• English
  • Français
  • Español
  • Português
  • Ελληνικά

The Journal

  • Home
  • GOVERNANCE
    • INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
    • NATIONAL DEFENSE
    • POLITICS
  • ECONOMY
  • JUSTICE
    • CRIME & PUBLIC ORDER
    • HUMAN RIGHTS & JUSTICE
  • EDUCATION
  • CULTURE & SOCIETY
    • PUBLIC HEALTH
    • RELIGIONS
    • GENDER
    • YOUTH
    • ARTS
    • SOCIAL ISSUES
    • SPORTS
    • CULTURAL ISSUES
    • DISABILITY
  • ENVIRONMENT
    • NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
    • OUR CITIES
    • TRAVEL
  • TECHNOLOGIES
    • SCIENCES & NEW TECHNOLOGIES
    • INTERNET
    • MEDIA
  • NON PROFIT
    • FOUNDATIONS
    • NGOs & ASSOCIATIONS
EDUCATION

Masters of Givology

on how can you make your giving interactive
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS - NGOs & ASSOCIATIONS

Listen to the warning bells

from analysts based in over 60 countries
NGOs & ASSOCIATIONS

Let’s try a new school model

if the old one is too conventional
EDUCATION - SOCIAL ISSUES

What are the Families for Excellent Schools?

when parents speak for themselves
ECONOMY

25 dollars can go a long way

the KIVA initiative and how it works
NON PROFIT

Good news from Harlem

providing education services to 100 blocks
NGOs & ASSOCIATIONS

How to start with 88 beneficiaries and then reach 25 millions

the work of ActionAid
EDUCATION

Nothing compares 2U

online learning experiences and degrees
FOUNDATIONS - POLITICS

Hundreds of millions, for one idea

spreading democracy, if and where possible
NATURE & ENVIRONMENT

Keep America Beautiful

is there a way to fight pollution?
EDUCATION - INTERNET

The target of Panorama Education

on data analytics and K-12 education
ECONOMY

How can you hire high skilled but foreign-born professionals?

Jane Leu and the Upwardly Global
CRIME & PUBLIC ORDER - EDUCATION

Inclusion in Rio de Janeiro

the efforts of Viva Rio
SOCIAL ISSUES - YOUTH

The Bully, the Bullied, and the bystander

is it possible to break the cycle of violence?
FOUNDATIONS

Connecting donors with their own impact

Alexandre Mars and the Epic Foundation
EDUCATION

Learning how to read in Philadelphia

discover the Springboard Collaborative
NATURE & ENVIRONMENT

Too many fish out of the water

protecting the oceans
EDUCATION

The private schools of high quality and low cost

the idea of the Omega Schools
NATURE & ENVIRONMENT

Follow the frog

the Rainforest Alliance and the power of markets
NATURE & ENVIRONMENT

Not that RARE

conservation of nature comes down to people
EDUCATION

The tuition-free University

a new kind of access to higher education
PUBLIC HEALTH

Τraining the locals to save lives

health capacity building, starting from scratch – the work of the International Medical Corps
INTERNET - SCIENCES & NEW TECHNOLOGIES

Digital inclusion can change your life in Brazil

the idea of Rodrigo Baggio
EDUCATION - SOCIAL ISSUES

The most creative of Kindergartens

at the MIT Media Lab
ECONOMY

Can you transform the economic conditions of small fishermen?

Antonio Garcia Allut and his Fundacion Lonxanet
FOUNDATIONS - YOUTH

How Talia Leman started her organization at 10

the fundraising power of kids
EDUCATION

I see what you’re doing!

how can teachers improve behavior in classroom?
ECONOMY - SOCIAL ISSUES

How do you make immigrants participate in the economy?

Rodriguez Ferrera and the self-managed communities in Spain
EDUCATION - NATURE & ENVIRONMENT

No protection without education

the work of the Sea Research Foundation
EDUCATION - YOUTH

Build them a school, and then another one

what happened when 18-year-old Maggie Doyne set out to track through the Himalayas
ECONOMY - SOCIAL ISSUES

The complex economy of the homeless

Charles-Edouard Vincent and the work of Emma’s Défi
NATURE & ENVIRONMENT

The Swiss renewal

the proposals of South Pole Carbon
Page 23 of 33« First«...51015...2122232425...30...»Last »
All About Olbios
Three ways to participate
  • Show the best of your country

  • Spread the good news

  • Make yourself a gift

Search
Most read
  • CRIME & PUBLIC ORDER
    The Million Hoodies Movement for Justice
  • ECONOMY
    The truths of Solomon Hsiang
  • SOCIAL ISSUES
    We will go on living, no matter what
  • ARTS
    Give the Oscar to Oppenheimer
  • NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
    The boy who wanted to clean the oceans
  • NON PROFIT
    The many children of Matt Berg
  • RELIGIONS
    Life of the “Mother Teresa of Asia”
  • NON PROFIT
    Never too early to start
  • DATA
    A coach just for yourself?
  • ECONOMY
    The poor sex
  • GENDER
    The new Greek children and their mothers
  • DISABILITY
    Love-able people and outsiders
  • NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
    A coalition on violence against animals
Recent articles
  • CRIME & PUBLIC ORDER
    The Million Hoodies Movement for Justice
  • ECONOMY
    The truths of Solomon Hsiang
  • SOCIAL ISSUES
    We will go on living, no matter what
  • ARTS
    Give the Oscar to Oppenheimer
  • NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
    The boy who wanted to clean the oceans
  • NON PROFIT
    The many children of Matt Berg
  • RELIGIONS
    Life of the “Mother Teresa of Asia”
  • NON PROFIT
    Never too early to start
  • DATA
    A coach just for yourself?
  • CULTURAL ISSUES
    The pandemic’s silver linings
  • SOCIAL ISSUES
    Doing the right thing in difficult times
  • FOUNDATIONS - NGOs & ASSOCIATIONS
    A time for charities to reinvent themselves
  • ECONOMY
    Business not as usual
  • SOCIAL ISSUES
    Learning from the past how to protect our future
Sectors
CRIME & PUBLIC ORDER
CRIME & PUBLIC ORDER - HUMAN RIGHTS & JUSTICE
CULTURAL ISSUES
CULTURAL ISSUES - NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
CULTURE & SOCIETY
ECONOMY
ECONOMY - PUBLIC HEALTH
ECONOMY -SOCIAL ISSUES
EDUCATION
EDUCATION - SCIENCES & NEW TECHNOLOGIES
ENVIRONMENT
FOUNDATIONS - NGOs & ASSOCIATIONS
GOVERNANCE
HUMAN RIGHTS & JUSTICE
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
ISSUES
JUSTICE
NATURE
NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
NGOs & ASSOCIATIONS
NON PROFIT
OUR CITIES
OUR CITIES - NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC HEALTH - INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
PUBLIC HEALTH - SOCIAL ISSUES
SCIENCES
SCIENCES & NEW TECHNOLOGIES - ECONOMY
SOCIAL ISSUES
SOCIAL ISSUES - PUBLIC HEALTH
SOCIAL ISSUES - SCIENCES & NEW TECHNOLOGIES
TECHNOLOGIES
Disclaimer
No responsibility is taken for any information which may appear on any linked websites. Olbios does not accept any liability to any person for the information or advice which is provided on this website or incorporated into it by reference
  • There are an estimated 10 million non-governmental organizations (NGOs) worldwide. Source: The Global Journal
  • In a typical month, a massive 1.9 billion people will help a stranger; 1.3 billion people donate money and whilst 800 million people will volunteer. Source : CAF World Giving Index
  • If NGOs were a country, they would have the 5th largest economy in the world. In only 36 countries covered by the study, 20 years ago, volunteers comprised 44 % of the work force of civil society organizations representing the equivalent of 20.8 million full-time workers. Source: John Hopkins University, Center for Civil Society Studies
  • Nearly one in three (31.5%) people worldwide donated to charity in 2015 and one in four (24%) volunteered. Source: CAF World Giving Index 2015
  • There are more than 1.4 million NGOs in the United States that employ 11.4 million Americans. Source: Urban Institute/Bureau of Labor Statistics
  • 84% of Canadians donate to non-governmental organizations with an average individual donation of $446 per year. In total, that is $10.6 billion donated to NGOs by Canadians every year. Source: Imagine Canada
  • Some of the world’s most generous countries are among the most deprived. The G-20, which represents the world’s largest economies, accounts for only 5 of the top 20 countries in the CAF World Giving Index.
  • For the first time since 2008, men are now more likely to give money than women. People from Iraq were most likely to have helped a stranger, replacing the United States which came top last year.  There has been a recovery in young people’s generosity, helping to reduce the generation gap which sees much more giving among older people. Source : The 2015 CAF World Giving Index
  • With over 3.3 million non-governmental organisations, India has approximately one NGO for every 400 people. Source: Infochange
  • The world in english Among the ten ten most generous countries in the world are : Ireland, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and United States. Source: CAF World Giving Index 2015
  • Giving money to someone else actually makes you feel better than spending it on yourself, according to research from the Harvard Business School. Participants in the study actually predicted the opposite, but the results were overwhelming. Source : Michael Norton, Harvard Business School
  • There are more than 129,000 public-benefit foundations in Europe. Combined these non-governmental organisations (NGOs) give more than 53 billion euros annually. Source: Donors and Foundations Networks in Europe
  • Australia is one of the most generous countries in the world. On average, more than two thirds of Australian’s help strangers or donate money while one third volunteer. Ireland is the second most generous country in this aspect, followed by Canada. Source : Unscripted
  • The top 20 countries for charitable giving vary economically, geographically and politically; there’s at least one country from each continent. The list includes both Qatar, a country with the second highest GDP per capita and also Liberia, which has the second lowest GDP per capita. The USA, a nation of 300 million people, also makes an appearance in the top 20 - as does Trinidad and Tobago, a nation of just over one million. Source : CAF World Giving Index
  • The NGO sector In England and Wales is made up of 165,000 registered charities, 948,000 employees, 943,000 trustees, and 3,200,000 volunteers. Source: Charity Commission
  • The past decade has seen a massive jump in generosity, according to recent research. Between 2001 and 2011, giving around the world grew a whopping 240%.  Source : Giving USA 2012 Report
  • 40% of the French population volunteers with a local association or NGO and 22% regularly donate money. Source: France Bénévolat
  • The Third Sector in Germany consists of more 600,000 non-governmental organizations. 40% of the NGOs were founded after the year 2000. Source: ZiviZ
  • As of 2015, there were 136,453 registered non-governmental organizations in South Africa and on average, 68 new NGOs are registered every day. Source: Republic of South Africa
  • The NGO sector in Kenya alone represents more than 290.000 full-time employees and volunteers of which 80% are under the age of 24. Source: Devex
  • The GWP found that 16 per cent of adults worldwide volunteered their time to an organization. People in North America, Australia and New Zealand were the most likely to volunteer, followed by those in South-East Asia (specifically Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines) and Africa. Source : The Gallup World Poll
  • There are more than 600,000 non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Australia whose employees make up 8% of Australian workforce. Source: Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission
  • Three stunning facts The number of people worldwide donating money to NGOs increased from 1.2 billion in 2011 to 1.4 billion in 2014. By 2030, the number is expected to grow to 2.5 billion. With over 3.3 million NGOs, India has approximately one NGO for every 400 people.
  • Globally,1.4 billion people donated to NGOs in 2014. By 2030, this is expected to be 2.5 billion! Source: Charities Aid Foundation
  • The Sharing Economy is growing faster than Facebook, Google and Yahoo combined. It has been valued at $15 billion 2 in its first 7 years compared to the combined growth of Facebook, Google and Yahoo of $11 billion. Source : Report by Benita Matofska
  • Fascinating Statistics The 2007 Canada Survey of Giving, Volunteering and Participating, conducted by Statistics Canada, recorded a total of 2.1 billion volunteer hours with both an increase in the number of volunteers (5.7%) and volunteer hours (4.2%) from 2004. In 2004, in the United States, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the Department of Labor indicated that 62.8 million people had volunteered for an organization at least once in the previous 12 months.
  • The Bureau of Statistics of Australia found that, in 2007, 5.2 million people volunteered for a sum of 713 million hours of work, the equivalent to 14.6 billion Australian dollars of paid work time. The study showed that 34 per cent of the adult population volunteered (36 per cent of women and 32 per cent of men)
  • The estimated value of volunteer is $23.07 per hour. Thus, the value of the 7.7 billion hours of volunteer work performed by 62.6 million Americans, or 25.4 percent of the adult population, in 2013 was $173 billion. The NGO workforce is actually the third largest among U.S. industries. Source: Independent Sector
  • Total giving in the United States to non-governmental organizations was $358.38 billion in 2014 (about 2% of GDP) – an increase of 7.1% from 2013. Source: Giving USA Foundation
  • 9 out 10 people in the Gulf states donate to NGOs regularly with 63% of the donations being made during the religious holidays of Ramadan and Eid. Source: Philanthropy Age
  • 53% of Asia Pacific citizens donate to NGOs with those in Thailand (71%), Vietnam (70%), and Hong Kong (65%) giving most often. Children’s health and education is the most popular cause. Source: MasterCard Engagement Bureau
  • The NGO sector in Sweden is made up of 232,000 non-governmental organizations and 58% of its employees are female. Source: Statistiska centralbyråns
  • 80% of global citizens agree that nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) make it easy to be involved in positive social change. Source: Walden University

  • The Journal

  • The Community

  • The Social Fund

Navigation
  • Contact us
  • Who we are
  • Legal notices
  • Terms of use
  • Mission
  • FAQ
About Olbios

Improve the world
Choose to act
Focus on solutions

Newsletter
Social Media