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Founding
NetHope Member Organizations[10]
2019 Norwegian Church Aid, Team Rubicon, GOAL, Project Concern International, Operation Smile, Right To Play, FUPAD
2017 Doctors Without Borders
2016 Danish Refugee Council, ProMujer, HIAS, Deutsche Welthungerhilfe, Medair, DanChurchAid, Marie Stopes, Mennonite Central Committee
2015 Norwegian Refugee Council
2014 Samaritan's Purse, Ipas[11]
2013 Direct Relief, International Medical Corps, Islamic Relief Worldwide, Women for Women International[12]
2012 World Wildlife Fund (WWF), Americares, Trocaire[13]
2011 Compassion International, Conservation International[14]
2010 SOS Children's Villages, Habitat for Humanity, Pact
2009 ACCION, FINCA, Canadian Red Cross (Federated Member)
2008 Ashoka, PATH, Christian Aid, VSO
2007 American Red Cross (Federated Member), International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, WaterAid
2006 Concern Worldwide
2005 Heifer International, Wildlife Conservation Society, Save the Children - UK (Federated Member)
2004 ActionAid, The Nature Conservancy, Relief International, International Rescue Committee
2003 Christian Children's Fund
2002 Oxfam, Plan International
2001 Save the Children, World Vision, CARE, Mercy Corps, Catholic Relief Services, Winrock International, Children International
In March 2001, Edward G. Happ, then CIO of Save the Children, authored a paper entitled "Wiring the Global Village" that discussed two hypotheses:
International nonprofits could solve the connection problem better, faster, and cheaper if done together rather than reinventing the wheel as individual organizations; and
Nonprofits would be in a better position to partner with corporate sponsors as a group rather than as individuals.
This paper was presented to Cisco's corporate philanthropy group and became the basis for NetHope. Soon, Cisco fellow Dipak Basu coined the name "NetHope."[15]
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