Our Vision
To be the leading network of think tanks and individual experts, which advocates for a more inclusive multilateralism and policies that are fair from the perspective of the Global South.
Objectives
- To serve as a platform for the exchange of news and ideas among participating think tanks and individual experts on multilateralism and international policy development and coordination
- To undertake and disseminate relevant research
- To be an advocate for a more inclusive international order with fairer policies
- To grow and expand the network
How our Network works
Quarterly dialogues are arranged to discuss policy issues identified by network participants. The convening participants pose the questions in advance of a dialogue, so that all attendees can prepare their thoughts for the discussion.
Network participants keep each other in the loop as to events that their own institutions are arranging, with a view to inviting input from other network participants.
Network participants keep each other informed of external major events, for example, major UN conferences or consultations, the ACUNS annual meeting, etc. This with a view to coordinating a possible GSPN input and participation into such events, either as GSPN or under the umbrella of one of the participating organisations.
Network members discuss and consider supporting each other in initiatives that one or more of them may undertake, within their respective country, continent or globally.
Our Story
The end of the Cold War in the late 1980s and early 1990s was supposed to usher into an era of prolonged peace and shared prosperity, the end of history as we knew it, written through wars and destruction in the past. The rude awakening that followed included a succession of crises, from intensifying climate change and the world financial crisis of 2008 to the COVID-19 pandemic, food and water insecurity, wars in many parts of the world, including a war in Europe and another one in the Middle East with the potential of escalating into major, even nuclear world war.
In all this, the protagonists remain the big powers, mainly the Northern, industrialized countries, especially those of the West, but also of the East, the latter traditionally including Russia and increasingly China. Having achieved a significant degree of prosperity and stability within themselves, not least because of technological advances, domestic upheavals but also colonial exploitation of others and of the Earth’s resources, the countries of the West claim to speak for “the international community” with a rhetoric of human rights, freedom and dignity that is often not followed in practice in their economic activities and military adventures abroad. On the East, Russia, perennially an almost-dominant power in its various incarnations, follows externally similar patterns to those of the West externally. China, on the other hand, has a more conservative external presence, at least while it is still developing internally and consolidating its partnerships externally, but is clearly the other main economic elephant in the room together with the US and its G7 friends.
As history is unfolding, old superpowers find themselves under pressure from emerging powers and by their internal contradictions that start to show, causing turbulence and conflict. Beyond the human competition, the Earth system shows the ultimate power that it holds, even in the Anthropocene, with the intensifying impacts of the climate crisis, new zoonotic diseases, biodiversity losses. Will history continue to be written with wars and destruction and superpower succession, or is there a more inclusive, fair and sustainable way that can replace all this? Is there an alternative to East – West confrontation that tries to suck in the whole world, calling for countries and people to take sides? How resilient, able to survive and bounce back, is humanity?
Increasingly, actors from the Global South are becoming more vocal, as they want to express themselves beyond siding with one or the other camp, want to be heard clearly by all, and want to claim their rightful place in the management of our world, and in the voice of “the international community”. This web page is meant for those rising voices and the new perspectives they bring to the global stage. It is a space for expression and listening, debate and action. Based on a network of think tanks and individual experts mainly from the Global South, this forum aspires to influence upcoming decisions on the future of global governance. This includes decisions on the reform of the United Nations, so that the states, the communities and the citizens of the Global South no longer feel that they are guests at the mercy of Northern hosts in the halls of global governance, but they are equal partners, with their own valid perspectives, equal right- and obligation-holders in decision-making and action.
Co-Conveners

HumanizaCom
HumanizaCom has hosted research, technical and extension projects conceived and developed by its researchers, teachers and doctoral and master’s students, of the Postgraduate Program in Social Communication of the Methodist University of São Paulo, and scientific initiation, of the Communication courses (Journalism, RP, PP and RTVI) of the Methodist.
In the field of communication and journalism, with emphasis on the areas of humanitarian and peace journalism, media interventions and risk communication, the projects have the participation and support of partner institutions, national and international.
HumanizaCom, for its outstanding performance in these areas, has also been invited to integrate projects from other institutions, in Brazil or in other countries.

Inclusive Society Institute
The Inclusive Society Institute (ISI) is an autonomous and independent institution that functions independently from any other entity. It is founded for the purpose of supporting and further deepening multi-party democracy.
The ISI’s work is motivated by its desire to achieve non-racialism, non-sexism, social justice and cohesion, economic development and equality in South Africa, through a value system that embodies the social and national democratic principles associated with a developmental state. It recognises that a well-functioning democracy requires well-functioning political formations that are suitably equipped and capacitated. It further acknowledges that South Africa is inextricably linked to the ever-transforming and interdependent global world, which necessitates international and multilateral cooperation. As such, the ISI also seeks to achieve its ideals at a global level through cooperation with like-minded parties and organs of civil society who share its basic values.
Whilst the institute undertakes research through the lens of social and national democratic values and principles, it is pragmatic, not dogmatic, in its approach.

Foundation for Global Governance and Sustainability
Established in Brussels,Belgium in 2013, the Foundation for Global Governance and Sustainability (FOGGS) is a think and-do tank, serving at the same time as research and ideas-generation centre, discussion forum and advocacy mechanism. FOGGS is a Public Benefit Foundation under Belgian law and is governed by its Executive Board in accordance with its statutes.
The FOGGS founders were inspired by the work of the UN Secretary-General’s High-Level Panel on Global Sustainability (2010-2012), which, among other things, was instrumental in introducing the concept of Sustainable Development Goals. In 2018 the work of FOGGS was refocused towards putting together a new “Grand Narrative” for globalisation.
Since 2020 and the 75th anniversary of the United Nations, this central focus includes strengthening the UN and global governance for human security, resilience and peace.
