Volunteering & Community Service
Aids West
AIDS WEST is a voluntary organisation funded by the Western Health Board based in Galway. We offer an information help line, education / prevention services and support to people affected by HIV and to those concerned about their sexual health in counties Galway, Mayo and Roscommon.
ALJEFF Treatment Centre Ltd
To Provide a Positive Alternative for the Youth of Limerick.
What we do:
- Create Drug & Alcohol Awareness
- Provide education & training on the dangers of addiction
- Offer Support and Counselling Services
- Organise community & youth Outreach events
Amnesty International Irish Section
Amnesty International is an independent worldwide movement working impartially for the release of all prisoners of conscience, fair and prompt trials for political prisoners, an end to torture, executions, disappearances, and extrajudicial executions.
ARC Cancer Support Centre
Standing for Aftercare Research Counselling, ARC Cancer Support Centre is a voluntary organisation and registered charity.
Athru
Athru is the irish word for "change" and the athru programme is all about people who want to change. Athru is a centre which offers education and training to people who are in recovery from drug misuse and who wish to make a new start.
Belfast Exposed Photography
Belfast Exposed is a photographic resource, archive and gallery. Based in Belfast city centre's historic Cathedral Quarter it remains Northern Ireland's only dedicated photography gallery.
Big Brothers Big Sisters Of Ireland
Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ireland's mission is to make a positive difference in the lives of young people and society through a professionally supported one-to-one friendship with a caring older volunteer.
Carmichael Centre
Carmichael Centre for Voluntary Groups is a centre for small voluntary organisations.
Catholic Guides of Ireland / Banóglaigh Catoilicí Na hÉireann
Catholic Guides of Ireland is one of the leading Girl Guide Associations on the island of Ireland
Center for Independent Living
The first Irish Centre for Independent Living (CIL) was established in 1992 by and for people with disabilities, with the main aim of ensuring that people with disabilities achieved independent living, choice and control over their lives, and full participation in society as equal citizens. It offered an advocacy and campaigning respresentation role, striving to bring about a social model of service delivery, and to ensure policy decisions would include input from those whose lives were actually affected. It also held an action-research role in monitoring developments in the world of Independent Living.