1. INISE AISBL
International Network for Innovative Social
Entrepreneurship
(references in singular in slides 2, 9 and 10 taken from Ewa’s briefing
note of 22/06/2012)
2. LIVERPOOL RECONCILES
1. I would like to let you know that at the last minute we managed to
include Chara Trust to the list of the founding members of INISE.
2. This has been thanks to the resolvement of misunderstandings between
the leaders of the organisations in Liverpool.
3. Chara Trust has been the organisation which contacted Barka
Foundation
and the one which has been organising the study visits of
Merseyside-based organisations to Barka Network in Poland. The visits
have borne fruit in our joint endeavors towards the establishment of
INISE.
4. In terms of the registration process, we have a month to go to obtain
the royal authorisation according to the information from the General
Office Advices.
3. OBJECTS AND PURPOSE
1. The Association does not have a profit
objective. Its general aim is to establish
partnerships at national and international
levels with civil society organizations, public
authorities at all levels, educational and
research institutions, economic and social
institutions and especially European
Institutions - to promote and develop social
inclusion and social entrepreneurship within
the social market economy.
4. OBJECTS AND PURPOSE
2. The AISBL INISE pursues as well educational activities.
As such, it organizes conferences, seminars and
training to benefit its members and its beneficiaries.
3. The main activity of the Association will relate
essentially to the elaboration, implementation and
management of projects and local economic and/or
social development services proposed by the member
organizations of INISE and public or semi-public bodies
and by Associations or companies having a similar
purpose. The Association will not aim, through its
activities, to reap financial benefits
5. OBJECTS AND PURPOSE
4. In the common projects, the Association works for the benefit of its
members in partnership with international and European institutions.
5. The AISBL has as a purpose of the conception and the implementation of
stable and clearly identified local partnerships with the actors of social
economy and public authorities, aimed at participative new social
business start-up, employment creation and education.
It realizes its objective in a total independence towards any government
or political party, and in coherence with the principles of the founding act
of the Association.
6. In addition, the AISBL can develop all the activities which will contribute
directly or indirectly to the realization of the above mentioned non-
lucrative goals within the limits fixed by the law.
6. MEMBERS - CATEGORY
The Association consists of legal and physical persons distributed in three categories of members,
full or associated.
The AISBL counts at least 15 full members, who have all the rights granted to the members aimed
by the AISBL's law. The above-mentioned founders are the first full members.
Bodies which can become members are:-
7. As full members: all actors of social economy as well as all the representative platforms of the
social economy at the national and international level, all structures supporting the social economy
(foundations, social banks, science and research institutions, alliances and networks of social
enterprises etc.)
8. As associate members: public authorities at all levels and their platforms, grouping of public
authorities, other thematic networks of cities and regions and their platforms as well as trade
unions and institutions supporting employers and employers’ alliances
9. As associate members: physical persons supporting the social economy.
7. FOUNDING MEMBERS
1. Barka Foundation for Mutual Help, Poland. Tomasz Sadowski
2. Barka Cooperation Network, Poland. Lidia Węsierska-Chyc
3. Barka UK Ltd., UK. Bernadatte Cassidy
4. Barka for Mutual Help Ireland, Ireland. Dagmara Szlandrowicz
5. Stichting Barka, Holland, Ewa Sadowska
6. Association d'Aide Mutuelle à BARKA, FRANCE. Martine Wendzinski
7. Harambee (UK) CIC, UK. John MacPhie
8. Harambee (CIC) Uganda Ltd., Uganda. Godwin Bateren
9. Kenya Community Association Ltd., Great Britain. Baiba Dhidha Mjidho.
10. Mekelle University, Ethiopia. Tadesse Dejenie Haile, PhD
11. Merseyside Association of Ghanaians, UK. Ibrahim Farouque Napson
12. Mukuru Promotion Centre, Kenya. Sr. Scholasticah Nganda
13. Fondation Privee Nkeme, BELGIUM. Marie Belek
14. Chara Trust, UK. Alfred Salami.
8. INTERIM BOARD AND TRUSTEES
1. Mr Tomasz Sadowska, BARKA Foundation for
Mutual Help, Poland;
2. Ms Ewa Sadowska, BARKA UK;
3. Sr. Scholasticah Nganda, Mukuru Promotion
Centre , Kenya
4. Mr. Godwin Bateren, Harambee (CIC) Uganda
Ltd. Uganda
5. Mr Baiba Dhidha Mjidho, Kenya Community
Association, Liverpool UK
9. REGISTRATION
1. Place: Brussels, Belgium.
2. Governing Law: Belgian Law.
3. In terms of the registration process, there is a
month to go to obtain the royal authorisation
according to the information from the
General Office Advices (GOA).
10. IN PROGRESS
Currently I am arranging meetings with
representatives of European
Commission & Parliament and European
Economic and Social Committee in
Brussels to update them on the progress we
have made so far.