Related Organizations
Covenanting Communities
Covenanting communities are Unitarian Universalist (UU) groups that claim a UU identity but they look and feel different from a traditional congregation.
Related and Associate Member Organizations are diverse groups that embrace Unitarian Universalist (UU) principles and traditions outside of congregations and covenanting communities. They include member and professional organizations, justice-focused groups, camps and conference centers, and more.
Associate Member Organizations are named in the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) bylaws, and are limited to the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee and the Unitarian Universalist Women's Federation, two organizations with historic connections to the UUA.
Related Organizations do important work in providing identity groups for Unitarian Universalists, focusing on specific justice work, supporting people working within Unitarian Universalism, and providing unique UU experiences. Related Organizations are in formal relationship with the UUA in order to advance Unitarian Universalist values and claim a UU identity, but are not congregations or covenanting communities.
- To learn more about the ways the UUA supports Related Organizations, visit the benefits page.
- To apply to become a Related Organization, complete the online application form.
- Existing Related Organizations must complete a five-year renewal. If you've not already submitted your renewal, please complete the renewal form ASAP.
Displaying 61 - 70 of 91
Social Justice
-
Faithful Fools Street Ministry
Faithful Fools Street Ministry is located in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco. Faithful Fools was founded by UU Rev. Dr. Kay Jorgensen and Sr. Carmen Barsody, OSF....
-
UU Mass Action
Our mission is to organize and mobilize UUs in Massachusetts to confront oppression. We provide pathways towards justice and identify opportunities in which we can live our shared values.
-
Unitarian Universalist Network on Indigenous Affairs (UUNIA)
UUNIA is being reorganized after a period of inactivity by Rev. Bob Thayer, who for the last 20 years has devoted sabbatical, discretionary time and money to developing knowledge and contacts with Native people East and West in the USA. UUNIA will reformulate it's goals accordingly to existing...
-
Coalition of Unitarian Universalist State Action Networks (CUUSAN)
CUUSAN is an association of Unitarian Universalist state witness, advocacy, and action organizations from Florida to Washington and Maine to California that are working to give life the shape of justice.
-
Unitarian Universalist Peace Ministry Network
The UUPMN, is a 501c3 and an outgrowth of the UU Peacemaking Congregational Study Action Issue. The purpose of the UUPMN is to institutionalize this energy at the national and congregational levels to encourage a culture of peace within our families, our association, our communities, and the world.
-
Unitarian Universalist Peace Fellowship
The UU Peace Fellowship (UUPF) envisions a world of justice, peace and freedom. IT is a vision of a beloved community, where diversity is respected, where conflicts are addresses nonviolently, and oppressive structures have been eliminated. It is a world where we live in harmony with each other,...
-
UURISE: UU Refugee and Immigrant Services and Education, Inc.
UURISE is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) with a mission to advance justice and human rights for immigrants and refugees.
-
Promise the Children
Our mission is to help Unitarian Universalists advocate for and with young people. We give special priority to initiatives that promote the well-being of low-income children and youth. Promise the Children works with advocates around the country, as well as in our home state of Massachusetts.
-
Unitarian Universalist Urban Ministry
The UU Urban Ministry has continued its work in Boston for nearly 200 years by facing the moment we are in, summoning the resources to address it, and convening people to work together to make change...