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  2. Mongols Motorcycle Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongols_Motorcycle_Club

    Mongols members are required to pay a monthly fee and attend chapter meetings. The club's bylaws are contained in a 70-page constitution, which also features a list of ten commandments. [27] The Mongols' constitution forbids drug use and dictates that any member convicted of a serious crime faces immediate expulsion from the club. [44]

  3. Mongolian Revolutionary Youth League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongolian_Revolutionary...

    The first congress was held in July 1922 in Ulaanbaatar. At the twentieth congress in 1991, members established a new youth and community organization on the basis of the organization. On January 17, 1991, the Mongolian Youth Forum was organized, the Youth Association was established, and the association's declaration and charter were approved.

  4. World Assembly of Youth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Assembly_of_Youth

    The World Assembly of Youth (WAY; French: Assemblée Mondiale de la Jeunesse; Spanish: Asamblea Mundial de la Juventud) is the international coordinating body of national youth councils and national youth organisations. The full members of WAY are national youth councils.

  5. Mongolian Red Cross Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongolian_Red_Cross_Society

    The MRCS Youth program educates Mongolian youth on humanitarian values and principles to further develop voluntary service and youth participation at all levels of society. Red Cross youth clubs are established in many Mongolian kindergartens, schools and universities to engage youth in humanitarian activities and further promote these ...

  6. Sükhbaatar Mongolian Pioneers Organization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sükhbaatar_Mongolian...

    The organization was named after the Mongolian military leader and revolutionary hero Damdin Sükhbaatar. [1] The organization was founded in May 1925. Its activities were monitored by the Mongolian Revolutionary Youth League. In the late 1980s, the organization had a membership of around 360,000. [1] Its members were children aged 10 to 15.

  7. ThereforeGo Ministries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThereforeGo_Ministries

    ThereforeGo Ministries (formerly known as Youth Unlimited, [2] the American Federation of Reformed Young Men's Societies, [3] [4] the Young Calvinist League, and then the Young Calvinist Federation) [5] is a Christian youth ministry for short-term mission trips in the United States and Canada that was formed in September 1919. [4]

  8. Youth in Mongolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_in_Mongolia

    Many of Mongolia’s laws and policies attempt to protect and better the lives of Mongolian youth. The legal age of majority occurs at 18, wherein Mongolian young adults are able to vote and assume legal authority. [10] The transition from a Soviet satellite state to a sovereign nation in 1992 fueled major structural changes in Mongolian youth ...

  9. Friends of Mongolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friends_of_Mongolia

    In 2006 FOM began working with Inland Northwest Community Foundation, UNICEF and the Mongolian Youth Development Foundation (MYDF) to help facilitate the distribution of the Matthew Girvin Scholarship Fund. This fund 'was created in memory of Matthew Girvin, a UNICEF program officer stationed in Mongolia who was killed in a helicopter crash in ...