Chapters & Partnerships

 

Since 2006, GlobeMed has had a presence on 69 campuses across the United States and in Rwanda, with more than 6,000 students being involved in their university’s chapter. These chapters worked with 109 different groundbreaking grassroots organizations working in Asia, Africa, and the Americas.

Throughout our 15 years of working with community leaders around the world, GlobeMed saw the transformative potential of grassroots organizations harnessing the power of their own communities to drive the change they need. Seeing that, the best way to achieve lasting change is to shift power and resources to those grassroots organizations.

During our operation, GlobeMed students mobilized over $3.5 million in unrestricted funds for more than 385 health projects across Africa, Asia, and the Americas. This unrestricted, trust-based support ensures that organizations have the necessary operational foundation to be impactful. In addition, GlobeMed funding has been used to run critical but hard-to-fund programs, like crisis support for refugees, as well as pilot initiatives that require trial, iteration, and metrics showing success before other funders will invest.

 
 

GlobeMed Chapters

 

GlobeMed at Amherst College
GlobeMed at Arizona State University
GlobeMed at Bethel University
GlobeMed at Boston College
GlobeMed at Brown University
GlobeMed at Bucknell University
GlobeMed at California State University, San Bernardino
GlobeMed at City College of New York
GlobeMed at Colorado College
GlobeMed at Columbia University
GlobeMed at Cornell University
GlobeMed at Dartmouth College
GlobeMed at DePaul University
GlobeMed at Duke Univeristy
GlobeMed at Emory University
GlobeMed at Florida International University
GlobeMed at the George Washington University
GlobeMed at Georgetown University
GlobeMed at Georgia State University
GlobeMed at Howard University
GlobeMed at Indiana University, Bloomington
GlobeMed at Lawrence University
GlobeMed at Loyola University

GlobeMed at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
GlobeMed at Middlebury College
GlobeMed at Morehouse College
GlobeMed at Morgan State Univeristy
GlobeMed at North Carolina Central University
GlobeMed at Northeastern University
GlobeMed at Northwestern University
GlobeMed at Oberlin College
GlobeMed at the Ohio State University
GlobeMed at Pennsylvania State University
GlobeMed at Princeton University
GlobeMed at Rhodes College
GlobeMed at Rutgers University
GlobeMed at San Francisco State University
GlobeMed at Spelman College
GlobeMed at St. Edwards University
GlobeMed at Truman State
GlobeMed at Tufts University
GlobeMed at University of California, Berkeley
GlobeMed at University of California, Los Angeles
GlobeMed at University of Chicago
GlobeMed at University of Cincinnati
GlobeMed at University of Colorado, Boulder

GlobeMed at University of Denver
GlobeMed at University of Illinois, Chicago
GlobeMed at University of Maryland, Baltimore
GlobeMed at University of Michigan
GlobeMed at University of Missouri, Kansas City
GlobeMed at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
GlobeMed at University of Notre Dame
GlobeMed at University of Pennsylvania
GlobeMed at University of Rochester
GlobeMed at University of Rwanda
GlobeMed at University of South Carolina
GlobeMed at University of Southern California
GlobeMed at University of Texas, Austin
GlobeMed at University of Texas, San Antonio
GlobeMed at University of Virginia
GlobeMed at University of Washington
GlobeMed at University of Wisconsin, Madison
GlobeMed at Vanderbilt University
GlobeMed at Washington University in St. Louis
Globemed at Wayne State University
GlobeMed at Whitman College
GlobeMed at Wilbur Wright College
GlobeMed at Xavier University of Louisiana

 

Groundbreaking Grassroots Partner Organizations

In the more than 15 years of working with many impactful grassroots organizations, GlobeMed has identified four characteristics that makes a partner organization exemplary:

  • Target root causes: Our partners do not simply implement stand-alone projects or provide band-aid solutions. They target the root causes that are driving poverty and sickness in their community and work to challenge the regional, national, and global systems that create and perpetuate inequity.

  • Amplify community voices: Our partners not only know the community’s needs, but also engage the community in every stage of their programs. They give community members positions of power in the design, implementation, and evaluation of projects. 

  • Focus on mission: Our partners focus on their mission and know when to turn down support that detracts them from their mission.

  • Committed to learning: Our partners uses a rigorous evaluation strategy to test assumptions, pilot project models, and develop strategies tailored to their goals and community.

Sectors Partners Work In

2021-02 Partner Sector Illustration WEBSITE.png
 

Partners in Africa

Adonai Child Development Center, Uganda
Africa 2000 Network, Uganda
Art and Global Health Center Africa, Malawi
Bayira Rural Women's Development Association, Uganda
CareNet Ghana, Ghana
ChangeALife Uganda, Uganda
Children of Peace Uganda, Uganda
Children's Outreach and Vocational Education Alliance, Uganda
Conservation Heritage - Turambe, Rwanda
Development Initiative Network Malawi, Malawi
Facilitation for Innovations and Sustainable Productivity, Uganda
Food and Rural Development Foundation, Cameroon
Gardens for Health, Rwanda
Global Health Network Uganda, Uganda
Gulu Women's Economic Development and Globalization, Uganda
Health Alert, Uganda
Health Development Initiative, Rwanda
Heart and Sole Africa, Rwanda
HOPE Center, Ghana
Integrate Health (formerly Hope Through Health), Togo
Integrated Community Efforts for Development Action Network, Uganda
Kabwohe Clinical Research Center, Uganda
Kigezi Healthcare Foundation, Uganda
Kitovu Mobile Limited, Uganda
Knowledge for Children, Cameroon
Komera, Rwanda
Kyetume Community Based Health Care Programme, Uganda
Last Mile Health (formerly Tiyatien Health), Liberia
Light for Children Ghana, Ghana
Lwala Community Alliance, Kenya
Mission for Community Development Uganda, Uganda
Mpoma Community HIV/AIDS Initiative, Uganda
Nancholi Youth Organisation, Malawi
Network for Ecofarming in Africa, Kenya Chapter, Kenya
Nwoya Youth Center, Uganda
Raising the Village, Uganda
Reach a Hand Uganda, Uganda
Rwanda Village Community Promoters (formerly Rwanda Village Concept Project), Rwanda
Set Her Free, Uganda
Shirati Health, Education and Development, Tanzania
Spark MicroGrants, Uganda
Twesiga Mukama Federation, Uganda
Uganda Development and Health Associates, Uganda
Ungano Tena, Kenya
Village Health Relief Initiative, Nigeria
Western Organization for People Living with HIV/AIDS, Kenya
Youth Impact (formerly Young 1ove), Botswana

Partners in the Americas

A Ministry of Sharing Health and Hope, Nicaragua
Asociación Intercomunal de Comunidades Unidas para el Desarrollo Economico y Social del Bajo Lempa, El Salvador
Asociación Maya-Mam de Investigación y Desarollo, Guatemala
Asociación Salvadorena Pro-Salud Rural, El Salvador
Asociación Tierra, Nicaragua
ASSADE, Guatemala
Asociación de Personas Afectadas por Tuberculosis del Peru, Peru
The Center for Humanitarian Outreach and Inter-Cultural Exchange, Peru
Centro de Atención Integral para Adolescentes, Mexico
Centro Médico de Orientación y Planificación Familiar, Ecuador
Centro Romero, United States
El Centro de Capacitación Campesina de la Universidad Nacional de San Cristobal de Huamanga, Peru
Clinica Ana Manganara, El Salvador
Dios es Amor, Peru
Escuela de la Calle, Guatemala
Equipo de Apoyo en Salud y Educación Comunitaria, Mexico
FACES for the Future Coalition, United States
FUNDPRONID, Ecuador
Jambi Huasi, Ecuador
Kallpa Iquitos, Peru
La Primavera, Guatemala
Logan Square Neighborhood Association, United States
Maison de Naissance, Haiti
Maeying Huamjai Phattana, Laos
Medical Advocacy and Outreach, United States
Minga Peru, Peru
Pastoral de la Salud, El Salvador
Perkin Educational Opportunities Foundation, El Salvador
Primeros Pasos, Guatemala
Project Bona Fide, Nicaragua
Sacred Valley Health, Peru
Salud Sin Limites, Peru
Wuqu' Kawoq Mayan Health Alliance, Guatemala

 

 
Most donors prefer to fund a project that has already been started. Most donors fear trying to start a new project. They love to fund a project that is ongoing, but GlobeMed was so good. They took it on when we told them about [our pilot project ideas]. If GlobeMed didn’t take on the project, I don’t think the US embassy would have put in the funding.
— Robinah Muganzi, Set Her Free
What I can say about the uniqueness of GlobeMed is that it is faithful. The community can dictate the projects they want to propose.
— Peter Mokaya, Ungano Tena