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Discover the growth and changes within AMWCY in 2012 through statistics and figures. Explore the increase in members, supporters, grassroots groups, and national coordinations. Witness the evolution of support and the importance of fostering a strong social consensus. Dive into the distribution of members and supporters across different countries. Analyze the demographics regarding girls, boys, children, and youth within the organization. Witness the shifts in numbers and the need for accelerating growth to meet the evolving needs of the community.
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The AMWCY in figures 2012 Statistics
How many we are? 554 353 members and supporters 172 254 members 3 028 grass root groups 311 associations 24 countries
What changes ? Supporters • 2009 : 182 388 • 2010 : 273 799 • 2011 : 299 692 • 2012 : 382 099 They have doubled in 3 years (X 2) after a slow down in 2011
What Changes? Supporters • In 2012 supporters evolved more than members We have two and a half supporters for a member To receive a good social consensus : we need to increase the number of supporters
What Changes? Supporters • Gambia, G.Bissau, Mauritania, Rwanda, Togo, from 5 to 20 times more. • Benin, Burkina, Ivory Coast, Guinea, Mali, Niger and Senegal have between 2 and 3 supporters for 1 member (AMWCY average) • Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria, DRC, Chad, have 1 or less per Member. • The others have little or no.
What Changes? Members • 2009 : 95 787 • 2010 : 122 547 • 2011 : 148 154 • 2012 : 172 254 They have almostdoubled in 3 years But it goes slower than before(2007-2010 theyhadtripled) must beaccelerated!!!
What Changes? Members • 7 Countries : Benin, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, Guinea Conakry, Mali, Senegal, Togo are between 10 500 and 19 500 members • 2 countries have 7,500 members: Nigeria, DRC • 9 Countries have between 2700 and 5000 members • The other 5 have fewer than 2,000 members… some have hundreds. In 2010 the largest group (11) had between 2000 and 5500 members
The Grass root groups • They are 3 028 and together an average of 57 members each • But this is only an average and realities range from a few members to more than 100.
The AWCY • They are 311 today. Some are not yet fully recognized by the AMWCY. • The largest has 2 344 members, the smallest 65 members.
Girls - Boys 54 % of girls - 1,9 % in 2011 • The girls grew more slowly than males (110% - 118%), they are still a minority in the training workshops (40%) and national meetings • Burkina, Burundi, Ethiopia, Niger, DRC, Chad, Uganda, have about 39 - 44% - Rwanda is 31%. • Guinea Conakry, Gambia, Nigeria, Senegal, Togo, stay “champions of girls” with 62% to 72% • The other 10 are in the average of 45%-60 %
Children - Youth 71% of children + 0.80% in 2011 • It stabilizes, it resists, but we must remain very vigilant, because members get older. • Burkina, Ivory Coast, Mali, Uganda, Chad, are below 65 % • Benin, Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Guinea Conakry, Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, Rwanda, Togo, Zimbabwe, are above 75 %
Children and Youth • Youth are there to support the children. • Meet quotas 2 or 3 youth for 10 WCY in AMWCY instances including the National Coordinations. . • Know to say« stop and place children » at a certain age.
The National coordinations 19 countries • Have the minimum number of 3 AWCY to get into national Coordination This reality has not changed since 2010.