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Hello Everyone this presentation is about Top NGOs in India how NGO works and what is NGO and how it benefits the people.<br>
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Top 10 NGO in India By: Rachit Joshi JavaTpoint.com
What is NGO? A non- governmental organization (NGO) is a group that functions independently of any government. NGOs, sometimes called civic society organizations, are established on community, national, and international levels to serve a social or political goal such as a humanitarian cause or the protection of the environment. NGO work for the betterment and upliftment of socio-economic and politically weaker section of the community to improve their status in the society. In this presentation we are going to present about the top 10 NGO in India.
1. Child Rights and You (CRY) Child Rights and You (CRY) is an Indian non-governmental organization (NGO) that works towards ensuring children's rights. The organization was started in 1979 by RippanKapur, an Air India purser. CRY works with 99 grassroot projects across 19 states in India and has impacted the lives of over three million children. The organization focuses on changing behaviors and practices at the grassroots level and influencing public policy at a systemic level, to create an environment where children are the priority.
2. Smile Foundation Smile Foundation is an Indian nonprofit and non-governmental development organization that assists with child education and women's empowerment. The organization primarily works in disadvantaged areas in the areas of education, well-being, vocation, and strengthening. It has its headquarters in New Delhi. Santanu Mishra is a fellow donor and the establishment's main legal administrator. Smile Establishment is a formative organization.
3. Give India Foundation A strong "giving" culture in which Indians constantly contribute 2% of their earnings to provide opportunities for the needy. An active "charity marketplace" to ensure that the most capable and engaging charities have access to the greatest resources. The idea that fairness or "equivalent open door" is the foundation of civilization supports all that Give India does. Each individual, paying little mind to where or how the person in question is conceived, ought to have a similar likelihood of coming out on top throughout everyday life.
4. Goonj Goonj is a non-governmental organization based in New Delhi, India, providing disaster relief, compassionate leadership, and community development in 23 Indian states. Goonj focuses on clothing as an important but often overlooked requirement. In 1999, Anshu Gupta founded the group. He received the Ramon Magsaysay Grant in 2015 for his work with Goonj. Schwab Establishment, a sister group of World Financial Discussion, recognized him as India's Social business person of the Year in 2012.
5. Care India The 'Indo-CARE Two-sided Understanding' has been approved by CARE and the Indian Parliament - the first 'CARE Bundles' to appear long ago. Approximately 20,000 tonnes of food were appropriated across the country, laying the framework for CARE's sustenance programme. Catastrophe relief, sustenance, farming, well-being, and training initiatives were presented. In 2013, CARE India commenced operations as a free element. Changes becoming a member of the CARE Global Confederation. Implementing the Bihar Specialized Help Program to improve the state's maternal, baby, and child well-being.
6. Nanhi Kali Anand Mahindra, Executive of Mahindra Gathering, established the K.C. Mahindra Schooling Trust in 1996 to educate disadvantaged young females in India. The enterprise was founded against escalating population growth, poor female competence levels, and low female labour force interest. Anand Mahindra argued that there were substantial areas of strength between the traditional cultural disasters in India, such as concepts, endowment passings, rank structure, and the lack of education for young women. The World Bank has validated this multiple times, with its most recent 2018 report suggesting that low educational options for young females and barriers to completing 12 years of school.
7. HelpAge India HelpAge India is a popular, non-profit organization established under the Social Orders Enlistment Demonstration of 1860. Founded in 1978, the organization works for "the purpose and care of burdened, more established individuals to work on their fulfilment. In India, an estimated 138 million people are over 65. HelpAge India advocates for their rights so that they can live safe and respected lives. It manages 26 State Workplaces across India, runs various projects on the ground, tending to senior necessities and upholding their freedoms, such as their right to General Benefits, quality Medical care, activity against Senior Maltreatment, and much more at a public, state, and cultural level with Focal and State legislatures.
8. Pratham Pratham is one of the largest non-governmental organizations in India. It is committed to providing valuable education to downtrodden children in India. Madhav Chavan and Farida Lambay helped with its creation. It now has mediations in 23 states and association domains across India, as well as supporting sections in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Sweden, and Australia. Madhav Chavan, Pratham's organizer and ex-President, received the Skoll Grant for Social Entrepreneurship in 2011. Pratham was also awarded the 2013 BBVA Foundation Wildernesses of Information Grant. Collaboration has resulted from successfully caring for the developing needs of many stressed children for more than twenty years.
9. Save the Children India Bal Raksha Bharat, commonly known as Save the Children India, is a nonprofit organization that began working to better the lives of disadvantaged children in India in 2008. The organization, located in Gurugram and established in India as Bal Raksha Bharat (under the Social Orders Enlistment Act of 1861), is a member of the global Save the Children Coalition. While Save the Children has been operating in India since the 1940s, the organization was renamed Bal Raksha Bharat in April 2008. Since then, it has increased to 10.1 million children. The organization implements sensible, local-area-driven initiatives throughout India, from remote villages to major areas.
10. Oxfam India Oxfam India aim to ensure that Adivasis, Dalits, Muslims, and women and young women live secure, violence-free lives with equal opportunities to understand their rights and a future free of separation. They investigate long-term solutions to eliminate increasing inequities and prevent underserved networks from obtaining equitable employment, quality free education, and medical care. Almost the last year, they have improved the lives of over 1,000,000 people in our six core states*. Oxfam India are also critical to the Oxfam global confederation, which has affiliates in 21 countries working together to create a better world.