The International Social Service (ISS) is an international NGO founded in 1924; today a network of national entities and a General Secretariat that assist children and families confronted with complex social problems as a result of migration.
Thanks to its presence in more than 120 countries, ISS is a global actor promoting child protection and welfare.
In addition to its work on the ground, ISS undertakes training projects, awareness raising and advocacy work in an effort to better respect children's rights.
ISS support and helps approximately 75,000 families in the world each year.
Our mission: Uniting families across borders
Provide psychosocial and legal assistance as well as counselling and support to families who are in distress.
Offer relevant training to all stakeholders (e.g. government officers, judiciary, lawyers and social workers) involved in the protection of children deprived of families, alternative care and inter country adoption.
Promote the respect of the fundamental right of each child to grow up in a proper family through advocacy and research.
Strengthen the ISS global network through training, evaluation and capacity building and identification of local resources to ensure sustainability.
Analyse the laws in the field of protection of children deprived of families and promote good practices.
Suggest family mediation in case of divorce and child abduction across borders, preserving the best interest of the child.
Evaluate the child protection frameworks with national authorities and propose recommendations for their improvement.
Examples of projects in our Network (recent or in progress)
Vietnam, Mauritius, Mexico, Burkina Faso : A Better Future is possible for children with disabilities
ISS defends all children's rights, including those of children with disabilities, proposing to them a life project after having been placed in an Institution. The main purpose is to sensitize and to train professionals enabling them to offer children the opportunity to leave the institutions and to be re-integrated into a family based environment applying the right to live and to grow up within a proper family framework. With all the adequate resources, the project will be expanded in Mexico, Peru and Togo.
Haïti : after the earthquake in January 2010
ISS published a report highlighting contraventions to the rights of children who were adopted through accelerated adoption procedures. This stand has been supported by a huge number of International organisations (UNICEF, Hague Conference) and it contributed to a temporary suspension of adoptions.International Family Mediation
ISS develops targeted projects to launch and support the Institutionalisation of International family mediation - a project that started at the beginning of 2000 through Statehood Organisations such as the European Union and the Hague Conference on Private International Law.ISS's project aims to disseminate information and raise awareness about mediation practice to solve cross border family conflicts and to facilitate the access for families to specialized mediators.
In 2014, the first guide on International Family Mediation was published to inform and accompany families and professionals is the launch pad of this global project.
West Africa : building a network
The ISS Swiss Branch has developed a Network that encourages a regional cooperation between children, families, NGOs, States and child protection professionals to identify and prevent identify and prevent dangerous internal and cross-border movements of minors in order to protect and reinsert children in a family context ensuring sustainability with the support of by an educational or professional project.Evaluation Adoption Section : Haïti - Vietnam
At the request of UNICEF, ISS has undertaken evaluation missions of the adoption systems in different Countries. For example in Vietnam and Haiti ISS' recommendations have been followed assisting the countries to review entirely their legal framework, to ratify the 1993 Hague Convention on Inter-country Adoption, promoting the adoption of children with special needs, and considerably strengthen the monitoring of different actors involved within the procedures. Many Countries could likewise take advantage of the ISS expertise in this field.Research and Publication
ISS publishes a monthly newsletter offering an analysis of the latest developments in the field of adoption and protection of children without families. Each publication provides an information update on the evolution of laws and practices both at international and national level. ISS provides answers the specific requests of its professionals partners, in particular of the Central Authorities, legislators and other actors in the field of the protection of children without families.