committed to the creation of a society that is free of all forms of discrimination against women through the provision of legal aid, women's rights monitoring, advocacy, education and referral. Membership to FIDA Kenya is open to Kenyan women lawyers and women law students.

The organization was started in 1985 after the 3rd UN Conference on Women, which was held in Nairobi, Kenya.

International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Asian Coalition for Housing Rights (ACHR)

Asian Coalition for Housing Rights (ACHR) is a coalition of Asian professionals, NGOs and community organizations committed to finding ways to make change in the countries where their work is rooted - change that goes along with the particular realities of their own cultures, politics and ways of doing things.

International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Protimos

Protimos was founded by a group of international lawyers, in London in 2002. Its network grew in succeeding years, and it now includes sister organisations in Lesotho, South Africa and USA.

Protimos works by creating local legal teams who can offer the full range of legal processes, making those processes accessible to impoverished communities who thus become enabled to assert their rights over their resources, in particular where those concern land usage and related issues. Their work includes a range of community legal empowerment projects.

International Institute of Rural Reconstruction (IIRR)

Slum/Shack Dwellers International (SDI)

SDI is a network of community-based organisations of the urban poor in 32 countries and hundreds of cities and towns across Africa, Asia and Latin America. In each country where SDI has a presence, affiliate organisations come together at the community, city and national level to form federations of the urban poor. These federations share specific methodologies, which are enumerated below.