WAGGGS consists of national Member Organizations, which are run independently but agree to abide by the WAGGGS constitution. The national Member Organizations are split into five regions. The member organizations, in turn, elect the
World Board, originally the World Committee, which governs the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts. It is made up of 17 active volunteer members from around the world who are democratically elected by all Member Organizations and include the Chairs from each of the five WAGGGS regions. In addition, there is the permanent staff of the World Bureau based in London and headed by the WAGGGS Chief Executive (formerly Director of the World Bureau). Every three years, representatives from the member states meet in a World Conference to discuss and vote on policy. The World Committee changed its name to the World Board in 1996. The job title of the head of staff was changed from Director of the World Bureau to Chief Executive between 1964 and 1997. Each WAGGGS Member Organization chooses how it believes it can best promote these goals, taking into account its culture and the needs of its young people. Some choose to work with girls alone in a single-sex environment in order to break down stereotypes and to give girls and young women the confidence to take their place in society. Other Member Organizations prefer to work with mixed groups to enable young women and young men to have equal partnerships within their units. Some Organizations choose to mix co-educational and single-sex approaches according to the age and the preferences of the young people.
World regions The World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts has five regions: Europe, Arab, Africa, Asia and the Western Hemisphere.
World Centres WAGGGS operates five World Centers that offer training programmes, activities, and lodging for girls and leaders, as well as members of some other groups and independent travelers. Activities focus on international cooperation, skill development, leadership training, and community service. The Friends of the Four World Centers organization supports and promotes the centers. The five World Centers are: •
Our Chalet, in
Adelboden,
Switzerland; opened in 1932. •
Pax Lodge, in
Hampstead,
London,
England; current location opened in 1990. It is actually London's third World Centre; the first was Our Ark, which opened in 1937, and renamed
Olave House on its 25th anniversary. •
Our Cabaña, in
Cuernavaca,
Mexico; opened in 1957. •
Sangam, in
Pune,
Maharashtra,
India; opened in 1966. •
Kusafiri, moving between cities, in
Africa; opened in 2010. A new centre, Kusafiri, meaning "to journey" in
Swahili, was announced in 2015. Unlike the other centers, it will be a roving centre and exist for a fixed period of time in different places with a particular theme in Africa. While testing the idea, starting in 2012, the country organizations involved include
Ghana,
South Africa,
Rwanda,
Kenya,
Nigeria, and
Benin. Focuses so far have included "Stopping the Violence" training in
Rwanda and developing entrepreneurial leaders among others. ==World Trefoil==