American Non-Governmental Organizations Coalition for the International Criminal Court (AMICC) | |
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Formation | 2001 |
Type | Non-profit NGO |
Purpose/focus | Advocating for full US support for the ICC and earliest possible US ratification of the Court's Rome Statute |
Location | Secretariat in New York City |
Membership | Over 40 American Non-Governmental Organizations |
Convenor | John L. Washburn |
Website | http://www.amicc.org |
The American Non-Governmental Organizations Coalition for the International Criminal Court (AMICC) leads the civil society movement for full United States participation in the International Criminal Court.
With over 40 member and observer organizations, AMICC is a national coalition made up of US-based non-governmental organizations that works to build support for the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the United States. AMICC is a program of the United Nations Association of the United States of America.
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AMICC is a coalition of non-governmental organizations committed to achieving full United States support for the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the earliest possible US ratification of the Court's Rome Statute.
The Coalition supports and promotes grassroots activity in support of the Court, including the formation of local alliances of individuals and organizations whose interests will be served and advanced by the ICC and by a positive US relationship with it. The member organizations include bar associations, women's groups, human rights organizations, religious organizations, veterans' groups, victims organizations, students and young adults, and others. These organizations may have sharply differing views on other political and social issues, but hold that the ICC expresses and implements values traditionally championed by the United States, including international justice and the rule of law. Together they work effectively to promote a Court which implements their common intense opposition to international atrocities and to holding accountable those most responsible for them.
AMICC's Local Alliances for the ICC advocate full U.S. participation in the ICC, and the earliest possible ratification of the Rome Statute. Through broad alliances of the legal, academic, human rights and faith-based communities, they coordinate activities in the support of the Court and act as a resource for those seeking information about the movement for the ICC.
LOCAL ALLIANCES
Arkansas
California
Los Angeles - ICC Alliance (ICCA)
San Francisco
Illinois
Chicago Alliance for the ICC (CAICC)
Indiana
Iowa
Kentucky
Kentuckians for the ICC
Maine
Maine Alliance for the ICC (MAICC)
Minnesota
Missouri
St. Louis
New Mexico
New York
Brooklyn
Texas
Austin
Dallas
San Antonio
The United States Faith and Ethics Network for the International Criminal Court (US FENICC) is a coalition of religious and interfaith NGOs that examine the moral, ethical and religious considerations surrounding the Court. Religious organizations have a special role to play in raising awareness at the grassroots level and helping to shape the ICC. The Network promotes the ICC by disseminating information about the Court to respective religious, ecumenical, and ethical communities. To inform others about some of the moral, ethical and religious considerations involved in the ICC, the Network holds frequent group meetings and plans events that will bring these issues to the attention of a wider audience. The issues that the group raises and decides upon will impact the role the court will play and the way it is perceived around the world. The following issues are among those that have been and will be discussed by the working group in their meetings as well as in their open events and dialogues: moral, ethical and theological imperatives and the importance of the ICC as a powerful representation of these values; moral, political and ethical dimensions of impunity, reconciliation, and long term peace building; individual and collective healing in society; redressive justice relationships between confession, repentance, compensation and forgiveness issues of psychological and spiritual rehabilitation.
CURRENT MEMBER ORGANIZATIONS
Al-Khoei Foundation
The American Humanist Association
Baha'is of the United States
Church World Service
Conference of Major Superiors of Men
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Fellowship of Reconciliation
Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights of the American Jewish Committee
The Loretto Community
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA
National Service Conference of the American Ethical Union
Presbyterian Church, USA
Religious of the Sacred Heart
Soka Gakkai International
Temple of Understanding
Unitarian Universalist Association
General Board of Church and Society of the United Methodist Church
World Council of Churches
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