W ELF ARE - la Caixa
Transcripción
W ELF ARE - la Caixa
013-5310147-83 WELFARE 2005 Financial Year Real Expenditure by Programme THOUSAND EUROS Social programmes 119,478 Educational programmes 19,520 Cultural programmes 63,729 Science and Environment programmes 43,530 Total expenditure (1) 246,257 (1) Investment carried out during the financial year amount to 57,036 euros. Financing of activities and investments carried out in financial year 2005 THOUSAND EUROS ”la Caixa” savings bank allocation Income generated by own activities Total 246,257 18,370 264,627 Key figures Total participants / beneficiaries Total number of activities carried out Number of towns with Foundation presence 12,518,553 27,958 1,038 Annual Report 2005 Index Governing bodies of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Introduction New Programmes 2 4 10 Prevention of Violence 12 New Fellowship Programmes 14 Microloans 16 Volunteers Programme 18 Affordable Housing 20 Promoting Employment 22 The Environment 24 New lines 2006 27 Social Programmes 28 Senior Citizens 30 Hospital Cyber Classrooms 34 International Cooperation 38 Health 42 Immigration 48 Disabilities and Employment for the Disabled 52 Marginalisation 56 Foster families 58 Education 60 Foreign Postgraduate Fellowship Programme 62 Social Studies 65 Environmental Education 66 Educalia 68 Prevention of Violence 70 Educating via Inter-generational Activities 72 Educational Activities For Everyone 73 Culture 76 CaixaForum Madrid 78 CaixaForum Barcelona 80 Social and Cultural Centres 82 Exhibitions 86 Music 94 Multimedia Art 97 Humanities The Environment and Science 98 100 Comprehensive Management Plan for Nature Parks 102 CosmoCaixa 104 Exhibition Programme 109 Call for Applications for Environmental Grants 110 Figures and Statistics 112 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects budget and statistics 115 Other key data concerning "la Caixa" Welfare Projects in 2005 126 Governing bodies of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects at 31st December 2005 Welfare Projects Committee Chairman Ricardo Fornesa Ribó Deputy Chairmen Salvador Gabarró Serra Jorge Mercader Miró Manuel Raventós Negra Secretary Alejandro García-Bragado Dalmau Members Marta Domènech Sardà Javier Godó Muntañola Inmaculada Juan Franch Justo Bienvenido Novella Martínez Magín Pallarés Morgades Chief Executive Officer of ”la Caixa” Isidro Fainé Casas Executive Officer of Welfare Projects José F. de Conrado y Villalonga Board of Trustees of the ”la Caixa” Foundation Chairman José Vilarasau Salat Deputy Chairmen Salvador Gabarró Serra Jorge Mercader Miró Isidro Fainé Casas Trustees Ramon Balagueró Gañet Mª Amparo Camarasa Carrasco José F. de Conrado y Villalonga Marta Domènech Sardà Ricardo Fornesa Ribó Manuel García Biel Javier Godó Muntañola Inmaculada Juan Franch Juan José López Burniol 2 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Montserrat López Ferreres Amparo Moraleda Martínez Miguel Noguer Planas Justo Bienvenido Novella Martínez Vicenç Oller Compañ Magín Pallarés Morgades Alejandro Plasencia García Manuel Raventós Negra Leopoldo Rodés Castañé Luis Rojas Marcos Lucas Tomás Munar Francisco Tutzó Bennasar Nuria Esther Villalba Fernández Josep Francesc Zaragozà Alba Secretary (non-trustee) Alejandro García-Bragado Dalmau Management of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Executive Management José F. de Conrado y Villalonga Secretary. ”la Caixa” branch network relations Rafael Chueca Blasco Affordable Housing Programme Jaume Cabré Grau Microloan Programme Alberto Camps Aycart Fellowship and Social Studies Rosa María Molins Solé Management of the ”la Caixa” Foundation Chief Executive Officer Production José F. de Conrado y Villalonga Enric Sagrera Depares Deputy C.E.O. Human Resources Esther Planas Herrera Albert Soria Casas Social Management The Environment and Science S. A. R. la Infanta Doña Cristina Jorge Wagensberg Lubinski Cultural Affairs Juan Cejudo Peña Art Centres and Collection Víctor Guardiola Flores Communication, Advertising and Public Relations Cristina Langarika Solórzano Social Integration Alberto López Martínez Touring Exhibitions Luis Reverter Gelabert Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I3 2005: the year of a shift towards society ”La Caixa” is committed to society. Our institution's involvement in meeting the needs of society forms the core of the ”la Caixa” Strategic Plan 2004-06. This orientation is true to the institution's two fundamental principles: that of anticipation, aimed at solving deficiencies not resolved by other institutions; and that of flexibility, responding to new demands arising from the rapid transformation of society. These criteria have guided ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects for over 100 years. The growing commitment of ”la Caixa” to the needs of society has led to a significant increase in President of ”la Caixa” Ricardo Fornesa the resources dedicated to Welfare Projects, totalling 255 million euros last year. This accounts for 25% of the recurrent income of the ”la Caixa” Group, making it the leading privately run social organisation in Spain in terms of funding allocated to this area. ”la Caixa” reinvests this significant proportion of its profits in society through Welfare Projects, thereby fulfilling the spirit that originally inspired its creation, namely to improve all people's quality of life. In order to achieve this goal, ”la Caixa” carries out its Welfare Projects initiatives either directly or by delegating to the ”la Caixa” Foundation. In 2005, and in agreement with the autonomous communities in Spain, Welfare Projects embarked on a new line of action to adapt its work to the particular nature of each region and to carry out its programmes and initiatives in cooperation with these communities. New programmes for new social demands New needs have played an increasingly important role in our work over the last few years. The goals 4 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects of Welfare Projects include the promotion of an initiative that also helps disadvantaged people affordable housing, helping disadvantaged groups to become a part of society. become a part of society and helping people The dissemination of science and culture as the access financial services who would otherwise be driving forces behind social growth is another excluded from this possibility. important task to which the ”la Caixa” Foundation In 2005, ”la Caixa” consolidated its position as the privately run Spanish institution that dedicates most resources to providing Microloans, dedicates a range of programmes, including the plastic arts, photography, humanities and music. aimed at funding self-employment projects and Committed to the future totalling 20.9 million euros. In 2006, ”la Caixa” will increase its contribution to Our Affordable Housing programme has now started to produce results, the institution handing Welfare Projects to 303 million euros, 20% more than in 2005. over the first 148 rental properties to young The social area, which will be extended with people and senior citizens at prices slightly lower new programmes aimed at immigrants, the young than market rates. And through our new and dependent people, will be allocated a budget Promoting Employment programme, ”la Caixa” of 160 million euros. has already started to sign agreements with non- Cultural and scientific initiatives, carried out in profit organisations in order to help those people ”la Caixa” centres or via exhibitions that travel with particular difficulties in finding work. around the whole country, are proof of our social In the educational area, Welfare Projects has commitment and more of these will be extended its Fellowship programme, adding programmed. One of the more extensive initiatives postgraduate studies abroad and new fellowships of Welfare Projects in this area, the CaixaForum in Spain, of particular note being those aimed at Madrid, will open its doors on Paseo del Prado in specialists in areas of interest to society, as well the winter of 2006. as helping prison inmates to prepare for and find employment. Preventing violence As a result of its spirit to serve, throughout 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects promoted 27,958 initiatives in which 12,518,553 people took part. One in every four people in Spain already and preserving the environment benefits directly from the welfare actions of ”la Violence is another of our society's big problems. Caixa”. With our commitment and the trust of our The Prevention of Violence programme by customers, this figure is sure to grow, year after ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects was started in 2005 year. with the aim of drawing attention to the problem Welfare Projects is the soul of ”la Caixa”. and preventing violent behaviour, as well as helping to care for victims of violence and their children and reinstate them in society. The Environment is also one of the firm Ricardo Fornesa Chairman of ”la Caixa” priorities of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, in 2005 promoting a programme to protect and improve nature parks throughout the country by means of Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I5 Responding to society’s new needs The ”la Caixa” Foundation, directly assigned by Welfare Projects to carry out actions in the areas of society, culture, education and the environment, has conscientiously worked on consolidating the institution’s shift towards society. Following the guidelines set by the Welfare Projects Committee, the body that approves the strategy and management of Welfare Projects and the ”la Caixa” Foundation, in 2005 the Foundation increased its actions focusing on care in society. Chairman of the ”la Caixa” Foundation José Vilarasau The aim has been to help cover society’s basic needs by highlighting marginalisation, social problems such as exclusion, domestic violence, the social integration of immigrants and the promotion of employment. The Foundation’s experience, accumulated over more than 100 years of initiatives in favour of citizens, has allowed it to start up new lines of work in 2005 via programmes such as those relating to the Prevention of Violence, Microloans, Volunteers, Affordable Housing, Promoting Employment, Social Fellowships and the Environment. The ”la Caixa” Foundation responds to the most urgent needs by means of innovative lines of action, carrying out its own programmes and also collaborating with public authorities and social organisations to ensure its initiatives benefit the greatest possible number of people throughout Spain. 6 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Volunteers as a driving force in society In 117 towns and cities throughout the The new Volunteers programme is particularly country, the ”la Caixa” Foundation presented a representative of the essence of ”la Caixa”. The total of 42 cultural exhibitions combining aim of this programme is to provide volunteers information on the great civilisations of the past with specific training to help them become more with the discovery of the latest innovations in art, effective. As part of the same programme, music and thought. Welfare Projects also promotes corporate volunteers among the ”la Caixa” employees. Bringing science closer to everyone The ”la Caixa” Foundation also plays a part in In addition to its commitment to culture, the hospitals via a programme to create cyber CosmoCaixa museums in Barcelona and Madrid classrooms, these being areas for play and and the 54 science-based exhibitions that have learning designed to alleviate time spent in travelled throughout Spain demonstrate the hospital, especially for children who have been interest of the ”la Caixa” Foundation in bringing hospitalised and their families. science closer to citizens of all ages and levels of education. An integrating culture Neither must we forget that all the facilities These new programmes have been created in where Welfare Projects carries out its cultural and addition to the work carried out in other, more scientific initiatives via the Foundation, both traditional areas. Following the strategy of those run by the Foundation itself as well as ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, the Foundation facilities used under agreement, promote the has continued with its commitment to an involvement and well-being of people and help active them become full members of society. old age via its Senior Citizen programme, as well as promoting international This annual report summarises our institution’s cooperation projects, encouraging biomedical work throughout 2005. Both new programmes research and supporting educational activities, and well-established initiatives that are proof of exhibitions and concerts for all kinds of the renewed impetus of ”la Caixa” in favour of audiences throughout the different provinces social cohesion and the welfare of people. of Spain. Education and culture have always played a highly relevant part in the work of the ”la Caixa” José Vilarasau Foundation. During 2005, over 2,200,000 people Chairman of the ”la Caixa” Foundation took part in one or more of the 1,766 cultural initiatives promoted throughout Spain. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I7 New Programmes Responding to the most disturbing problems As part of its Strategic Plan 2004-2006, which establishes the broad lines of the institution’s social focus, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has set up a series of new programmes related to society, care and the environment. The plan not only aims to support groups in exceptional or extremely serious circumstances but also aims to act in areas affecting broad sectors of the population, such as housing, employment, training, job creation, domestic violence and the conservation of natural areas. The Domestic Violence programme is particularly useful as an example of the current philosophy behind the initiatives of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects. Violence in the home is not an area that affects small groups of people at the fringes of society but is a collective problem that requires everyone’s commitment. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects works to raise awareness, providing education, looking for possible solutions, organising informative and preventative activities and helping victims to become full members of society and to find employment. This programme is carried out in collaboration with public institutions, non-profit organisations and specialists placing their knowledge at the service of the community. This dynamic, open philosophy characterises all the actions promoted by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in 2005. Prevention of Violence ERADICATING VIOLENT BEHAVIOUR IN EVERYDAY LIFE Image of the marquee set up in the Plaza de Colón in Madrid Domestic violence in Spain is an increasingly evident problem, with complaints of gender-based violence rising from 43,313 in 2002 to 59,758 in 2005. The 54 deaths due to domestic violence in 1999 have risen to a figure of 72 in the last year. In spite of the unequivocal nature of these figures, many people tend to see domestic violence as a distant problem that has nothing to do with them. To carry out its Prevention of Violence programme, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has had the support of the Psychiatry Service of the Sant Joan de Déu Hospital in Barcelona, the universities of Barcelona and La Laguna and of doctors Inés Alberdi, Luis Rojas Marcos and Boris Cyrulnik. As a palliative measure, the programme provides victims of domestic violence and their children with tools to help them overcome the emotional and psychological impact arising from situations of violence. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects also carries out various actions in the educational field, with activities aimed at encouraging young people to reflect on and take an active part against the phenomenon of violence. 12 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects The programme is divided into three main areas: • Prevention and education. • Awareness and dissemination. • Victim support. The Prevention of Violence programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects aims to bring to light a latent problem in society and to raise people's awareness of the presence of violent behaviour in our everyday lives. It hopes to help break the silence of victims and to promote zero tolerance with those committing violence. AWARENESS AND PREVENTION As a key element to spread knowledge and raise awareness, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has published the book Violencia: tolerancia cero (Violence: zero tolerance), written by Inés Alberdi, professor of sociology at the Universidad Complutense of Madrid, and by Luis Rojas Marcos, lecturer in psychiatry at New York University and member of the American Public Health Association. This book, published in Catalan, Spanish, Basque and Galician, is distributed on request at the branches of ”la Caixa”. The book analyses the origins of violent behaviour, especially in the domestic environment, and explains how to detect this and offers a series of possible antidotes to combat violence. “Violencia: tolerancia cero” is also the title of an exhibition that was inaugurated in Cordoba on the 9th of November 2005. It occupies a marquee of 200 m2, divided into five modular areas that invite the visitor to reflect on violence. By identifying the problem and examining its causes and consequences, visitors can analyse violent behaviour and offer possible solutions. Human rights versus the current situation, the difference between love and possession, jealousy, violence in the classroom and real-life accounts of how people have overcome violence are just some of the themes tackled by the exhibition, which is accompanied by complementary activities and cycles of conferences. In 2006 Welfare Projects will have three marquees simultaneously visiting 33 Spanish cities. ”la Caixa” W Welfare Projects also provides teachers with educational material to help analyse the problem of violence via music, cinema and new technologies. VICTIM SUPPORT In addition to educational activities, aimed at raising awareness and training, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has also generated a psychological and social support programme for women and children who are victims of abuse, based on strengthening their capacity to recover as a complementary tool to those initiatives carried out by public authorities and other organisations involved in helping women return to normal lives. Another big challenge for the future of victims is their return to employment, which allows many abused women to rebuild their lives. Welfare Projects dedicates particular attention to this group in its new programme to encourage employment. 10,000 schools will take part in workshops against violence promoted by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 13 New Fellowship Programmes MORE OPPORTUNITIES TO STUDY AND FIND WORK The Fellowship programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects includes training in Spain for professionals working in areas of interest to society As a complement to one of the oldest programmes of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, namely the funding of Spanish graduate students to carry out postgraduate studies abroad, three new Fellowship programmes were set up in 2005. The first is for postgraduate courses and doctoral theses at Spanish universities. This new programme aims to make knowledge even easier to access, as well as to promote research in disciplines with significant shortfalls, particularly in those areas related to the problems in society, assistance services or the environment. The second programme concerns the granting of professional training fellowships for prison inmates in order to help them return to employment. Lastly, and in collaboration with the Spanish news agency, Agencia EFE, Welfare Projects is also giving 30 fellowships for young journalists to carry out internships in Spain and abroad. 14 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects There are three main lines to this training programme: • Postgraduate fellowships in Spain. • Postgraduate fellowships abroad. • Journalism fellowships. In 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has dedicated a total of 2.3 million euros to its new Fellowship programme. 65 POSTGRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS IN SPAIN In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects granted a total of 65 fellowships for postgraduate studies in areas of interest to society, science and technology. The beneficiaries were 30 Spanish university students. These fellowships cover seven areas dedicated to: • Studies on immigration, marginalisation and social exclusion. • Social economic studies. • Treating drug addicts, eating disorders and depression. • Geriatric studies. • Resolving conflict and mediation. • Studies on the environment and sustainability. •T Technological studies. Out of the projects presented, of particular note are those related to marginalisation, geriatric care and eating disorders. In the field of the environment and technology, of particular note are those projects dedicated to renewable energy sources and systems to save energy, the elimination of harmful waste, bio-climactic architecture and remote medicine. In 2005, the Department of Justice of the Catalan government collaborated with the Professional Training programme for prison inmates. The courses were given by specialists from the Gaudí Building Institute and from the APIP (Asociación para la Promoción y la Inserción Profesional or Association for Promotion and Professional Placement). 80 PROFESSIONAL TRAINING FELLOWSHIPS FOR PRISON INMATES With its new Fellowship programme of Professional Training for prison inmates, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects hopes to promote access to training for the socially disadvantaged, helping them find employment in the future. Throughout the academic year of 2005-06, more than 80 men and women resident at penitentiary centres in Catalonia have taken part in professional training courses in building (tilers, bricklayers, assistant bricklayers and crane operators), new technologies (computing, office skills, graphic design) and geriatrics. There are several significant aspects to this programme, such as the fact that classes are held outside the penitentiary centre so that students can establish frequent contact with the outside world and become familiar with habits associated with holding down a stable job (punctuality, teamwork and responsibility). In order to assess the programme, which in 2006 will be rolled out to all autonomous communities in Spain, a mixed committee has been set up consisting of representatives from ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and from the penitentiary management. Prison inmates have joined those benefiting from the Fellowship programme 30 JOURNALISM FELLOWSHIPS The Journalism Fellowships of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and the Spanish news agency Agencia EFE are also based on an innovative approach. Their aim is to facilitate access to employment for students in their last year of Information and Communication Sciences, providing journalism internships for two years: the first year at any branch of the news agency in Spain and the second year at a branch in Europe, South or North America, Africa or Asia. During their first year, fellowship students will receive 600 euros a month, increased by 100 euros per month in the second year. While they are living abroad, the students will also receive a bonus of 500 euros a month for accommodation, as well as an additional payment for travel. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 15 Microloans SMALL AMOUNTS FOR LARGE PROJECTS Every microloan granted by ”la Caixa” generates 2.5 jobs “Small amounts for great opportunities”. With this slogan, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has launched a new line of microloans: credit for people who would normally have problems accessing traditional funds to help them carry out a sustainable economic project. Microloans are an essentially social product. They favour self-employment and help to increase employment, encouraging the integration of people and groups that have problems finding work, such as the long-term unemployed, immigrants, people aged over 45, the disabled and single parents. Since the programme started in July 2000 and up to the end of 2005, ”la Caixa” has granted 1,472 microloans for a total value of 20.9 million euros, becoming the Spanish privately run institution dedicating the most resources to this kind of aid. 73% of ”la Caixa” microloan beneficiaries are women and 26% are granted to immigrants. The activities most frequently funded by this kind of loan 16 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects are small commercial establishments or businesses related to restaurants and catering, crafts or beauty centres. Their social nature is also demonstrated by the fact that each microloan generates an average of 2.5 jobs. COLLABORATION AGREEMENTS BACKED BY PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS To date, ”la Caixa” has signed collaboration agreements with 141 social organisations throughout the country, acting as a link between the end beneficiaries of microloans and the financial institution. These are organisations with experience in economic or social aid and aimed at supporting the generation of microfirms, promoting employment and encouraging enterprise. The aim of the agreements backed by these organisations is to prioritise those employment and business projects that truly encourage selfemployment, providing a means of personal development for those applying for the loan. The only requirement is for the project to be economically viable and backed by a social organisation or body that has signed an agreement with ”la Caixa” for this purpose. Microloans are granted without guarantees or fees. The Microloan programme also has a specific section aimed at Women Entrepreneurs and Business Women, the result of a collaboration between ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, the Institute for Women (part of the Ministry of Work) and the Directorate General for SME's (Ministry of the Economy). 2005, INTERNATIONAL MICROLOAN YEAR ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has joined in with the events commemorating the International Microloan Year, designated by the General Assembly of the United Nations to publicise and promote this financial tool. On the 9th and 10th of March 2005, Welfare Projects organised the 1st National Microloan Congress in Madrid, presided over by Her Royal Majesty the Queen of Spain. The congress highlighted the notable growth in social microloans in Spain, whose total has multiplied 40-fold in the last four years. Leading international specialists also debated concepts such as financial and social exclusion, the use of microfinance as a means of relieving discrimination, the employment situation of women and the importance of social bodies in financial systems aimed at inclusion. On the 26th, 27th and 28th of September, Welfare Projects also collaborated in organising the 2nd European Microfinance Conference in Barcelona, as a member of the European Microfinance Network. Microf Her Majesty the Queen of Spain inaugurated the 1st National Microloan Congress in Madrid, organised by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 17 Volunteers THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND AID In 2005, ”la Caixa” decided to encourage volunteering Over the last few decades, volunteering has become a vehicle for citizen involvement and the crucial driving force behind society’s development. There are currently one million people in Spain who volunteer and collaborate with almost 37,000 nonprofit organisations. Via its Volunteers programme, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects supports organisations working W with volunteers to ensure that these people have additional human and material resources and to improve their management systems. Another aim of the programme is to help those related professionally to ”la Caixa” in carrying out volunteer work, namely our corporate volunteers. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects started its volunteer work in 1999. Within its Senior Citizen programme, over 3,000 volunteers currently make up 14 associations related to those Senior Citizen Centres where Welfare Projects is involved. Volunteers also carry out important work in the cyber classrooms, as well as accompanying and cheering up patients in 18 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects hospitals and other actions by cultural volunteers. This work is supported by the new Welfare Projects Volunteers programme. This new programme is therefore carried out on two levels: • Training and funding of social organisations. • Creation of a network of corporate volunteers. The budget allocated in 2005 for applications from organisations working with volunteers and encouraging volunteering totalled 3 million euros. SUPPORT FOR ASSOCIATIONS The aging of the population, the rise in social inequality, new immigration and deterioration in the environment are some of the social problems that ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects hopes to tackle through the work of its Volunteers programme. This initiative provides resources to further the internal development and organisational growth of Spanish social organisations that work with volunteers. In 2005, applications were requested from projects aiming to strengthen social organisations in institutional terms and to promote volunteering. This call for applications was directed at private nonprofit organisations working in the following fields: • Immigrants with difficulties in becoming part of society. • Groups of people in extreme poverty. • People with addictions and former addicts. • Current and former inmates of penitentiary centres. • Socially rejected minorities. • People with problems that make it difficult for them to develop themselves fully. The deadline for applications was the 15th of November, with 505 projects being presented. The successful projects will be chosen by April 2006. The first employee activities include accompanying senior citizens, helping immigrants become a part of society and caring for and training younger people in situations of risk. The programme is divided into three kinds of action: direct volunteering, with non-profit organisations committed to the needs of more disadvantaged groups; management volunteering, aimed at helping the internal and administrative organisation of these bodies in order to optimise their performance; and a third area where the volunteer associations of ”la Caixa” can put forward their own programmes. SOLIDARITY BEGINS AT HOME At the same time as providing aid to consolidate and strengthen organisations working with volunteers, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has also started a line of work aimed at encouraging the financial institution’s 25,000 employees to become involved in volunteer work. ”la Caixa” promotes corporate volunteers among its 25,000 employees The Corporate Volunteers programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects took its first steps in April 2005. There are currently over 32 provincial associations of volunteers made up of people associated professionally with ”la Caixa”. Valencia, Bilbao, Las Palmas, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Palma, Barcelona, Madrid and Seville are the pioneering cities starting up these initiatives. 505 projects were put forward for the 1st Call for Applications for volunteer projects Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 19 Affordable Housing A DREAM HOME ”la Caixa” helps both the young and old find a home Access to decent housing is a significant problem in society. A study by architect Jordi Bosch i Meda, awarded the 17th Rogeli Duocastella Prize given by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, notes that the elderly live in the oldest accommodation and in dwellings with greater deficiencies than the rest of the population. In most cases, their household income means they can’t afford to rent accommodation at market prices. Young people between the ages of 18 and 35 also have increasingly more problems in gaining access to their first home. The Affordable Housing programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects is aimed at these two groups. This initiative offers the chance to rent newly built dwellings with a good location and at an affordable price. The characteristics of the housing and the end users are as follows: • Approximate surface area of the housing: 40-50 m2. • Rental price: €140-240/month. • Young people under 30. •P People over 65. With an investment of 320 million euros on the part of ”la Caixa”, the Welfare Projects Affordable 20 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Housing programme plans to build 1,100 homes in 2005 and 2006. THE FIRST DEVELOPMENT, IN MADRID The first Affordable Housing development was inaugurated in July 2005 in the Madrid district of Vicálvaro, in a modern area with good communications, just a hundred metres from the Puerta de Arganda underground station and Vicálvaro railway station. This development consists of 148 rented dwellings, with tenants being selected by means of a strictly controlled draw from among applicants aged under 35 and over 65. With a useful surface area of between 40 and 65 m2, these flats are ideal for the needs of the people this programme is aimed at. Rents vary from 184 to 240 euros a month and they have been built by applying criteria of quality, accessibility, energy saving and sustainability. All have shared areas, a landscaped zone and an optional parking place. The rental contract is given for a period of 5 years for young people, while applicants over 65 can successively extend the lease once this first period has elapsed. In order to access these contracts, applicants must certify a gross family income of 2 to 4.5 times the minimum inter-professional wage. 3,000 HOMES IN NINE YEARS In the first three-year period of the programme, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has already set up 13 Affordable Housing developments with a total of 1,100 new homes. In the next six years the plan is to build a further 2,000 homes. After handing over the first development of Vicálvaro, the programme will be rolled out to various cities in Spain, and Welfare Projects has already signed a protocol to build affordable The first phase of the programme planned to build 1,1000 homes housing in Seville and Girona, among other cities, for 2006. All the profit obtained from the Affordable Housing project rents will be reinvested in creating new homes in order to increase the number of people benefiting from this initiative. The first completed development of the Affordable Housing programme in Vicálvaro (Madrid) Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 21 Promoting Employment AVOIDING EXCLUSION In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects allocated 1.5 million euros to its Promoting Employment programme Over half the Spaniards questioned by the Sociological Research Centre in 2005 named unemployment as one of the three key problems in Spain. Finding work is also considered to be an essential step in integrating groups into society that are at risk of exclusion. The new Promoting Employment programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects was created in order to help people with difficulties in finding work, aimed particularly at young people with problems in finding their first job, older people without any kind of work experience, those with physical, intellectual, mental or sensory handicaps, immigrants, the longterm unemployed, women affected by domestic violence or any person excluded from society. The project is structured around three levels: • Signing collaboration agreements with organisations that promote employment throughout Spain. • Strengthening the figure of the job developer. 22 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects • Establishing links with ordinary firms via the active collaboration of the ”la Caixa” financial network. Throughout 2005, Welfare Projects set up 8 collaboration agreements with 25 bodies dedicated to promoting employment in five autonomous communities, with a total investment of 1.5 million euros. One of these, for example, benefits groups at risk of exclusion in the province of Cadiz, using a network strategy made up of the Asociación para la Mediación Social Equa (Association for Equal Social Mediation), whose area of action covers intellectually handicapped people; the Asociación Alendoy, focused on socially excluded women and young people in Cadiz; the Asociación Gaditana de Espina Bífida e Hidrocefalia or AGEBH (Cadiz Spina Bifida and Hydrocephaly Association), dedicated to those affected by these diseases; and the Colectivo de Prevención e Inserción Social de Andalucía (Group of Prevention and Social Insertion of Andalusia), aimed at women inmates and former inmates of prisons. In 2006, the institution’s aim is to roll out this programme to the whole of Spain by signing 30 new agreements and allocating a budget of 5.4 million euros to ease the consequences of unemployment among disadvantaged groups. A KEY FIGURE: THE JOB DEVELOPER Finding work for people with particular difficulties must be seen as a personalised process that requires actions prior to, at the same time as and after employment has been found. Within this process, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects will focus its efforts on the figure of the job developer, a highly relevant position in the world of employment. This person’s key functions are looking for possible jobs, following up the beneficiary’s training process, accompanying people at work, solving possible conflicts that may arise within the employment relationship and encouraging new companies to join the programme. Welfare Projects will also help raise the awareness of ordinary firms regarding the recruitment of people from disadvantaged groups. As a support, in 2006 Welfare Projects plans to organise knowledge management seminars for organisations and professionals, aimed at sharing experiences and models of work to ensure greater success in finding employment. The conclusions of these seminars will be recorded so that they can be disseminated in a publication of good practices and recommended employment circuits. The Promoting Employment programme supports the training of job developers Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 23 The Environment FUTURE RESERVE ”la Caixa” has set up a programme to conserve and improve Spain’s nature parks The new Environment programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects is based on a philosophy of closeness. Nature parks, the conservation and recovery of indigenous species, sustainable management of the land and the recycling of waste generated by urban life are its key themes. At the same time, the institution also wishes to encourage people to reflect in general on the problems of the environment. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects also aims to promote information and knowledge via dissemination and raising awareness. New technologies mean that people can immediately access the latest data on the state of the planet, using satellite images from space to appreciate those problems that are close to us. A new environmental observatory, created via an agreement with the European Space Agency, will offer this information to those visiting the institution’s cultural centres. 24 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects The new line of environmental work started in 2005 is based on the following areas: • Recovering indigenous fauna. • Protecting nature parks. • Teaching sustainability. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects allocated close to 15 million euros to specific environmental projects. PROTECTING AND RESTORING PARKS AND NATURAL AREAS Nature parks are relatively untouched by human exploitation and occupation and are of significant value to society because of the beauty of their landscapes, the representative nature of their ecosystems or the singularity of their flora, fauna or geomorphologic forms. But the fact that these areas are protected does not mean they are safe from attack. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects initiated a collaboration with those institutions responsible for managing natural areas in Spain. The programme aims to improve forest habitats and riverbeds, develop infrastructures and signposting, restore particularly degraded areas and prevent fires. The ”la Caixa” Environment programme promotes the recovery of indigenous fauna One of the novelties of the programme is that, in order to carry out these actions, Welfare Projects will prioritise the hiring of people in situations of risk of social exclusion: preferably groups of prison inmates or former inmates, former drug addicts or any other group with difficulties in finding work. The first actions were started in 2005 in collaboration with the provincial government of Barcelona. These were 62 initiatives to conserve and improve nature parks, involving different groups of people to encourage their integration into society. Collaboration agreements were also signed in 2005 with the provincial government of Lleida, the government of the Balearic Islands and the regional government of Andalusia. In 2006 the institution will promote its Environment programme in nature parks and protected areas in Spain by means of collaboration agreements with all the autonomous communities in the country. RECOVERING INDIGENOUS SPECIES Spain is one of the countries with the greatest diversity of habitats. It has 5 of the bio-geographical regions of the European Union. It is also one of the countries with the greatest variety of species, some of which are currently endangered. ”la Caixa” Welfare Recovering tawny eagles at the Vallcalent Fauna Centre Recovering (Lleida) Projects also wishes to contribute to conserving our biodiversity and to looking after endangered species. During the first phase of the programme, in 2005 the institution set up the following collaborations in projects helping to protect species: • Reintroduction of the bearded vulture or Lammergeier, in collaboration with the Vallcalent Fauna Centre in Lleida. V • Reintroduction of the griffon vulture and the cinereous vulture, carried out by the Rehabilitation Group of Indigenous Fauna and its Habitat in Madrid. • Repopulation of the knobbed triton through the Nereo Association in Girona. • Rehabilitation of the Algerian hedgehog, with the Fauna Recovery Centre of the Collserola Nature Park, Can Balasc, in Barcelona. • Training orphan immature owls, thanks to the collaboration with the Brinzal Centre for the Recovery of Nocturnal Birds of Prey in Madrid. A new area in the ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects’ centres will allow us to publicise the situation of these species and to follow their recovery minute by minute via television monitors. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 25 PREVENTION VIA SATELLITE TEACHING SUSTAINABILITY ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects provides citizens with the latest research findings from the European Space Agency (ESA). Of particular note are the reports concerning the encroaching desert of the Mediterranean area, climate change, the state of the sea and the prevention of natural catastrophes, promoted with the aim to raise awareness of these areas of concern. By means of an environmental observatory installed at the CosmoCaixa centre in Barcelona, visitors can access the information provided on these areas by satellites orbiting the Earth. This initiative is the result of an agreement between the ESA and ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects as part of the European Space Education Resources Office (ESERO) project. The Science Museum of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Barcelona is the only facility in Spain to take part in this programme, highlighting the institution’s key role in raising awareness and spreading scientific and environmental information. Welfare Projects also promotes activities to inform, prepare for and raise awareness about sustainable development. Exhibitions, conferences and pedagogical activities are an example of this. Throughout 2005, Welfare Projects produced four touring exhibitions dedicated to alternative energy sources, the sustainable exploitation of forests, climate change and waste management. Between 2006 and 2007, these four exhibitions will visit all the main towns and cities in Spain. At the same time, the educational portal “Paisaje: educación medioambiental a través de la red” (Countryside: online environmental education), part of the Educalia portal, is aimed at schoolchildren, families and, in general, everyone who is interested in the environment. This proposal offers a range of educational resources to analyse the impact of human activity on the countryside and to reach conclusions about the need to develop behaviour that respects the environment. PROMOTING RECYCLING AND THE RE-USE OF WASTE An average-sized Spanish city produces 100,000 tonnes of waste per year. The re-use of much of this waste would lead to significant savings in natural resources and would benefit biodiversity. The latest call for applications for Environmental aid from ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects dedicated a special section to recycling and the re-use of waste. Out of the 58 projects selected, 25 are dedicated to this area. The first applications for Environmental Grants were made in 2002. Since that time, the institution has supported 132 projects, contributing a total of 4.6 million euros. The call for applications in 2005 increased the previous year’s budget of 2.1 million euros to 2.4 million euros. 26 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects One of the Environment programme’s goals is to prevent fires New Lines 2006 IMMIGRANTS, YOUNG AND DEPENDENT PEOPLE The new lines of action of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects reinforce its commitment to those sectors most in need True to its commitment to those sectors most in need and as stated in its Strategic Plan 2004-2006, throughout 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects started work on developing new programmes that will be implemented over the coming months. Dependent people, youngsters and immigrants are three groups that Welfare Projects will prioritise in 2006. To meet their needs, the institution will design new programmes aimed specifically at each of these groups. Relieving the load of those who are permanently caring for people who can’t look after themselves, providing models of civil behaviour and alternative training for young people, as well as contributing comprehensively to welcoming immigrants and helping them become full members of our society, will be some of the goals that ”la Caixa” Welfare Dependent and young people and immigrants are three groups that Welfare Projects will prioritise Projects will attempt to achieve via these new programmes. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 27 Social Programmes Closeness, commitment and use to society For more than one hundred years, ”la Caixa” has worked to help people and society with a philosophy of closeness, commitment and use to society. Throughout this time, its programmes have gradually been adapted to emerging needs and have played a pioneering role in society. This is the case of the programme dedicated to senior citizens, one of Welfare Projects’ key characteristics. Originally designed in recognition for the contribution made by senior citizens, it currently focuses on promoting voluntary work, working with new technologies and the continued training of our elderly as a means to help them towards an active, healthy old age and to stimulate the involvement of senior citizens in society. In addition to looking after the welfare of our elderly, Welfare Projects also works in other fields where there are significant deficiencies: caring for people affected by neuro-degenerative diseases and their families, the rehabilitation of people who have recovered from cancer and research into AIDS and neurology. Within its main dedication to disadvantaged groups, ”la Caixa” is also concerned with helping disabled people find employment, involving marginalised people in society and assisting immigrants. Within the framework of its Infancy and Family Care programme, Welfare Projects has promoted two innovative projects: the creation of a network of cyber classrooms in hospitals throughout Spain and a programme of host families, acting as a temporary refuge for children in a situation of risk. The International Cooperation programme aims to support initiatives in poorer countries in order to achieve a greater degree of social justice. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects allocated 119.5 million euros to its social programmes. Senior Citizens ADDING LIFE TO YEARS The elderly have always been a priority for ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Older people can adapt effectively to change, can keep active and play an important role in society. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects wants to help them do so via continued training, helping them access new technologies and encouraging initiatives that help society and voluntary work projects. Welfare Projects has a network of 552 Senior Citizen Centres distributed throughout Spain. Of these, 73 are owned by the institution and 479 are through collaboration with public authorities. Recently this network has become a highly active social resource. Computer rooms, Internet cafés and media libraries are the setting for inter-generational activities run by senior citizen volunteers. Talks and conferences bring specialists in different areas to the Senior Citizen Centres, covering areas of interest such as transformations in everyday life, the conflicts affecting the world today 30 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and the search for happiness. Always with a positive attitude: adding life to years, adding years to life. Throughout 2005, a total of 4,328,041 people have benefited from the ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects programme dedicated to senior citizens, with a budget of 8.5 million euros. A LITTLE HISTORY The work of ”la Caixa” in favour of senior citizens dates back to its very beginnings, when it instituted the “Homage to old age” and was a pioneer in introducing a new social benefit: old age pensions. In 1972, W Welfare Projects created the first Senior Citizen Centre in Barcelona. As from 1997, the Senior Citizens programme of the ”la Caixa” Foundation started to expand throughout Spain. Since then, collaboration agreements have been signed with administrations at a regional, provincial and local level in order to promote and boost these Senior Citizen Centres. Initiatives such as “Life is change. Change is life” and the “Club Estrella”, a website designed exclusively for senior citizens, highlight the institution’s interest in promoting an active old age. The Senior Citizen Centres of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects promote actions by senior citizen volunteers. Since 2004, 14 associations of senior citizen volunteers have been created in various autonomous communities, of particular note being the ASVOL (Association of Senior Citizen Volunteers in Science and Culture, Social Area, Media and Computing), AVIMA (Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Andalusia), with more than 500 members, and VIACEMA (Computing Volunteers Associated to Senior Citizen Centres of Madrid) with over 200 active participants. ASSOCIATIONS OF SENIOR CITIZEN VOLUNTEERS AND NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS PER AUTONOMOUS COMMUNITY ASVIGAL Galicia 150 AMAVI Asturias 97 IZARBIDE Guipuzcoa 140 AVIM-CyL Castile & Leon 90 VIACEMA Madrid 250 AVIMEX Extremadura 193 AVICEMCAM Castile-La Mancha 133 AVIMAR Aragon 147 ASVOL Catalonia 540 AVIM-CV Valencia 124 TALAIA Balearic Islands 115 AVIMA Andalusia 560 AMAVITE AVIMGRAN Tenerife Las Palmas 30 35 ASVOL Association of Senior Citizen Volunteers in Science and Culture, Social Area, Media and Computing VIACEMA Computing Volunteers Associated to Senior Citizen Centres AVIMA Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Andalusia AVIMAR Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Aragon AMAVI Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Asturias TALAIA Association of Volunteers of the Balearic Islands AMAVITE Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Tenerife AVIMGRAN Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Gran Canaria AVICEMCAM A Association of Senior Citizen Centre Computing Volunteers of Castile-La Mancha AVIM CyL Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Castile & Leon IZARBIDE Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Gipuzkoa AVIMEX Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Extremadura ASVIGAL Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of Galicia AVIM-CV Association of Senior Citizen Computing Volunteers of the Valencia Since 1997, more than 200,000 senior citizens have learned new information technologies in the 385 cyber classrooms and 17 Internet cafés installed by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Senior Citizen Centres throughout Spain. The enthusiasm shown by the users of this activity is so positive that former students have often become teachers in the later promotions. By way of example, in the seminars held in September 2005 in Palma de Mallorca, the ”la Caixa” Foundation awarded computing diplomas to 181 senior citizens who had gained extensive mastery of new technologies through their classes. LIFE IS CHANGE. CHANGE IS LIFE As the years go by, our body changes but so does our environment. Transformations due to aging can be a problem but they are also an opportunity to excel and for personal growth. With the programme “Life is change. Change is life”, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects helps senior citizens adapt to old age by emphasising health, creativity and involvement. Renowned professionals such as Luis Rojas Marcos, Eduard Estivill, Oscar Visitación and Sebastià Serrano take part in seminars, conferences, talks and workshops analysing how change comes about over the years from a neurological, psychological and social perspective and helping to achieve a favourable attitude towards adaptation. The activities of the “Life is change. Change is life” programme tackle highly diverse areas ranging from spirituality to conflict resolution, sexuality, self-esteem and personal image. The aim of the cycle is to help older people enjoy better health, keep mentally active, strengthen their self-esteem and personal satisfaction and to help them feel useful in society. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 31 Club Estrella also provides legal advice on associations and volunteers. In 2005, this website was visited by over 500,000 people. VOLUNTEERS AND ACTIVE PEOPLE ”la Caixa” promotes an active old age at 552 Senior Citizen Centres In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organised 48 seminars as part of the “Life is change. Change is life” cycle. Over 20,000 people took part in these seminars and in the parallel activities. CLUB ESTRELLA: THE SENIOR CITIZENS’ WEBSITE Club Estrella is a virtual area for older people to keep in touch with each other and up-to-date with the latest information, a place for learning and expressing their concerns, their creativity and social commitment for the benefit of society as a whole. Workshops for radio, painting, photography, image, creating e-zines; courses on computing, languages, Internet and conferences on the environment and health; games of memory, logic and observation are just some of the activities designed exclusively for this group of people, accessed via the website www.clubestrella.com. Of particular note in 2005 was the 1st Digital Photography Competition “Photograph your city. The city, a place for everyone”, allowing website users to look at the urban environment from a different point of view and to get involved in its evolution. 32 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Every year, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects promotes initiatives to motivate senior citizens to carry out volunteer work, relating to people of different ages and helping groups of people with problems, such as young people, immigrants and the disabled. Senior Citizen Centres organise computerrelated volunteer activities in cyber classrooms and hospitals. Every year, disabled people of all ages can take their first steps in computing under the guidance of senior citizen volunteers who have already mastered computers. Senior citizen volunteers also visit their sick or lonely peers and dedicate time to learning and playing together with children or disabled people. They also act as guides and monitors on organised trips to exhibitions and cultural events. In September 2005, during the Barcelona festival of the Mercè, its patron saint, the associations of senior citizen volunteers, encouraged by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and together with the “Voluntaris 2000” Association, designed and organised up to 40 day trips from Senior Citizen Centres. The aim was to help older people become involved in the festivities, both those from the centres themselves and in collaboration with the regional and city councils. Inter-generational Don Quixote In 2005, the calendar of inter-generational activities paid particular attention to the fourth centenary of the publication of Don Quixote. From the summer onwards, and arranged via the educational portal “Educalia”, over 5,000 children from infant, primary and secondary schools collaborated with older people from 173 computer classrooms in a programme of activities related to the work of Cervantes, its landscapes and characters. The seminar paid homage to the associations that run the computing classrooms: VIACEMA (Computing Volunteers Associated to Senior Citizen Centres), the Board of Governors of the Senior Optimism as an option for life In October 2005, H. R. H. Princess Cristina shared with 2,000 senior citizens of Madrid the seminar entitled “Optimism as a way to combat depression and loneliness”, as part of the cycle “Life is change. Change is life”. During this seminar, psychiatrist Luis Rojas Marcos gave a talk in favour of active aging, and diplomas of merit were also awarded to the senior citizens who had taken part in the computing volunteer activities promoted by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Madrid. ”la Caixa” promotes 14 senior citizen volunteer associations throughout Spain Citizen Centres of the Community of Madrid and the Group running the “Life is change. Change is life” programme in this community. There are 33 cyber classrooms in operation in Madrid in 37 Senior Citizen Centres, in which over 36,000 older people have learned computing. Statistics on attendance and activities Computing & Communication courses Senior citizen volunteers No. Activities Attendance No. Activities ANDALUSIA 247 2.987 44 18.091 ARAGON 167 3.400 37 65 662 37 164 2.455 51 CANTABRIA 43 496 CASTILE-LA MANCHA 72 692 CASTILE & LEON 92 1.198 CATALONIA 680 VALENCIA Inter-generational activities No. Activities Attendance 29 544 686 9 298 824 11 123 1.033 12 221 6 112 13 175 29 573 12 446 15 1.118 18 294 11.513 365 12.344 78 1.929 193 1.723 24 1.521 15 212 75 1.214 32 1.291 19 353 EXTREMADURA 141 1.221 33 852 12 263 GALICIA 106 1.557 27 659 17 331 60 594 8 990 10 145 ASTURIAS CANARY ISLANDS BASQUE COUNTRY BALEARIC ISLANDS Attendance 67 1.133 6 95 4 88 MADRID 306 5.438 317 21.423 42 1.050 MURCIA 73 1.059 21 1.023 12 695 2 36 2.553 37.378 LA RIOJA NAVARRE T tal To 1.053 64.989 1 12 314 7.179 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 33 Hospital Cyber Classrooms ”LA CAIXA” IN HOSPITALS ”la Caixa” is present in Spanish hospitals via a network of cyber classrooms Children find staying in hospital a particularly traumatic experience. The strangeness of their surroundings and the uncertainty of the diagnosis are added to the fact that they have lost contact with their school and friends. The Hospital Cyber Classrooms of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects aims to respond to this situation. These are areas where children who have been hospitalised can go during the day to follow a programme of studies and have contact with other children and adults. And they also provide a window on the outside world via communication technology. Since the first cyber classroom was created in 2002 at the Vall d’Hebron University Hospital in Barcelona, the programme has been very popular and is now in full expansion. At the end of 2005, 20 cyber classrooms were already in operation and there were agreements with 15 Autonomous Communities to complete a network of 71 areas in 2006, located in hospitals throughout Spain. 34 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects The budget allocated by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in 2005 for its hospitalised children programme totalled 3.2 million euros. DISTRIBUTION OF CYBER CLASSROOMS By the end of 2005, the following cyber classrooms were in operation: •V Vall d’Hebron University Hospital in Barcelona. • Hospital Complex of Ourense. • University Hospital Complex of Santiago de Compostela. • La Fe Clinical Hospital in Valencia. • Son Llàtzer in Palma de Mallorca. • Materno Insular in Las Palmas. • Carlos Haya in Malaga. • San Sebastián Hospital. • Cruces in Baracaldo. • Zumárraga Hospital. • Basurto Hospital. The ”la Caixa” cyber classrooms have 4 clearly differentiated areas • Juan Canalejo in A Coruña. • Río Hortega in Valladolid. • General Yagüe in Burgos. • Miguel Servet in Zaragoza. • Doctor Trueta in Girona. DISTRIBUTION BY GEOGRAPHICAL AREA Galicia Asturias Cantabria 1 2 • •5 Basque Country • 6 • • 3 Castile & Leon La Rioja 4 • Madrid 9 • Extremadura 5 Castile-La Mancha 5 • • Aragon 3 • Valencia 4 Catalonia 10 • Balearic Islands 3 • • Andalusia 5 • Canary Islands 6 • T Total • Germans Trias i Pujol in Badalona. • Leon Hospital. •V Virgen del Rocío in Seville. • Manacor Hospital. The expansion of the Cyber Classroom programme plans to create 71 of these play-educational areas, of which 10 will be in Catalonia, 9 in the Community of Madrid, 6 in the Basque Country and Canary Islands, 5 in Extremadura, Castile-La Mancha, Andalusia and Galicia; 4 in Castile & Leon and in Valencia, 3 in La Rioja, the Balearic Islands and Aragon, 2 in the Principality of Asturias and 1 in Cantabria. 71 HOW DOES A HOSPITAL CYBER CLASSROOM WORK? Cyber classrooms are always open, even during school holidays, summer, Christmas and Easter, and they have a very extensive timetable. They are organised as follows: Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 35 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects cyber classrooms have an area dedicated to new technologies Family area. Where families can relax together, exchange experiences with other parents and take part in activities proposed by the cyber classroom, such as talks, reading, computing or conferences and debates. Children’s area. This area is equipped with special furniture and resources for children, aiming to make their stay at the hospital more enjoyable. Here children can make use of pedagogical materials, educational programmes and organised activities. The Cyber Classroom programme plans to create 71 of these play and educational areas Computing area. Information and communication technologies offer a wide range of possibilities. Here people of all ages can contact each other using 36 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects resources such as PC’s and laptop computers, all with an Internet connection and email, as well as use printers and scanners. Reading and audiovisual area. The resources in this area, available to everyone visiting the cyber classroom, are books, newspapers, magazines, music and audiovisual equipment. ACTIVITIES AND ASSESSMENT ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects carries out a programme of specific play and training activities for hospital cyber classrooms. The activities can be carried out directly by the users or with the assistance of volunteers. Professionals from different universities, Prof together with the ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects team, constantly evaluate the Hospitalised Children Care programme in order to direct its development, evaluate social impact and generate new proposals. In this respect, a study carried out in 2005 by the University of Barcelona on ten hospital cyber classrooms promoted by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has highlighted the benefits derived from taking part in these activities in terms of the child's recovery. The study points out that the average time spent in the cyber classroom is 134 minutes per day. The most used cyber classrooms are at the following hospitals: Santiago (2,671), Vall d’Hebron (2,581), Valencia (2,527) and Las Palmas (1,007). V Particularly interesting is the case of the cyber classroom at the Carlos Haya Hospital in Malaga, which has received 1,054 visits in just four months of being in operation, the highest average number of visits over such a short period of time. In total, the 10 cyber classrooms in the study were visited by 11,322 children and 8,852 families and companions, totalling 20,174 beneficiaries, three times the figure of 6,935 for the same facilities the Professionals from different universities constantly evaluate the cyber classroom programme previous year. On the other hand, the predominant age among the children visiting the cyber classrooms was between 7 and 11. New technologies, together with the use of audiovisual resources and computers are undoubtedly the most frequently used elements by the children, while the family groups opt more for activities that do not involve new technologies, such as board games and books. ”la Caixa” cyber classrooms are a window on the outside world for children staying in hospitals and their relatives Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 37 International Cooperation PROMOTING DEVELOPMENT In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects increased its contribution to its International Cooperation programme by more than 40% The International Cooperation programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects aims to support initiatives that contribute to eradicating poverty in low income countries, helping to reach greater rates of social justice. Within this programme, the institution promotes projects by Spanish NGO’s working in the most disadvantaged countries in collaboration with local agents. These actions aim to stimulate these countries to truly develop, at the same time as reporting an improvement in the population’s living conditions. Emergency situations also deserve special attention from the International Cooperation programme. Along these lines, and in response to larger natural catastrophes, in 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects created a special fund of one million euros per year for projects helping to relieve the effects of the Tsunami catastrophe in South East Asia. The institution also contributed over 100,000 38 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects euros to help mitigate the consequences of the floods in Guatemala and the earthquake that shook Pakistan. In 2005, the budget allocated to help international cooperation projects of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects increased by 44%, reaching 5.6 million euros. This investment was distributed among 51 Spanish NGO’s and for organising activities to raise awareness, publicise and promote development in disadvantaged countries. OVER HALF A MILLION BENEFICIARIES ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects gives aid to international cooperation projects, prioritising actions aimed at improving the habitat and infrastructures, health resources, education and training for the population, rural and urban development, respect for human rights and humanitarian action. In 2005, CosmoCaixa Barcelona held seminars dedicated to analysing the relationship between health and poverty The aim is to promote those projects of solidarity that emphasise most the benefiting populations. Since 1997, when the call for applications was first set up, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has helped 313 projects carried out by Spanish NGO’s in different countries in Latin America, Africa, Asia and Oceania, with a total investment of more than 20 million euros. The number of direct beneficiaries of the programme already exceeds half a million people. The grants in 2005 totalled 4.6 million euros and, in terms of content, have consisted of a general section aimed at international cooperation projects for development and three specific sections aimed at promoting productive economic activities; the prevention and/or social care of people affected by AIDS and humanitarian action. Out of the 51 projects receiving support from ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in 2005, 24 were carried out in Latin America, 16 in Africa and 11 in Asia. With regard to their content, 10 concerned humanitarian action, 5 emergencies, 8 were related to economic activities and 4 to the prevention of AIDS and social care of people affected by the HIV virus. The remaining 24 projects were aimed at education, rural development and health care, the construction of basic infrastructures and the protection of fundamental rights. The projects are managed by different NGO’s from Andalusia (2), Aragon (1), Balearic Islands (1), Castile & Leon (2), Catalonia (18), Valencia (1), Basque Country (4), Extremadura (1), Galicia (1), Madrid (19) and Murcia (1). DISTRIBUTION OF THE PROJECTS SELECTED Basque Country • 4 Galicia •1 Castile & Leon 2 • Aragon 1 • Madrid 19 • Valencia 1 Extremadura 1 • • Andalusia 2 • T Total Catalonia 18 • Balearic Islands 1 • Murcia 1 • 51 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 39 International cooperation projects. Call for applications 2005 Latin America COUNTRY Bolivia Brazil Colombia El Salvador El Salvador/ Guatemala/ Mexico El Salvador/ Guatemala/ Nicaragua caragua Guatemala Honduras Nicaragua caragua Peru Dominican Republic Total PROJECTS 1 1 1 3 EUROS 34,000 80,000 165,000 165,000 Mexico Guatemala Dominican Republic Honduras El Salvador Nicaragua 1 87,000 Colombia Peru 1 91,000 5 3 3 2 298,000 325,000 360,000 1 164,000 3 271,200 24 2,040,200 Brazil Bolivia Africa COUNTRY Angola Burkina Faso Cameroon Chad Ethiopia Guinea Morocco Mozambique Senegal Sierra Leone Tanzania zania Uganda Total PROJECTS EUROS 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 16 390,000 35,000 130,000 100,000 22,000 180,000 46,000 173,000 9,800 360,000 24,000 203,000 1,672,800 Morocco Senegal Chad Guinea Sierra Leone Ethiopia Cameroon Uganda Tanzania Angola Mozambique Asia COUNTRY Afghanistan Philippines India Pakistan Palestinian Territories Total PROJECTS EUROS 2 1 6 1 363,000 90,000 611,129 50,000 1 11 61,000 1,175,129 Afghanistan India Pakistan Palestinian Territories Total 40 51 4,888,129 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Philippines GETTING TO KNOW THE REALITY In addition to its support on the ground, in 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects also organised over 20 symposia, conferences and seminars in various cities in Spain, given by prestigious professionals in the field of international cooperation. Among these activities, aimed at raising people’s awareness of the reality of the most disadvantaged countries, those particularly of note were dedicated to the following areas: Health and Poverty • Seminars on health and poverty. •R Relationship between migratory movements and health. • How to lower infant mortality rates in lowincome countries. • Child immunisation in developing countries. Conflict • Peace and conflict cycle. • Child soldiers. • The conflict in the Sudan. • Challenges of human safety and governance of peoples. • The construction of peace processes. Latin America • Realities and challenges of the indigenous people of Latin America. Cooperation organisations • Analysis of cooperation organisations to help similar developments in Spain. HEALTH AND POVERTY SEMINARS To mention just one of these activities, the “Health and Poverty” seminars held in Barcelona and organised by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects with the collaboration of the Observatory of International Health, the University and Clinical Hospital of Barcelona, brought together representatives from public institutions and academics from developing countries in order to reflect on “The vicious circle Follow-up visit for programme projects on tuberculosis and AIDS financed by the Welfare Projects at the Manhiça Health Centre in Mozambique of sickness and poverty: new instruments to tackle this”. The hub of the analysis focused on how to break the vicious circle of sickness and poverty that reigns in the poorest areas of our planet, so that the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goal may be reached. SUPPORTING TRAINING In addition to actions in order to spread information and raise awareness, in 2005 the 7th Management Training Course was started for members of NGO’s which, organised by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in collaboration with ESADE business school, has become a point of reference in management training for this area. As well as this course, and aware of the fact that broadening the capacities of local agents is a means of guaranteeing more effectiveness in improving the quality of international cooperation, in 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects also promoted the training of specialists in evaluating and managing project cycles in Humanitarian Action. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 41 Health CARING FOR THE SICK AND PROMOTING RESEARCH ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects promotes biomedical research into oncology and neuro-degenerative diseases Public institutions are responsible for offering citizens high quality health care. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects complements their work in two W fundamental ways: attending to the social aspects of illnesses such as Alzheimer’s and cancer, and biomedical research. Welfare Projects promotes programmes for the rehabilitation and reinsertion of people who have recovered from cancer as well as initiatives to support those affected by neuro-degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s or multiple sclerosis. It also collaborates with associations of relatives and sick people in training monitors, developing innovative therapies and setting up day centres, domestic care services and rehabilitation 42 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects workshops. It also promotes courses, conferences and publications of interest to those affected. In the field of biomedical research, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects finances the projects of teams of Spanish researchers with regard to AIDS, cancer and neuro-degenerative diseases, so that their discoveries may lead to an improvement in the living conditions of the people suffering from these illnesses. The budget in 2005 for the area of health totalled 9 million euros. ALZHEIMER’S AND OTHER NEURO-DEGENERATIVE DISEASES One of the paradoxes of developed societies is that the increased life expectancy is accompanied by a higher rate of neuro-degenerative diseases. Since 1996, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has run its Neuro-Degenerative Disease programme with two objectives: to offer support to the sick, their relatives and carers and to promote applied biomedical research. Workshops, awareness raising programmes, support for managing associations of sufferers, publications of all kinds ranging from practical care manuals to children’s tales, websites and new therapies, are just some of the resources that ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects places at the disposal of the sick and the people around them. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects allocated 3.1 million euros to its health grants in this area, representing an increase of 44% with regard to the previous year. 48,124 people have benefited directly from the projects selected. Caring for the sick is another priority of the Health programme and allocated resources for those affected by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Huntington’s Chorea and hereditary ataxia, among other illnesses. CALL FOR GRANT APPLICATIONS 2005 Throughout the last year, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects funded 166 projects related to the care of those affected by neuro-degenerative diseases, with a total contribution of 2.3. Since the start of the programme, Welfare Projects’ contribution to improving the quality of life of the sick has taken shape in 515 collaboration agreements signed with associations throughout Spain. The call for grant applications in 2005 paid special attention to projects aiming to reinforce the structures of these associations, in order to help to consolidate their presence in society and improve how they are managed. The institution dedicated both economic resources and its own specialists to this end. Apart from the effort invested by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in the more common neuro-degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and multiple sclerosis, the institution has also carried out activities STIMULATION AND REHABILITATION WORKSHOPS To the relatives and associations of the sick ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has made available a whole range of materials and resources concerning the diagnosis and care for those affected, in order for them to keep their autonomy as long as possible. • The “Verbal expression” workshop proposes techniques to improve breathing, speaking, swallowing, facial expression and communication among affected people. • The “Mobility and rhythm” workshop helps the sick to regain internal harmony using rhythm and music. • The “Corporal flexibility” and “Performing arts” workshops work on aspects to prevent disease and develop resources to handle illness, providing a better quality of life. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 43 • In the month of June, the new occupational therapy workshop was held in Madrid, entitled “Activities of everyday life”, aimed both at the sufferers of Parkinson’s disease and their relatives. SPREADING KNOWLEDGE AND RAISING AWARENESS As a result of its commitment to the field of health, in recent years ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has generated basic tools to raise awareness regarding neurodegenerative diseases. Ranging from materials that can be used to work on cognitive stimulation to a collection of children’s tales that explain to children the development and effects of these diseases, as well as the Diary, designed the help those affected to arrange their everyday tasks and the architecture Guide, which helps people re-adapt their homes for a sick person in a practical, effective and inexpensive way. The collection Understanding Multiple Sclerosis, completed in 2005, consists of seven works published in collaboration with the Spanish Federation for the Fight Against Multiple Sclerosis, and contains material prepared by associations from different countries who are members of the International Multiple Sclerosis Federation. The collection covers both the physiological aspects of the disease as well as the psychological, which is fundamental to taking on the life changes involved. As part of its Health programme, Welfare Projects has also organised numerous courses, conferences, workshops and informative sessions that help to understand how the disease evolves and how to live with it. Of particular note are the workshops “Learn to help” aimed at relatives, professionals and volunteers working with the sick. WEBSITE RESOURCES A specific section of its portal website has been set aside by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects for those 44 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects suffering from neuro-degenerative diseases and their relatives. This has been set up to help spread information and raise the awareness of society, as well as making communication and the flow of knowledge between sufferers and associations more fluid. This resource includes available materials, the Diary of activities, ongoing projects, a directory of associations and results of applied biomedical research, as well as articles and talks given by prestigious professionals. PILOT PROGRAMMES Another of the areas where ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects collaborates is in setting up pilot projects combining therapeutic and social aspects. The first initiative of this type was “Spaces of life” which, carried out at a spa, allowed carers to follow a programme of training while the sick underwent physical and cognitive therapies. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects financed 166 projects concerning the care of those suffering from neuro-degenerative diseases Along these lines, of particular note are the music therapy workshops, the Inter-Generational Choir of Barcelona, the theatre courses to work on memory and the training of guide dogs for those in the first phase of their disease. BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH As part of its social and assistance programmes, in 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects set up a new call for applications for biomedical research grants. The institution allocated 3.2 million euros to finance 26 research projects run by leading medical teams throughout Spain. These Biomedical Research grants, created in 1997 for neurosciences and in 2002 for oncology, aim to strengthen basic and clinical research into these areas, reinforcing the material and human infrastructure of scientific teams carrying out their work in Spain and, at the same time, helping to disseminate the knowledge generated for the benefit of patients. By geographical area, the 15 grants in the area of neurosciences went to nine teams in Madrid, two in Barcelona, two in Lleida, one in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and one in Valladolid. Of the 11 oncology teams, six work in Barcelona, three in Madrid, one in Vizcaya and another one in Salamanca. Since these grants were set up, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has supported 126 research teams, 93 in the area of neuroscience and 33 in oncology. The total investment is over 12 million euros, of which 8.3 million euros correspond to projects in the area of neurosciences and 3.7 million euros to scientific teams in the area of oncology. ”la Caixa” supports 126 biomedical research teams In order to publicise advances achieved in the laboratory, in 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organised neuroscience and oncology forums to present the findings of the projects it had financed, contained in the scientific annual report of the ”la Caixa” Foundation. Bio-computing also enjoyed a key role in 2005, as the main focus of seminars held at CosmoCaixa in Barcelona. NEUROSCIENCES ONCOLOGY The 15 teams selected in 2005 in the area of neurosciences cover a large number of neurodegenerative diseases: Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s Chorea, epilepsy, schizophrenia, cerebral vascular accidents, etc. Their focuses are highly diverse, although they can be grouped into four broad areas: origin and development of Alzheimer’s disease, the function of nuclear receptors in the neuro-degenerative process, neuronal development and treating neuronal complaints. In the oncology area, the eleven projects selected carry out research into all kinds of cancers, from leukaemia and lung cancer to work on the more general area of tumour families. The most usual areas are the genetic origin of cancer, how the disease develops and an evaluation of therapies and methods of diagnosis. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 45 Call for grant applications 2005 - Biomedical Research 2005 Team Institution Dr. Alberto Martínez Serrano “Severo Ochoa” Molecular Biology Centre - Autonomous University of Madrid. (Madrid) Dr. Faustino Mollinedo García Cancer Research Centre - Foundation for Cancer Research of the University of Salamanca. (Salamanca) Dra. María Francisca Cano Abad University Hospital of La Princesa - Foundation for Biomedical Research. (Madrid) Dr. Javier de Felipe Oroquieta Cajal Institute - CSIC. (Madrid) Dra. Elisa Martí Gorostiza Cardiovascular Research Centre - CSIC. (Barcelona) Dr. Ernest Giralt Lledó Biomedical Research Institute of Barcelona - Science Park Foundation of Barcelona. (Barcelona) * Dra. María Carmen Espinet Mestre Faculty of Medicine. University of Lleida. (Lleida) * Dr. José María Frade López Santiago Ramón y Cajal Neurobiology Institute - CSIC. (Madrid) Dr. Jordi Surrallés Calonge Faculty of Science - Autonomous University of Barcelona. (Bellaterra. Barcelona) Dra. Mireia Duñach Masjuan Faculty of Medicine - Autonomous University of Barcelona. (Barcelona) Dr. Jesús Pintor Just University School of Optics - Complutense University of Madrid. (Madrid) Dra. María Teresa Miras Portugal Faculty of Veterinary Science - Complutense University of Madrid. (Madrid) Dr. Miguel Ángel Piris Pinilla National Centre for Oncology Research - Carlos III National Foundation Centre of Oncology Research. (Madrid) Dr. Manuel Portero Otín Faculty of Medicine - University of Lleida. (Lleida) Dr. Alfredo Rodríguez Tébar Cajal Institute - CSIC. (Madrid) Dr. José Javier Lucas Lozano “Severo Ochoa” Molecular Biology Centre - CSIC. (Madrid) Dr. Óscar Fernández-Capetillo Ruiz National Centre for Oncology Research Carlos III National Foundation Centre of Oncology Research. (Madrid) Dr. Joaquín Arribas López Research Institute, Vall d’Hebron University Hospital. (Barcelona) Dr. Jorge Moscat Guillen National Centre for Molecular and Cellular Biotechnology - CSIC. (Madrid) Dr. Álvaro Urbano Ispizua Faculty of Medicine - Private Clinical Foundation for Biomedical Research. (Barcelona) * Dr. A. Castrillo Viguera Faculty of Medicine - University of las Palmas de Gran Canaria. (Las Palmas) * Dra. María Ángeles Moro Sánchez Faculty of Medicine - Complutense University of Madrid. (Madrid) Dr. Jesús Balsinde Rodríguez Institute of Biology and Molecular Genetics - CSIC. (Valladolid) Dr. Miguel Ángel Genestar Pujana Private Foundation Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute - August Pi i Sunyer Foundation. (L’Hospitalet de Llobregat) Dr. Ramón Mangues Bafaluy Research Institute of the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau. (Barcelona) Dra. María del Mar Vivanco Ruiz Cooperative Research Centre CIC - Biogune. (Derio. Vizcaya) (*) Coordinated projects 46 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects AIDS Raising awareness, providing information, particularly for younger members of society, prevention and research into new drugs are, since 1993, the main lines of action in the fight against AIDS of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, which dedicated 1.8 million euros to this area in 2005. The irsiCaixa Foundation celebrated its tenth anniversary in 2005. Set up by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and the Department of Health of the Catalan regional government, under the direction of Dr. Bonaventura Clotet, it has established its headquarters at the Germans Trias i Pujol University Hospital in a centre that is outstanding in its field. Its aim is to promote medical research into the area of health sciences and epidemiology, particularly in acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). The irsiCaixa Foundation received a budget of 765,000 euros in 2005. NEW BIO-SAFETY LABORATORY At the end of 2004, the irsiCaixa Foundation inaugurated its new bio-safety laboratory, whose facilities have been highly praised by Spanish experts. This new laboratory has practically doubled in size, going from the original 389 m2 to 762 m2. Extending the facilities has meant that more scientists can work together at the same time, as well as providing an area for training research staff. The new services and scientific instruments have also enabled some tasks to be automated, leading to an increase in scientific production. VIRTUAL IRSICAIXA (WWW.IRSICAIXA.ORG) Consulting the latest research, accessing a complete bibliography of AIDS publications or asking the irsiCaixa researchers a question are just some of the services offered by this website, created in order to provide scientists, health professionals, students and the public at large with accurate and detailed information on HIV. The website is updated by the irsiCaixa Foundation research team, guaranteeing its quality and scientific accuracy. The irsiCaixa facilities are a point of reference worldwide in AIDS research Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 47 Immigration A SOCIETY FOR EVERYONE Finding work is one of the best ways for immigrants to become full members of our society In recent years, Spain has become a significant destination for migrations from North Africa, Latin America and countries in Eastern Europe. However, the reality of the Spanish job market and often a lack of skills mean that these people are frequently unemployed, precariously employed or form part of the hidden economy. High rents, together with a lack of a fixed income, means that many immigrants have to live together in flats and hostels and, on occasion, may be associated with phenomena such as criminal behaviour. This situation is particularly complicated among the younger population, with high rates of school absenteeism and other difficulties for them to adapt. One of the goals of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects is to improve the quality of life of new residents and to help them become members of society. That’s 48 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects why, in 2005, Welfare Projects increased the amount allocated for its Immigration programme by 78%, contributing 3.2 million euros to finance 200 initiatives throughout Spain. Since it set up its Immigration programme in 1999, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has collaborated with 759 initiatives, to which it has given more than 11.5 million euros. CARING FOR CHILDREN AND HELP WITH BUREAUCRACY Caring for children, helping immigrants achieve an official status in society, training and finding them employment are the main areas of action for projects promoted in the call for grant applications in 2005. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has financed initiatives ranging from literacy courses to programmes teaching the language of origin so that immigrants don’t lose their cultural roots when they become integrated in the host society. One of the objectives of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects is to improve the quality of life of new residents and provide them with an official status in society Integrating immigrants into the world of work has been tackled both via a wide range of workshops and courses aimed at teaching a trade, as well as by managing and promoting social and employment resources. Examples of this are job markets and employment development firms, designed to help immigrants integrate into society and the world of work. Other projects financed by Welfare Projects are based on caring for immigrants at emergency host centres, for immigrants who come ashore illegally along the coastline of the Canary Islands and Andalusia, as well as centres specialising in children or women who are victims of prostitution networks and people trafficking, among others. The new resident programme has also worked on informing, guiding and mediating to help immigrants with the different bureaucratic processes. It has also financed intercultural programmes as a means to eradicate discrimination, xenophobia and exclusion. By autonomous community, 56 of the projects promoted by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects to help immigrants become a part of society correspond to Catalonia; 32 to Andalusia; 28 to Madrid; 16 to Valencia; 12 to Castile & Leon; 9 to Galicia; 8 to Castile-La Mancha and Murcia; 7 to Aragon; 5 to La Rioja and the Basque Country; 4 to the Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands; 3 to Extremadura; and 1 to Melilla, Navarre and Asturias. DISTRIBUTION OF AID GIVEN FOR IMMIGRATION PROJECTS 2005 Asturias Galicia Basque Country •1 • 5 Navarre •1 •5 Castile & Leon La Rioja • 12 Aragon •7 Madrid • 28 •9 Extremadura 3 • Castile-La Mancha 8 Andalusia 32 • Canary Islands 4 • ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has increased the amount it dedicates to its Immigration programme by 78% T Total • Valencia 16 Catalonia 56 • Balearic Islands 4 • • Murcia 8 • Melilla 1 • 200 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 49 The projects selected encourage new residents and the host population to live together in harmony TRAINING CENTRE FOR IMMIGRANTS IN CORDOBA Among the initiatives promoting the integration of new residents, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has given In 2005, Welfare Projects increasedthe budget for its Immigration programme by 78%, contributing 3.2 million euros 50,000 euros to the Pro Inmigrantes Association of Cordoba to consolidate its Employment Training 50 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Centre for immigrant people. The aim of the centre is to provide immigrants with the necessary knowledge and skills to find a job on the Cordoba job market, considering a job to be the main way to avoid social exclusion. 135 people have already benefited from the programme, half of these women. PROMOTING EDUCATION AND INTERCULTURAL MEDIATION IN JEREZ With the support of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, which has contributed 18,000 euros, the Immigrant Host Centre (CEAIN) of Jerez carries out a programme of social and educational promotion and intercultural mediation for immigrant minors. The project, in which some 500 people take part, aims to help these children to overcome language difficulties and make sure they don’t fall behind at school. It also organises classes on their mother tongue to reinforce their own identity, and works as an intercultural mediator between children, their families and their social and educational environment. INTEGRATING YOUNG IMMIGRANT PRISON INMATES The Arca Association promotes the programme “Cartón-immigration”, whose aim is to help young immigrants interned at Catalan Penitentiary Centres to find work. Among other initiatives, “Arca” has set up bookbinding workshops in the prisons of Tarragona, Girona and Trinitat (Barcelona). ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has collaborated in this project via a donation of 30,000 euros. A REAL AND VIRTUAL WELCOME In December 2004, and in collaboration with different public authorities, ”la Caixa” created the portal “Intégrate XXI” (www.integrateXXI.es), providing information on legal, health, educational and employment issues to help new residents become a part of society. Designed as a meeting point between public authorities and people who want to live in Spain, in 2005 the portal “Intégrate XXI” became an important means of contact between the different people involved in immigrant issues. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects promotes the training of the immigrant community Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 51 Disability and Employment for the Disabled HELPING TO BECOME A FULL MEMBER OF SOCIETY In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects allocated over 8 million euros to its Disability programme In Spain, over 3.5 million people have some kind of disability, whether physical, intellectual, mental or sensorial. Finding employment and becoming a full member of society is a high priority goal of the community. Since 1999, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has promoted 1,200 projects to improve the quality of life of those with a disability Through its Disability programme, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects attends to some of the common problems for people with some kind of disability. 52 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects The programme’s objectives are to help improve their quality of life, protect their rights and promote their full integration into society. In 2005, Welfare Projects allocated 8.2 million euros to the programme, supporting 374 projects by non-profit organisations. 206 of these correspond to the call for disability grant applications and 165 to the specific call for projects to improve the employment prospects of the disabled. Since the disability grants were first set up in 1999, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has collaborated with almost 1,200 projects, contributing nearly 25 million euros. In 2006, Welfare Projects will launch a new programme to care for dependent people, which will substantially increase the resources allocated to improving the quality of life of the disabled. MAKING DISABILITY A NORMAL WAY OF LIFE The accommodation, care and integration of disabled people, helping them become normal members of society, supporting their training and helping them find employment by learning languages and professional skills are the main objectives of the 206 projects selected in the call for disability grant applications in 2005. "la Caixa" Welfare Projects allocated 4 million euros to fund projects that help to improve the quality of life of people with disabilities. The projects belong to 10 broad areas: • Occupational workshops. • Sheltered accommodation. • New therapies. • Day centres. • Social integration workshops. • Domestic care services. • Across-the-board programmes. • Special education centres. • Information and guidance services. • Leisure programmes. In terms of their distribution by autonomous community, 53 projects were presented by nonprofit organisations from Catalonia, 41 from Andalusia, 24 from Madrid, 15 from Galicia, 11 from the community of Valencia, 9 from the Balearic Islands, Castile & Leon and Aragon, 8 from Castile-La Mancha and Murcia, 6 from the Canary Islands and Extremadura, 3 from Cantabria and 1 from La Rioja, the Basque Country, Navarre and Ceuta. The allocation for the call for Disability grant applications in 2005 totalled 4 million euros help different groups of disabled people find employment. In 2005, as part of its grants for the Employment of Disabled People, Welfare Projects contributed 4.2 million euros to fund 165 projects, GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF DISABILITY GRANTS IN 2005 Cantabria 3 • 15 WORK: THE BEST WAY TO BECOME A PART OF SOCIETY People with disabilities have very high levels of unemployment due to several discriminatory factors. To counteract this, since 2002 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has awarded specific grants to Extremadura 6 • Castile-La Mancha 8 Andalusia 41 • Canary Islands 6 • T Total Basque Country • 1 Navarre •1 •1 Castile & Leon La Rioja •9 Aragon •9 Madrid • 24 • Galicia • Valencia 11 Catalonia 53 • Balearic Islands 9 • • Murcia 8 • Ceuta 1 • 206 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 53 Finding a job opens the door to becoming a full member of society for people with a disability a budgetary increase of 45% compared with 2004. Since 2002, Welfare Projects has financed 494 initiatives with a total investment to date of 11 million euros. The main aim of these grants is to strengthen, consolidate and improve the resources of occupational centres and special employment centres dedicated to assisting this group of people, with the intention of helping them find work in ordinary firms. Of the 165 projects chosen in 2005, 29 correspond to organisations from Andalusia. The rest are distributed throughout the different autonomous communities: Catalonia (29), Valencia (16), CastileLa Mancha (14), Community of Madrid (12), Aragon (8), Castile & Leon (8), Galicia (7), Murcia (7), Balearic Islands (6), Canary Islands (6), Extremadura 54 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects (6), Navarre (5), Basque Country (4), Asturias (3), Cantabria (2), Ceuta (2) and La Rioja (1). GRANT APPLICATIONS FOR THE EMPLOYMENT OF DISABLED PEOPLES Galicia Asturias Cantabria 2 3 • •7 Extremadura 6 • Castile-La Mancha 14 Andalusia 29 • Canary Islands 6 • T Total Basque Country • 4 Navarre •5 •1 Castile & Leon La Rioja •8 Aragon •8 Madrid • 12 • • Valencia 16 Catalonia 29 • Balearic Islands 6 • • Murcia 7 • Ceuta 2 • 165 INNOVATIVE ALTERNATIVES IN EDUCATION Among the projects selected in 2005 that were aimed at promoting the education of the disabled, of particular note is the early care programme for children with special needs up to 3 years of age, promoted by the Ciudad de San Juan de Dios Since 1999, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has dedicated almost 25 million euros to the welfare of people with disabilities Centre in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, which was given a grant of 25,000 euros. Its aim is to strengthen and accelerate the rehabilitation of disabled children to help them integrate better into their environment. This initiative, in which 16 children are taking part, also includes the guidance, training and participation of their parents. MOBILITY FOR THE DISABLED IN TERUEL ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has given 25,000 euros to the programme for the intellectually disabled promoted by the Association for the Intellectually Disabled of Cuenca Minera Central Turolense (ADIPCMI). The aim of this initiative is to improve the mobility of all intellectually challenged people in the county, establishing “care routes” and providing their families with support and information. 27 people are taking part in the project and they are planning to buy a specially adapted vehicle. TRAINING AND WORK FOR THE DISABLED An outstanding project from the disabled employment grant programme is the occupational print workshop run by the Disabled Association of Lanzarote (ADISLAN). Its aim is to train a group of people and provide them with the necessary knowledge and skills to carry out printing tasks. Welfare Projects has helped finance the project with 15,000 euros. One of the beneficiaries of the Disability programme during a day’s work Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 55 Marginalisation TRAINING, REHABILITATION AND RE-ENTERING SOCIETY ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has given almost 4.5 million euros to finance projects against marginalisation The Poverty and Social Exclusion study led by sociologist Joan Subirats and recently published by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects draws worrying conclusions: one out of every three Spaniards runs the risk of being excluded from society in some way. Women, former and current prison inmates, drug addicts, young people without a social structure, ethnic minorities, the homeless, people with AIDS and the elderly are the groups most at risk. The commitment of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects to improving the quality of life of these people and to helping them become full members of society is amply demonstrated by its marginalisation programme, which in 2005 supported 233 initiatives by non-profit organisations throughout Spain. Welfare Projects has dedicated almost 4.5 million euros to financing these projects, representing an increase in the budget of almost 60% compared with 2004. 56 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Since 1999, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has collaborated with more than a thousand initiatives against marginalisation, to which it has contributed around 17 million euros. RELIEVING DEFICIENCIES IN SOCIAL CARE The main aim of the projects selected by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in this area is to encourage the training, integration into society and employment of young people who lack support in social terms, strengthening emergency or domestic assistance, deterring dangerous or criminal behaviour and relieving, as far as possible, the deficiencies in social care for those suffering from AIDS or the homeless. Other areas receiving aid include projects researching into and providing information on marginalisation, as well as actions against racism, xenophobia and intolerance among young people. Out of the 233 projects chosen in 2005, a total of 53 correspond to Andalusia. The rest are distributed among the different autonomous communities: 51 in Catalonia; 30 in the Community of Madrid; 26 in Valencia; 10 in Murcia; 9 in Castile & Leon; 8 in Aragon; 7 in Asturias, the Basque Country, the Balearic Islands and in the Canary Islands; 6 in Galicia; 4 in Cantabria; 3 in Extremadura; 2 in Castile-La Mancha and Navarre and 1 in La Rioja. REHABILITATING AIDS SUFFERERS INTEGRATION INTO SOCIETY AND WORK The Mar de Niebla Cultural Association of Gijón was one of the organisations selected in the call for grant applications for projects against marginalisation in 2005. It runs a programme to help young people at risk of exclusion in the west zone of Gijón to find employment and become full members of society. The aim is to give 45 youngsters at risk the necessary professional and social skills to get a job. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has helped set up the project with 23,500 euros. DISTRIBUTION OF AID GIVEN TO INITIATIVES AGAINST MARGINALISATION Galicia Asturias Cantabria 4 7 • •6 Basque Country • 7 Navarre •2 •1 Castile & Leon La Rioja •9 Aragon •8 Madrid • 30 • Extremadura 3 • Castile-La Mancha 2 Andalusia 53 • • Valencia 26 • Catalonia 51 • Balearic Islands 7 • Murcia 10 • Canary Islands 7 • T Total The Marginalisation programme encourages the employment of people at risk of exclusion 233 Welfare Projects also contributed 22,200 euros to the Nou Horitzó Association of Palma de Mallorca, helping to run a programme that cares for, rehabilitates and socially integrates AIDS sufferers. The project consists of accommodating people, for the medium or long term and in decent conditions in both social and health terms, who are suffering from an advanced stage of the infection and who lack the necessary financial and/or family resources. HELPING EXPLOITED WOMEN The Institute of Adoratrices Esclavas del Santísimo Sacramento y de la Caridad in Gijón runs the SICAR project, a programme providing across-theboard care to women in situations of prostitution or victims of sexual exploitation. The initiative’s aim, in which around twenty women are taking part, is to improve the living conditions and social status of these women by accommodating them in a home where they can develop in both personal and cultural terms. The home also offers psychological assistance and occupational workshops to help these women prepare for an independent life. This project has had the support of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects since 2001. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 57 Foster Families A WELCOMING SPIRIT ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects promotes a programme for families to foster children at risk Foster Families is one of the projects initiated by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects which is currently being carried out through public authorities. Faced with a real problem (the difficulties experienced by children at risk of exclusion, forced to abandon their homes and in need of an appropriate environment in which they can develop), in 1997 Welfare Projects started an innovative initiative by establishing volunteer foster families to look after these children temporarily, giving them affection and security, until they could return to their own families. Under the generic name of “Foster Families” and by means of agreements with 15 autonomous communities, Welfare Projects has carried out this temporary fostering programme with a series of actions that provide society with new ways to foster children and train specialists. 58 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects The experience has been a great success. Since 1997, over 1,600 children and 1,420 families have taken part in the programme. A study carried out by experts from the Universities of Barcelona and Seville, under the direction of Prof. Pere Amorós and Prof. Jesús Palacios, and an International Symposium on protecting children have all highlighted the effectiveness of this initiative. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects allocated 261,000 euros to the “Foster Family” initiative, whose activities have benefited a total of 18,400 people. EMERGENCY FOSTERING & EXTENDED FAMILY FOSTERING The ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects programme includes two models of fostering as the most typically used formulas. Emergency fostering offers children immediate care in a family that has been previously trained for this purpose. This approach is aimed primarily at children under six years of age and has a maximum duration of six months. Fostering in extended families (grandparents, uncles and aunts, etc.) is the most frequently used approach in all autonomous communities in Spain. In this way the children live with people they already know and trust, so that their separation from their parents isn’t so traumatic. POSITIVE EFFECTS An evaluation of the Foster Family programme, carried out in 2005 at the Universities of Barcelona and Seville, took 100 biological families as its sample, as well as 89 foster families and 129 children at risk. The study revealed that fostering produces highly positive effects in 80% of the children. In the initial evaluation, 40% of the children showed normal emotional development. One and a half years after the fostering took place, this percentage had risen to 70%. The report also shows that the children’s subsequent contact with their biological families were satisfactory in 55% of the cases. The report also states that family reunion is simpler after shorter periods of emergency fostering, which are associated with high return rates. However, when fostering lasts beyond 24 months, in 90% of the cases the children do not return to their biological family. ANOTHER KIND OF FAMILY LIFE Within this programme, and in order to publicise it and reach potentially interested citizens, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects set up the exhibition “Family fostering: another kind of family life”. This exhibition contains the accounts of children who have experienced fostering with successful results. The exhibition provides the children’s view of the experience, captivating the visitor with its combination of naivety and depth, simplicity and richness, in a journey through fostering recounted by those actually involved in it. In 2005, this exhibition visited numerous towns and cities in Santander, Oviedo, Seville and Zaragoza, among others, and was warmly received by both the public and the media. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 59 Education For all ages and levels of training The fast pace of change in society means that we have to dedicate increasingly more effort to education. In the seventies, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects led the way in introducing non-formal educational methods to complement the work of schools. These methods have gradually been included in the institution’s different areas of action. Its social, cultural and environmental programmes all include pedagogical activities aimed at people of all ages and levels of education: from guided tours and family concerts to prevention workshops held as part of the “Violence: zero tolerance” programme. Through the virtual community of Educalia, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects specifically targets students, parents and teachers, offering them a series of didactic and leisure resources to enrich school subjects and materials. The Welfare Projects’ Postgraduate Fellowship programme for studying in foreign universities is also one of the most highly valued programmes by the educational community, thanks to its rigorous selection and international prestige. In 2005 this programme was extended with three new kinds of fellowship, detailed in the New Programmes section, aimed at training specialists in areas of interest to society, helping former prison inmates to re-enter society and providing internships for journalists. The ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects educational projects were given 19.5 million euros in budget in 2005 and 633,796 people took part in these initiatives. Foreign Postgraduate Fellowships Programme HIGHLY TRAINED YOUNG PEOPLE Once again, their Royal Highnesses the King and Queen of Spain awarded the ”la Caixa” Fellowships Once again, their Royal Highnesses the King and Queen of Spain presided over the award ceremony for the postgraduate fellowships abroad, granted every year by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects gave a grant to 120 Spanish graduates in order to further their postgraduate studies at foreign universities. Investment in this programme in 2005 was approximately 5.3 million euros. Since the programme began in 1982, the institution has contributed over 60 million euros to train 1,938 Spanish students at the most prestigious universities in the world. Year after year, the number of postgraduate fellowships abroad granted by Welfare Projects has increased significantly as a reflection of its commitment to educating young Spaniards, rising from the 35 fellowships granted in 1982 to 120 62 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects awarded in 2005. The institution has gradually increased its contribution to this programme in order to meet the high number of applications received and thereby help to train highly qualified researchers and professionals. As well as the postgraduate fellowships abroad, three new types of aid were added in 2005 aimed at specific groups: 65 fellowships for postgraduate studies in Spain; 80 fellowships to professionally train prison inmates and 30 internships for journalists. FIRST FELLOWSHIPS TO STUDY IN CHINA In 2005, the first beneficiaries of fellowships to take an MBA in China started their studies in the Far East. This initiative began in 2004 as a result of the agreement between ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and Casa Asia. The postgraduate course is taken at the CEIBS Business School in Shanghai, run jointly by the Chinese government and the European Union. China is therefore the latest addition to the now traditional destinations of the United States (50 fellowships), Germany (35), France (20) and Canada (10). ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has invested 60 million euros in the international training of 1,938 Spanish students Over the last 24 years, ”la Caixa” has granted 197 fellowships for studies in engineering, 177 for business administration, 152 for law, 136 medicine and 123 economics. Other disciplines such as anthropology, music, environmental sciences and museum studies have also been granted fellowships. Since 1982, 993 students have received a fellowship to study in the United States, 327 in the United Kingdom, 328 in Germany, 201 in France, 71 in Canada, 5 in Japan and 10 in China. By academic centre, the Columbia University has welcomed the greatest number of fellowship students from ”la Caixa”, totalling 102, followed by Harvard, with 82, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) with 68, Stanford with 54 and the London School of Economics with 42, all popular destinations with students benefiting from the programme. The updated directory of the students receiving fellowships, available at www.lacaixa.es, is a point of reference for many firms and a springboard to finding employment for those receiving ”la Caixa” fellowships. Geographical distribution of the fellowships granted by ”la Caixa” in 2005 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 63 Postgraduate fellowships abroad and in Spain Fellowships granted by country (2005) Specialities taken by fellowship students in 2005 Engineering 22 Environmental Sciences 14 Architecture 13 Psychology 13 Medicine 12 Information Sciences 11 Music 11 International Relations 11 Economics 10 Law 9 Business Administration 7 Biology 7 Philology 5 Sociology 5 Fine Arts 4 Linguistics 4 Chemistry 3 Archaeology 2 Political Sciences 2 Philosophy 2 Geography 2 History 2 Veterinary Science 2 Anthropology 1 Health Sciences 1 Theatre Sciences 1 Conservation & Restoration 1 Graphic Design 1 Pharmacy 1 Physics 1 Physiotherapy 1 Geology 1 Technical nical & Economic Management 1 Mathematics 1 Translation & Interpretation 1 64 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Spain 65 fellowships United States 50 fellowships Germany 35 fellowships France 20 fellowships Most selected universities since 1982 Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya China 5 fellowships 11 Universitat de Barcelona 9 Universidad Politécnica de Madrid 5 Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 5 Columbia University 101 Harvard University 82 M.I.T. 68 Stanford University 54 LudwigMaximilians Universität München 28 Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 21 Freie Universität Berlin 20 Universität Bonn 12 École des Hautes Études en Sciencies Sociales 14 Université Paris I: Panthéon-Sorbonne 14 Université Paris VI: Pierre et Marie Curie 13 Université Paris III: Sorbonne Nouvelle Canada 10 fellowships No. of fellow-ship students University of Toronto 9 10 Université de Montréal 8 McGill University 7 China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) 5 Social Studies AN X-RAY OF CONTEMPORARY ISSUES ”la Caixa” has already published 17 volumes of its Social Studies collection The ”la Caixa” Foundation Social Studies collection helps discuss, analyse and disseminate issues of general interest in our society through the publication, on the part of leading experts, of state of the art studies. 17 volumes have currently been published, covering areas as diverse as poverty and social exclusion, education, noise pollution, the employment possibilities of the disabled and domestic violence. This is a significant bibliographical resource tackling many of the most relevant social problems of our time. Throughout 2005, the Social Studies collection of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects focused on analysing the legal control of immigration in Europe, of great relevance at present. The social study The regulation of immigration in Europe, coordinated by the professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Barcelona, Eliseo Aja, and drawn up by professors from eight different countries, examines the laws and general regulations on immigration in the main countries in Europe, from perspectives as diverse as the arrival of immigrants, obtaining work and residence permits, penalties, violations and rights. Among the conclusions drawn by the report’s authors is the usefulness, in Spain, of drawing up a medium and long-term legislative strategy to counteract the proliferation of legal reforms that have taken place in our country over the past few years. The study also proposes the design of an agreed policy that integrates the actions of the state with those of the autonomous communities and local bodies, something which experts feel has been lacking. The establishment of agreements and pacts with the governments of the main countries of origin of immigrants arriving in Spain, covering all aspects of the process, from guaranteeing jobs while in the country of origin to strengthening policies to encourage integration in the host country, is another of the formulas proposed by the authors so that both the country of origin and the host country may reap the benefits of immigration. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 65 Environmental Education RESPECTING THE COUNTRYSIDE “Countryside” is a useful tool for both teachers and educators In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects developed “Countryside”, a new environmental education programme within the virtual community of Educalia and aimed at schools and families. “Countryside” is a tool that helps educational work and places new technologies at the disposal of the environment and primary and secondary schoolchildren. The programme can be accessed via a CD-guide or online through the Educalia portal (www.educalia.org). This initiative builds on the experience of the environmental backpacks of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, which for more than a decade have visited educational centres in Spain. The aim is to arouse interest in the environment and raise the awareness of schoolchildren about the need to preserve it. The environmental backpacks contain a range of materials such as thermometers, compasses, hygrometers, 66 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects etc, all useful for exploring the countryside. The green backpack is dedicated to flora and fauna; the red backpack studies the urban environment; the blue backpack covers everything to do with water and the yellow backpack focuses on rocks and soil. “Countryside” has become a resource with a wide range of possibilities in terms of getting to know, valuing and learning to respect our environment. ONLINE COUNTRYSIDE In designing the activities for the “Countryside” programme, the same study approach has been used as the one applied to the environmental backpacks. All the activities go beyond a strictly school-based context and, thanks to the use of new technologies, can satisfy interests from other areas of non-formal education. The programme acts as a kind of motorway between the real and virtual world, with a natural flow of information. “Countryside” is a tool that facilitates education and places new technologies at the disposal of the environment Users apply an approach based on analysis, diagnosis, prognosis and prevention. “Countryside” is divided into five clearly distinguished blocks. The first four blocks of Observe, Classify, Investigate and Act allow users to get to know the countryside in virtual terms. The fifth block, with the name of Explore, is a detailed guide to facilitate real contact. The investigative process culminates by communicating the results from the study. “Countryside” helps to involve students and encourages them to exchange their experiences of the environment. That’s why the initiative includes an area where users can publish accounts of their field trips. This project forms part of the educational strategy of Welfare Projects in the field of the environment, and is in addition to the numerous activities carried out at the CosmoCaixa museums in Madrid and Barcelona, at the cultural and social centres and in the virtual environment of Educalia itself. “Countryside” foments environmentally-friendly attitudes in schoolchildren Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 67 Educalia A WINDOW ON EDUCATION Educalia is the largest virtual educational community in Spain In 2005, the virtual educational community of the ”la Caixa” Foundation, Educalia, received over 1.5 million visits per month, consolidating its position as the most active community in Spain. Through this site, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects offers children, adults and teachers a complete profile of complementary educational resources to encourage participation and the use of communication technologies. In 2005 year, the workshops and the “Happy Birthday, Quixote!” programme were the two sections on Educalia most frequently visited by schoolchildren throughout Spain. EDUCALIA WORKSHOPS: LEARNING THROUGH PLAY The aim of the workshops is to create, via new technologies, an area of games, experiences and 68 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects educational activities that can be completed in a relatively short period of time. These activities complement the educational process and allow children to construct, work and create knowledge in both a fun and interactive way. They are therefore an attractive family option for free time at home and offer the chance to organise inter-generational activities. To date, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has organised more than 50 workshops in Educalia along thematic lines. Each of these is accompanied by an explanation and complemented with a search facility and forum where people can swap experiences. In addition to environmental issues, Educalia workshops have also tackled disciplines such as science, language and communication, society, violence, AIDS and the plastic arts. Of particular note are the workshops “Make your own recipe” and “Write a story”, helping primary schoolchildren with their writing skills. “Iter-itineris”, designed for the social science area for secondary schoolchildren, offers the chance to virtually accompany a family at the end of the middle ages as they travel from Flanders to Santiago de Compostela, passing through Venice. other and set up joint initiatives with their students via computer. This initiative encourages students to share responsibility, discuss ideas, contribute information according to their own interests and needs and be able to prepare their work using the experiences and knowledge of other students. “Multicultural Calendar”, “Itineraries through Europe”, “Our water consumption” and “Citizens Educalia encourages students to share responsibility, discuss ideas and prepare their work together with the experiences of other schoolchildren The new Educalia programming has been added to the content from previous years, of note being the workshop “Can play”, where children are put into the position of people suffering from a disability. PROJECTS TO SHARE The new “Projects” area allows teachers at educational centres throughout Spain to contact each Educalia leaflets of the world” are just some of the projects presented in 2005. All of them are interdisciplinary in nature and cover different areas of the curriculum. The environment where the projects are carried out provides the different groups with specific resources and tools to facilitate communication between users. All the projects include the following: • Online pages explaining how the project works. • Forums to encourage debate and public communication. • A chat room for simultaneous communication between users. • A tool to share, file and classify project documentation, where files can be downloaded and published. • A directory with personal files on each member to help them get to know each other. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 69 Prevention of Violence YOUNG PEOPLE SET THE EXAMPLE In the IES Les Corts in Barcelona, Luis Rojas Marcos gives a workshop on preventing violence One of the new programmes of ”la Caixa” Welfare Pro Projects set up in 2005 is “V “Violence: zero tolerance”. Within the framework of this programme, Welfare Projects has prepared educational workshops based on the belief that violence is a learned behaviour and one which can therefore be avoided. The ultimate aim of the workshops is for young people to become aware of the violence around us and be encouraged to act Based on the conviction that violence is a learned behaviour and can therefore be modified, the educational proposals of “Violence: zero tolerance” are aimed at teachers and students of primary and secondary schools, helping them build a society without violence through their day to day actions. 70 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects The ultimate aim is for young people to act on their growing awareness of the phenomenon of violence. With their teachers’ guidance or via more direct means, young people can take part in a programme that counts on them to truly prevent violence. It is vital for our new generations to be aware of and want to resolve violent situations, so that we can build a society where we can all be different and equal, a world without violence. It is possible. These educational workshops, which will reach almost 10,000 schools throughout Spain in 2006, are in addition to the efforts made by Education Ministries and other public institutions at a regional and local level. Welfare Projects is proposing an initiative in which young people generate and transmit the content. The ultimate aim is for young people to become aware of the fact that violence surrounds us and to act in order to prevent and combat it. EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS The main themes of these educational materials are as follows: • Human rights as the basis for living together in peace and equality. • Awareness of the value of and respect for difference as a condition for equality. • Models of relationships based on possession, dominance, control and jealousy. • The possibility to build a fair society free from violence. The competition “It’s possible. Act!” encourages young people to create awareness-raising campaigns against violence. One of the campaigns sent to the competition is entitled “Peace in three seconds” and consists of posters and stickers with quotations from famous people in favour of peace. The “three seconds” mentioned in the title refers to the time required to read these phrases. Other activities invite people to take part in drawing up a manifesto for the young against violence, or to analyse expressions, language use and One of the activities encourages young people to draw up a manifesto against violence customs that justify violence in literature, theatre, cinema or music. The activity “Grandmother’s trousers” encourages participants to discover, in their own family history, the achievements over the last few decades in favour of equality. These and other proposals carried out by young people throughout Spain have been brought together via Educalia. Students from a college in Madrid taking part in a session against violence Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 71 Educating via Inter-Generational Activities EXPERIENCE IS A QUALIFICATION During the holidays, the Senior Citizen Centres of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects open their doors to our younger citizens As every year, in 2005 the 552 Senior Citizen Centres of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, either run by the institution or in collaboration with different public authorities, opened their doors to our younger citizens. The aim is to carry out intergenerational activities, both for fun and for learning, using new technologies and via the Educalia portal, the virtual educational community of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects. LITTLE QUIXOTE To celebrate the 4th centenary of the first edition of Don Quixote, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects invited Spanish youngsters to come to the Senior Citizen Centres, equipped with computer rooms, so they could have fun delving into the universe of this famous knight. 72 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Over 5,000 boys and girls responded to the call and visited the computer rooms in 173 Senior Citizen Centres. The greatest participation was in the autonomous community of Madrid, with over 1,500 participants, followed by Catalonia with more than 1,000. For the Christmas festivities, Welfare Projects promoted another inter-generational initiative that allowed grandparents and children to learn all about the indigenous people of Latin America and how they celebrate Christmas. In 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organised over 300 inter-generational activities, with the participation of almost 7,000 people. Educational Activities for Everyone W0ORKSHOPS, CONFERENCES, COURSES AND STUDIES Workshops in Japanese calligraphy for senior citizens in CentroCaixa Madrid Education is present in all the initiatives carried out in the centres and programmes of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects. This is done in a wide variety of ways: ranging from formal actions such as conferences, workshops and classes to virtual courses and initiatives, as well as film projections, books, informative material, plays and musical performances. People of all ages were directly involved in the educational activities programmed in 2005 by the social and cultural centres, the hospital cyber classrooms, the Science Museums and the Senior Citizen Centres of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects. INITIATIVES FOR LEARNING, PLAYING AND SHARING Workshops are a fun, thorough and hands-on way to tackle a wide range of areas. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects set up workshops related to its different programmes: from initiatives designed to improve the quality of life of the disabled, older people and the sick, such as “Mobility and rhythm” for people suffering from Parkinson’s disease, to other initiatives that have helped people enjoy more and better musical and artistic activities, or have helped them Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 73 understand the advances made in our environment and contemporary science. Most of the touring exhibitions, all the exhibitions at the CaixaForum and the two CosmoCaixa museums (Madrid and Barcelona), as well as the music festivals and other events, included workshops with visits or performances aimed at and designed for all members of the family. UP-TO-DATE CONFERENCES Dialogue and debate form the foundation of the educational conferences organised by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects. Through these events, the general public has access to specialised knowledge in an involved and fun way, directly from the experts of the highest renown. The exhibitions, seminars, big concerts and specific events organised throughout Spain are usually also accompanied by informative conferences for all kinds of audiences. Every year, Welfare Projects’ social and cultural centres promote specific cycles on humanities, The initiatives carried out in the ”la Caixa” social and cultural centres promote people’s involvement, growth and welfare music, poetry, literature, science and the environment, with associated educational activities. In 2005, of particular note were “Thought 2005”, “Poetry today and memory of the past” and “Afternoons at the Museum”, a cycle of conferences “Af on science and the environment organised jointly by the CosmoCaixa museums. Music is one of the cores of the training activities supported by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects 74 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Even the youngest among us can enjoy educational activities COURSES FOR EVERYONE UP-TO-THE-MINUTE PUBLICATIONS Every year, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects also programmes courses given by international specialists and seen as long-term training activities. In 2005, it held courses on international cooperation, health, the All ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects programmes generate resources to drawn attention to some of the most pressing problems of our society. In 2005, and within the framework of the prevention of violence programme, the institution published the book Violence: zero tolerance, written by sociologist Inés Alberdi and psychiatrist Luis Rojas Marcos, 350,000 copies of which have already been distributed. Also of note in 2005 was the Aging and H Housing report that, drawn up by architect Jordi Bosch i Meda, analyses the progressive deterioration in the homes of the elderly in Catalonia. His work reveals that 75% of the elderly in the community live in housing that is difficult to access, often without a lift or lacking even basic needs in terms of hygiene, health, etc. The author describes the situation and puts forward alternative formulas to help resolve these problems, as well as condemning them. Welfare Projects sets up courses in the plastic arts, music and humanities for people of all ages and levels of education environment, science, music and education. For example, there were courses on digital photography and publishing for senior citizens, the course “Project cycle management in humanitarian action”, “Stage 05” for music teachers and “Relativity and quantum physics, the two revolutions of the 20th century”, organised in CosmoCaixa Barcelona. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 75 Culture Bringing art closer to everyone Culture is a powerful tool for social integration. By means of art exhibitions, concerts, activities with literature, poetry or humanities, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects aims to improve people’s knowledge and personal growth via culture. The W Welfare Projects cultural activities combine information on the great civilisations of the past with the discovery of the latest values in art, music and thought. All with a global perspective and attending to the key themes of the day. One of the initiatives of the institution’s new phase, characterised by a shift towards society, is the project “Street art”, which at the beginning of 2006 will comprise of an exhibition of giant bronzes by the Polish artist Igor Mitoraj and which will occupy the streets and squares of various Spanish cities throughout the year. With this initiative, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects aims to bring art closer to the public at large, breaking the barrier that separates many people from the different manifestations of art. The budget allocated by Welfare Projects to culture in 2005 totalled 63.7 million euros. Over 2,022,000 people took part in the cultural initiatives promoted by the institution throughout Spain. CaixaForum Madrid COMMITMENT TO THE FUTURE The CaixaForum Madrid project will become a reality in winter 2006 The construction of the social and cultural centre, CaixaForum Madrid, illustrates the desire of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects to multiply its actions and bring them closer to a larger number of beneficiaries every year. This new centre, with an approximate surface area of 10,000 m2, will conserve the original façade of the old Central Eléctrica del Mediodía, one of the few examples of modernist industrial architecture in Madrid. Inside, CaixaForum Madrid will offer a wide variety of activities aimed at all kinds of people, such as music and the plastic arts and also social and educational programmes and humanities. The inauguration of the new building, whose architectural project was drawn up by Herzog & De Meuron, is planned for winter 2006. THE TRIANGLE OF CULTURE Located opposite the Botanical Gardens, CaixaForum Madrid forms part of the so-called “cultural triangle” 78 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects of Madrid, made up by the Prado Museum, the Reina Sofía National Museum Art Centre and the ThyssenBornemisza Museum. This architectural project forms part of the plan to rearrange the Recoletos-Prado zone, a significant urban development initiative directed by architects Álvaro Siza and Juan Miguel Hernández de León. The old Central Eléctrica del Mediodía is one of the few examples of modernist industrial architecture still surviving in the old town of Madrid. This redbrick building is made up of two large warehouses with V-shaped façades, a typical structure for electricity power stations built towards the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century. AN INNOVATIVE BUILDING The architectural project for CaixaForum Madrid is the work of the prestigious Swiss architect’s office of Herzog & De Meuron, also responsible for restoring the new premises of the Tate Modern in London, among other projects, and specialised in the reconversion of industrial buildings. This recovery preserves the four original façades of the old power station with the clear intention of conserving its overall appearance. The architects have used micro-piles to strengthen and stabilise the original walls and the façade itself has been “sewn and strapped” by means of an innovative procedure. CaixaForum Madrid has more than 2,500 m2 of space for exhibition rooms, an auditorium seating over 300 people, a foyer, media library and various multi-purpose rooms for conferences and other activities. A spacious hall, cafeteria, shop-bookshop and restaurant complete the facilities provided by the centre. CaixaForum Madrid will considerably extend the social and cultural activities currently offered by The architectural work conserves the original façades of the old Central Eléctrica del Mediodía ”la Caixa” in the Autonomous Community of Madrid through its own centres, CentroCaixa, CosmoCaixa and the Exhibition Rooms on Calle Serrano. The future social and cultural centre of the ”la Caixa” Foundation in Madrid is located on the Paseo del Prado, opposite the Botanical Gardens Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 79 CaixaForum Barcelona THE SUCCESS OF INTEGRATING CULTURE ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects helps spread culture as the driving force behind growth for everyone Ca CaixaForum Barcelona continues to break attendance records. The number of visitors to the centre has once again topped one million, for the fourth consecutive year. In 2005, 1,081,853 people visited its facilities. CaixaForum Barcelona activities are organised around four main areas: the plastic and visual arts, music, humanities and multimedia art. In addition to its exhibitions, CaixaForum Barcelona also offers a lot of other cultural events: coffee and conversation for senior citizens, “Art Mornings”, designed for art lovers and cycles of evening conferences for a more specialised public. From time to time it also organises seminars with the participation of international experts. EXHIBITIONS AND MUCH, MUCH MORE A BROAD MUSICAL PROGRAMME During the last year, CaixaForum Barcelona programmed the following exhibitions: “Thrace, enigmatic treasures of Bulgaria”, “Turner and Venice”, “L’Art Nouveau, the legacy of Siegfried Bing”, “Video times: 1965-2005”, “Bauhaus has fun: 1919-1933” and “Portraits” by Rineke Dijkstra. 80 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Music plays a central role in the centre’s agenda. CaixaForum Barcelona organises the Festival of World Music and, in parallel with the programmed concerts, also offers an ethno-musical cinema cycle. From time to time it also covers key genres or figures in the history of music by means of conferences and performances. Zarzuela and music of the 20th century were the focus of this event in 2005. CaixaForum also sets up music-related courses and cycles of conferences, such as those dedicated to “Literature and music” and the “History of classical music”. At Christmas and Easter, the “Filmed Music” programmed offers projections dedicated to various composers and styles of music. Last Christmas the protagonist was the tango. SHARING ART AND THOUGHT In the area of humanities, the CaixaForum activities are based on thought, literature, poetry and cinema. These include readings, conferences, discussions and round tables, led by writers, poets, thinkers and philosophers. Some of the most significant courses in 2005 were “The exile of beauty: 1963-1989” and “Poetry today and memory of the past”. In 2005, over 70,000 people took part in the activities within the humanities programme of CaixaForum Barcelona. PROMOTING MULTIMEDIA ART The centre’s Media Library programmes seminars, round tables and cycles of projections to publicise and reflect on multimedia art. In this respect, CaixaForum Barcelona is a leading centre in both Spain and abroad, with a large collection that increases in size each year. In 2005, it organised “Art & Media, First Iberian-American Meeting of New Trends in Art and Technology”. The LEM festival (experimental music) and EMAF festival (European Media Art Festival Osnabruek) also held concerts and projections at its facilities. programme includes backpacks to discover the history of the building (the former modernist factory designed by Puig i Cadafalch) and its transformation into a modern exhibition centre. A mini-workshop on the mural by Sol LeWitt, located in the hall, and games with clues related to the exhibitions to improve visitors’ observation skills. The family concerts of music from around the world, such as “Sakapatú, a journey through Andean music” and the Brazilian “Barbatukes, corporal percussion”, were also warmly received by the public. TEACHING CULTURE In 2005, over 44,238 schoolchildren from primary and secondary schools paid a visit to and carried out cultural activities in CaixaForum Barcelona. Of particular note among the activities programmed was a route based on the architecture of the CaixaForum and a workshop using, as its point of departure, two of the centre’s emblems: the trees by Arata Isozaki and the installation The room of pain by Joseph Beuys. Other initiatives were the exhibition visits-workshops, music workshops and activities for school groups to help them explore the artistic, theatrical and architectural qualities of the premises. CULTURE FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY Through the Laboratory of Arts, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects promotes activities held at CaixaForum so that the whole family can enjoy art and music. The CaixaForum hosts conferences and activities on the big problems of our society Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 81 Social and Cultural Centres ALL ASPECTS OF CULTURE Palma cultural centre hosted the exhibition “The Roman world on the Balearic Islands” In addition to CaixaForum Barcelona, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects also has social and cultural centres in Girona, Lleida, Tarragona and Palma de Mallorca, as well as exhibition rooms in Madrid and Granollers. MADRID In 2005, the Madrid Exhibition Rooms presented four large exhibitions: “The Pre-Raphaelites”; “Passions”, by Bill Viola; “Shoji Ueda: a subtle line (1913-2000)” and “The Thracians: enigmatic treasures of Bulgaria”. Around these exhibitions, Welfare Projects has developed a wide range of activities to inform, educate and particular for families. Of particular importance is the visit-workshop for school groups organised by the Art Laboratory: secondary teachers 82 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects are presented with a methodology and use this to carry out various educational activities to investigate further into the content of the exhibitions. Family visits, programmed for Sunday mornings, are a different and active way for all the family to learn, play and enjoy art. BALEARIC ISLANDS In 2005, the cultural centre of the ”la Caixa” Foundation of the Balearic Islands offered two large exhibitions, previously unseen in Spain: “From Millet to Matisse: French painting in the 19th and 20th century from the Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow” and “The Roman world on the Balearic Islands”. In addition to these, throughout the year there was also an exhibition of work from the Contemporary Art Collection of the ”la Caixa” Foundation and a retrospective “Shoji Ueda: a subtle line (1913-2000)”. The cultural centre of the ”la Caixa” Foundation of the Balearic Islands is located in the old Gran Hotel de Palma, one of the most emblematic Hot modernist buildings of the city, recovered by Welfare Projects in 1993. The complex includes exhibition rooms, an auditorium and other facilities, including the permanent exhibition of work by Anglada Camarasa and the bookshop. In 2005, the centre received 216,109 visitors. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects carries out a lot of cultural activities on the Balearic Islands. In the area of music it held two participatory Messiahs and a series of concerts forming part of the Festival of World Music. In conferences, of note was the cycle dedicated to “The transformation of our environment”, analysing the changes brought about by globalisation and “About the Trojan war”, a university level course on classical thought and culture. GIRONA “Girona: chronicle of the thirties, leisure, sport and culture” was the most outstanding exhibition presented by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in 2005 at the Sala Girona. This exhibition was accompanied by workshops, conferences, recitals, educational activities, public readings and a coffee & discussion session. In 2005, the cultural centre of Girona also presented the exhibitions “Max Ernst, invisible at first sight” and “Media landscapes”. In the area of education, the centre's programme included various A group of visitors at the exhibition “Girona: chronicle of the thirties” Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 83 In its cultural centres, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects helps to bring schoolchildren closer to culture activities related to the Year of the Book, as well as the mini-exhibitions “Book-game” and “Borges fiction”, included in the “Book point” cycle. TARRAGONA The ”la Caixa” social and cultural centre is a point of reference in Tarragona. One of its most emblematic elements is Personality, the sculpture by Joan Miró installed permanently in the entrance hall. Educational activities relating to this sculpture are organised from time to time, such as workshops for families, senior citizens and schoolchildren from infant school age to primary and secondary. Some of the activities programmed in 2005 were the exhibitions “Escher: the life of shapes”, “Media landscapes” and “FotoPres’05”; as well as family concerts such as “Airs of Madagascar”, “The voice of 84 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects the desert” and “Celtic melodies in Scotland”, as part of the Festival of World Music, and the conferences “Education and power in the knowledge society” and “The transformation of psychiatric hospitals” as part of the “Thought 2005” cycle. LLEIDA The ”la Caixa” social and cultural centre in Lleida is a privileged setting for the Welfare Projects programmes and activities in this city. In 2005, the centre presented the exhibitions “The fantastic garden. Modernist jewellery in European collections”, “Heroes and gods: shadow theatre and puppetry in China”, “Ten years of events in the hall” and “Max Ernst: invisible at first sight”. “Ten years of events in the hall” is an installation exhibiting nine original creations accompanied by significant quotes from the various exhibitions that have formed part of the innovative cycle “Spaces of Intersection” over the last ten years. The ”la Caixa” social and cultural centre in Lleida has also programmed the cycle “Documentary + debate”, presenting the most significant work in this genre followed by colloquia with specialists, as well as an oral narration for secondary schoolchildren that forms part of the “Narra2 de 2 en 2” (Narrated two by two) cycle. GRANOLLERS The ”la Caixa” social and cultural centre in Granollers plays a highly active role in the city’s cultural life. It is the headquarters for the circuit of the Contemporary Dance and Theatre Display and, during 2005, hosted the 25th Theatre Workshops Exhibition, as well as organising the 1st Seminar on Community Cultural Development, together with Granollers town council. The centre regularly programmes concerts, projections, plays and dance performances, poetry workshops and music for schoolchildren, among other activities. Of particular note is its cycle “Let’s rediscover the masterpieces”, held for the third year in 2005 with the theme “Benjamin Britten: a midsummer night’s dream”. SALA MONTCADA (BARCELONA) The cycle “Nothing / Something’s happening” was the focus of Sala Montcada’s programme in 2005. By curators Fabienne Fulchéri and Martí Manen, this cycle has shown the work of various artists on moments of waiting and doubt before action. As part of this cycle, the following exhibitions were programmed: “Pure illusions” by Zilla Leutenegger, “The day on which Jim Pomeroy conquered the Vallès” by Job Ramos, “The Day Before - Star System”, by Renaud Auguste-Dormeuil, and “David Bestué + Blanca Casas Brullet”. The visual errors of Max Ernst revealed by the ”la Caixa” Foundation in a touring exhibition Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 85 Exhibitions CULTURE - A MEETING POINT 156,000 people have visited the exhibition “The Thracians” in Madrid and Barcelona The exhibitions of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects have been supported in recent years by a broad, diverse public, making them a point of reference and a meeting point for a wide variety of people. Welfare Projects’ exhibitions encourage people to interpret the past in a new light, bringing visitors closer to the collections held by large museums, presenting new artists and styles, and calling attention to the latest trends in contemporary plastic arts and press photography. Each exhibition is a centre of activities for people of all ages, with the aim of helping all kinds of audiences to access art and culture, with a wide range of proposals ranging from guided tours and family itineraries to school activities. 86 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organised 42 exhibitions of a social, cultural, scientific and environmental nature that have travelled to over 170 Spanish towns and cities and have amassed 1,825,000 visitors. THE THRACIANS: ENIGMATIC TREASURES OF BULGARIA Organised by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture and the Institute of Thracology of Bulgaria, “The Thracians: Enigmatic treasures of Bulgaria” has caught the attention of the public as one of the most forgotten cultures of Ancient Times. The exhibition, whose organisers are Gregorio Luri, Alberto Costa and Valeria Fol, has been presented in the CaixaForum Barcelona and in the Madrid exhibition rooms. In 2006 it will be shown in the museum of Fine Arts of Valencia. The exhibition has received 156,000 visitors. Experts consider the fertile lands of the Balkan peninsular as the birthplace of civilisation in Europe. The first worked piece of gold in world was found there, together with inscriptions among the oldest examples of writing. From the Asian steppes, the Thracians assimilated many elements from these primitive cultures to create their own. The exhibition goes through history, from the first vestiges of civilisation to their assimilation by the Greek world, and presents Thrace as a place of interchange and a crossroads of cultures between Asia Minor and Central Europe. “The Thracians” has rescued their history and revealed the latest archaeological discoveries in Bulgaria with a selection of more than 300 pieces. Two visitors admiring a visit to Venice by Turner TURNER AND VENICE From the 2nd of March to the 5th of June, CaixaForum Barcelona presented “Turner and Venice”. Carried out in collaboration with the Tate Britain in London and organised by Ian Warrell, curator of the Tate Collection, this exhibition received 160,000 visitors. The ”la Caixa” Foundation collaborates in producing its exhibitions with museums from all over the world Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 87 The exhibition brought together 107 pieces by Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851), a product of the three visits the artist made to Venice in 1819, 1833 and 1840. Turner was one of the artists who most contributed to the legend of this Italian city. Unlike classical painters such as Canaletto, who painted views of the city under a radiant light, Turner felt a predilection for misty and nocturnal settings. In the rooms of the CaixaForum, visitors were able to relive these highly characteristic settings and follow various routes through the city, contemplating the landscapes that inspired in Turner some of his most adventurous work. THE PASSIONS OF BILL VIOLA Since they were presented for the first time in the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles at the end of 2003, “The Passions”, by Bill Viola (New York, 1951) have generated an extraordinary fascination throughout the world. The reasons for this phenomenon, which has broken down the frontiers of contemporary art, are highly complex. The North American artist translates the themes that inspired the great masters of medieval and renaissance painting to images of incredibly high resolution, with the full mastery of digital technology. The Welfare Projects exhibitions propose new interpretations of the past and call attention to the latest artistic trends Organised by the J. Paul Getty Museum of Los Angeles and the National Gallery of London, and with John Walsh as curator, “The Passions” brought together thirteen works belonging to this project in the exhibition room of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Madrid, attracting 47,100 visitors. THE ROMAN WORLD ON THE BALEARIC ISLANDS The Madrid Exhibition Rooms played host to the latest innovations in video art with the Bill Viola exhibition 88 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Produced by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and inaugurated in November 2005, “The Roman world on the Balearic Islands” shows an extraordinary selection of works of art and everyday objects from public and private collections, illustrating the different aspects of Roman life in the Balearic Islands. From the time it was conquered by the troops of Consul Quintus Caecilius Metellus until it was converted to Christianity, a period of over 700 years. One of the exhibition’s main attractions is being able to see a series of archaeological pieces removed from Mallorca in 1913 and currently kept by the Hispanic Society in New York: figures of heroes and gods, of incredible beauty. There are also sculptures, steles, ceramics and jewellery from different museums, which for the first time have been shown within the f framework of an exhibition covering, in all its complexity, the incorporation of the Balearic Islands into the culture and customs of Rome. From March to April 2006, the exhibition travelled to El Roser (Ciutadella). FROM MILLET TO MATISSE. FRENCH PAINTING IN THE 19TH AND 20TH CENTURIES FROM THE KELVINGROVE ART GALLERY, GLASGOW Every season, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects presents, in Palma, an exhibition related to the art movements of the end of the 19th century and, specifically, with the modernism of the Gran Hotel by Lluís Domènec i Montaner and in the Hermen Anglada Camarasa collection, two points of reference in Europe. The exhibition in 2005 was exceptional due to different concepts. Firstly, due to the extraordinary quality of the selection of pieces, including precursors such as Jean-François Millet and Camille Corot and the impressionists Camille Pissarro, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Alfred Sisley, the postimpressionists Georges Seurat, Edouard Vuillard and Pierre Bonnard and the fauvists André Derain and Raoul Dufy. The exhibition also contained work by five of the great masters of modern painting: Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cézanne, Picasso and Matisse. The exhibition, whose curator was Vivien Hamilton, was organised by the American Federation Arts from the collections of the Kelvingrove Art Gallery in Glasgow, an institution over a hundred years old and linked to the industrial development of the city of Glasgow and its artistic tradition. L’ART NOUVEAU. THE LEGACY OF SIEGFRIED BING In 1895, the collector and art dealer Sigfried Bing (1838-1905) opened the gallery L’Art Nouveau in Paris. His proposals had such an enormous impact that the name of this establishment was used to name the style of this artistic period. Produced by the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam and the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, and organised by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, “L'Art Nouveau, the legacy of Siegfried Bing” was a first approach to the work of this dealer, his role in introducing Europe to Eastern tastes and his importance in publicising the best European and North American work. The exhibition, by curators Gabriel P Weisberg, Edwin Becker and Évelyne Possémé, presented in CaixaForum Barcelona a wide range of paintings and artistic objects that had been exhibited in the L’Art Nouveau gallery: from Chinese and Japanese works that Bing brought to Europe during his time as an importer of Asian art, to masterpieces in ceramic, glass and the furniture that would soon become collection pieces. VIDEO TIMES: 1965-2005 In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organised a large exhibition on video art entitled “Video Times: 19652005”, with Christine Van Assche as its curator. This exhibition received a total of 112,600 visitors and presented a selection of 30 works from the “Nouveaux Médias” collection of the Pompidou Centre in Paris, considered to be one of the most important collections in the world, as well as art works from the Contemporary Art Collection of the ”la Caixa” Foundation itself. From television to cinema and their influence on society and art, including new devices such as multiprojection and installations, the exhibition took visitors through the various formulas that have made video one of the most widely used media on the international art scene. Among the artists presented, of particular note were Nam June Paik, Bill Viola, Dan Graham, Peter Campus, Tony Oursler, Walid Raad, Pierre Huyghe, Aernout Mik, Stan Douglas, Valie Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 89 Export, Bruce Naumann, Cui Xiu-Wen, Chris Marker and Spaniards Dora García and Javier Peñafiel. BAUHAUS HAS FUN: 1919-1933 From the 29th of June to the 4th of September, and by means of 150 different works, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects revealed a hitherto unknown side to the legendary Bauhaus movement at CaixaForum: the parties and everyday life of the school created in 1919 by Walter Gropius and closed in 1933 by the German National Socialist Party. Designed by Mercedes Valdivieso, “Bauhaus has fun: 1919-1933” is divided into two sections dedicated to everyday life at Bauhaus and its parties. The exhibition reconstructs, with photographs, posters, invitations, collages, gifts, decorations and décors, all from the Baushaus-Archiv of Berlin, the evolution of the school from the combative idealism of its early years to the consolidation of rationalism, its main trait. Students from the Escola Massana in Barcelona collaborated in designing the graph image for the exhibition. RINEKE DIJKSTRA: PORTRAITS In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and the Stedelijk Museum of Amsterdam presented in Spain the largest exhibition dedicated to the Dutch photographer and video artist Rineke Dijkstra (Sittard, 1959), designed by Hripsimé Visser. 1,825,000 people visited the 42 cultural exhibitions organised by Welfare Projects in 2005 The exhibition at CaixaForum brought together around seventy photographs selected from among her most important series (Portraits on the beach, Maternities, Children, Bullfighters, Israeli soldiers, Mat Olivier, Almerisa and Secondary students students), together with two video installations (Buzzclub and Annemiek). The non-chronological arrangement of the pieces was conceived and prepared together with the artist herself, so that various series shared the same room, making it easier to contrast the different themes Dijkstra is interested in. A SUBTLE LINE: SHOJI UEDA 1913-2000 Poster Post er for the exhibition by the Dutch photographer Rineke Dijkstra 90 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Under this title, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and the Elysée museum of Lausanne organised the most comprehensive selection of photographs by the Japanese artist Shoji Ueda presented outside Japan. By means of 150 photographs distributed among seven different areas, the exhibition, designed by Gabriel Bauret, provides a summary of his seventy years of work: from the first experiments with raygrams to his famous portraits of people at the Tottori sand dunes. It’s precisely this theatre of dunes that impregnates the work of Ueda with an unmistakable, inimitable atmosphere. MAX ERNST: INVISIBLE AT FIRST SIGHT... ENGRAVINGS, ILLUSTRATED BOOKS AND SCULPTURES This exhibition, designed by Irene KleinschmidtAltpeter, focused on the visual games created by Max Ernst based on seventy-five engravings, around twenty books and five sculptures from the Bonn Kunstmuseum collection. The exhibition revealed to ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has organised the most comprehensive retrospective of Shoji Ueda outside Japan what extent Ernst tried to find a synthesis between art, science and philosophy. His engravings and illustrated books are not an appendix to his painting but creations with great personality and resounding expressive force. The “Bauhaus has fun” exhibition recreated the cultural climate of the twenties in Berlin Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 91 One of the press photographs of Juan Medina, winner of the FotoPres’05 award The result is a work of inexhaustible richness that transcends mere doctrine or avant-gardism. The exhibition has travelled around the cultural centres of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Catalonia. FOTOPRES’05 Juan Medina, with a dramatic report on a group of immigrants who were shipwrecked in a raft off the coast of Fuerteventura at the end of 2004, Raül Gallego Abellán, with “The intifada of the wall”, and Javier Arcenillas, with a series of photographs reflecting life in a psychiatric sanatorium in Calcutta ref were the winners of FotoPres’05, Welfare Projects’ photographic journalism and documentary event. The winning pieces were exhibited in various Spanish cities, containing both the award winners and those projects selected for FotoPres grants for new creators. The photographers awarded grants in 2005 were Sergi Cámara, Carme Casulà, Héctor Mediavilla, Fernando Moleres, Patric Tató and Fosi Vegué. GIRONA, CHRONICLE OF THE 30’s: FREE TIME, SPORT AND CULTURE The thirties saw the opening up of society towards a new urban and cosmopolitan world. The appearance of talkies, the impact of radio, the popularisation of sport 92 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and the growing presence of automobiles on the streets transformed customs and the pace of life. “Girona, chronicle of the 30’s: free time, sport and culture” revives the birth of a new awareness that coincided with a time of great hopes and collective projects. The exhibition, created by Josep M. Fonalleras and Narcís Jordi-Aragó, shows the vitality of Girona at a key time in its history, between the fall of Primo de Rivera’s regime and the Spanish Civil War, by means of an exceptional selection of objects, photographs, books and publications from museums and private collections. HEROES AND GODS: SHADOW THEATRE AND PUPPETRY IN CHINA An extraordinary set of 400 puppets, figures, costumes, musical instruments and all kinds of elements related to shadow theatre and puppetry from the Kwok On collection of popular Asian art, one of the most important collections in the world and given to the Fundaçao Oriente de Lisboa by the sinologist Jacques Pimpaneau. This is the core of this unique exhibition of oriental style. The exhibition, by curators Sylvie Gonford and Jacques Pimpaneau, recounts the creative process of a traditional puppet show without forgetting some of the key plots, legends and historical dramas concerning the gods that protect artists who, according to the region, adopt different personalities. “Heroes and Gods: Shadow theatre and puppetry in China” could be seen in 2005 in Lleida and Tarragona and in 2006 it will be presented in Palma. ANDALUSIA IMAGINED, PHOTOGRAPHS 1910-1930 Produced by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and designed by Cristina Zelich, the exhibition was inaugurated at the beginning of October 2005 in the History Museum of San Fernando (Cádiz) and it will travel around different towns in Andalusia. This exhibition focuses on the photographs of some of the firms that published postcards and is made up of around sixty photographs in new copies, made using the original negatives from the collections of the Ametller Institute of Barcelona and the Institute of Photographic Studies of Catalonia. SEA PATHS: PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE BALEARIC ISLANDS IN THE MAS ARCHIVE In collaboration with the Ametller Institute, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has brought together eighty hitherto Welfare Projects adapts its programme of art and photography exhibitions to different local interests unpublished photographs by Adolf and Pelai Mas and five stereoscopes by Alexandre Ribera Maneja. The exhibition provides a journey through the different areas of the Balearic Islands around 1900 and calls Lleida and Tarragona hosted the exhibition “Heroes and Gods: Shadow theatre and puppetry in China” attention to the importance of institutions such as the Mas Archive. Its huge task of documentation means that, today, we can enjoy graphic testimony of great value for studying history, the landscape and customs. The exhibition will visit various municipalities on the Balearic Islands. “Andalusia imagined” has travelled around various provinces in Andalusia Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 93 Music A UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects boosts the capacity of music as a vehicle for social cohesion Music is the most universal of languages, that which most directly helps communication between people of different cultures. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects pays particular attention to music as a window on the cultural diversity that is increasingly present in our towns and cities. For the last two years, it has organised “Diversons” (Diverse-Sounds and Diversions), an initiative that promotes integration and respect for differences via music. In its family concerts and the traditional Messiah mass, open to the participation of the public, Welfare Projects also transforms the concert hall into a place for exchange and relationships. In 2005 the music concerts promoted by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects were enjoyed by 120,872 participants. 94 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects MUSIC FOR INTEGRATION: “DIVERSONS” AND THE 10TH FESTIVAL OF WORLD MUSIC The 10th Festival of World Music was blessed with a wonderful list of participants, including performances by L. Subramaniam (India), Alim Qasimov (Azerbaijan), Mohammad Reza Shajarian (Iran), Kamkars (Kurdistan), Samir and Wissam Joubran (Palestine), Jeque Ahmad Al-Tûni (Egypt), Ayub Ogada (Kenya), I Made Djimat & His Ensemble (Bali), Culture Musical Club (Zanzibar), Nour Eddine and the duet Alasdair Fraser/Natalie Haas (Scotland). The Festival programmed four family concerts, a cycle of ethno-musical cinema (“Rebel music”) and “Ten worlds of music”, a production commemorating the tenth anniversary of this event with a compilation of its most outstanding moments. As in previous years, the Festival of World Music extended its activities to Tarragona, Girona, Lleida and Palma. “Diversons” is also a pioneering initiative created in 2004 as a result of the experience of the Festival of World Music. Its aim is to support the integration in society of new residents via the dissemination and recognition of their musical values. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects selected 10 groups to publicise their work in CaixaForum: Mashalá! (Sephardic), Paulinho Lêmos and Zé Manel (Angola-Brazil), Octavio Sana (GuineaBissau), Los Moussakis (Balkans), David Cortés Quartet (flamenco), Carlinhos Pitera Trio (Brazil), Amtaña (Chile), Kavocheva (Ivory Coast), Tenzin Choegyal (Tibet) and Akliso (Ivory Coast). ANCIENT MUSIC FOR NEW TALENTS: FRINGE. 28TH FESTIVAL OF ANCIENT MUSIC With Fringe, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects offers young European musicians the chance to perform and get themselves known within the framework of the Festival of Ancient Music, which for two days fills the streets of Barcelona’s gothic quarter with music. From 50 proposals from all over Europe, Fringe selected eight groups: Il Saltarello, Forma Antiqva, Mimesis, B-Five, Ensemble Vallotti, Basso-rum vox, Cicic-Petra Matejová and Chacona. In its 28th year, the Festival of Ancient Music presented fifteen concerts, a course on medieval and renaissance music, two family concerts and master classes by, among others, the clavichordist Jos van Immerseel. Of particular note among the groups taking part in the Festival were: the Flanders Recorder Quartet, L’Arpeggiata, Mala Punica, Micrologus, Blanca Olavide, Zefiro Baroque Orchestra, Accentus Austria, Eric Hoeprich, Kenneth Weiss, Daniel Taylor, Carlos Mena and Jordi Domènech. 50 groups from around Europe presented their repertoires at the Fringe Festival In 2005, the Festival also started a practice adopted with great success at other European festivals: under the title of Carte blanche to..., it gave space on the programming to the prestigious director and violinist Fabio Biondi. One of the groups chosen in the Festival, during their performance in the streets of Barcelona Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 95 PARTICIPATORY MESSIAHS In cities such as London, it is traditional to perform Händel’s Messiah every year, offering the audience the chance to sing the choral sections from where they are seated, taking an active role in the performance. Since 1995, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has taken on this idea and organised participatory Messiahs in various Spanish cities. In this way it aims to recognise and stimulate the social practice of singing and of music, as carried out in choral associations, as well as promoting social cohesion related to culture. From the 15th to the 30th of December 2005, eight participatory Messiah’s have been performed, organised by Welfare Projects in Barcelona, Valencia, Palma and Granada, in which 11,900 people have taken part. THE PASSION ACCORDING TO SAINT MATTHEW At the traditional Easter concert organised by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects on the Balearic Islands, The King’s Consort performed on the 16th of March in the Basilica of San Francisco in Palma de Mallorca, The Passion According to Saint Matthew by J. S. Bach. On this occasion, The King’s Consort, directed by Robert King, enjoyed the collaboration of prestigious soloists such as the tenor James Gilchrist (in the role of evangelist) and the bass Peter Harvey (Christ), together with soprano Gillian Keith, mezzo-soprano Diana Moore, tenor Charles Daniels and bass Brett Polegato. grandparents – can share the experience and pleasure of an attractive, stimulating repertoire, selected to introduce the new generations to the world of music. In 2005, 46 family concerts were held in 9 cities, with 11,634 people taking part. TRAINING FOR THE FUTURE ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organises music-related training under the format of specific courses, such as “The Middle Ages and the Renaissance” and “Let’s Rediscover the Masterpieces”, as well as conferences dedicated to the great composers: Vivaldi, Brahms, Mozart, Mahler, Prokofiev and Purcell. Stage 2005, held at CaixaForum and aimed at music teachers in primary and secondary schools, is an intensive course of one week with morning and afternoon sessions dedicated to voice, creativity, percussion and movement. The international course “Historical Performance” brought together 204 students in Vitoria in 2005. The programme offered the participants the chance to play instruments from the time of masters such as Mozart and Haydn. FAMILY CONCERTS The family concerts organised by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects since 1993 are performances especially designed so that all the family – parents, children, 96 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects The Music programme has events for audiences of all ages Multimedia Art NEW FORMS OF COMMUNICATION AND ARTISTIC EXPRESSION In 2005, CaixaForum reviewed the cultural influence of the Hip Hop movement Within its programming, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects also dedicates an area for new trends in multimedia art. Among other activities, CaixaForum organised the first Art & Media Symposium, the first Iberian- In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organised the First Iberian-American Meeting of New Trends in Art and Technology American Meeting of New Trends in Art and Technology. This event brought together more than 30 artists, theorists and representatives from cultural and academic institutions in the Iberian- American area, Spain and Portugal involved in producing, teaching, reflecting on and promoting media art. Each presented projects and took part in various conferences and round tables. The parallel programme of activities included eight media art exhibitions exhibiting the recent work of more than 80 Iberian-American artists. Under the title “Hip Hop: political roots and social future”, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects also organised a series of activities in 2005 on this cultural movement born in the United States 30 years ago and which is now receiving significant recognition. Via projections, round tables, online resources and even a live artistic duel, the CaixaForum media library brought together the four creative pillars of Hip Hop: DJ’s, MC’s (rappers), B’Boys (breakdancers) and graffiti artists. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 97 Humanities A PLATFORM OPEN TO THE WORLD The Humanities activities of Welfare Projects focus on poetry, literature and thought The exhibitions of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects are designed to be accompanied by a wide range of cultural activities. Projections, readings and musical performances, among others, to provide a more in-depth view of an area. These activities are complemented by cycles of conferences, courses and workshops dedicated to contemporary issues in the field of literature, music, cinema, art, philosophy and thought. There are many goals. On the one hand, to help people access knowledge via activities aimed at the public at large. On the other hand, Welfare Projects also wishes to promote debate and reflection inspired by some of the leading creators and thinkers of our time. The cultural activities in the Welfare Projects Humanities programme have brought together more than 70,000 people in the ”la Caixa” cultural centres throughout Spain. 98 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects THE 3RD “DAYS OF TALES”: THE SHORT STORY AS A LITERARY GENRE Fernando Valls, literary critic and professor of contemporary Spanish literature in Barcelona, coordinated in CaixaForum a programme related to the present and future of tales, with the participation of writers Juan Marsé, Pedro Zarraluki, Carme Riera, Cristina Fernández Cubas, Javier Cercas, Manuel Rivas, Enrique Vila-Matas, Juan Antonio Masoliver Ródenas, Ignacio Martínez de Pisón, Robert Saladrigas, Juan Bonilla and Luis Mateo Díez. With a dynamic structure alternating between conferences and round tables with text readings, “Days of Tales” revealed the growing attention awakened by a genre considered of minor importance until recently, as well as highlighting its potential for experimentation and communication. THE MEDIA: POWER AND ETHICS Organised by the ”la Caixa” Foundation cultural centre of the Balearic Islands and coordinated by Carmel Bonnín i Cortès, president of Justice and Peace of Mallorca, this cycle gathered together thinkers (Victoria Camps, Enrique Gil Calvo, Carmen Caffarel), journalists (Juan Luis Cebrián, José Antich, Maruja Torres), actors (Silvia Munt) and sports people (Samuel Eto’o). Everyone’s aim was to debate the powers and responsibilities of the media, their independence and the limits to information in a democratic society that protects people’s rights. 4TH POETRY PARTY Narcís Comadira, Sergi Pey, Bartomeu Ferrando, Krishoo Monthieux, Dionís Escorsa, Jordi Cornudella, Silvia Sant Funk, Àngels Ribé. All these are names of poets from different generations, associations and schools who took part in the 4th “Poetry Party” held in the different areas of CaixaForum. With an open, participatory format, the “Poetry Party” in 2005 included an exhibition of visual poetry and a family workshop, “Poetry a la carte”. The poetry was presented in conjunction with different visual arts, performance, dance and video, and children up to the age of 12 read out their own poems in the party, which they had written during the poetry workshops held throughout the course. CONCERNING THE GREAT MASTERS OF LITERARY CRITICISM OF THE 2OTH CENTURY: RE-THINKING “WELTLITERATUR” As part of the Year of the Book and Reading, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects brought together ten of the leading literary critics and theorists of the time in Barcelona, in order to reflect on the canon of world One of the participants in the Humanities programme reciting her creations literature and the function of criticism. The programme was coordinated by Manuel Asensi, professor of Comparative Literature at the University Over 70,000 people took part in 2005 in the initiatives carried out as part of the Humanities programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects of Valencia. The programme was divided into ten sessions led by some of the most prestigious international critics: Jordi Llovet, Andrzej Warminski, Roberto Calasso, Alberto Manguel, Tom Cohen, Joseph Hillis Miller and Ricardo Piglia. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 99 Nature Parks The Environment and Science Live matters Helping to redress the deficit in scientific culture, putting accessible, updated information within reach of citizens to allow them to understand the fundamental concepts of science and to create opinion, have been the main objectives of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in recent years. By means of the science museums, CosmoCaixa Madrid and CosmoCaixa Barcelona, as well as the touring exhibitions held throughout Spain, Welfare Projects has generated a model of exhibitions and informative activities that combines spectacle with the utmost scientific rigour. This criterion has led to a great response on the part of the public. Since it was inaugurated in September 2004, CosmoCaixa Barcelona has received 2,411,481 visits. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects promoted actions in the field of the environment. The institution set up initiatives aimed at raising people’s awareness of the need to develop sustainable lifestyles and a programme to recover protected areas in collaboration with the public authorities in the autonomous communities, responsible for managing the nature parks in Spain. In 2005, the science and environment programmes of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects saw the participation of 3,692,253 people. The budget for the projects carried out was over 43.5 million euros. Comprehensive Management Plan for Nature Parks LONG-TERM SUSTAINABILITY Cleaning the Mediterranean forest in Cartoixa de Montalegre (Barcelona) As part of its new Environment programme, ”la Caixa” W Welfare Projects has developed a comprehensive management plan applicable to the whole network of nature parks in Spain which also promotes the integration of people excluded from society. Disadvantaged groups help improve the nature parks as part of the Environment programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects With a 2005 budget of close to 9 million euros, the plan is being applied in the natural areas managed by the provincial governments of Barcelona and Lleida. 102 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects has also signed agreements with the government of Andalusia, the Balearic Islands and Valencia to implement this programme in these autonomous communities in the near future. In 2006, it is planned to roll out this initiative to all the autonomous communities in Spain. RECOVERING ECOSYSTEMS Biodiversity is a fundamental element in our lives. The aim of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects is to help conserve and recover our most valuable ecosystems, so that they can be sustained in the long term. Among the specific actions promoted by Welfare Projects are fire prevention, looking after river areas, restoring highly degraded areas and optimising signs and the infrastructure network. This initiative also promotes the economic fabric of the whole of Spain, involving the population in Joint actions with the provincial government of Barcelona Number of actions Comprehensive management plans 14 Habitat management manuals 2 Projects being drafted 12 Executive projects - Forest improvement - Restoration of degraded areas - Recovery of burnt zones - Prevention of forest fires - Socio-economic aspects 7 4 6 12 5 Total municipalities adjacent to these areas in using and managing the natural resources. When carrying out the Plan’s actions, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects prioritises the hiring of people with social disadvantages, preferably former prison inmates and drug addicts. 62 By the end of 2006, as already mentioned, Welfare Projects hopes to have signed agreements with all the public authorities responsible for the nature parks in Spain. Repopulating scrubland in the high mountain areas carried out by prison inmates Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 103 CosmoCaixa LIVING MUSEUMS CosmoCaixa celebrated the centenary of Albert Einstein with exhibitions, conferences and workshops The ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects science museums are a meeting point between science and society: living spaces that generate and disseminate knowledge. Scientific and educational activities play a fundamental role in their programmes, markedly innovative in nature. Leading scientists and heads of current research projects come to the museums throughout the year to share their knowledge and to awaken an interest in science. In 2005, CosmoCaixa Madrid and CosmoCaixa Barcelona added to the acts commemorating the World Physics Year, as declared by UNESCO. 100 years ago, Albert Einstein publicised his studies that revolutionised the human conception of time and space. To celebrate this centenary, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects created a large exhibition on Einstein’s life and discoveries, accompanied by workshops, courses and activities. 104 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects This was a great success in both CosmoCaixa Barcelona and CosmoCaixa Madrid, as shown by the more than 2,100,000 visitors both centres received in 2005. Among the joint initiatives carried out by both museums, of particular note was the astronomical day to observe the ring eclipse of the sun on the 3rd of October, a spectacular phenomenon that won't be seen again until 2028. COSMOCAIXA BARCELONA The new Science Museum in Barcelona was inaugurated on the 25th of September 2004 and since then has welcomed over 2,400,000 visitors. Thanks to the breadth of its content and its modern approach as a museum, CosmoCaixa has also become a point of reference among science museums the world over. The singular area “The flooded wood” and the temporary exhibition “Iguanos” were, together with the Planetarium, the most visited areas during 2005. Although the centre receives visitors of all ages, of particular note is the figure of 6,355 school groups that passed through the centre in 2005. 6,355 school groups visited CosmoCaixa in 2005 TEMPORARY EXHIBITIONS In 2005, CosmoCaixa Barcelona presented two new temporary exhibitions: “Jules Verne: travel, travel, travel” and “Einstein 1905: 100 years of physics”. EINSTEIN 1905: 100 YEARS OF PHYSICS On the centenary of the publication of Albert Einstein’s five fundamental texts, and as part of the World Physics Year, in 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organised a big exhibition that could be visited simultaneously in CosmoCaixa Barcelona and CosmoCaixa Madrid. The aim of the exhibition was to bring visitors closer to Einstein’s discoveries and their repercussions today via 4 areas. The first dedicated to the human profile of Einstein and the motivations for his work. The second “The great invisible”, on the scientist’s most important contribution, the Theory of Relativity. The third, “The tiny invisible”, focusing on the origins of quantum physics, the other great path opened up by the genius. And the fourth, “The complex invisible”, reserved for experiments that, designed by the scientist, provided empirical evidence for the existence of atoms and molecules. Real objects, audiovisuals and modules with R experiments introduced the visitor to the world of modern physics, helping them to understand its main concepts and to value Einstein’s contribution. The exhibition also covered the many present-day applications deriving from the German scientist’s discoveries: GPS, nuclear energy and magnetic resonance imaging are just some of these. A large number of activities, conference cycles, courses, workshops on energy and mass, a play, guided tours and games with clues were programmed in both museums as a complement to the exhibition. JULES VERNE: TRAVEL, TRAVEL, TRAVEL On the centenary of Jules Verne’s death and as part of the International Year of the Book and Reading, “Jules Verne: travel, travel, travel” introduced visitors to the writer’s world, author of such unforgettable books as “20,000 leagues under the sea” and “Journey to the centre of the earth”. Considered to be one of the fathers of science fiction, in 2005 Verne was a permanent source of inspiration for the activities and exhibitions of CosmoCaixa Barcelona. “Jules Verne: travel, travel, travel” was divided into two large sections. The “Verne Space”, dedicated to the life and work of the writer, and the “Verne Route”, a Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 105 MICROMANIA The facilities at CosmoCaixa surprise visitors journey through the modules of the permanent installations at CosmoCaixa Barcelona, explaining some of the phenomena mentioned by Verne in his books. The exhibition was complemented by workshops and activities ranging from films to live experiments and even including hot air balloon trips. THE BIG QUESTIONS IN PHYSICS As part of the World Physics Year, CosmoCaixa Barcelona held two big seminars. The first debated the big theories and principles of physics and among its participants had the support of Nobel prize-winner Horst L. Störmer. The second, “The spectacle of intelligence”, explored the relationship between chess and science. The museum also programmed the following courses: “The energies of the new millennium”, “Relativity and quantum physics, the two revolutions of the 20th century” and “Mathematics in everyday life”. CosmoCaixa Barcelona also offered other scientific and informative activities, including the Ecology Congress “Unity in diversity”, dedicated to Ramon Margalef, who introduced scientific ecology in Spain, the seminars “Dinosaurs in the 21st century” and the usual cycle of conferences “Museum Afternoons”. 106 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Every year, around its permanent and temporary exhibitions, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects programmes numerous educational, informative, entertaining and family initiatives. Of particular note in 2005 were the “Science Shows”, plays introducing scientific themes. The new area entitled “Micromania”, where reality magnified 1,500 times can be seen, has given rise to two new activities related to the environment: “Microdiversity” and “Microphenomena”. “Surprising materials” was another of the most attractive workshops of the season. Here, participants could explore the properties of matter using experiments that help to explain how we are capable not only of using material and transforming it according to our needs, but also of manipulating molecules to achieve new “a la carte” materials. TEACHING SCIENCE CosmoCaixa Barcelona’s educational activities complement and broaden knowledge on science for students of all levels. Of particular note are the “Museum Mornings”, conferences open to public participation and given by specialists in different areas. The World Physics Year and the work of Jules Verne were also star themes in 2005. For their part, “Pedagogical conversations” aim to bring scientific reality closer to educators and offer a place for reflection and debate with renowned experts in science and education. In 2005, some of the themes covered were sustainability in globalisation and the state of science teaching in Spain. COSMOCAIXA MADRID In April 2005, CosmoCaixa Madrid celebrated its fifth anniversary. To commemorate this, the first week of the month, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects designed an extraordinary programme including two open days, a “modular origami” workshop, a performance of the play Cosas del Mar and an experimentarium where children could carry out some of the key experiments in the history of science. In 2005, the permanent installations, temporary exhibitions and scientific, informative and educational activities programmed by CosmoCaixa Madrid attracted over half a million visitors. And, in total, since April 2000 close to 3.5 million people have visited its modern facilities in Alcobendas. EXHIBITIONS: SCIENCE AND EMOTION CosmoCaixa Madrid inaugurated two new temporary exhibitions in 2005: “Music... more music!”, a multidisciplinary approach to sound and hearing and “Einstein 1905: 100 years of physics”. Two large exhibitions also culminated in 2005 in the museum: “Antarctica”, a display dedicated to the last virgin area on the planet, and “Remains and traces of our ancestors”, a detective-style summary of the evolutionary history of man. most unexpected objects, a horn over a 150 metres long, a lute workshop, a complete and surprising collection of musical instruments and a journey through the lullabies of the world. Numerous experiments and interactive modules throughout the exhibition explain how sound waves are transmitted and how hearing works. One of the exhibition’s sections, reflecting how the brain of a professional musician reacts differently to that of a person without musical training when both listen to the New World Symphony, has been published in the most prestigious neuroscience magazines in the world. VIRTUAL WORKSHOPS The CosmoCaixa permanent and temporary exhibitions generate related educational and family activities as a bridge between science and people. Among the workshops programmed in 2005, of particular note were the workshops on cold, on board games around the world and natural cosmetics (making soaps, body lotions, colognes, etc.). But removed from the realities of space, the virtual workshops are a novel way to explore, MUSIC... MORE MUSIC! Inaugurated in May, this exhibition, produced and created by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, provides a harmonious journey through music, one of the most universal arts, conducted by Science. The exhibition reveals how to approach music from Science. This doesn’t take away the emotion; in fact, quite the opposite, it enriches the freedom of the person creating, playing or listening to music with new nuances. Some of the attractions of “Music... more music!” were the sound sculptures by the Baschet brothers, capable of emitting harmonious sounds using the Over 3.5 million people have visited CosmoCaixa Madrid since it was opened Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 107 experiment and investigate science and the environment. Related to the museum’s exhibitions and activities, these workshops can be carried out at school or home via the CosmoCaixa Madrid website. DETECTIVES OF THE PAST... AND PRESENT CosmoCaixa Madrid is therefore an area to stimulate scientific knowledge that is at the service of the whole educational community. Its exhibitions and activities allow school groups, from nursery to secondary, to experience and experiment actively, enjoyably and thoroughly the scientific content in their school curricula. Of particular note among the educational programming of CosmoCaixa Madrid in 2005 was the workshop “Detectives of the past”, given by specialists from the site at Atapuerca. Here schoolchildren from all around Spain could become palaeontologists, working with fossils and “Music... more music!” delighted visitors to CosmoCaixa Madrid 108 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects discovering their secrets. The courses programmed by the museum, on the other hand, tackle aspects associated with everyday life or great scientific themes of a general nature, related, for example, to astronomy and astrophysics, neurobiology and sleep, nutrition or the plant world and its relation with culture. And, once again, the “Summer School” of CosmoCaixa Madrid delighted both parents and children during the first weeks of July. Electricity, flying devices, the plastic arts and great geniuses of history took pride of place for young people taking advantage of their school holidays. SCIENTIFIC AND INFORMATIVE ACTIVITIES Encouraging creative contact between specialists and top-level scientists and informing the public of the latest advances in their research is another of the objectives of CosmoCaixa Madrid. The wide-ranging programme carried out during 2005 included the seminars “The limits of human reproduction”, “Teaching physics and chemistry” and the conference cycle “From genes to the individual”, analysing the development of genetics over the last few years and its perspectives for the future. As part of the cycle “Museum Afternoons”, there were superb conferences such as those given by the astronaut Franklin Chang-Diáz, the director of the Mental Health Unit of the World Health Organisation, José Manuel Bertolete and the talk given by palaeontologist Mary Schweitzer on the sex of dinosaurs. Exhibition Programme SCIENTIFIC RIGOUR AND SPECTACLE REMAINS AND TRACES OF OUR ANCESTORS A dinosaur, a newly born cave bear, a meteorite, fossilised footprints and a piece of amber. “Remains and traces of our ancestors” recounts surprising stories that explain without words. Each trace is the last piece in an adventure, illustrated in a comic and built around the clues provided by the fossils themselves. In some cases, the pieces have been selected due to their exceptional nature and, in others, due to their capacity to convey a story that is significant to knowledge. After its great success at CosmoCaixa Madrid, “Remains and traces of our ancestors” has now started its travels around Spain. SEDENTARY Fossils from millions of years ago revive the past in the exhibition “Remains and traces of our ancestors” ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects organises exhibitions on science and the environment that travel all over Spain in order to bring knowledge closer to all citizens. These are didactic exhibitions, for all members of the public, with up-to-date information on novel themes that invite the spectator to get involved and reflect on the advances of science. Exhibitions such as “From ape to man, five milestones in human evolution”, “Volcanoes”, “The Neurone”, “By a nose”, “And afterwards came... shape!”, “The target, to fly”, “Humans, the first settlements in Catalonia” and “The Canary Islands: volcanoes in the ocean” take to all corners of the country the multidisciplinary methodology that inspires the science museums of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects. In 2005, a total of 60 Spanish towns and cities hosted scientific exhibitions promoted by Welfare Projects. Among the new productions for 2005 were “Remains and traces of our ancestors” and “Sedentary”. In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects created an exhibition to respond to the questions concerning the first settlements in our country. The exhibition begins with an introductory area focusing on the Epipaleolithic period and the end of cave dwelling. The main area uses a setting that represents a hut to present the most important innovations of the Through its touring exhibitions, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects brought science to 60 Spanish towns and cities in 2005 Neolithic period (agriculture, stockbreeding, ceramics, the types of dwelling, funeral rites, stone and mining industries), which permitted the appearance of stable settlements. The final area presents the beginning of the era of metals. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 109 Call for Applications for Environmental Grants RECOVERY AND RECYCLING ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects is supporting the recovery of the knobbed triton (Charonia lampas lampas), among other species In 2005, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects invested close to 2.3 million euros in 58 nature conservation projects, selected via its call for application for Environmental Aid. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects supports 132 environmental projects, to which it has allocated 4.6 million euros Since 2002, when this initiative was first set up, Welfare Projects has already financed 132 environmental projects throughout Spain with a total investment of 4.6 million euros. 110 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects In 2005, the priority was the treatment and recycling of waste, an issue tackled by almost half the projects selected. Other projects selected focused on reforestation, recovering beaches and coastal zones, environmental education and encouraging sustainable agricultural and recreational activities. THE PROJECTS In order to change citizens’ habits regarding the treatment and management of waste, ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects selected projects, among others, that promote the distribution to homes of ecological bins, the installation of green points in public centres and buildings and the placement of bins for separated waste collection. In addition to raising awareness in society, the projects selected are also aimed at companies. To give two examples, Welfare Projects is supporting projects to prevent and manage waste in the industrial estates of Asturias and San Sebastian. Other proposals work on the recovery of the cherry woods in the province of Burgos, creating an awareness raising programme for schoolchildren in Navarre concerning the brown bear, the conservation of marine turtles and the recovery of beaches in Tenerife. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF AID In 2005, the 3rd Call for Applications for Environmental Projects selected 58 projects from among the 201 presented by private, non-profit organisations and local bodies from all around Spain. Of these, 26 are from Catalonia, 5 from Castile & Leon; 5 from Valencia; 3 Extremadura, Balearic Islands The giving of environmental aid promotes projects to conserve the maritime coast and Madrid; 2 from Andalusia, Asturias, Canary Islands, the Basque Country and Galicia; and 1 from Aragon, Castile-La Mancha and Navarre respectively. For more information on the Environment Programme of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects, please refer to the New Programmes section. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 111 Figures and statistics 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects: budget and statistics Publications Art works on loan from the Contemporary Art Collection ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Spain. Provinces, cities and towns Collaborating institutions Directory of the ”la Caixa” Foundation centres ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Budget Breakdown of the budget, basic data 2005 Budget expenditure by area for financial year 2005 Social programmes Cultural programmes 119,478 thousand euros 63,729 thousand euros Educational programmes Environment and science programmes 43,530 thousand euros 19,520 thousand euros Total budget(1): 246,257 thousand euros (1) Investment for the financial year was 57,036 Funding of activities and investment carried out during financial year 2005 THOUSANDS OF EUROS Contribution of ”la Caixa” Income generated by activities Total 246,257 18,370 264,627 Participants and beneficiaries by programme Social programmes 5,764,671 46% Educational programmes 633,796 5% Total: 12,113,283 Cultural programmes 2,022,563 16% Environment and science programmes 3,692,253 30% ”la Caixa” branch network activities 405,270 3% Basic data Participants via own facilities and in collaboration 7,814,622 Participants via external facilities 3,126,163 Beneficiaries of collaborations 1,172,498 Beneficiaries of ”la Caixa” branch network activities Total participants / beneficiaries Total activities carried out Number of towns/cities with Foundation presence 405,207 12,518,553 27,958 1,038 2006 Budget by area for financial year 2006 Social programmes Cultural programmes 159,897 thousand euros 70,509 thousand euros Educational programmes Environment and science programmes 19,044 thousand euros 53,550 thousand euros Total budget: 303,000 thousand euros Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 115 TABLE 1 Social, Educational, Cultural and Environment & Science programmes of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects and ”la Caixa” branch network activities No. ACTIVITIES, SERVICES & COLLABORATION TOTAL ATTENDANCE, USERS & BENEFICIARIES 10,929 5,764,671 840 633,796 1,766 2,022,563 Environment & Science programmes 914 3,692,253 ”la Caixa” branch network activities 13,509 405,270 Grand total 27,958 12,518,553 Social programmes Educational programmes Cultural programmes Number of programmes and activities and attendance by geographical area Programmes Barcelona city Catalonia except Barcelona Spain except Catalonia Total ACTIVITIES, SERVICES & COLLABORATION No. ATTENDANCE No. ATTENDANCE No. ATTENDANCE 7,486 3,885,391 10,929 5,764,671 132,455 591 478,663 840 633,796 1,062 255,726 323 689,768 1,766 2,022,563 263 136,641 525 1,545,013 914 3,692,253 3,917 117,510 8,998 269,940 13,509 405,270 7,824 1,949,856 17,923 6,868,775 27,958 12,518,553 Social programmes 982 571,756 Educational programmes 128 22,678 121 Cultural programmes 381 1,077,069 Environment & Science programmes 126 2,010,599 ”la Caixa” branch network activities Total 594 17,820 2,211 3,699,922 ATTENDANCE 2,461 1,307,524 No. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 117 TABLE 2 Activities, services and collaboration arrangements carried out by ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Number of activities and attendance by geographical area Activities No. Fellowships* Catalonia except Barcelona city Barcelona city ATTENDANCE No. Spain except Catalonia ATTENDANCE No. ATTENDANCE Total No. ATTENDANCE 39 39 20 20 118 118 177 177 Concerts 133 73,901 98 18,202 147 28,769 378 120,872 Conferences, debates and discussions 195 24,116 279 18,375 947 40,401 1,421 82,892 Congresses, courses, seminars and symposia 471 29,695 466 10,562 2,295 79,630 3,232 119,887 Exhibitions 28 2,560,147 147 397,948 171 2,363,626 Festivals and fairs 62 8,555 115 16,265 111 59,552 288 84,372 Homage to old age 6 1,686 155 45,663 20 4,986 181 52,335 59 191,653 225 17,548 54 61,855 338 271,056 2 534 320 12,324 5 415 327 13,273 24 19,432 67 49,243 428 150,792 519 219,467 1 964 209 32,808 17 4,995 227 38,768 408 165,447 1,468 39,590 3,153 247,954 5,029 452,991 1,428 3,076,169 3,569 658,548 7,466 3,043,093 Film projections Poetry recitals Educational resources Theatrical events Workshops Total Activities 346 5,321,721 12,463 6,777,811 Number of services and users by geographical area Services Catalonia except Barcelona city Barcelona city No. USERS No. USERS Spain except Catalonia Total No. USERS No. USERS Hospital classrooms 5 1,500 6 1,800 73 54,458 84 57,758 Hospital cyber-classrooms 1 2,281 2 538 17 50,539 20 53,358 34 237,601 151 1,087,200 365 2,628,000 550 3,952,801 Foster Families – – – – 6 3,922 6 3,922 Cultural centre media libraries 1 92,729 – – 1 2,406 2 95,135 41 334,111 159 1,089,538 462 2,739,325 662 4,162,974 Leisure & senior citizen centres Total Services 118 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Number of collaboration arrangements and beneficiaries by geographical area Social project collaboration Barcelona city Catalonia except Barcelona city No. BENEFICIARIES No. 10 3,000 11 3 900 7 16 156,404 6 Projects aimed at immigrant groups Projects aimed at people with intellectual disabilities or mental illness Total No. BENEFICIARIES 3,060 145 42,064 166 48,124 2,100 43 12,900 53 15,900 1 320 34 282,910 51 439,634 – 4 – 16 16 – 2 26 – 31 83,352 25 8,049 144 293,498 200 384,899 24 3,328 29 2,791 156 14,248 209 20,367 8 551 21 761 136 23,125 165 24,437 29 16,214 22 1,872 182 75,056 233 93,142 5 2,000 22 37,763 31 31,600 58 71,363 16 6,073 37 27,543 110 41,016 163 74,632 Total collaboration arrangements 148 271,822 179 84,259 997 816,417 1,324 1,172,498 Alzheimer’s and other neuro-degenerative illnesses Society & Cancer International co-operation projects Research projects into neuro-degenerative illnesses and oncology** Employment project for people affected by disabilities Projects aimed at groups at risk of marginalisation or social exclusion Aid for environmental projects Social and cultural collaborations BENEFICIARIES Spain except Catalonia ACTIVITIES, SERVICES & COLLABORATIONS Total activities No. BENEFICIARIES TOTAL: ATTENDANCE, USERS & BENEFICIARIES 12,463 6,777,811 662 4,162,974 1,324 1,172,498 Total ”la Caixa” branch network activities 13,509 405,270 Total activities, services and collaborations 27,958 12,518,553 Total services Total collaborations * Does not include eight fellowships granted to eight students from Latin American universities with qualifications officially approved in Spain. ** The findings of these research projects have an effect on the whole population. Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 119 TABLE 3 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Spain Attendance, users and beneficiaries of social, educational, cultural and environment & science programmes by autonomous Communities Educational programmes Social programmes ACTIVITIES COLLABORATION AGREEMENTS SERVICES No. ATTENDANCE No. USERS Andalusia 717 75,388 89 476,265 Aragon 367 11,827 24 152,901 No. Cultural programmes ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES BENEFICIARIES No. ATTENDANCE No. 225 303,953 58 85,132 46 23,473 20 34,641 SERVICES ATTENDANCE No. USERS 14 42,513 – – 2 52,941 – – Asturias 236 11,731 23 153,800 21 4,722 18 4,463 – – – – Balearic Islands 448 35,127 25 154,404 43 12,892 87 6,423 253 197,746 1 2,406 Basque Country 235 34,290 25 137,882 34 127,664 34 59,826 10 10,332 – – Canary Islands 394 12,636 38 241,565 36 4,104 8 4,297 8 35,707 – – Cantabria 121 7,701 11 72,500 12 984 8 1,640 1 16,720 – – Castile & Leon 321 14,306 41 227,397 79 31,820 47 65,593 2 38,167 – – Castile-La Mancha 281 28,458 25 145,693 48 10,745 29 35,998 2 59,267 – – 2,944 232,042 199 1,330,920 300 1,442 1,240,066 1 92,729 1 15 – – 6 1,433 4 16,899 1 2,972 – – Extremadura 302 29,108 25 152,782 28 4,529 9 2,401 4 8,393 – – Galicia 296 9,456 30 164,630 56 14,002 22 21,651 3 30,094 – – Madrid 925 53,696 48 273,895 151 183,991 147 53,112 5 112,475 – – Murcia 841 22,895 5 30,300 48 25 8,392 3 12,587 – – Catalonia Ceuta & Melilla 316,318 249 155,133 29,984 Navarre 13 286 4 22,000 13 2,440 7 12,696 1 5,365 – – La Rioja 132 4,638 14 86,825 13 5,331 4 8,708 – – – – Valencian Community 429 12,097 34 244,080 107 22,750 64 56,791 13 62,083 – – 9,003 595,697 660 4,067,839 1,266 1,101,135 840 633,796 1,764 1,927,428 2 95,135 Total Spain 120 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects community Environment & Science programmes COLLABORATION AGREEMENTS ACTIVITIES No. ATTENDANCE No. 9 168,344 2 – – Grand total Total BENEFICIARIES ACTIVITIES COLLABORATION AGREEMENTS SERVICES No. ATTENDANCE No. USERS – 798 371,377 89 1 – 389 99,409 No. ATTENDANCE, USERS AND BENEFICIARIES No. BENEFICIARIES 476,265 227 303,953 1,114 1,151,595 24 152,901 47 23,473 460 275,783 1 82,688 2 – 255 98,882 23 153,800 23 4,722 301 257,404 322 24,360 3 – 1,110 263,656 26 156,810 46 12,892 1,182 433,358 3 29,763 2 – 282 134,211 25 137,882 36 127,664 343 399,757 13 114,747 2 600 423 167,387 38 241,565 38 4,704 499 413,656 2 61,464 – – 132 87,525 11 72,500 12 984 155 161,009 3 60,793 5 26,000 373 178,859 41 227,397 84 57,820 498 464,076 3 42,323 – – 315 166,046 25 145,693 48 10,745 388 322,484 362 2,107,477 27 39,763 200 1,423,649 327 356,081 5,524 5,514,448 4,997 3,734,718 – – – – 6 19,886 – – 6 1,433 12 21,319 2 35,986 3 – 317 75,888 25 152,782 31 4,529 373 233,199 – – 2 – 321 61,201 30 164,630 58 14,002 409 239,833 128 768,400 3 5,000 1,205 987,683 48 273,895 154 188,991 1,407 1,450,569 – – – – 869 43,874 5 30,300 48 29,984 922 104,158 – – 1 – 21 18,347 4 22,000 14 2,440 39 42,787 2 31,612 – – 138 44,958 14 86,825 13 5,331 165 137,114 6 92,933 5 – 512 223,904 34 244,080 112 22,750 658 490,734 856 3,620,890 58 71,363 662 4,162,974 1,324 1,172,498 14,449 12,113,283 12,463 6,777,811 ”la Caixa” branch network activities 13,509 405,270 Grand Total 27,958 12,518,553 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 121 TABLE 4 Users, attendance and beneficiaries of the social, educational, cultural and environment & science programmes in Catalonia Programmes Barcelona No. Social programmes ATTENDANCE, USERS AND BENEFICIARIES Girona Lleida No. ATTENDANCE, USERS AND BENEFICIARIES No. ATTENDANCE, USERS AND BENEFICIARIES Tarragona No. ATTENDANCE, USERS AND BENEFICIARIES Total Catalonia No. ATTENDANCE, USERS AND BENEFICIARIES 2,237 1,239,335 356 193,325 360 219,168 490 227,452 3,443 1,879,280 Educational programmes 179 50,874 25 17,515 21 13,905 24 72,839 249 155,133 Cultural programmes 674 1,150,910 73 29,311 440 65,924 256 86,650 1,443 1,332,795 Environment & Science programmes 138 2,067,033 19 50,673 67 5,920 165 23,614 389 2,147,240 3,228 4,508,152 473 290,824 888 304,917 935 410,555 5,524 5,514,448 Total Catalonia 122 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects TABLE 5 Attendance to the institution’s own facilities FACILITIES ATTENDANCE Social and cultural centres: CaixaForum, Barcelona 1,081,853 Granollers 51,776 Lleida 63,618 Palma 197,639 Tarragona 77,656 Exhibition rooms: Sala Montcada, Barcelona 19,651 Girona 20,710 Madrid 110,017 Science museums: CosmoCaixa, Barcelona CosmoCaixa, Madrid 1,424,194 735,958 Senior citizen centres: CentroCaixa, Madrid 48,544 CentroCaixa, Murcia 28,275 Own senior citizen centres Santa Madrona University Nursing School, Barcelona 448,781 1,930 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 123 TABLE 6 Facilities of ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Autonomous communities Cultural Centres & Exhibition Rooms Media Libraries Schools Senior Citizen Centres* Museums Total Andalusia 61 61 Aragon 21 21 Asturias 21 21 21 23 Basque Country 16 16 Canary Islands 33 33 Cantabria 10 10 Castile & Leon 31 31 Castile-La Mancha 20 20 Balearic Islands Catalonia 1 7 1 1 1 185 1 195 Extremadura 21 21 Galicia 21 21 Madrid 1 37 1 39 Murcia 4 4 Navarre 3 3 La Rioja 12 12 Valencian Community 33 33 Total 9 2 1 550 2 564 * Balearic Islands: 5 own facilities and 16 under collaboration; Catalonia: 66 own facilities and 119 under collaboration; Madrid: 1 own facility and 36 under collaboration; Murcia: 1 own facility and 3 under collaboration. The senior citizen centres in the remaining autonomous communities are centres run in collaboration with other institutions. 124 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects TABLE 7 The ”la Caixa” Foundation on the Internet Websites Visits Pages visited 397,328 3,403,379 1,325,318 26,633,641 19,119 67,198 1,076,410 2,170,905 www.lacaixa.es/solidaritat 249,677 591,431 www.mediatecaonline.net 291,528 6,153,034 www.cosmocaixa.com 184,277 1,105,681 3,543,657 40,125,269 www.clubestrella.com www.educalia.org www.amas.org www.fundacio.lacaixa.es Total Data: 1st January - 30th November 2005. Visits per day: Pages visited / day: 10,610 120,136 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 125 Other important data on ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in 2005 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Publications Loans of works from the Contemporary Art Collection of the ”la Caixa” Foundation ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Spain. Provinces, cities and towns Collaborating institutions Directory. Centres and services Publications of the ”la Caixa” Foundation in 2005 PLASTIC ARTS De Millet a Matisse. Pintura francesa dels segles XIX i XX 2,500 Cat.-Sp. PHOTOGRAPHY AND AUDIOVISUAL ARTS Bill Viola. Las pasiones 2,000 Spanish El món romà a les Illes Balears 1,500 Catalan Camins de mar 3,000 Cat.-Sp.-English El mundo romano en les Illes Balears 700 Spanish Fotopres’05 4,000 Cat.-Sp.-Galician-Basque Els Tracis. Tresors enigmàtics de Bulgària 1,800 Catalan Los Tracios. Tesoros enigmáticos de Bulgaria 4,500 Spanish Girona. Crónica dels ’30. Oci, esport i cultura 1,000 Catalan La Bauhaus de festa 1,700 Cat.-Sp.-English Rineke Dijkstra. Retrats 1,500 Cat.-Sp. Temps de Vídeo 1,500 Catalan Tiempo de Vídeo 1,000 Spanish Herois i deus. El teatre d’ombres a la Xina 2,500 Catalan Una línia subtil: Shoji Ueda 1913-2000 1,500 Catalan Sala Montcada. Temporada 2004-2005 1,000 Cat.-Sp.-English Una línea sutil: Shoji Ueda 1013-2000 3,000 Spanish Max Ernst. Invisible a primera vista 2,000 Cat.-Sp.-English SCIENCE Turner i Venecia 2,000 Catalan Turner y Venècia 2,000 Spanish Valentí Castanys 700 Cat.-Sp. 126 De simi a home (quadern exposició) 2,000 Catalan Egizu hegan! 500 Basque El planetari viatger (quadern de treball) 2,000 Catalan El planetario viajero (cuaderno de trabajo) 10,000 Spanish Europa fue camino (cuaderno de trabajo) 2,000 Spanish Europa bidea izan zen 500 Basque Guia paisatge 2,700 Catalan Guía del paisaje 5,300 Spanish La ciencia en el mundo andalusí 850 Spanish Los castillos de al-Andalús (cuaderno de trabajo) 4,000 Spanish Los millares (cuaderno de trabajo) 11,500 Spanish Los iguanos 2,000 Spanish Què és la sida? (quadern de treball) 1,100 Catalan Els iguanos 2,000 Catalan Zer da hies-a? 1,500 Basque EDUCATION De mono a hombre (cuaderno exposición) 2,000 Spanish I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Cuentos: El viatge de Narayan 5,000 Catalan El viaje de Narayan 15,000 Spanish Tales (reprinted): M’assemblo molt al meu pare 2,100 Catalan Me parezco mucho a mi papá 5,400 Spanish L’últim joc de mans 1,000 Catalan El último juego de manos 3,000 Spanish L’escarabat de l’avi Quim 1,000 Catalan El escarabajo del abuelo Joaquín 3,000 Spanish La veïna d’en Miquelet 1,000 Catalan La vecina de Miguelito 3,000 Spanish La meva àvia és diferent 1,000 Catalan Tengo una abuela diferente a las demás 3,000 Spanish La fada d’Alzheimer 1,000 Catalan El hada de Alzheimer 3,000 Spanish SOCIAL SCIENCES Activem la ment. Actualització 2005 4,000 Catalan Acercarse a la Esclerosis Múltiple 6,000 Spanish Apropar-se a l’Esclerosi Múltiple 2,000 Catalan Comprendre l’Esclerosi Múltiple 3,000 Catalan Envejecimiento y vivienda 1,000 Spanish Guía del taller de fotografía digital 6,000 Spanish Guia del taller de fotografia digital 2,500 Catalan Guía del taller de informática 9,000 Spanish Manual de gestión del ciclo del proyecto en acción humanitaria 1,900 Spanish Manual de gestió del cicle del projecte en acció humanitària 1,900 Catalan Memòria Científica 2004 4,000 Cat.-Sp.-English Menores soldados Menors soldats Violencia. Tolerancia cero Violència. Tolerància zero Indarkeria. Zero tolerantzia ”LA CAIXA” FOUNDATION PERIODICALS COLLABORATION ARRANGEMENTS Agenda CaixaForum (4 issues) Catalan In collaboration with Tusquets Editores: Agenda CaixaForum (4 issues) Spanish Catálogo de publicaciones Fundación ”la Caixa” 2005 Spanish Catàleg de publicacions Fundació ”la Caixa” 2005 Catalan Nadie pierde Agenda actividades escolares (Laboratori de les Arts, Museu de la Ciència, CosmoCaixa, Centres Culturals Tarragona, Girona, Lleida, Granollers, Palma y Madrid) OTHER PUBLICATIONS OF THE ”LA CAIXA” FOUNDATION Josep Sebastià Pons 8,000 Catalan 2004 - Annual report English Pablo Neruda 8,000 Catalan SOCIAL STUDIES COLLECTION El grup de Bloomsbury 8,000 Catalan Mi visión del mundo Agenda actividades Centros Culturales Tarragona, Girona, Lleida, Granollers y Palma 2004 - Informe anual Spanish Howard Phillips Lovecraft 8,000 Catalan La conjura de los machos CosmoCaixa. Agenda de actividades (Quarterly) Spanish READING GUIDES Hans Christian Andersen 8,000 Catalan El lado oscuro del hombre Museu de la Ciència/CosmoCaixaAgenda de actividades (Quarterly) Spanish 2004 - Informe anual Catalan Aurora Bertrana 8,000 Catalan El filantrópico Dr. Guillotín Museu de la Ciència/CosmoCaixaAgenda d’activitats (Quarterly) Catalan Violencia. Tolerancia cero James Joyce 8,000 Catalan La rodilla de Lucy La regulació de la immigració a Europa Catalan La regulación de la inmigración en Europa Spanish OTHER MATERIALS Instituciones para la cooperación internacional para el desarrollo: el caso de España Spanish La vida es cambio. El cambio es vida Spanish La vida és canvi. El canvi és vida Catalan Joan Perucho Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 127 Art works on loan from the Contemporary Art Collection of the ”la Caixa” Foundation EXHIBITION: EXHIBITION: EXHIBITION: EXHIBITION: Victoria Civera. Bajo la piel Gerhard Richter - Image after Image Arte Sagrado - Arte Profano Sujeto Sala Amorós Salvador, Logroño 13th May - 26th June 2005 MUSAC (Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León), León 10th September 10th December 2005 Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid 13th January - 6th March 2005 WORK ON LOAN: Victoria CIVERA Ella, 2003 Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaeck (Denmark) 4th February - 6th June 2005 WORK ON LOAN: WORK ON LOAN: Guillermo PÉREZ VILALTA Flagelación, 1993 Gerhard RICHTER St. Bridget (653-3), 1988 EXHIBITION: EXHIBITION: WORK ON LOAN: Estados da Imagen. Instantes e Intervalos Joaquim Chancho. Prospectiva 1973-2003 EXHIBITION: Centre Cultural Tecla Sala 20th January 27th February 2005 Le Fresnoir 25th February - 24th April 2005 Fundaçao Centro Cultural de Belem, Lisbon 25th May - 21st August 2005 WORK ON LOAN: WORK ON LOAN: Gary HILL Learning Curve, 1993 Jeff WALL A Haunting Scene, 1994 EXHIBITION: EXHIBITION: Centre Cultural Caixa Tarragona 29th April - 19th June 2005 Gary Hill WORKS ON LOAN: Joaquim CHANCHO Naima, 1995 Joaquim CHANCHO Inscripcions, 1975 Joaquim CHANCHO Camí i Caminants, 1990 Desacuerdos. Sobre arte, políticas y esfera pública en el Estado Español Centro José Guerrero, Granada 8th March - 29th May 2005 Vivir en Sevilla. Construcciones visuales en torno al flamenco –vanguardias y tradición– entre 1966 y 1999 Centro Andaluz de Arte Contemporáneo 20th January - 27th March 2005 Museo de Arte da Bahía, Brazil 15th September - 26th October 2005 Centro Cultural Español, Mexico D.F. 7th July - 15th August 2005 WORK ON LOAN: Carlos PAZOS Milonga, 1980 EXHIBITION: El efecto Guerrero: José Guerrero y la pintura española de los años 70 y 80 Centro José Guerrero, Granada 26th January - 16th April 2005 WORK ON LOAN: Jorge GALINDO Pintura Bizarre nº3, 1995 128 La Biennale di Venecia 12th June - 6th November 2005 WORK ON LOAN: Juan DELCAMPO La voz de su amo, 1989 Bruce NAUMAN Sit in your Hat - Head on a Chair, 1990 EXHIBITION: EXHIBITION: WORK ON LOAN: EXHIBITION: The Experience of Art. Always a Little Further. Adriana Varejao Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, Paris 16th March - 5th June 2005 Domus Artium, Salamanca 22nd June - 28th August 2005 Fundaçao Centro Cultural Belem, Lisbon 13th October 15th January 2006 WORK ON LOAN: Adriana VAREJAO O Seductor, 2004 EXHIBITION: Populism NIFCA (The Nordic Institute of Contemporary Art), Helsinki, Finland 8th April - 4th September 2005 WORK ON LOAN: Cildo MEIRELES Volátil (Volatile), 1980-1994 I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Col·lecció 17 MACBA (Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Barcelona), Barcelona 6th July 2005 - 5th June 2006 WORKS ON LOAN: Josep GUINOVAR Homenatge al pintor parets, 1964 Antonio SAURA Soleá, 1956 Antonio SAURA Cota, 1959 Manuel MILLARES Cuadro 85, 1959 Lucio FONTANA Concetto Spaziale C59 T21, 1959 Lucio FONTANA Concetto Spaziale C58 I38, 1956 Albert RÀFOLS-CASAMADA Hers, 1968 Stefan HABLÜTZEL 1962-1929, 1995-1996 EXHIBITION: Tiempos de vídeo. 1965-2005. Colección Nouveaux Médias del Centre Pompidou CaixaForum, Barcelona 27th September 2005 8th January 2006 WORKS ON LOAN: Dora GARCÍA La lección respiratoria, 2001 Javier PEÑAFIEL Maltrato, 1999 EXHIBITION: Xesús Vázquez CGAC (Centro Galego de Arte Contemporáneo), Santiago de Compostela 29th September 2005 22nd January 2006 WORK ON LOAN: Xesús VÁZQUEZ Primera internacional II, 1993 EXHIBITION: Pablo Palazuelo: 1995-2005 MNCARS (Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía), Madrid 25th October 2005 9th January 2006 WORKS ON LOAN: Pablo PALAZUELO Dos I, 1999 Pablo PALAZUELO Marin XII, 1997 EXHIBITION: Tàpies. La esencia secreta Palacio de Congresos y Exposiciones de IBERCAJA, Zaragoza 25th October 20th December 2005 WORK ON LOAN: Antoni TÀPIES X i dues bandes de roba T-6657-91, 1991 EXHIBITION: Picasso to Plensa: A Century of Art for Spain The Alburquerque Museum of Art and History 18th December 2005 16th April 2006 Salvador Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, USA 5th May - 30th July 2005 WORKS ON LOAN: Ferran GARCÍA SEVILLA Letra 24, 1991 Rogelio LÓPEZ CUENCA Bandera de Europa, 1992 Txomin BADIOLA Twins IV (Plus One), 1990 EQUIPO CRÓNICA El Mundo (serie “el cartel”), 1973 Miquel BARCELÓ Six figures xines, 1997 PEREAUME Retaule Teatre Municipal de Girona, 1997 Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 129 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects in Spain in 2005. Provinces, cities and towns. Andalusia ALMERÍA Adra Albox Almería Carboneras Cuevas del Almanzora Ejido, el Huércal-Overa La Cañada de San Urbano Mojácar Níjar Roquetas de Mar Tabernas Vélez-Rubio Vícar CÁDIZ Alcalá del Valle Algeciras Arcos de la Frontera Barbate Benalup-Casas Viejas Cádiz Chiclana de la Frontera Chipiona Conil de la Frontera El puerto de Santa Maria Espera Jerez de la Frontera La Línea de la Concepción Prado del Rey Puerto Real Rota San Fernando San José del Valle San Roque Sanlúcar de Barrameda Tarifa Trebujena Vejer de la Frontera Villamartín CÓRDOBA Baena Cabra Córdoba Encinarejo de Cordoba Fernán-Núñez Fuente Obejuna La Rambla Lucena Montalbán de Córdoba Montilla Montoro Monturque Palma del Río Pozoblanco Priego de Córdoba Puente Genil GRANADA Albolote Almuñécar Armilla Baza 130 Benamaurel Cájar Dúrcal Granada Guadix Huétor Vega Illora Jun La Zubia Loja Montefrío Motril Ogíjares Órgiva Salobreña Santa Fe Tocon HUELVA Almonte Aracena Ayamonte Beas Bollullos Par del Condado Cartaya Gibraleón Huelva Isla Cristina La Palma del Condado Lepe Minas de Riotinto Moguer Punta Umbría San Bartolomé de la Torre Trigueros Valverde del Camino JAÉN Alcalá la Real Andújar Baeza Bailén Castillo de Locubín Cazorla Jaén La Carolina Linares Lopera Mancha Real Marmolejo Martos Úbeda Valdepeñas de Jaén Villanueva del Arzobispo MÁLAGA Alhaurín de la Torre Alhaurín el Grande Antequera Arriate Arroyo de la Miel-Benalmádena Costa Benalmádena Cártama Coín Cómpeta El Burgo I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Estepona Frigiliana Fuengirola Málaga Marbella Mijas Nerja Pizarra Puerto de la Torre Ronda San Pedro de Alcántara Torremolinos Torrox Vélez-Málaga SEVILLE Alcalá de Guadaira Arahal Bollullos de la Mitación Carmona Constantina Dos Hermanas Écija El Cuervo El Viso del Alcor Estepa Fuentes de Andalucía La Puebla de Cazalla Las Cabezas de San Juan Lebrija Los Palacios y Villafranca Mairena del Aljarafe Morón de la Frontera Olivares San Juan de Aznalfarache Sanlúcar la Mayor Seville Tomares Utrera Aragon HUESCA Barbastro Binéfar Fraga Huesca Jaca La Sotonera Monzón Sabiñánigo TERUEL Alcañiz Alcorisa Andorra Calamocha Calanda Teruel Utrillas ZARAGOZA Borja Calatayud Casetas Caspe Cuarte de Huerva Ejea de los Caballeros Illueca La Almunia de Doña Godina Pastriz Sádaba Tarazona Uncastillo Villamayor Zaragoza Asturias ASTURIAS Avilés Cangas de Onís Cangas del Narcea Colloto Gijón La Felguera (Langreo) Langreo Latores Llanes Luanco Mieres Moreda Oviedo Pola de Laviana Pola de Lena Pola de Siero Ribadedeva Tineo Tuñón (Santo Adriano) Turon Valdés Balearic Islands BALEARIC ISLANDS Alaior Alaró Alcúdia Algaida Andratx Artà Banyalbufar Biniamar Binissalem Búger Bunyola Caimari Cala Millor Calonge Calvià Campanet Campos Ca’n Picafort Capdepera Ciutadella de Menorca Colònia de Sant Jordi Colònia de Sant Pere Consell Costitx Eivissa Es Castell Es Llombards Es Mercadal Es Migjorn Gran Esporles Estellencs Felanitx Ferreries Formentera Fornalutx Fornells Inca Lloret de Vistalegre Lloseta Llubí Llucmajor Manacor Mancor de la Vall Maó Maria de la Salut Marratxí Montuïri Moscari Muro Palma Palma de Mallorca Palmanyola Peguera Petra Pollença Porreres Port d’Alcudia Port de Sóller Portol Puigpunyent Sa Pobla Sa Vileta Sant Antoni de Portmany Sant Francesc de Formentera Sant Joan Sant Jordi Sant Josep de Sa Talaia Sant Llorenç Des Cardassar Sant Lluís Sant Rafel Santa Eugènia Santa Eulàlia del Riu Santa Margalida Santa Maria del Camí Santa Ponça Santanyí Selva Sencelles Ses Salines Sineu Sóller Son Carrio Son Ferriol Son Serra de Marina Son Servera Vilafranca de Bonany Basque Country ÁLAVA Vitoria-Gasteiz GUIPÚZCOA Arrasate o Mondragón Astigarraga Azpeitia Beasain Bergara Deba Donostia-San Sebastián Eibar Errenteria Irun Legazpi Tolosa Zarautz Zizurkil Zumaia Zumarraga VIZCAYA Amorebieta Barakaldo Bilbao Derio Galdakao Getxo La Arena Portugalete Santurtzi Canary Islands Castile-La Mancha LAS PALMAS Agaete Agüimes Aldea Blanca Almatriche Bajo Arrecife Arucas Corralejo Firgas Gran Tarajal Ingenio Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Maspalomas Mogán Moya Puerto del Rosario San Bartolomé San Bartolomé de Tirajana San Nicolás de Tolentino Santa Brígida Santa Lucía de Tirajana Santa María de Guía Santa María de Guía de Gran Canaria Tahiche Tejeda Telde Tuineje Valsequillo de Gran Canaria Vecindario Yaiza ALBACETE Albacete Almansa Caudete Elche de la Sierra Fuentealbilla Hellín La Roda Tobarra Villarrobledo SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE Adeje Arona Breña Alta Candelaria El Pinar Frontera Granadilla de Abona Guía de Isora Güímar Icod de los Vinos Isora La Laguna La Orotava Los Llanos de Aridane Los Realejos Puerto de la Cruz San Cristóbal de la Laguna San Miguel de Abona San Sebastián de la Gomera Santa Cruz de la Palma Santa Cruz de Tenerife Taco Tacoronte Tegueste Valverde Cantabria CANTABRIA Ampuero Camargo Comillas El Astillero Laredo Reinosa Santander Santoña Suances Torrelavega CIUDAD REAL Alcázar de San Juan Campo de Criptana Ciudad Real Daimiel La Solana Manzanares Puertollano Socuéllamos Tomelloso Valdepeñas CUENCA Carrascosa del Campo Cuenca Tarancón GUADALAJARA Cabanillas del Campo Guadalajara TOLEDO Argés Fuensalida Illescas Madridejos Quintanar de la Orden Sonseca Talavera de la Reina Toledo Torrijos Villacañas Villanueva de Alcardete Yepes Castile & Leon ÁVILA Arenas de San Pedro Arévalo Ávila Fontiveros BURGOS Aranda de Duero Atapuerca Burgos Cardeñadijo Melgar de Fernamental Miranda de Ebro Villarcayo de Merindad de Castilla la Vieja LEON Astorga Bembibre Cacabelos Cistierna León Ponferrada Santa Marina del Rey Trobajo del Camino Villablino PALENCIA Aguilar de Campoo Carrión de los Condes Fuentes de Nava Guardo Palencia San Cebrián de Campos Támara de Campos SALAMANCA Béjar Ciudad Rodrigo Gomecello Peñaranda de Bracamonte Salamanca San Morales Zarapicos SEGOVIA Campo de San Pedro Carbonero el Mayor Cuéllar Segovia Torreiglesias SORIA Almazán Fuentes de Magaña Soria VALLADOLID Laguna de Duero Mayorga Medina de Rioseco Medina del Campo Renedo de Esgueva Santovenia de Pisuerga Simancas Valladolid ZAMORA Benavente Coreses Morales del Vino Zamora Catalonia BARCELONA Aiguafreda Alella Alpens Arenys de Mar Arenys de Munt Argentona Artés Avià Avinyó Avinyonet del Penedès Badalona Badia del Vallès Balenya Balsareny Barberà del Vallès Barcelona Begues Bellaterra Berga Cabrera de Mar Cabrils Calaf Caldes de Montbui Calella Canet de Mar Canovelles Capellades Cardedeu Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 131 Cardona Castellar del Vallès Castelldefels Castellterçol Centelles Cercs Cerdanyola del Vallès Cervelló Collsuspina Cornellà de Llobregat El Masnou El Pont de Vilomara i Rocafort El Prat de Llobregat Els Hostalets de Pierola Esplugues de Llobregat Gavà Gelida Gironella Granollers Guardiola de Berguedà Igualada La Batllòria La Garriga La Llagosta La Pobla de Lillet L’Estany L’Hospitalet de Llobregat Les Franqueses del Vallès Les Masies de Roda Les Masies de Voltregà Llinars del Vallès Malgrat de Mar Malla Manlleu Manresa Martorell Mataró Moià Molins de Rei Mollet del Vallès Monestir de Montserrat Monistrol de Montserrat Montcada i Reixac Montesquiu Montgat Montornès del Vallès Montseny Navarcles Olèrdola Olesa de Bonesvalls Olesa de Montserrat Palafolls Pallejà Piera Pineda de Mar Premià de Dalt Premià de Mar Puig-reig Ripollet Roda de Ter Rubí Sabadell Sant Adrià de Besòs Sant Andreu de la Barca Sant Andreu de Llavaneres Sant Boi de Llobregat Sant Cebrià de Vallalta Sant Celoni Sant Cugat del Vallès Sant Esteve de Palautordera Sant Esteve Sesrovires Sant Feliu de Codines Sant Feliu de Llobregat Sant Hipòlit de Voltregà 132 Sant Joan de Vilatorrada Sant Joan Despí Sant Just Desvern Sant Martí Sarroca Sant Pere de Ribes Sant Pere de Torelló Sant Pol de Mar Sant Quirze de Besora Sant Quirze del Vallès Sant Sadurní d’Anoia Sant Vicenç de Castellet Sant Vicenç de Montalt Sant Vicenç de Torelló Sant Vicenç dels Horts Santa Coloma de Gramenet Santa Fe del Penedès Santa Margarida de Montbui Santa Maria de Palautordera Santa Maria d’Oló Santa Perpètua de Mogoda Santpedor Sentmenat Sitges Súria Taradell Teià Terrassa Tiana Tordera Torelló Torrelles de Llobregat Vic Viladecans Vilafranca del Penedès Vilanova de Sau Vilanova del Camí Vilanova del Vallès Vilanova i la Geltrú Vilassar de Dalt Vilassar de Mar GIRONA Agullana Amer Anglès Arbúcies Argelaguer Banyoles Begur Besalú Blanes Bordils Breda Cadaqués Caldes de Malavella Calonge Camprodon Cantallops Capmany Cassà de la Selva Castelló d’Empúries Castell-Platja d’Aro Celrà Cervià de Ter Cornellà del Terri El Far d’Empordà Esclanya Figueres Flaçà Fornells de la Selva Garriguella Girona Gombrèn Hostalric La Cellera de Ter I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects La Jonquera La Bisbal d’Empordà L’Escala Les Planes d’Hostoles Les Preses Llagostera Llançà Llers Lloret de Mar Les Llosses Maçanet de Cabrenys Maçanet de la Selva Madremanya Massanes Medinya Mieres Mollet de Peralada Montagut Ogassa Olot Palafrugell Palamós Pau Pedret i Marzà Peralada Platja d’Aro Puigcerdà Quart Ribes de Freser Ripoll Riudarenes Riudellots de la Selva Salt Sant Antoni de Calonge Sant Feliu de Buixalleu Sant Feliu de Guíxols Sant Feliu de Pallerols Sant Gregori Sant Hilari Sacalm Sant Joan de les Abadesses Sant Joan de Mollet Sant Joan les Fonts Sant Julià de Ramis Sant Pau de Segúries Santa Coloma de Farners Santa Cristina d’Aro Santa Pau Sarrià de Ter Serinyà Sils Terrades Torroella de Montgrí Tossa de Mar Vallfogona de Ripollès Vidreres Vilabertran Viladamat Viladasens Vilafant Vilajuïga Vilamalla Vilanova de la Muga LLEIDA Agramunt Alfarràs Alguaire Almenar Alòs de Balaguer Artesa de Lleida Artesa de Segre Arties Balaguer Bellpuig Bellver de Cerdanya Bellvís Benavent de Segrià Castelldans Cervera Corbins El Pont de Suert Esterri d’Àneu Golmés Guimerà Guissona Ivars d’Urgell Juncosa Juneda La Fuliola La Pobla de Segur La Seu d’Urgell La Torre de Cabdella Lés Les Borges Blanques Lleida Menàrguens Mollerussa Oliana Organyà Ponts Rialp Sant Llorenç de Morunys Seròs Solsona Sort Tàrrega Torregrossa Torres de Segre Tremp Vallbona de les Monges Vielha e Mijaran TARRAGONA Aiguamúrcia Alcanar Alcover Altafulla Amposta El Perelló El Vendrell La Fatarella La Selva del Camp La Sénia Les Borges del Camp Les Cases d’Alcanar L’Espluga de Francolí Calafell Camarles Cambrils Deltebre Falset Fontscaldes Gandesa Jesús Miami Platja Montblanc Mont-roig del Camp Móra d’Ebre Móra la Nova Picamoixons Poblet Raval de Cristo Reus Roquetes Salou Sant Carles de la Ràpita Sant Jaume dels Domenys Sant Jaume d’Enveja Sant Salvador Santa Bàrbara Santa Coloma de Queralt Santa Oliva Tarragona Torredembarra Tortosa Ulldecona Valls Vila-rodona Vila-seca Extremadura BADAJOZ Almendralejo Azuaga Badajoz Burguillos del Cerro Cabeza del Buey Calamonte Castuera Don Benito Fuente de Cantos Hornachos Llerena Mérida Montijo Navalvillar de Pela Olivenza Ribera del Fresno San Vicente de Alcántara Talarrubias Villafranca de los Barros Villanueva de la Serena Zafra CÁCERES Albalá del Caudillo Alcántara Alcuéscar Cáceres Coria Hervás Jaraíz de la Vera Logrosán Miajadas Moraleja Navalmoral de la Mata Plasencia Torrejón el Rubio Trujillo Galicia A CORUÑA A Coruña A Pobra do Caramiñal Ames Arteixo Betanzos Cabana de Bergantiños Carballo Carnota Cee Culleredo Ferrol Muros Narón Noia Oleiros Ortigueira Outes Ribeira Sada San Marcos Santiago de Compostela LUGO Burela Lugo Monforte de Lemos Ribadeo Vilalba Viveiro ORENSE Celanova Laza Maceda Ourense Velle Verín Xinzo de Limia PONTEVEDRA A Guarda Cangas Marín Meaño Moaña Nigrán O Grove O Porriño Pontevedra Redondela Vigo Vilagarcía de Arousa Vilanova de Arousa La Rioja LA RIOJA Alfaro Arnedo Autol Calahorra Haro Leza de Río Leza Logroño Nájera Nalda Rincón de Soto Santo Domingo de la Calzada Madrid MADRID Alcalá de Henares Alcobendas Alcorcón Aranjuez Arganda del Rey Collado Mediano Collado Villalba Colmenar Viejo Coslada Fuenlabrada Getafe Las Matas-Pinar-Monte Rozas Las Rozas de Madrid Leganés Madrid Majadahonda Móstoles Navacerrada Parla Pedrezuela Pinto Pozuelo de Alarcón Rivas-Vaciamadrid San Fernando de Henares San Lorenzo de el Escorial San Sebastián de los Reyes Torrejón de Ardoz Tres Cantos Valdemoro Villanueva de la Cañada Villaviciosa de Odón Zulema Murcia MURCIA Abarán Águilas Alcantarilla Alquerias Beniajan Bullas Caravaca de la Cruz Cartagena Ceutí Cieza El Palmar o Lugar de Don Juan Jumilla La Palma Lo Campano Lorca Molina de Segura Murcia Puerto Lumbreras San Javier Torre-Pacheco Totana Yecla Navarre NAVARRE Ansoáin Aoiz/Agoitz Barañain Burgui/Burgi Cadreita Cascante Cintruénigo Corella Estella/Lizarra Ilundain Noain Olite Pamplona/Iruña Tudela Valencian Community ALICANTE Alcoy/Alcoi Alicante/Alacant Aspe Banyeres de Mariola Benidorm Bigastro Callosa de Segura Callosa d’en Sarrià Castalla Cocentaina Crevillent El Campello Elche/Elx Elda Gata de Gorgos Guardamar del Segura Ibi Monóvar/Monòver Muro de Alcoy Novelda Orihuela Pego Petrer San Vicente del Raspeig/Sant Vicent del Raspeig Sant Joan d’Alacant Santa Pola Sax Teulada Torrevieja Villajoyosa/la Vila Joiosa Villena CASTELLÓN Benicarló Burriana Castellón de la Plana/Castelló de la Plana La Vall d’Uixó Morella Nules Onda Oropesa del Mar/Orpesa Peñíscola Villarreal/Vila-real Vinaròs VALENCIA Albaida Algemesí Almàssera Alzira Benifaió Bocairent Burjassot Canals Carlet Castelló de la Ribera Catarroja Cullera Gandia Godella Guadassuar La Pobla Llarga Llíria Mislata Museros Oliva Ontinyent Paterna Quart de Poblet Requena Rocafort Rótova Sagunto/Sagunt Sueca Torrent Valencia Villar del Arzobispo Ceuta CEUTA Melilla MELILLA Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 133 Institutions that have collaborated with the ”la Caixa” Foundation in 2005 Abriendo Puertas. As. de Jóvenes Especiales. Moguer (Huelva) Acadèmia Mariana. Lleida Acció Familiar. Barcelona Acción Familiar. Madrid ACSUR Las Segovias. Madrid ACTUA Vallès. Sabadell (Barcelona) ADACE-CLM. As. de Daño Cerebral Sobrevenido. Argés (Toledo) AEMA - Fira d’entitats. Blanes (Girona) Affamer. Vilassar de Mar (Barcelona) Afromujer de Andalucía. Seville AGAMAMA - Asociación Gaditana de Mujeres Mastectomizadas. Cádiz Agermanament sense fronteres. Barcelona Agropecuaria l’Olivera, SCCL. Vallbona de les Monges (Lleida) Agrupació d’Avis de Santa Maria d’Oló (Barcelona) Agrupació de Defensa Forestal de Mieres (Girona) Agrupació d’Homenatge a la Vellesa. Girona Agrupació Naturalista i Ecologista de la Garrotxa. Olot (Girona) Agrupa’t. Lleida AIXIÑA. Ourense Ajuntament d’Alaior (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament d’Hostalric (Girona) Ajuntament d’Agullana (Girona) Ajuntament d’Aiguafreda (Barcelona) Ajuntament d’Aiguamúrcia (Tarragona) Ajuntament d’Alcoi (Alicante) Ajuntament d’Alcover (Tarragona) Ajuntament d’Alfarràs (Lleida) Ajuntament d’Amposta (Tarragona) Ajuntament d’Andratx (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament d’Anglès (Girona) Ajuntament d’Arenys de Mar (Barcelona) Ajuntament d’Argentona (Barcelona) Ajuntament d’Artesa de Lleida Ajuntament d’Avià (Barcelona) Ajuntament d’Avinyó (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Badalona (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Badia del Vallès (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Balaguer (Lleida) Ajuntament de Banyalbufar (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Barcelona Ajuntament de Begur (Girona) Ajuntament de Bellver de Cerdanya (Lleida) Ajuntament de Benicarló (Castellón) Ajuntament de Benidorm (Alicante) Ajuntament de Besalú (Girona) Ajuntament de Binissalem (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Blanes (Girona) Ajuntament de Breda (Girona) Ajuntament de Bunyola (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Burjassot (Valencia) Ajuntament de Burriana (Castellón) Ajuntament de Cabrils (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Cadaqués (Girona) Ajuntament de Cadaqués (Girona) Ajuntament de Calafell (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Caldes de Montbui (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Calonge (Girona) Ajuntament de Calvià (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Camarles (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Cambrils (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Campanet (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Campos (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Camprodon (Girona) Ajuntament de Castelldefels (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Castelló de la Plana Ajuntament de Celrà (Girona) Ajuntament de Cerdanyola del Vallès (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Cervelló (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Cervià de Ter (Girona) Ajuntament de Ciutadella (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Collsuspina (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Consell (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Cornellà de Llobregat (Barcelona) 134 Ajuntament de Costitx (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Deltebre (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Falset (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Felanitx (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Ferreries (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Flaçà (Girona) Ajuntament de Formentera (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Fornalutx (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Fornells de la Selva (Girona) Ajuntament de Gandia (Valencia) Ajuntament de Gavà (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Gironella (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Guardamar del Segura (Alicante) Ajuntament de La Bisbal d’Empordà (Girona) Ajuntament de La Jonquera (Girona) Ajuntament de La Pobla de Segur (Lleida) Ajuntament de La Sénia (Tarragona) Ajuntament de La Torre de Cabdella (Lleida) Ajuntament de Les (Lleida) Ajuntament de Les Borges Blanques (Lleida) Ajuntament de Les Llosses (Girona) Ajuntament de Les Masies de Voltregà (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Les Preses (Girona) Ajuntament de L’Escala (Girona) Ajuntament de L’Estany (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Llagostera (Girona) Ajuntament de Llançà (Girona) Ajuntament de Lleida Ajuntament de Llers (Girona) Ajuntament de Maçanet de Cabrenys (Girona) Ajuntament de Madremanya (Girona) Ajuntament de Malla (Girona) Ajuntament de Manlleu (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Manresa (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Maó (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Marratxí (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Martorell (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Massanes (Girona) Ajuntament de Menàrguens (Lleida) Ajuntament de Mieres (Girona) Ajuntament de Moià (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Molins de Rei (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Mollerussa (Lleida) Ajuntament de Mollet de Peralada (Girona) Ajuntament de Montagut (Girona) Ajuntament de Mont-roig del Camp (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Navarcles (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Palafrugell (Girona) Ajuntament de Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Pau (Girona) Ajuntament de Pedret i Marzà (Girona) Ajuntament de Peralada (Girona) Ajuntament de Petra (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Pineda de Mar (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Ponts (Lleida) Ajuntament de Porreres (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Puigcerdà (Girona) Ajuntament de Puigpunyent (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Requena (Valencia) Ajuntament de Reus (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Ripoll (Girona) Ajuntament de Riudellots de la Selva (Girona) Ajuntament de Roda de Ter (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Antoni de Portmany (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Sant Boi de Llobregat (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Carles de la Ràpita (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Sant Cebrià de Vallalta (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Cugat del Vallès (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Feliu de Buixalleu (Girona) I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Ajuntament de Sant Feliu de Llobregat (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Feliu de Pallerols (Girona) Ajuntament de Sant Hipòlit de Voltregà (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Joan de Mollet (Girona) Ajuntament de Sant Lluís (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Sant Martí Sarroca (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Pau de Segúries (Girona) Ajuntament de Sant Quirze de Besora (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Sadurní d’Anoia (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Sant Vicent del Raspeig (Alicante) Ajuntament de Santa Coloma de Gramenet (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Santa Coloma de Queralt (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Santa Fe del Penedès (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Santa Maria del Camí (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Santa Oliva (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Sarrià de Ter (Girona) Ajuntament de Serinyà (Girona) Ajuntament de Sils (Girona) Ajuntament de Solsona (Lleida) Ajuntament de Son Serra de Marina (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament de Sort (Lleida) Ajuntament de Taradell (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Tàrrega (Lleida) Ajuntament de Tordera (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Torredembarra (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Torroella de Montgrí (Girona) Ajuntament de Tossa de Mar (Girona) Ajuntament de València Ajuntament de Valls (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Vic (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Vilabertran (Girona) Ajuntament de Viladamat (Girona) Ajuntament de Viladasens (Girona) Ajuntament de Vilafant (Girona) Ajuntament de Vilafranca del Penedès (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Vilajuiga (Girona) Ajuntament de Vilamalla (Girona) Ajuntament de Vilanova de Sau (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Vilanova del Vallès (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Vilanova i la Geltrú (Barcelona) Ajuntament de Vila-Rodona (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Vila-Seca (Tarragona) Ajuntament de Vilassar de Dalt (Barcelona) Ajuntament d’Eivissa (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament del Masnou (Barcelona) Ajuntament del Perelló (Tarragona) Ajuntament del Pont de Suert (Lleida) Ajuntament del Prat de Llobregat (Barcelona) Ajuntament del Vendrell (Tarragona) Ajuntament d’Elx (Alicante) Ajuntament des Castell (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament des Mercadal (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament d’Hostalric (Girona) Ajuntament d’Igualada (Barcelona) Ajuntament d’Inca (Balearic Islands) Ajuntament d’Ivars d’Urgell (Lleida) Ajuntament d’Ogassa (Girona) Ajuntament d’Olesa de Bonesvalls (Barcelona) Ajuntament d’Ontinyent (Valencia) Ajuntament d’Orihuela (Alicante) ALCER Burgos. As. para la Lucha contra las Enfermedades Renales Crónicas ALCER Ebro. Zaragoza Alcohólicos Rehabilitados de Vigo (Pontevedra) ALMON. Asociación Leonesa de Mujeres Operadas de Cáncer de Mama. Leon Althaia Xarxa Assistencial de Manresa, Fundació Privada (Barcelona) ALUCEM. As. Lucense de Esclerosis Múltiple. Lugo Amacmec. As. de Mujeres Afectadas por Cáncer de Mama de Elche y Comarca. Elche (Alicante) AMAMMEC Valencia Amas de Casa y Consumidores Tyrius.Albaida (Valencia) Amics de la Ciutat. Barcelona Amics de la Gent Gran. Barcelona Amics de la Tortuga de l’Albera. Garriguella (Girona) Amics de l’Illa de l’Hospital. Maó (Balearic Islands) Amigos de la Tierra. Madrid Amigos del Magreb. Navalmoral de la Mata (Cáceres) Amigos Escaes Perú. Vigo (Pontevedra) Amistat, L’. Mollerussa (Lleida) AMPA del Centre Públic d’Educació Especial Esperança. Lleida AMPA del Col·legi Public Dr. Folch i Camarasa. Barcelona AMUMA. Asociación de Mujeres Afectadas de Cáncer de Mama. Ciudad Real Animayor, SL, Animación para Mayores. Madrid Antigua Iglesia de la Compañía de Jesús. Caravaca de la Cruz (Murcia) Antiguo Ayuntamiento. Candelaria (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) APAMM. Asociación Provincial de Alicante de Mujeres Mastectomizadas. Alicante APANAH. Elda (Alicante) APASCIDE. Asociación Española de Padres de Sordociegos. Madrid Apoyo Positivo. Madrid APROSCOM. Manacor (Balearic Islands) APS Compañía para la integración S.L. Malaga Arasti Barca M.A.S.L. Burgos Arc, L’. Taller de Música Fundació Privada.Barcelona Arrels Fundació. Barcelona Arte y Cultura de Japón. Madrid Artes Gráficas de Narón, SL. (A Coruña) Arxiu Comarcal del Pallars Sobirà. Sort (Lleida) Arxiu de la Catedral de Lleida As. a Favor de Personas con Retraso Mental. Velle (Ourense) As. Abanzheimer Murcia. Abarán As. Abulense del Síndrome de Down. Ávila (Madrid) As. ADAMAR. Madrid As. ADEPSI. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria As. Agarimo. Arteixo (A Coruña) As. Agiantza. Bilbao (Vizcaya) As. Ainkaren. Zaragoza As. Alba d’Atenció al Disminuït. Tàrrega (Lleida) As. ALBA. Almería As. Alcohólicos Rehabilitados Loperanos. Lopera (Jaén) As. Alicantina de Operados de Laringe. Alicante As. Almería Acoge As. Alternativas al Menor. Malaga As. Alzheimer de Catalunya. Barcelona As. Alzheimer Murcia As. Alzheimer Santa Elena. Seville As. Alzheimer Vélez-Málaga (Malaga) As. Amics de la Mitjana Edat s’Alborada. Alaró (Balearic Islands) As. Amics de Sant Josep del Molí. Badalona (Barcelona) As. Amigos Contra el Sida. Maspalomas (Las Palmas) As. Amigos de Alzheimer de Almería As. Amigos del Camino de Santiago en el Bierzo. Ponferrada (Leon) As. Amigos del Camino de Santiago. Burgos As. Amiticia. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) As. Andalusí de Transplantados Hepáticos.Cordoba As. Andaluza contra la Fibrosis Quística.Seville As. Andaluza de Apoyo a la Infancia. Granada As. Andaluza de Mujeres Mastectomizadas. Granada As. Apoyo. Madrid As. Aragonesa de Empresas de Inserción. Zaragoza As. Aragonesa de Enfermedades Neuromusculares. Zaragoza As. Aragonesa de Entidades para Personas con Discapacidad Intelectual. Zaragoza As. Aragonesa de Esclerosis Múltiple.Zaragoza As. Aragonesa para Problemas de Crecimiento. Zaragoza As. Aragonesa Pro Salud Mental. Zaragoza As. Arca per a la Inserció. Barcelona As. Assistencial Llar Trobada. Barcelona As. Asturiana de Retinosis Pigmentaria.Oviedo (Asturias) As. Aula Cultural. Palma de Mallorca As. Autismo Ávila As. Baena Solidaria (Cordoba) As. Balear de Parkinson. Palma de Mallorca As. Balear del Síndrome de X. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) As. Balear d’Esclerosi Lateral Amiotròfica. Santa Maria del Camí (Balearic Islands) As. Balear d’Esclerosi Múltiple. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) As. Balzheimer. Palma del Río (Cordoba) As. Benéfica Patronato de Santo Domingo. Malaga As. Benéfica Reyes Magos 98. Algeciras (Cadiz) As. Benéfico Geriátrica. Getafe (Madrid) As. Benéfico Social de Padres y Amigos, La Esperanza del Valle Miñor. Nigrán (Pontevedra) As. Benéfico Social MAIN. Almatriche Bajo (Las Palmas) As. Benestar i Desenvolupament. Barcelona As. Bipolar de Madrid As. Bizkaina de Esclerosis Lateral Amiotrófica. Bilbao (Vizcaya) As. Border-Line de Granada As. Brote de Vida. Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) As. Burgueña de Alzheimer. El Burgo (Malaga) As. Ca teva. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) As. Cabeceña de Lucha contra la Droga Sida. Las Cabezas de San Juan (Seville) As. Cacereña de Padres y Protectores de Personas afectadas de Parálisis Cerebral. Cáceres As. Canaan. Centre Assistencial. Banyoles (Girona) As. Canaria de Cáncer de Mama de Tenerife. Santa Cruz de Tenerife As. Canaria de Cáncer de Mama. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria As. Cántabra de Enfermos de Fibromialgia. Santander (Cantabria) As. Cántabra de Espina Bífida e Hidrocefalia de Santander (Cantabria) As. Cántabra de Lucha contra el Paro. Santander (Cantabria) As. Cántabra Pro Salud Mental. Santander (Cantabria) As. Casal dels Infants del Raval. Barcelona As. Catalana de Malalties Neuromusculars. Barcelona As. Catalana de Malalts de Huntington. Barcelona As. Catalana d’Esclerosi Múltiple J.M. Charcot. Barcelona As. Catalana d’Ostomitzats, ACO. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. Catalana Infància Maltractada. Barcelona As. Catalana per la Pau. Barcelona As. Católica Española de Migración. Madrid As. Católica Española Servicio a Juventud Femenina. Cáceres As. Cedre per la Promoció Social. Barcelona As. Centre d’Educació Ambiental Alt TerPirineus Orientals. Sant Pau de Segúries (Girona) As. Centro de Acción Social San Rafael. Madrid As. Centro de Investigación Cooperativa en Biociencias. Derio (Vizcaya) As. Centro de Yoga Santosha. Gijón (Asturias) As. Centro Down. Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) As. Centro Ocupacional Taller de la Amistad. Frigiliana (Malaga) As. Ciezana de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer. Cieza (Murcia) As. Ciudadana Anti-Sida de Málaga As. Ciudadana Cantabra Anti Sida. Santander (Cantabria) As. Ciudadana contra el Sida de Castellón. Castellón de la Plana As. Cívica de Ayuda Mutua. Barcelona As. Cívica La Nau. Barcelona As. Club de Ocio Ágora. Mérida (Badajoz) As. Club d’Esplai la Florida. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. Club Santa Teresina. Lleida As. Colectivo la Huertecica. Cartagena (Murcia) As. Colectivo Paréntesis. El Palmar o Lugar de Don Juan (Murcia) As. Columbares. Beniaján (Murcia) As. Comarcal Amigos Alzheimer Cuevas del Almanzora (Almería) As. Comarcal de Afectados por el Cáncer. Villena (Alicante) As. Comarcal de Padres y Protectores de Minusválidos Psíquicos de Cieza (Murcia) As. Comarcal Familiares Alzheimer Acofa 26 de marzo. Andújar (Jaén) As. Comarcal para la Atención del Toxicómano. Algeciras (Cadiz) As. Comarcal Vallenca de Familiars amb Nens, Adolescents i Adults Deficients Psíquics. Valls (Tarragona) As. Combasant. Alcantarilla (Murcia) As. Compartir. Rubí (Barcelona) As. Compostelana de Esclerosis Múltiple. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) As. Conileña para la Integración de las Personas con Discapacidad. Conil de la Frontera (Cadiz) As. Cooperacció. Barcelona As. Cooperación y Desarrollo con el Norte de África. CODENAF. Seville As. Coordinadora d’Ajuda Unida, ACAU. Terrassa (Barcelona) As. Cordobesa de Enfermos Afectados de Espondilitis. Cordoba As. Cordobesa de Esclerosis Múltiple. Cordoba As. Cordobesa de Parálisis Cerebral y Otras Afecciones Similares. Cordoba As. Cordobesa para la Integración de Niños. Cordoba As. Coruñesa de Esclerosis Múltiple. A Coruña As. Cristiana Encuentro y Esperanza. Madrid As. Cultura Viva Santboiana. Sant Boi de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. Cultural Cives Mundi. Soria As. Cultural Colectivo de Inmigrantes Independientes. Seville As. Cultural de Almadieros Navarros. Burgui (Navarre) As. Cultural de Sordos de Mérida (Badajoz) As. Cultural de Sordos de Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) As. Cultural Deportiva Nuestra Señora de Luna. Pozoblanco (Cordoba) As. Cultural Gruñidos Salvajes. Madrid As. Cultural i Recreativa des Migjorn Gran (Balearic Islands) As. Cultural Inmigrantes de Guinea Bissau Luso-Africanos. Seville As. Cultural La Kalle. Madrid As. Cultural Mar de Niebla. Gijón (Asturias) As. Cultural Súbete. Gijón (Asturias) As. Cultural Talloc. Madrid As. Cultural Teatro Yeses. Alcalá de Henares (Madrid) As. Cultural Viarany (Barcelona) As. Cultural Villa de Támara (Palencia) As. Cultural y Deportiva Alayos. Granada As. d’Amics de l’Escola Pia al Senegal. Mataró (Barcelona) As. d’Ajuda a Drogodependents. Olot (Girona) As. d’Ajuda als Toxicòmans. Barcelona As. d’Ajuda i Reinserció del Toxicòman. Terrassa (Barcelona) As. d’Ajut als Malalts d’Alzheimer i Afectats de Figueres (Girona) As. d’Alzheimer de Reus i Baix Camp. Reus (Tarragona) As. d’Alzheimer i altres Demències Degeneratives. Banyeres de Mariola (Alicante) As. d’Amics de la Gent Gran Santa Magdalena. La Pobla de Segur (Lleida) As. d’Amics del Jardí Botànic de Barcelona As. d’Amics del Museu de Zoologia. Barcelona As. d’Antics Alumnes de la Salle. Cambrils (Tarragona) As. de Afectados de Fibromialgia de la Foia. Castalla (Alicante) As. de Alcohólicos Rehabilitados de Palencia As. de Alcohólicos Rehabilitados de Yecla (Murcia) As. de Alumnos Pablo Freire. Albox (Almería) As. de Amigos de Amati. Granada As. de Amigos de la Marina Alta de Ayuda a Enfermos Mentales. Gata de Gordos (Alicante) As. de Amigos de los Humedales del Sur de Alicante. Elche (Alicante) As. de Amigos y Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer de Yecla (Murcia) As. de Amigos y Familiares de Ibi (Alicante) As. de Animación Sociocultural AVALON. Granada As. de Antiguas Alumnas del Cuco. Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) As. de Axuda ó Enfermo Mental Avelaiña. A Guarda (Pontevedra) As. de Axuda ó Enfermo Mental. Burela (Lugo) As. de Ayuda a Paralíticos Cerebrales. Gijón (Asturias) As. de Ayuda al Drogodependiente y Familiares y de Prevención de Menores en Riesgo Social Puerta Abierta. Moguer (Huelva) As. de Ayuda al Enfermo Psíquico DOA. Vigo (Pontevedra) As. de Ayuda en Carretera de Bizkaia. Bilbao (Vizcaya) As. de Bipolars de Catalunya As. de Colombian@s en el País Vasco. Bilbao (Vizcaya) As. de Diabéticos de Gran Canaria. Las Palmas As. de Discapacitados El Castillo. Puerto Lumbreras (Murcia) As. de Discapacitados Físicos Extremeños. Badajoz As. de Discapacitados Físicos, Psíquicos y Sensoriales. Baeza (Jaén) As. de Discapacitados Físicos, Psíquicos y Sensoriales. Espera (Cadiz) As. de Discapacitados Oscenses Miguel Servet. Huesca As. de Disminuidos Físicos de Abarán (Murcia) As. de Disminuidos Físicos de la Ribera de Tudela (Navarre) As. de Disminuidos Físicos y Psíquicos de Corella (Navarre) As. de Disminuidos Psíquicos AMICOS. Ribeira (A Coruña) As. de Disminuidos Psíquicos Angel Custodio. Teruel As. de Disminuidos Psíquicos Cinco Villas. Ejea de los Caballeros (Zaragoza) As. de Disminuidos Psíquicos Con Eles. Vilagarcia de Arousa (Pontevedra) As. de Disminuidos Psíquicos Cuenca Minera. Utrillas (Teruel) As. de Disminuidos Psíquicos Las Fuentes. Zaragoza As. de Disminuïts Físics d’Osona. Vic (Barcelona) As. de Dones en la Lluita de les Malalties del Càncer de Mama, ARIADNA. Olesa de Montserrat (Barcelona) As. de Educadores Castellano-Leoneses. Salamanca As. de Educadores Nuestro Barrio. Cádiz As. de Empleados de Iberia Padres de Minusválidos. Malaga As. de Empresas de Economía Social de Canarias. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria As. de Encuentro y Acogida al Toxicómano. Cordoba As. de Enfermos de Parkinson andaluces. Seville As. de Enfermos de Parkinson de Astorga y Comarca (Leon) As. de Enfermos de Parkinson de Córdoba As. de Enfermos de Parkinson del Bierzo. Ponferrada (Leon) As. de Enfermos Psíquicos de Elda, Petrer y Comarca. Elda (Alicante) As. de Enfermos y Familiares de Alzheimer y Demencias. Pizarra (Malaga) As. de Enfermos y Familiares de Parkinson de Algeciras (Cadiz) As. de Esclerosis Múltiple de Alicante As. de Esclerosis Múltiple de Almería As. de Esclerosis Múltiple de Bizkaia. Bilbao As. de Esclerosis Múltiple de Ibiza y Formentera (Balearic Islands) As. de Esclerosis Múltiple de Navarra. Pamplona/Iruña As. de Esclerosis Múltiple del Campo de Gibraltar. La Línea de la Concepción (Cadiz) As. de Esclerosis Múltiple Isla de Menorca. Maó (Balearic Islands) As. de Esclerosis Múltiple. Madrid As. de Estudios Ornitológicos del Bierzo. Ponferrada (Leon) As. de Familiares Alzheimer de Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) As. de Familiares Cuidadores Pro-Enfermos de Alzheimer de Tres Cantos (Madrid) As. de Familiares de Adultos con Problemas. Pedrezuela (Madrid) As. de Familiares de Alzheimer de Antequera. Malaga As. de Familiares de Alzheimer de Lepe y su Comarca (Huelva) As. de Familiares de Alzheimer de Salamanca As. de Familiares de Alzheimer de Valencia As. de Familiares de Alzheimer y otras Demencias. Daimiel (Ciudad Real) As. de Familiares de Alzheimer y otras Demencias. Requena (Valencia) As. de Familiares de Enfermos afectos de la Enfermedad y Síndrome de Alzheimer. La Línea de la Concepción (Cadiz) As. de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzeimer de Mijas (Malaga) As. de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer Acuérdate de mí. Bigastro (Alicante) As. de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer ALFUSAL de Priego de Córdoba As. de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer Bajo Aragón Los Calatravos. Alcañiz (Teruel) As. de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer Bajo Aragón. 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Vilanova del Camí (Barcelona) As. de Personas con Deficiencia Mental de Arganda del Rey (Madrid) As. de Personas con Discapacitados de Alcoy (Alicante) As. de Personas Sordas de Lorca y Comarca (Granada) As. de Persones Majors de Llucmajor (Balearic Islands) As. de PP de AA Iniciativa Progreso del CEE. Granada As. de Prevención y Estudios de las Toxicómano. Almonte (Huelva) As. de Promoción Comunitaria de Pan Bendito. Madrid As. de Promoción de Servicios Sociales. Madrid As. de Promoción y Atención del Minusválido. Jaén As. de Rehabilitació del Minusvàlid. Lleida As. De Reinserción Social Erroak. DonostiaSan Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) As. de Síndrome de Down de Extremadura. Mérida (Badajoz) As. de Síndrome de Down en Cuenca y Provincia. Cuenca As. de Sords de Sabadell (Barcelona) As. de Suport al Disminuït Psíquic Mare de Déu de Bellvitge. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. de Teatro para la Integración de Personas. Ciudad Real As. de Trabajadores e Inmigrantes Marroquíes. Logroño (La Rioja) As. de Trabajadores e Inmigrantes Marroquíes. Murcia As. de Trasplantados de Corazón de Andalucía. Seville As. de Vecinos Bellavista. Les Franqueses del Vallès (Barcelona) As. de Vecinos El Tajo. Toledo As. de Vecinos Paraguay-Perú. Barcelona As. de Veïnats Es Rafal Vell. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) As. de Veïns Barri Morera. Badalona (Barcelona) As. de Veïns Casal Raval de Cristo. Tarragona As. de Veïns de Sant Pere de Banyoles (Girona) As. de Veïns del Barri de Gràcia. Barcelona As. de Veins del Barri Mas Palau de Banyoles (Girona) As. de Veïns El Casal de Medinyà (Girona) As. de Veïns Ferreries. Tortosa (Tarragona) As. de Veïns Rocabruna de Picamoixons (Tarragona) As. de Voluntariado Penitenciario Gallego. Vigo (Pontevedra) As. de Voluntarios de Informática de Mayores de Andalucía, AVIMA As. dels Grups de Suport de l’Esclerosi Lateral Amiotròfica. Badalona (Barcelona) As. Democrática Asturiana de Familias con Alzheimer. Gijón (Asturias) As. Desarrollo. Albacete As. d’Esclerosi Múltiple de Castelló de la Plana As. d’Homenatge a la Vellesa de Begur (Girona) As. Diagnosticadas de Cáncer de Mama. Cangas (Pontevedra) As. Dignidad. El Ferrol (A Coruña) As. Discapacitados de Lanzarote. Tahiche (Las Palmas) As. Donalliure. Valencia As. Drapaires. Barcelona As. Edad Dorada Mensajeros de la Paz Andalucía. Jaén As. Educativa Ítaca. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. Egueiro. Tarragona As. El Bastidor. Oliva (Valencia) As. El Sauce. Lucena (Cordoba) As. Elche Acoge (Alicante) As. Elige la Vida. Seville As. EMAD Sant Feliu, Entorn Malalts d’Alzheimer. Sant Feliu de Guíxols (Girona) As. en favor de las Personas con Discapacidad. San Pedro de Alcántara (Malaga) As. en favor de las Personas con Retraso Mental. Montijo (Badajoz) As. Enfermos de Alzheimer y Familiares de Mislata (Valencia) As. Enfermos de Parkinson de Astorga y Comarca (Leon) As. Enfermos de Parkinson en Málaga As. Entorn Malaltia d’Alzheimer, AEMA. Lloret de Mar (Girona) As. entre Pinto y Valdemoro. Pinto (Madrid) As. Es Garrover. Inca (Balearic Islands) As. Esclat. Barcelona As. Esclerosis Multiple de Guipuzcoa, ADEM. Donostia-San Sebastián As. Escuela El Cau. Valencia As. Española contra el Cáncer. A Coruña As. Española contra el Cáncer. Alicante As. Española contra el Cáncer. Bilbao (Vizcaya) As. Española contra el Cáncer. Cáceres As. Española contra el Cáncer. Castellón de la Plana As. Española contra el Cáncer. Ceuta As. Española contra el Cáncer. Cordoba As. Española contra el Cáncer. Girona As. Española contra el Cáncer. Guadalajara As. Española contra el Cáncer. Logroño (La Rioja) As. Española contra el Cáncer. Malaga As. Española contra el Cáncer. Ourense As. Española contra el Cáncer. Santa Cruz de Tenerife As. Española contra el Cáncer. Segovia As. Española contra el Cáncer. Teruel As. Española contra el Cáncer. Zamora As. Española contra el Cáncer. Zaragoza As. Española de Aniridia. Madrid As. Española de Esclerosis Múltiple de Albacete As. Española de Esclerosis Múltiple de Cuenca As. Española de Miastenia. Cordoba As. Española de Patologías Mitocondriales. Seville As. Española del Síndrome de Joubert. Madrid As. Española para Pacientes con Tics y y Síndrome de Tourette. Barcelona As. Eunate de Familiares y Amigos de Personas con Deficiencias Auditivas de Navarra. Pamplona/Iruña (Navarre) As. Familiar de Ayuda a Minusválidos Psíquicos. Sanlúcar de Barrameda (Cadiz) As. Familiares Alzheimer de Laciana, AFAOLA. Villablino (Leon) As. Familiares Alzheimer de Lanzarote. Arrecife (Las Palmas) As. Familiares Alzheimer de Talavera de la Reina (Toledo) As. Familiares Alzheimer de Tomelloso (Ciudad Real) As. Familiares Alzheimer Valencia As. Familiares de Afectados de Esclerosis Múltiple de Burgos As. Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer de El Ejido (Almería) As. Familiares y Amigos de Enfermos de Alzheimer. Alcoy (Alicante) As. Familiares y Enfermos Neuromusculares Valencia As. Familiars Alzheimer Francisco Amat. Sant Boi de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. Familiars Malalts d’Alzheimer de les Terres de l’Ebre. Tortosa (Tarragona) As. Familiars Rapitencs Alzheimer i Parkinson. Sant Carles de la Ràpita (Tarragona) As. Fontaiña. Vigo (Pontevedra) As. Franciscana de Apoyo Social. Zulema (Madrid) As. Fuenlabreña de Esclerosis Múltiple. Fuenlabrada (Madrid) As. Fundació Astres. Girona As. Gaditana de Esclerosis Múltiple. Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) As. Galega para Axuda dos Enfermos de Alzheimer. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) As. Gijonesa de Caridad. Gijón As. Granadina de Esclerosis Múltiple. Armilla (Granada) As. Granadina de Familias para la Rehabilitación del Daño Cerebral. Granada As. Granadina de Jugadores de Azar en Rehabilitación. Granada As. Grupo Martes de Valencia As. Guimerà.info (Lleida) As. Hogar el Buen Samaritano. Cartagena (Murcia) As. Hontanar. Madrid As. Huelva Acoge As. IEMAKAIE. Cordoba As. Infantil i Juvenil Casal Xerinola. Mataró (Barcelona) As. Infantil Oncológica de la Comunidad de Madrid As. Iniciatives Solidàries. Valencia As. Intercultural Bastis Solidarias. Santander (Cantabria) As. Intersectorial de Recuperadors i Empreses Socials de Catalunya, AIRES. Barcelona As. Isleña para la Defensa del Minusválido. Isla Cristina (Huelva) As. IZARBIDE. Asociación de mayores voluntarios en informática de Guipúzcoa As. Jaén Acoge As. JAIRE. Madrid As. Jesús Nazareno de Alzheimer y Otras Demencias. Baena (Cordoba) As. Jienense Esclerosis Múltiple Virgen del Carmen. Baeza (Jaén) As. Juan Díaz de Solís. Lebrija (Seville) As. Jubilats i Pensionistes d’Almenar (Lleida) As. Juvenil ATZ. Madrid As. Juvenil Casa de Juventud Aleste. Valladolid As. Juvenil Gent d’Alcoi (Alicante) As. Juvenil IRIS Vallecano. Madrid As. Juvenil Sòcio-Cultural de Prosperitat. Barcelona As. La Casa Grande de Valencia As. La Muga Vella. Castelló d’Empúries (Girona) As. La Vall Verda. La Vall d’Uixó (Castellón) As. Laboris. Barcelona As. Leonesa de Daño Cerebral Sobrevenido. León As. Leonesa de Esclerosis Múltiple. Leon As. Lleidatana de la Síndrome de Down. Lleida As. Local de Ayuda al Toxicómano de Rota (Cadiz) As. Lucense de Esclerosis Múltiple. Lugo As. Madre Coraje. Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) As. Madrid Puerta Abierta. Madrid As. Madrileña de Pacientes con Síndrome de Down. Madrid As. Malagueña de Esclerosis Múltiple. Malaga As. Malagueña de Hemofilia. Malaga As. Malagueña de Laringectomizados y Mutilados de la Voz, ASMALAVOZ. Malaga As. Malagueña Pro Minusválidos Psíquicos. Malaga As. Mancala para la Inserción Sociolaboral. Zaragoza As. Marbella - San Pedro Esclerosis Múltiple (Malaga) As. Mediambiental La Sínia. Altafulla (Tarragona) As. Mégara. Barcelona As. Melilla Acoge As. MINKA - Centro de Promoción y Solidaridad. Madrid As. Minusválidos Murgi. El Ejido (Almería) As. Montañesa de Ayuda al Toxicómano. Torrelavega (Cantabria) As. Montseny Guilleries. Arbúcies As. Morisca para la Lucha y Prevención de la Drogodependencia. La Puebla de Cazalla (Seville) As. Mostoleña de Esclerosis Múltiple. Móstoles (Madrid) As. Mundo Inmigrante. Logroño (La Rioja) As. Murciana de Esclerosis Múltiple. Murcia As. Murciana de Rehabilitación Psicosocial. Murcia As. Murciana para la Ayuda de Mujeres con Cáncer. Murcia As. Naim para Ayuda a Jóvenes Drogodependientes. Punta Umbría (Huelva) As. Nazarena para la Integración del Disminuido Psíquico. Dos Hermanas (Seville) As. Nora de Ayuda a Paralíticos Cerebrales. Pola de Siero (Asturias) As. Nou Horitzó. Palma de Mallorca As. Nova Terra. Paterna (Valencia) As. Nuevas Alternativas de Cooperación Extremeña. Cáceres As. Nuevo Futuro Sirio. Madrid As. Nuevo Futuro. Seville As. Oncológica Extremeña. Badajoz As. On-Off Parkinson de la Región de Murcia As. Onubense de Jugadores de Azar en Rehabilitación. Huelva As. Onubense de Mujeres Mastectomizadas Santa Agueda. Huelva As. Orensana de Esclerosis Múltiple. Ourense As. Padre Laraña. Santa Cruz de Tenerife As. Padres con Hijos con Espina Bífida. Alicante As. Padres de Niños con Cáncer de Guipúzcoa. Donostia-San Sebastián As. Palentina de Esclerosis Múltiple. Palencia As. Palentina de Parkinson. Palencia As. Pallapupas, Pallassos d’Hospital. Barcelona As. Palmerina Contra el Cáncer La Vida. La Palma del Condado (Huelva) As. Pan Bendito. Madrid As. para Ayuda de Deficientes Mentales. Aranda de Duero (Burgos) As. para el Desarrollo de Iniciativas de Formación y Empleo. Cuarte de Huerva (Zaragoza) As. para el Desarrollo de la Permacultura. Tacoronte (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) As. para el Desarrollo Sierra Grande - Río Matachel. Hornachos (Badajoz) Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 137 As. para el Síndrome de Down de Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) As. para el Tratamiento de Niños y Jóvenes con Síndrome de Down. Cartagena (Murcia) As. para la Atención a Dependencias y Adicciones. Badajoz As. para la Atención de Personas con Trastornos del Desarrollo de la Región de Murcia. Molina de Segura As. para la Atención, Habilitación y Educación de niños con lesión cerebral. Madrid As. para la Defensa del Paciente Psíquico El Cribo. Arrecife (Las Palmas) As. para la Defensa e Integración del Enfermo Mental. Orihuela (Alicante) As. para la Demencia de Alzheimer de Alfaro As. para la Formación y el Empleo de Mujeres. Logrosán (Cáceres) As. para la Gestión de Infraestructuras y Servicios de los Polígonos Industriales de Roces y Porceyo. Gijón (Asturias) As. para la Información, Formación, Animación y Desarrollo. Albacete As. para la Integración de Personas con Minusvalía Psíquica. Coslada (Madrid) As. para la Integración del Discapacitado en la comarca del Mar Menor. San Javier (Murcia) As. para la Integración del Menor Paideia. Madrid As. para la Libertad. Badajoz As. para la Lucha contra la Leucemia de Valencia As. para la Prevención y Tratamiento de Toxicómanos Gibalbin. El Cuervo (Seville) As. para la Prevención, Atención y Reinserción de la Mujer en Situación de Riesgo. Almería As. para la Prevención, Reinserción y Atención a la Mujer Prostituta. Madrid As. para la Promoción a través de la Informática de Colectivos Excluidos. Madrid As. para la Promoción socio-laboral de las Personas con Discapacidad. Ciudad Real As. para la Promoción Sociolaboral Entremanos. Bilbao As. para la Promoción y Ayuda FULBE. Roquetas de Mar (Almería) As. para la Protección, Ayuda y Asistencia de Menores, Promepal. Santa Cruz de la Palma (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) As. para la Solidaridad. Benicalap (Valencia) As. para promover el uso racional de los productos y servicios del monte. Madrid As. Parálisis Cerebral de Baleares. Marratxí (Balearic Islands) As. Parkinson Alcorcón (Madrid) As. Parkinson Aragón. Zaragoza As. Parkinson Asturias. Oviedo As. Parkinson Ávila As. Parkinson Bahía de Cádiz. San Fernando (Cadiz) As. Parkinson Burgos As. Parkinson de la comarca de Cartagena (Murcia) As. Parkinson de Las Palmas As. Parkinson de les comarques de Tarragona. Reus As. Parkinson de Málaga As. Parkinson Gandía - Safor (Valencia) As. Parkinson Madrid As. Parkinson Terres de l’Ebre. Tortosa (Tarragona) As. Parkinson Valencia As. Parkinson Valladolid As. Pedagógica y Terapéutica de Asturias. Tuñón (Asturias) As. pel consum de productes ecològics SAÓ de Lleida As. per a la Integració social del Deficient. Cardedeu (Barcelona) As. per al Desenvolupament de la Infància d’Àfrica. Barcelona As. per la Reeducació i Reinsercio Social Laboral. Barcelona As. Petjades ONGD. Valencia As. PISO. Proyecto de Inserción Sociolaboral. Zaragoza As. Plataforma Polo Emprego. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) As. Portuense de Personas con Discapacidad. El Puerto de Santa María (Cadiz) As. Prelaborales Naranjoven. Fuenlabrada (Madrid) As. Prestadora de Servicios para la Integración. Madrid As. Prevención y Ayuda al Toxicómano . Almuñécar (Granada) 138 As. Pro Deficientes Psíquicos de Alicante As. Pro Derechos del Sordo. Granada As. Pro Discapacitados Psíquicos La Luz. Badajoz As. Pro Inmigrantes de Córdoba. Andalucía Acoge. As. Pro Minusválidos. Campo de Criptana (Ciudad Real) As. Pro Personas con Discapacidad Intelectual. Albalá del Caudillo. Cáceres As. Pro Salud Mental A Creba. Noia (A Coruña) As. Pro Salud Mental Nueva Luz. Tarancón (Cuenca) As. Pro-Deficientes del Suroeste de Almería. El Ejido As. Pro-Deficientes Mentales San José. Guadix (Granada) As. Pro-Derechos Humanos de Andalucía. Seville As. Pro-Discapacitados Psíquicos Jabalcón. Baza (Granada) As. Pro-Disminuidos María Auxiliadora. Bollullos par del Condado (Huelva) As. Pro-Disminuïts Psíquics de Sabadell i Comarca (Barcelona) As. Pro-Disminuïts Psíquics de Sant Adrià de Besòs (Barcelona) As. Pro-educació especial Tramontana. Sant Feliu de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. Prominusválidos del Sur. Granadilla de Abona (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) As. Pro-Minusválidos Psíquicos de Elche (Alicante) As. Pro-Minusvalidos Valle de Lecrín. Dúrcal (Granada) As. Promotora de Centros de Educación Espec. Sant Just Desvern (Barcelona) As. Propietaris, veïns i residents del Montseny. Barcelona As. Protectora de Deficiencias Sensoriales. Huelva As. Protectora de Disminuidos de Quintanar de la Orden (Toledo) As. Protectora de Disminuïts Psíquics de Berga (Barcelona) As. Protectora de Minusválidos Psíquicos de Sevilla As. Protectora de Minusválidos Psíquicos de Valverde del Camino (Huelva) As. Protectora de Minusválidos Psíquicos de Vigo (Pontevedra) As. Protectora de Personas con Discapacidad. Benavente (Zamora) As. Provincial Alicantina de Ayuda al Drogodependiente. Alicante As. Provincial de Allegados de Enfermos Mentales. Bailén (Jaén) As. Provincial de Esclerosis Múltiple. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria As. Provincial de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer de Ciudad Real As. Provincial de Sordos de Jaén As. Provincial Linarense de Jugadores en Rehabilitación. Linares (Jaén) As. Provivienda. Madrid As. Proyecto 21. Ponferrada As. Proyecto Abraham. Murcia As. Proyecto Acogida. Madrid As. Proyecto Lázaro. Alicante As. Proyecto Vida. La Pobla Llarga (Alicante) As. Psiquiatría y Vida. Madrid As. Puente Centro Cultural Árabe. Barcelona As. Puertas Abiertas. Tomelloso (Ciudad Real) As. Punt de Referència. Barcelona As. Pupaclown, Payasos de Hospital. Murcia As. Recuerda de Enfermos y Familiares de Alzheimer. Pozoblanco (Cordoba) As. Regional Parkinson Extremadura. Mérida (Badajoz) As. Rexurdir. Marín (Pontevedra) As. Ribera de Duero de Esclerosis Múltiple. Aranda de Duero (Burgos) As. Riojana de Esclerosis Múltiple. Logroño (La Rioja) As. San Francisco de Sales de Hipoacúsicos. Huesca As. San Juan. Centro de Pedagogía Curativa. Adeje (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) As. San Rafael de Alzheimer y Otras Demenencias. Cordoba As. San Vicente de Paul de Alicante As. SAO Prat. Prat de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. Saray. Pamplona/Iruña (Navarre) As. Semilla para la Integración Social del Joven. Madrid As. Semillas de Futuro. Montoro (Cordoba) I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects As. Servei de Suport al Treball per a Persones amb Discapacitat. Girona As. Sevillana de Protectores de Personas con Retraso Mental Gravemente Afectadas, Asesubpro. Olivares (Seville) As. Shalom. Lleida As. Si Quieres Puedo. Barbate (Cadiz) As. Síndrome d’Asperger de Catalunya. Cabrera de Mar (Barcelona) As. Síndrome de Down de Balears. Marratxí (Balearic Islands) As. Síndrome de Down de Navarra. Pamplona/Iruña As. Síndrome de Down Down de Cádiz y Bahía As. Social Yaya Luisa. Barcelona As. Sociocultural y de Cooperación al Desarollo. Madrid As. Solidaria de Integración Social ASIS. Arroyo de la Miel-Benalmádena Costa (Malaga) As. Solidaridad con Madres Solteras. Madrid As. Talaverana de Amigos, Familiares y Enfermos Psíquicos "ATAFES". Talavera de la Reina (Toledo) As. TAS. Salamanca As. Teatral Pa’tothom. Barcelona As. Templarios de Jumilla (Murcia) As. Tercera Edat Portocolom (Balearic Islands) As. Teuladí. Quart de Poblet (Valencia) As. Tinerfeña de Esclerosis Múltiple. Santa Cruz de Tenerife As. TRADE. Tratamiento y Diagnóstico Educativo. Almería As. Trévol. Ontinyent (Valencia) As. Tripartita. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) As. Tutelar del Minusválido. Cartagena (Murcia) As. Valenciana d’Amics i Parents dels Malalts d’Alzheimer, AVAMA. Valencia As. Valenciana de Caridad. Valencia As. Valenciana de Esclerosis Lateral Amiotrófica. Valencia As. Valenciana de Ex-alcohólicos. Valencia As. Valenciana de Padres de Autistas. Valencia As. Valenciana Síndrome de Prader-Willi. Valencia As. Vallès Amics de la Neurologia de Terrassa (Barcelona) As. Vallisoletana de Esclerosis Múltiple. Valladolid As. Vasija. Guadalajara As. Veïns Fonts del Lledoner. Fontscaldes (Tarragona) As. Visueña de Ayuda al Insuficiente Mental. El Visor del Alcor (Seville) As. Vive y Deja Vivir. Madrid As. Wafae. Barcelona As. Xarxa. Llíria (Valencia) As. Zamorana de Esclerosis Múltiple AZDEM. Zamora Asamblea de Cooperación por la Paz. Madrid Asamblea Local de Cruz Roja Española de Andorra (Teruel) Asamblea Local de Cruz Roja Española de Cazorla (Jaén) Asamblea Local de Cruz Roja Española de Elche (Alicante) Asamblea Local de Cruz Roja Española de Yecla (Murcia) ASEM CYL. As. Castellano Leonesa de Enfermermedades Musculares. Salamanca Asilo de ancianos de las Hermanitas de los Pobres. Granada ASODEMA. As. de Discapacitados de Madridejos (Toledo) ASPACE Cantabria. Santander ASPACE Oviedo. Latores (Asturias) ASPACE. Centro de Día de la Parálisis Cerebral. Dos Hermanas (Seville) ASPAFES. Pozuelo de Alarcón (Madrid) ASPANADIF. Eivissa (Balearic Islands) ASPAS. Castellón de la Plana ASPAS. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) ASPASIM. Barcelona ASPAYM Castilla y León. Simancas (Valladolid) ASPAYM. Toledo ASPRODETA. As. de Atención a Personas Adultas con Retraso Mental. Talavera de la Reina (Toledo) ASPRONA Bierzo. Ponferrada (Leon) ASVOL. Barcelona Atención a Discapacitados Sol, S.L. Fuengirola (Malaga) Ateneo Municipal. Vecindario (Las Palmas) Ateneu Científic, Literari i Artístic. Maó (Balearic Islands) Atlántida, Professionals de la Interculturalitat. Barcelona Auditori d’Alcúdia (Balearic Islands) Auditori de cas Serres. Sant Josep de sa Talaia (Balearic Islands) Auditori Narcís de Carreras. Girona Auditorio de Cáceres Auditorio Manuel de Falla. Granada Auditorio Municipal. Fuentealbilla (Albacete) Auditorio Príncipe Felipe. Oviedo (Asturias) Auditorio y Centro de Congresos Victor Villegas. Murcia Auditòrium de Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Auditòrium Sa Màniga. Sant Llorenç des Cardassar (Balearic Islands) Avismón Catalunya. Barcelona Ayuda al Toxicómano Asociación Nueva Ilusión. Guadix (Granada) Ayuntamiento Cieza (Murcia) Ayuntamiento de Albacete Ayuntamiento de Albox (Almería) Ayuntamiento de Alcalá de Guadaira (Seville) Ayuntamiento de Alcalá la Real (Jaén) Ayuntamiento de Alcobendas (Madrid) Ayuntamiento de Alcorcón (Madrid) Ayuntamiento de Alicante Ayuntamiento de Almendralejo (Badajoz) Ayuntamiento de Almería Ayuntamiento de Almuñécar (Granada) Ayuntamiento de Andújar Jaén) Ayuntamiento de Antequera (Malaga) Ayuntamiento de Aracena (Huelva) Ayuntamiento de Arcos de la Frontera (Cadiz) Ayuntamiento de Arona. Los Cristianos (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Ayuntamiento de Arucas (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de Atapuerca (Burgos) Ayuntamiento de Barakaldo (Vizcaya) Ayuntamiento de Benalup-Casas Viejas (Cadiz) Ayuntamiento de Burgos Ayuntamiento de Cádiz Ayuntamiento de Calamonte (Badajoz) Ayuntamiento de Canals (Valencia) Ayuntamiento de Candelaria (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Ayuntamiento de Cangas de Narcea (Asturias) Ayuntamiento de Caravaca de la Cruz (Murcia) Ayuntamiento de Carboneras (Almería) Ayuntamiento de Castellón de la Plana Ayuntamiento de Cieza (Murcia) Ayuntamiento de Ciudad Real Ayuntamiento de Collado Mediano (Madrid) Ayuntamiento de Córdoba Ayuntamiento de Cuenca Ayuntamiento de Don Benito (Badajoz) Ayuntamiento de Donostia - San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Ayuntamiento de El Puerto de Santa María (Cadiz) Ayuntamiento de Encinarejo de Córdoba (Cordoba) Ayuntamiento de Fuenlabrada (Madrid) Ayuntamiento de Galdakao (Vizcaya) Ayuntamiento de Gijón (Asturias) Ayuntamiento de Granada Ayuntamiento de Huelva Ayuntamiento de Huétor Vega (Granada) Ayuntamiento de Icod de los Vinos (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Ayuntamiento de Jaca (Huesca) Ayuntamiento de Jaén Ayuntamiento de La Oliva (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de La Roda (Albacete) Ayuntamiento de la Villa de Agüimes (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de Laredo (Cantabria) Ayuntamiento de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de Leganés (Madrid) Ayuntamiento de León Ayuntamiento de Llíria (Valencia) Ayuntamiento de Logroño (La Rioja) Ayuntamiento de Lucena (Cordoba) Ayuntamiento de Madrid Ayuntamiento de Málaga Ayuntamiento de Melilla Ayuntamiento de Mérida (Badajoz) Ayuntamiento de Mogán (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de Moguer (Huelva) Ayuntamiento de Mojácar (Almería) Ayuntamiento de Monóvar (Alicante) Ayuntamiento de Monturque (Cordoba) Ayuntamiento de Móstoles (Madrid) Ayuntamiento de Murcia Ayuntamiento de Nijar (Almería) Ayuntamiento de Oropesa del Mar (Castellón) Ayuntamiento de Pamplona /Iruña (Navarre) Ayuntamiento de Ponferrada (Leon) Ayuntamiento de Pozoblanco (Cordoba) Ayuntamiento de Puerto de la Cruz (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Ayuntamiento de Roquetas de Mar (Almería) Ayuntamiento de Sagunto (Valencia) Ayuntamiento de Salamanca Ayuntamiento de Salobreña (Granada) Ayuntamiento de San Bartolomé de Tirajana (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de San Cristóbal de La Laguna (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Ayuntamiento de San Fernando (Cadiz) Ayuntamiento de Sanlúcar de Barrameda (Cadiz) Ayuntamiento de Santa Cruz de Tenerife Ayuntamiento de Santa Cruz de Tenerife Ayuntamiento de Santa Lucía de Tirajana (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de Santander (Cantabria) Ayuntamiento de Santurtzi (Vizcaya) Ayuntamiento de Tacoronte (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Ayuntamiento de Talavera de la Reina (Toledo) Ayuntamiento de Telde (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de Tineo (Asturias) Ayuntamiento de Tolosa (Guipúzcoa) Ayuntamiento de Torrelavega (Cantabria) Ayuntamiento de Torrevieja (Alicante) Ayuntamiento de Totana (Murcia) Ayuntamiento de Tuineje (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de Valladolid Ayuntamiento de Villamartín (Cadiz) Ayuntamiento de Villanueva de la Serena (Badajoz) Ayuntamiento de Villarreal (Castellón) Ayuntamiento de Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Ayuntamiento de Yaiza (Las Palmas) Ayuntamiento de Zaragoza Ayuntamiento de Badajoz Ayuntamiento del Muro del Alcoy (Alicante) Banco de Alimentos de la Costa del Sol. Malaga Banco de Alimentos Medina Azahara. Cordoba Banco de Alimentos. Segovia Basílica de Sant Francesc. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Benito Menni, Complex Assistencial en Salut Mental. Sant Boi de Llobregat (Barcelona) Berpiztu Elkartea. Donostia - San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Biblioteca Central Comarcal de Tàrrega (Lleida) Biblioteca Central d’Igualada (Barcelona) Biblioteca Central Xavier Amorós. Reus (Tarragona) Biblioteca Comarcal Carles Fages de Climent. Figueres (Girona) Biblioteca Comarcal de Blanes (Girona) Biblioteca Comarcal de la Ribera d’Ebre. Móra d’Ebre (Tarragona) Biblioteca Comarcal Jaume Vila. Mollerussa (Lleida) Biblioteca Comarcal Pla de l’Estany. Banyoles (Girona) Biblioteca Comarcal Sant Agustí. La Seu d’Urgell (Lleida) Biblioteca Comtat de Cerdanya. Puigcerdà (Girona) Biblioteca d’Artés (Barcelona) Biblioteca de l’Ajuntament de Consell (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca de l’Ajuntament de Marratxí. Portol (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca de Santa Perpètua de Mogoda (Barcelona) Biblioteca Dos Rius. Torelló (Barcelona) Biblioteca Eduard Camps i Cava. Guissona (Lleida) Biblioteca El Casino. Manresa (Barcelona) Biblioteca Ernest Lluch. Girona Biblioteca Es Migjorn Gran (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca Francesc Pujols. Martorell (Barcelona) Biblioteca Generau de Vielha e Mijaran (Lleida) Biblioteca Joan Coromines. El Masnou (Barcelona) Biblioteca Joan Triadú. Vic (Barcelona) Biblioteca Josep Picola. Sant Joan de les Abadesses (Girona) Biblioteca Josep Soler Vidal. Gavà (Barcelona) Biblioteca La Bòbila. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) Biblioteca La Cooperativa. Centelles (Barcelona) Biblioteca Lambert Mata. Ripoll (Girona) Biblioteca l’Escorxador. Sant Celoni (Barcelona) Biblioteca Manuel de Pedrolo. Sant Pere de Ribes (Barcelona) Biblioteca Margarida de Montferrat. Balaguer (Lleida) Biblioteca Montserrat Roig. Sant Feliu de Llobregat (Barcelona) Biblioteca Municipal de Astorga (Leon) Biblioteca Municipal de Banyalbufar (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca Municipal de Binissalem (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca Municipal de Cambrils (Tarragona) Biblioteca Municipal de Capellades (Barcelona) Biblioteca Municipal de la Garriga (Barcelona) Biblioteca Municipal de Les (Lleida) Biblioteca Municipal de Salobreña (Granada) Biblioteca Municipal de Torredembarra (Tarragona) Biblioteca Municipal de Tremp (Lleida) Biblioteca Municipal de Vila·Rodona (Tarragona) Biblioteca Municipal de Vilafranca de Bonany (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca Municipal d’Esporles (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca Municipal Ernest Lluch i Martín. Vilassar de Mar (Barcelona) Biblioteca Municipal Guillem Viladot. Agramunt (Lleida) Biblioteca Municipal i Comarcal Salvador Estrem i Fa. Falset (Tarragona) Biblioteca Municipal Joan Vinyoli. Santa Coloma de Farners (Girona) Biblioteca Pau Vila. Molins de Rei (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pere Salses i Trillas. Ponts (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública de Calaf (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública de Cardona (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública de Sant Feliu de Codines (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública de Sant Lluís (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca Pública de Sant Vicenç dels Horts (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública de Santa Coloma de Queralt (Tarragona) Biblioteca Pública de Solsona (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública de Sort (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública del Pont de Suert (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública Muncipal de Montblanc (Tarragona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal Ca Cosme. Alcover (Tarragona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Bellver de Cerdanya (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Caldes de Montbui (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Camprodon (Girona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Cassà de la Selva (Girona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Castellterçol (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Gandesa (Tarragona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de la Bisbal d’Empordà (Girona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de la Pobla de Segur (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Llinars del Vallès (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Moià (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Mora la Nova (Tarragona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Piera (Barcelona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Sant Hilari Sacalm (Girona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Sant Llorenç de Morunys (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Seròs (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública Municipal de Torroella de Montgrí (Girona) Biblioteca Pública Municipal d’Esterri d’Àneu (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública Municipal d’Organyà (Lleida) Biblioteca Pública Municipal La Ràpita. Sant Carles de la Ràpita (Tarragona) Biblioteca Pública Octavi Viader i Magarit. Sant Feliu de Guíxols (Girona) Biblioteca Rafael Vila Barnils. Arbúcies (Girona) Biblioteca Ramon Bosch de Noya. Sant Sadurní d’Anoia (Barcelona) Biblioteca Ramon Vinyes i Cluet. Berga (Barcelona) Biblioteca Salvador Galmès. Sant Llorenç des Cardassar (Balearic Islands) Biblioteca Torras i Bages. Vilafranca del Penedès (Barcelona) Biblioteca Vicente Aleixandre. Badia del Vallès (Barcelona) Bisbat de Lleida Bona Gent. Amigos del Deficiente Mental. Valencia Botigueta, Sa. Sóller (Balearic Islands) Bubulus. Companyia de Dansa. Barcelona Buenos amigos. Mieres (Asturias) C. de la Puríssima Immaculada. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) C.C. Sol Ixent. Inca (Balearic Islands) C.C. Verge del Carme. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) C.E.E. Cierzo Gestión S.L. Zaragoza C.E.E. Joan Mesquida. Manacor (Balearic Islands) C.G. Alai-Etxe. Fundación Matía. Donostia San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) C.G. Fraisoro. Fundación Matía - Zizurkil (Guipúzcoa) C.G. Rezola. Fundació Matía. Donostia San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) C.P. Can Cantó. Eivissa (Balearic Islands) Ca Ses Monges. Maria de la Salut (Balearic Islands) Cabildo Insular de El Hierro. Valverde (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Cabildo Insular de Tenerife. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Cal Llovet. Santpedor (Barcelona) Caldes Solidària. Caldes de Montbui (Barcelona) Cambra Oficial de Comerç, Indústria i Navegació. Tortosa (Tarragona) Campus Universitario de Jérez de la Frontera (Cadiz) Can Comas. Pineda de Mar (Barcelona) Can Curt. Sant Josep de sa Talaia (Balearic Islands) Can Gelabert Casal de Cultura. Binissalem (Balearic Islands) Can Llensa. Hostalric (Girona) Can Quintana. Centre Cultural de la Mediterrània. Torroella de Montgrí (Girona) Capacis, SL. Alcoy (Alicante) Capella de Ca Ses Monges. Petra (Balearic Islands) Capella de les Escolàpies. Sóller (Balearic Islands) Capella de Sant Joan. Vilafranca del Penedès (Barcelona) Capella Fonda de l’Església Nova. Son Servera (Balearic Islands) Càritas Arxiprestat de Vic (Barcelona) Cáritas Autonómica de Aragón. Zaragoza Cáritas de La Palma (Murcia) Cáritas Diocesana de Barbastro - Monzón (Huesca) Càritas Diocesana de Barcelona Cáritas Diocesana de Bilbao Cáritas Diocesana de Burgos Cáritas Diocesana de Cádiz y Ceuta Cáritas Diocesana de Canarias. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Cáritas Diocesana de Ibiza (Balearic Islands) Cáritas Diocesana de Murcia Cáritas Diocesana de Plasencia (Cáceres) Cáritas Diocesana de Santa Cruz de Tenerife Cáritas Diocesana de Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Cáritas Diocesana de Sigüenza Guadalajara Cáritas Diocesana de Teruel Cáritas Diocesana de Valladolid Cáritas Interparroquial de Alcantarilla (Murcia) Cáritas Interparroquial de Arousa. Vilagarcía de Arousa (Pontevedra) Cáritas Interparroquial de Hellín (Albacete) Cáritas Interparroquial de Villarrobledo (Albacete) Cáritas Interparroquial de Villena (Alicante) Cáritas Interparroquial Gandia (Valencia) Càritas Parroquial de Berga (Barcelona) Cáritas Parroquial de San Antonio Abad. Cartagena (Murcia) Cáritas Parroquial Nuestra Señora de Gracia. Valencia Cáritas Parroquial Nuestra Señora de la Paz. Valencia Càritas Parroquial. Parròquia de Sant Genís de Taradell. Taradell (Barcelona) Cas Metge Dolç. Campanet (Balearic Islands) Cas Txeco. Consell (Balearic Islands) Casa Colón. Huelva Casa de Cultura Antiguo Convento de San Agustín. Tacoronte (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Casa de Cultura Benito Pérez Armas. Yaiza (Las Palmas) Casa de Cultura de Can Puget. Manlleu (Barcelona) Casa de Cultura La Encomienda. Benavente (Zamora) Casa de Cultura. Almuñécar (Granada) Casa de Cultura. Andorra (Teruel) Casa de Cultura. Antequera (Malaga) Casa de Cultura. Campanet (Balearic Islands) Casa de Cultura. Canals (Valencia) Casa de Cultura. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) Casa de Cultura. Coria (Cáceres) Casa de Cultura. Don Benito (Badajoz) Casa de Cultura. Gran Tarajal (Las Palmas) Casa de Cultura. Guardamar del Segura (Alicante) Casa de Cultura. Mont-Roig del Camp (Tarragona) Casa de Cultura. Sant Joan (Balearic Islands) Casa de Cultura. Santa Margalida (Balearic Islands) Casa de Cultura. Tres Cantos (Madrid) Casa de Cultura. Villanueva de la Serena (Badajoz) Casa de la Aduana. Puerto de la Cruz (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Casa de la Cultura Alcalde Diego León. La Rambla (Cordoba) Casa de la Cultura Francisco Rabal. Águilas (Murcia) Casa de la Cultura. Antequera (Malaga) Casa de la Cultura. Conil de La Frontera (Cadiz) Casa de la Cultura. Llançà (Girona) Casa de la Cultura. Monforte de Lemos (Lugo) Casa de la Música. Villarreal (Castellón) Casa de las Ciencias. Logroño (La Rioja) Casa de las Vigas. Pozoblanco (Cordoba) Casa de los Morlanes. Zaragoza Casa Familiar Dr. Juan Segura. Granada Casa Latinoamericana en Galicia. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Casa Municipal de Cultura. Burjassot (Valencia) Casa Rafael. Asociación para el Desarrollo de la Pedagogía curativa. Pozuelo de Alarcón (Madrid) Casa Saladrigas. Blanes (Girona) Casa-Hogar Madre Guillemín. Bollullos de la Mitación (Seville) Casal Can Joanet. Alcúdia (Balearic Islands) Casal Cultural. Pego (Alicante) Casal de Cultura Can Dameto. Búger (Balearic Islands) Casal de Cultura. Inca (Balearic Islands) Casal de Cultura. Muro (Balearic Islands) Casal de Joves. Llucmajor (Balearic Islands) Casal de la Gent Gran. Alella (Barcelona) Casal de la Gent Gran. Ripoll (Girona) Casal de l’Espluga de Francolí (Tarragona) Casal de Son Tugores. Alaró (Balearic Islands) Casal del Jubilat de Cornellà del Terri (Girona) Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 139 Casal del Jubilat i Pensionista l’Esbarjo. Castelldans (Lleida) Casal dels Jubilats Sant Francesc de Jesus (Tarragona) Casal Municipal. Torredembarra (Tarragona) Casal Pere Capellà. Algaida (Balearic Islands) Casa-Museu Rafael Casanova. Moià (Barcelona) Casería de las Palmeras. Jaén Casino de Valverde (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Castell del Borni. Cornellà de Llobregat (Barcelona) Castellers de Lleida Castell-Palau de la Bisbal de l’Empordà (Girona) Castillo-Museo de Santa Ana. Roquetas de Mar (Almería) Catedral de Menorca (Balearic Islands) Centre Assistencial Sant Joan de Déu. Almacelles (Lleida) Centre Cívic de Ca’n Picafort (Balearic Islands) Centre Cívic de la Colònia de Sant Jordi (Balearic Islands) Centre Cívic de Mar. Vilanova i la Geltrú (Barcelona) Centre Cívic Sentfores - La Guixa. Vic (Barcelona) Centre Cívic Tueda. Sant Feliu de Guíxols (Girona) Centre Cultural Biblioteca Cas Metge Rei. Santa Maria del Camí (Balearic Islands) Centre Cultural Ca n’ Apol·lònia. Son Carrió (Balearic Islands) Centre Cultural Costa i Font. Taradell (Barcelona) Centre Cultural de Felanitx (Balearic Islands) Centre Cultural de Formació i Ocupació Professional. Barcelona Centre Cultural de la Colònia de Sant Pere (Balearic Islands) Centre Cultural de Les Corts. Barcelona Centre Cultural de Mollerussa (Lleida) Centre Cultural de Sant Cugat del Vallès (Barcelona) Centre Cultural el Casino. Manresa (Barcelona) Centre Cultural Escoles Velles. Begur (Girona) Centre Cultural Guillem Cifre de Colonya. Pollença (Balearic Islands) Centre Cultural i Esportiu de Sant Lluís (Balearic Islands) Centre Cultural La Mercè. Girona Centre Cultural s’Escorxador. Vilafranca de Bonany (Balearic Islands) Centre Cultural. Sant Lluís (Balearic Islands) Centre de Día de malalts d’Alzheimer. Bocairent (Valencia) Centre de Dia. Esporles (Balearic Islands) Centre de Dia. Sant Llorenç des Cardassar (Balearic Islands) Centre de Formació i Prevenció de Mataró (Barcelona) Centre de Formació Ocupacional Es Centre. Selva (Balearic Islands) Centre de Formació Ses Cases des Mestres. Santa Maria del Camí (Balearic Islands) Centre de Persones Majors de Cala Millor (Balearic Islands) Centre de Persones Majors de Maó (Balearic Islands) Centre de Persones Majors de Santa Eugènia (Balearic Islands) Centre de Persones Majors de Son Servera (Balearic Islands) Centre de Titelles. Lleida Centre d’Ecologia i Projectes Alternatius S.C.C.L. Molins de Rei (Barcelona) Centre d’Estudis Amazònics. Barcelona Centre d’Estudis Lacetans. Solsona (Lleida) Centre Informàtic Moià, S.L. Moià (Barcelona) Centre Juvenil. Lloret de Vistalegre (Balearic Islands) Centre Municipal de Cultura La Mercè. Burriana (Castellón) Centre Municipal l’Antic Sindicat. Lloret de Mar (Girona) Centre Obrer. La Sénia (Tarragona) Centre Parroquial de Santa Eugènia (Balearic Islands) Centre Socio-Cultural Sa Mina. Lloseta (Balearic Islands) Centre Sociosanitari Mare de Déu de la Salut. Terrades (Girona) Centre Universitari Calvià - Bendinat. Calvià (Balearic Islands) 140 Centre, Es. Selva (Balearic Islands) Centro Atlántico de Arte Moderno CAAM. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Centro Cívico Antiguo Sanatorio. Sagunto (Valencia) Centro Cívico Municipal Casco Vello. Vigo (Pontevedra) Centro Comercial Los Prados. Oviedo (Asturias) Centro Cultural Alcazaba. Mérida (Badajoz) Centro Cultural Asabanos. Valverde (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Centro Cultural de los Cristianos. Arona (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Centro Cultural de San Isidro. Níjar (Almería) Centro Cultural Gabriel Celaya. Alcalá de Henares (Madrid) Centro Cultural Gregorio de Céspedes. Villanueva de Alcardete (Toledo) Centro Cultural La Victoria. Sanlúcar de Barrameda (Cadiz) Centro Cultural Municipal Alfonso X El Sabio. El Puerto de Santa María (Cadiz) Centro Cultural San Sebastián. La Roda (Albacete) Centro de Acogida de Inmigrantes. Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) Centro de Acogida Lagun Artean. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Centro de Adultos. Conil de la Frontera (Cadiz) Centro de Alzheimer Juan Alvarado. Santa Lucía de Tirajana (Las Palmas) Centro de Animación Social. Valdeperales. Madrid Centro de Artesanía. Mojácar (Almería) Centro de Comunicación, Investigación y Documentación. Madrid Centro de Congresos. Puerto de la Cruz (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Centro de Desarrollo Rural Valdecea. Mayorga (Valladolid) Centro de Día de la Mujer O’Mencer. Ferrol (A Coruña) Centro de Día Santa Emerenciana. Teruel Centro de Especialidades Naturales Hipócrates, S.L. Madrid Centro de Estancias Diurnas. Caudete (Albacete) Centro de Estudios del Jiloca. Calamocha (Teruel) Centro de Estudios para la Integración Social y Formación de Inmigrantes. Valencia Centro de Información para Trabajadores Emigrantes. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Centro de integración sociocultural. Barakaldo (Vizcaya) Centro de Investigación del Cáncer. Salamanca Centro de Profesores y Recursos de Lorca (Murcia) Centro de Profesores y Recursos de Mérida (Badajoz) Centro de Rehabilitación Psicosocial. Madrid Centro de Salud Municipal. Alcalá de Henares (Madrid) Centro Diocesano Madre de la Esperanza. Talavera de la Reina (Toledo) Centro Especial de Empleo ASPABER, SL. Carballo (A Coruña) Centro Especial de Empleo Aspace-Rioja. Logroño (La Rioja) Centro Especial de Empleo Asprosub. Morales del Vino (Zamora) Centro Especial de Empleo Octavio Cuartero,S.L. Villarrobledo (Albacete) Centro Especial de Empleo. Cordoba Centro Formación Profesional - Instituto Secular Obreras de la Cruz. Museros (Valencia) Centro Hogar María Inmaculada Franciscanas de la Purísima Concepción. Madrid Centro Juvenil de Adolescentes del Carmelo. Barcelona Centro Maria Reina. Barcelona Centro Mater Misericordiae. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Centro Multifuncional. Coslada (Madrid) Centro Municipal de Exposiciones. Elche (Alicante) Centro Municipal de las Artes. Alcorcón (Madrid) Centro Nacional de Fotografia José Manuel Rotella. Torrelavega (Cantabria) Centro Ocupacional La Purísima. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Centro Ocupacional San Pedro Apóstol. Madrid I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Centro Psicológico Eguía. Donostia - San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Centro Residencial de Atención y Prevención de las Drogodependencias. Valencia Centro Social de Untzaga. Eibar (Guipúzcoa) Centro Social Ozanam de Ayuda al Toxicómano. Cáceres Centro Social Polivalente. La Roda (Albacete) Centro Social San Xoan Bautista. Carballo (A Coruña) Centro Social. San Vicente del Raspeig (Alicante) Centro UNESCO de Ceuta. Ceuta Cercle Artístic. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) Cercle de Belles Arts. Lleida Cercle Financer de Balears. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) CESAL. Madrid Cierzo y la Retama, El SL. Centro Especial de Empleo. Ejea de los Caballeros (Zaragoza) Círculo Convivencial Límite, CIRVITE. Madrid Ciudad Autónoma de Ceuta Ciudad de San Juan de Dios. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Claustre de Sant Domingo. Inca (Balearic Islands) Claustre de Sant Vicens Ferrer. Manacor (Balearic Islands) Club de Jubilats de Pardinyes. Lleida Club de la Tercera Edat de Sant Jordi (Balearic Islands) Club de Persones Majors de Palmanyola (Balearic Islands) Club del Pensionista de Ceutí (Murcia) Club Diario de Ibiza (Balearic Islands) Club Esportiu Santa Eugènia de Ter. Girona Club Gent Gran. Port d’Alcúdia (Balearic Islands) Club Infantil y Juvenil Arca de Noé. Valencia Club Jove Centre Municipal Cervantes. Sant Antoni de Portmany (Balearic Islands) Club Juvenil Solpor. Celanova (Orense) Club Natación Santa Olaya. Gijón (Asturias) Club Pollença (Balearic Islands) COCEMFE Cuenca COCEMFE Valencia Col·lectiu de Cultura Popular. Sant Vicenç dels Horts (Barcelona) Col·lectiu d’Iniciatives Juvenils contra l’Atur. Lleida Col·lectiu Vall de Vernissa. Rótova (Valencia) Col·legi Frederic Godàs. Lleida Col·legi La Salle. Alaior (Balearic Islands) Col·legi l’Anunciata Dominiques. Lleida Col·legi Major Universitari Monterols. Barcelona Col·legi Públic Pintor Torrent. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) Col·legi Públic Xaloc. Peguera (Balearic Islands) Colectivo para el Desarrollo Rural Tierra de Campos. Medina de Rioseco (Valladolid) Colegiata de San Patricio. Lorca (Murcia) Colegio de la Quinta Angustia. Cacabelos (Leon) Colegio de Psicológos. Valencia Colegio La Salle. Cordoba Colegio Marista Liceo Castilla. Burgos Colegio Sagrada Familia. Madrid Colegio San Vicente. Huesca Colexio Fonseca. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Comarca Andorra-Sierra de Arcos. Andorra (Teruel) Comarca del Campo de Borja (Zaragoza) Comisión de Ayuda al Refugiado en Euskadi. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Comisión de Derechos Humanos Hispano Guatemalteca. Madrid Comissió de festes de Les Masies de Roda (Barcelona) Comissió de festes de Sant Julià de Ramis Girona) Comité Català per als refugiats Catalunya ACNUR. Barcelona Comité Ciudadano Anti-Sida de la Comunitat Valenciana. Valencia Comité Internacional de Rescate. Madrid Companyia La Baldufa. Lleida Compañía de Jesús en La Rioja. Logroño (La Rioja) Comunidad Internacional Teresiano Sanjuanista. Ávila Comunidad Jorbalan. Granada Comunitat Teresiana de San Cosme-Cía Sta. Teresa de Jesús. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) Concello de A Coruña Concello de Ourense Concello de Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Concello de Vigo (Pontevedra) Confederación Andaluza de Personas con Discapacidad. Seville Confederación Española de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer y otras Demencias. Pamplona/ Iruña (Navarre) Confederación Galega de Minusválidos. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Confederación Regional de Minusválidos Físicos de de Castilla La Mancha. Toledo Confraria de Pescadors de Blanes (Girona) Congregació Espai Jove, Sa. Sa Pobla (Balearic Islands) Congregación Apostólica del Corazón de Jesús. Madrid Congregación de Religiosas del Sagrado Corazón. Barcelona Congregación de RR. Adoratrices Esclavas del Santísimo Sacramento. Madrid Congregación Hermanitas Ancianos Desamparados. Ciudad Real Congregación Madres de Desamparados y San José de de la Montaña. Valencia Congregación Madres Escolapias. Madrid Congregación Religiosa de Hermanitas de los Ancianos Desamparados. Hellín (Albacete) Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. Barcelona Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. Madrid Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas.Valladolid Conselh General d’Aran. Vielha e Mijaran (Lleida) Consell Comarcal de l’Alt Empordà. Figueres (Girona) Consell Comarcal del Baix Empordà. La Bisbal d’Empordà (Girona) Consell Insular de Mallorca. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Consell insular de Menorca. Maó (Balearic Islands) Consell Insular d’Eivissa i Formentera (Balearic Islands) Conservatori Superior de Música del Liceu. Barcelona Conservatori Superior de Música. Barcelona Conservatorio Profesional de Música de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Conservatorio Profesional de Música de Valencia Conservatorio Superior de Música de Oviedo Conservatorio Superior de Música de Salamanca Consolat General dels Estats Units a Barcelona Consorci Civil Mestral-GOB. Maó (Balearic Islands) Consorci de Benestar Social de la Garrotxa. Olot (Girona) Consorci de les Drassanes Reials i Museu Marítim de Barcelona Consorci de Medi Ambient i Salut pública de la Garrotxa. Olot (Girona) Consorci del Montsec. Àger (Lleida) Consorci del Museu Comarcal del Montsià. Amposta (Tarragona) Consorci Forestal de Catalunya. Santa Coloma de Farners (Girona) Convento de Capuchinos. Alcalá la Real (Jaén) Cooperación Internacional. Madrid Cooperativa de Iniciativas Sociales Nalda Cop XX. Nalda (La Rioja) Cooperativa d’Iniciatives Mediambientals i Educatives, CIMAE. Barcelona Cooperativa Estel, SCCL. Sant Cugat del Vallès (Barcelona) Cooperativa Valenciana Koynos. Godella (Valencia) Coordinadora Linense contra la Drogodependencia Despierta. La Línea de la Concepción (Cadiz) Coordinadora Catalana de Fundacions. Barcelona Coordinadora de Barrios. Madrid Coordinadora de Disminuidos Físicos y Psíquicos de Villar del Arzobispo (Valencia) Coordinadora de Minusvàlids de Menorca. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) Coordinadora de Organizaciones Agrarias y Ganadera. Jaén Coordinadora d’Entitats del Poblenou. Barcelona Coordinadora Federació Balear de Persones amb Discapacitat. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Coordinadora para el Desarrollo Integral del Nordeste de Segovia. Campo de San Pedro (Segovia) Coordinadora per la Inserció Socio Laboral. Anem per feina. Barcelona CP A. Rosselló. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) CP Àngel Ruiz i Pablo. Es Castell (Balearic Islands) CP Badies. Llucmajor (Balearic Islands) CP Can Bril. Sencelles (Balearic Islands) CP Can Guerxo. Sant Josep de sa Talaia (Balearic Islands) CP Cas Serres. Eivissa (Balearic Islands) CP Doctor Comes. Alaior (Balearic Islands) CP Es Canyar. Manacor (Balearic Islands) CP Fornells (Balearic Islands) CP Francesc d´Albranca. Es Migjorn Gran (Balearic Islands) CP Fray Junípero Serra. Petra (Balearic Islands) CP Gabriel Palmer. Estellencs (Balearic Islands) CP Jesús. Eivissa (Balearic Islands) CP Mare de Déu de Gràcia. Maó (Balearic Islands) CP Mare de Déu del Carme. Maó (Balearic Islands) CP Mare de Déu del Toro. Es Mercadal (Balearic Islands) CP Margalida Florit. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) CP Mateu Fontiroig. Maó (Balearic Islands) CP Mestre Colom. Bunyola (Balearic Islands) CP Miquel Costa i Llobera. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) CP Montaura. Mancor de la Vall (Balearic Islands) CP Norai. Port d’Alcúdia (Balearic Islands) CP Nostra Senyora de la Consolació. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) CP Rafal Vell. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) CP Sa Graduada. Maó (Balearic Islands) CP Sant Carles. Santa Eulàlia del Río (Balearic Islands) CP Sant Domingo. Es Llombards (Balearic Islands) CP Sant Francesc d’Asís. Ferreries (Balearic Islands) CP Sant Jordi. Sant Josep de sa Talaia (Balearic Islands) CP Sant Lluís (Balearic Islands) CP Sant Rafel (Balearic Islands) CP Ses Roques. Caimari (Balearic Islands) CP Ses Salines (Balearic Islands) CP Tramuntana. Maó (Balearic Islands) CP Vara de Rei. Sant Antoni de Portmany (Balearic Islands) CP Verge de Montision. Porreres (Balearic Islands) CPR Ciutadella. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) CPR Eivissa (Balearic Islands) CPR Inca (Balearic Islands) CPR Manacor (Balearic Islands) CPR Maó (Balearic Islands) CPR Palma. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Creu Roja Catalunya. Barcelona Creu Roja Espanyola de la Garrotxa. Olot (Girona) Cruz Roja Española de La Rioja. Logroño Cruz Roja Española. Cádiz Cruz Roja Española. Huesca Cruz Roja Española. La Solana (Ciudad Real) Cruz Roja Española. Lugo Cuarentuna Alicante DAPSI, Centre de Desenvolupament Infantil i Atenció Precoç. Rubí (Barcelona) Desarrollo y Solidaridad. Valladolid Destiladera S.L. Breña Alta (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Diputació de Lleida Diputación Provincial de Cádiz Domus Pacis-Casal de la Pau. Valencia Dya servicios discapacitados, sl. Sociedad unipersonal. Pamplona/ Iruña (Navarre) Edifici Calisay. Arenys de Mar (Barcelona) Edificio Huerta Cercada, Centro de Formación. Huétor Vega (Granada) Educación, Cultura y Solidaridad. Madrid Emaús S. Coop. Donostia - San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Empresa para la incorporación social. Los Palacios y Villafranca (Seville) Encina Laura. Alhaurín de la Torre (Malaga) Enfermos de Fibromialgia, AFIBROSE. Seville Entidad Local de Nueva Jarilla. Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) EPSJ Casa Escuela Santiago Uno. Salamanca Es Pla des Rector. Sant Lluís (Balearic Islands) ESADE, Madrid Esclerosi Múltiple - Associació de Lleida Esclerosi Múltiple - Associació de Tarragona. Reus (Tarragona) Escola Bon Pastor. Barcelona Escola d’acordió de Lleida Escola de música d’Andratx (Balearic Islands) Escola de Sida de Balears. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Escola d’Educació Especial Crespinell SCCL. Terrassa (Barcelona) Escola del Treball. Lleida Escola especial Ntra. Sra. de Montserrat. Barcelona Escola Especialitzada La Sagrera. Barcelona Escola Municipal Binipetit. Binissalem (Balearic Islands) Escola Municipal de Música Antoni Torrandell. Inca (Balearic Islands) Escola Municipal de Música Miquel Tortell. Muro (Balearic Islands) Escola Nova de Porreres (Balearic Islands) Escola Ramon Pont. Terrassa (Barcelona) Escola Sant Jaume de Lleida Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya. Barcelona Escola Universitària de Magisteri Alberta Jiménez. Palma de Mallorca ((Balearic Islands) Escola Verge del Carme. Maó (Balearic Islands) Escoles Velles. Ses Salines (Balearic Islands) Escoles Velles. Son Servera (Balearic Islands) Escoleta Municipal. Colònia Sant Pere (Balearic Islands) Escoleta Municipal. Esporles (Balearic Islands) Escoleta Municipal. Sineu (Balearic Islands) Escoltes Catalans. Barcelona Escorxador, L’ . Vilafranca del Penedès (Barcelona) Escuela de Empresas 2000. Antequera (Malaga) Escuela Gallega de Administración Pública, EGAP. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Escuela Hotel Santa Cruz de Tenerife Escuela Infantil Sagrada Familia. Granada Escuela Municipal de Música Luis Aramburu. Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Escuela Popular Calasanz. Alcalá de Henares (Madrid) Escuelas Profesionales Sagrada Familia. Andújar (Jaén) Església de Bunyola (Balearic Islands) Església de la Colònia de Sant Jordi (Balearic Islands) Església de la Colònia de Sant Pere (Balearic Islands) Església de la Mare de Déu dels Àngels, Cala Millor. Son Servera (Balearic Islands) Església de Sant Bartomeu. Alaró (Balearic Islands) Església de Sant Joan. Arties (Lleida) Església de Santa Eulàlia. Alaior (Balearic Islands) Església de Santa Maria. Ferreries (Balearic Islands) Església del Socors. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) Església Nativitat Ntra. Sra. de Banyalbufar (Balearic Islands) Església Nova. Biniamar (Balearic Islands) Església Oratori de Sant Felip Neri. Barcelona Església Parroquial de Sant Martí. Cassà de la Selva (Girona) Església Parroquial de Sant Miquel. Campanet (Balearic Islands) Església Parroquial de Santa Anna. Moscari (Balearic Islands) Església Parroquial Ntra. Sra. de la Visitació. Consell (Balearic Islands) Església Parroquial Ntra. Sra. de Loreto. Lloret de Vistalegre (Balearic Islands) Espai Cultural Can Ventosa. Eivissa (Balearic Islands) Espai d’Art. Ajuntament de Benidorm (Alicante) Ex-Convento de San Francisco. Icod de los Vinos (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Ex-Convento de Santo Domingo. San Cristóbal de la Laguna (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) FADES Ripoll (Girona) Far, El. Servei Social Evangèlic. Santa Coloma de Gramanet (Barcelona) Farmacéuticos Mundi. Barcelona FASAD. Oviedo (Asturias) FEAPS Canarias. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) FEAPS Ciudad de Ceuta FEAPS La Rioja. Logroño Federació Catalana Persones Disminució Psíquica. Barcelona Federació d’As. de Familiars de Malalts d’Alzheimer. El Prat de Llobregat (Barcelona) Federacio d’As. de Veïns de Lleida Federació d’As. de Veïns i Veïnes de Cornellà de Llobregat (Barcelona) Federació de Centres Juvenils Don Bosco de Catalunya. Barcelona Federació de Sords de Catalunya. Barcelona Federación Andaluza de As. de Laringectomizados. Jaén Federación Andaluza de As. para el Síndrome de Down. Granada Federación Autismo Galicia. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Federación Castellano-Leonesa de Familiares de Enfermos Mentales. Valladolid Federación de As. ALCER. Madrid Federación de As. Americanas en Catalunya. Barcelona Federación de As. Coraje. Madrid Federación de As. de Discapacitados Físicos. Ceuta Federación de As. de Enfermos de Alzheimer. La Cañada de San Urbano (Almería) Federación de As. de Enfermos de Alzheimer. Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Federación de As. de Esclerosis Múltiple de Andalucía. Seville Federación de As. de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer. Huelva Federación de As. de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer. Ibi (Alicante) Federación de As. de Familiares y Enfermos de Alzheimer. Úbeda (Jaén) Federación de As. de Personas con Parkinson. Murcia Federación de As. de Vecinos San Rafael y Pedanias. Hellín (Albacete) Federación de As. Galegas de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Federación de As. por la Integración del sordo en la Comunidad Valenciana. Valencia Federación de Jubilados Blanca de Navarra. Cadreita (Navarre) Federación de Mujeres Progresistas de Andalucía. Seville Federación de Personas Sordas de la Comunidad Valenciana. Valencia Federación de Sordos del Principado de Asturias. Oviedo Federación Española contra la Fibrosis Quística. Valencia Federación Española de Enfermedades Neuromusculares. Barcelona Federación Española de Hemofilia. Madrid Federación Española de Lupus. Malaga Federación Española de Parkinson. Barcelona Federación Extremeña de Deficientes Auditivos de Padres y Amigos del Sordo. Mérida (Badajoz) Federación Gallega de As. de Familiares y Enfermos Mentales. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Federación Local de As. de Padres de Alumnos. Rota (Cadiz) Federación Los Girasoles. Madrid Federación Madrileña de As. Pro Salud Mental. Madrid Federación Murciana de As. de Familiares y Enfermos Mentales. Murcia Federación Progresista de As. de Mujeres. Albacete Federación Provincial de As. de Minusválidos. Cordoba Federación Provincial de Entidades con Retraso Mental. La Línea de la Concepción (Cadiz) Federación Provincial de Málaga de As. de Alzheimer. Málaga Federación Regional de As. de Familiares de Enfermos de Alzheimer. Leon Femarec, SCCL. Barcelona Feria Internacional de Bilbao (Vizcaya) FMD Filipenses Hijas de María Dolorosa. Seville Formación e Intervención Socioeducativa S.L.L. A Coruña Formación, Empleo y Comercialización, Centro Especial de Empleo. Murcia Fraternidad Cristiana de Personas con Discapacidad. Segovia Fraternidad Cristiana de Personas con Discapacidad. Teruel Fremap. Don Benito (Badajoz) FUENSOCIAL. As. de Padres de Niños Discapacitados. Fuengirola (Malaga) Fundació Acció Solidària Contra l’Atur. Barcelona Fundació Artística Mateo Vilagrasa. VilaRodona (Tarragona) Fundació Autisme Mas Casadevall. Barcelona Fundació Ave María. Sitges (Barcelona) Fundació Bayt al-Thaqafa. Barcelona Fundació Casa de Misericòrdia de Barcelona Fundació Casa d’Empara. Vilanova i la Geltrú (Barcelona) Fundació Casal Verge de Montserrat. Balsareny (Barcelona) Fundació Catalana Privada Akwaba. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) Fundació Catalana Tutelar de Disminuïts Psíquics. Barcelona Fundació CECOT Formació. Terrassa (Barcelona) Fundació Centre d’Higiene Mental Les Corts. Barcelona Fundació Centres d’Alt Rendiment Empresarial i Social. Barcelona Fundació Clínic per a la Recerca Biomèdica. Barcelona Fundació Concepció Juvanteny. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) Fundació Cultural Privada Lestonnac. Barcelona Fundació Dr. Lluís Vila i d’Abadal. Barcelona Fundació Dr. Pifarré. Lleida Fundació EMYS. Riudarenes. Girona Fundació Engrunes. Barcelona Fundació Esclerosi Múltiple. Barcelona Fundació Escola Municipal d’Arts i Oficis. Olesa de Montserrat (Barcelona) Fundació Esplai de les Illes. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Fundació Eulàlia Torres de Beà. Barcelona Fundació Font Picant. Barcelona Fundació Ginesta. Barcelona Fundació Gresol Projecte Home. Montgat (Barcelona) Fundació Hospital Manacor (Balearic Islands) Fundació Hospital Son Llàtzer. Son Ferriol (Balearic Islands) Fundació Humanitària pel Tercer i Quart Món Dr. Trueta. Vic (Barcelona) Fundació Institut de Recerca Hospital Universitari Vall d’Hebron. Barcelona Fundació Joan Oró. Barcelona Fundació Jordi Gol i Gurina. Barcelona Fundació Lucia per la Sida Pediàtrica. Barcelona Fundació Main. Sabadell (Barcelona) Fundació Mercè Fontanilles. Barcelona Fundació Nou Barris. Barcelona Fundació Onada. Tarragona Fundació para el Apoyo de Menores en Ocio. Tiempo Libre. Madrid Fundació Patronat Obrer de Sant Josep. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Fundació Privada Acció Baix Montseny. Sant Celoni (Barcelona) Fundació Privada ARED. Barcelona Fundació Privada ARSIS. Badalona (Barcelona) Fundació Privada Auxilia Barcelona Fundació Privada CAVIGA. Sant Feliu de Llobregat (Barcelona) Fundació Privada Ciutat Solidària. Tarragona Fundació Privada Congost Autisme. La Garriga (Barcelona) Fundació Privada del Barri Pardinyes. Lleida Fundació Privada d’Oncologia Infantil Enriqueta Villavecchia. Barcelona Fundació Privada Els Joncs. Sarrià de Ter (Girona) Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 141 Fundació Privada Espai Salut. Barcelona Fundació Privada Ficat. Barcelona Fundació Privada Institut d’Investigació Biomèdica. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (Barcelona) Fundació Privada Integramenet. Santa Coloma de Gramenet (Barcelona) Fundació Privada Jeroni de Moragas. Sant Cugat del Vallès (Barcelona) Fundació Privada La Roda d’Accions Culturals i del Lleure. Barcelona Fundació Privada L’Heura Tarragona Fundació Privada Lliga Catalana d’Ajuda Oncològic. Barcelona Fundació Privada Mas Albornà. Olèrdola (Barcelona) Fundació Privada Omega. Sitges (Barcelona) Fundació Privada OREIG. Palamós (Girona) Fundació Privada per a Disminuïts Psíquics de la Comarca del Pla de l’Estany. Banyoles (Girona) Fundació Privada Pro Disminuïts Psíquics Finestrelles. Esplugues de Llobregat (Barcelona) Fundació Privada Ramon Noguera. Girona Fundació Privada Residencia Can Planoles. Roda de Ter (Barcelona) Fundació Privada Sant Romà. Lloret de Mar (Girona) Fundació Privada Santa Teresa del Vendrell (Tarragona) Fundació Privada TRINIJOVE. Barcelona Fundació Privada Tutelar ACIDH. Barcelona Fundació Privada Universitat i Tecnologia. Barcelona Fundació Privada Via-Guasp per a la Rehabilitació del Malalt Mental. Barcelona Fundació Pro Disminuïts Psíquics Jacinta Sastrada. Barcelona Fundació Residència d’Avis de La Pobla de Lillet. Barcelona Fundació Servei Gironi Pedagogia Social. Girona Fundació Sisal. Servei d’Integració Social i Ajuda. Barcelona Fundació Social La Sapiència. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Fundació Social Sant Ignasi de Loiola. Lleida Fundació Son Fornés. Montuïri (Balearic Islands) Fundación 2001 Global Nature-Castilla y León. Fuentes de Nava (Palencia) Fundación Acción contra el Hambre. Barcelona Fundación Acción contra el Hambre. Madrid Fundación Acción Franciscana. Centro de Orientación. Murcia Fundación Adana. Barcelona Fundación ADECCO. Barcelona Fundación ADRA. Agencia Adventista para el Desarrollo. Lleida Fundación ADSIS. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Fundación ADSIS. Madrid Fundación Adunare. Zaragoza Fundación Afanias Moratalaz. Madrid Fundación Albatros Andalucía. Seville Fundación Aldaba - Proyecto Hombre. Valladolid Fundación Aldauri = Aldauri Fundazioa. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Fundación Alicante Acoge. Alicante Fundación Alzheimer España. Madrid Fundación Amigos de José Mª de Llanos. Madrid Fundación Amparos Eres & Marhuenda. Villarrobledo (Albacete) Fundación APASCOVI. Collado Villalba (Madrid) Fundación APROCOR. Madrid Fundación Arzobispo Miguel Roca. Valencia Fundación Asindown. Valencia Fundación Asistencial para las Fuerzas Armadas y Guardia Civil. Madrid Fundación Aspace Navarra para el Empleo. Noain (Navarre) Fundación Atención Integral del Menor. Zaragoza Fundación Ayúdate. Madrid Fundación Balia. Madrid Fundación Banco de Alimentos de Jaén Fundación BAURES. Oviedo (Asturias) Fundación Benéfica La Encarnación y San José. Cájar (Granada) Fundación Benéfica San Bernabé y San Antolín. Palencia Fundación Benéfico Asistencial Doña Concepción y Don Pedro Aragonés de la Comunidad Valenciana. Villajoyosa (Alicante) 142 Fundación Benéfico Social Hospital y Asilo Santísimo Cristo de los Remedios. La Rambla (Cordoba) Fundación Bidean Laboral. Ansoáin (Navarre) Fundación Blas Méndez Ponce de ayuda al Niño Oncológico. Madrid Fundación Buruntza Fundazioa. DonostiaSant Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Fundación Canaria Centro de Solidaridad de las Islas. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Fundación Canaria Oliver Mayor contra la Fibrosis. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Fundación Canaria para el Desarrollo Social. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Fundación Canaria Santuario de Candelaria (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Fundación Canaria Universitaria de Las Palmas. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Fundación Candeal Proyecto Hombre. Burgos Fundación Canfranc para la Promoción Social y Cultural. Zaragoza Fundación Carlos Martín. Madrid Fundación Carmen Fernández Céspedes Centro Especial. Zaragoza Fundación Cauce. Burgos Fundación CEAR - Consejo de Apoyo a los Refugiados. Tres Cantos (Madrid) Fundación CEDAT de la Comunidad Valenciana. Valencia Fundación Centro Español de Solidaridad Proyecto Hombre. Madrid Fundación Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas. Madrid Fundación Cudeca. Arroyo de la Miel (Malaga) Fundación de Ayuda al Discapacitado y Enfermo Psíquicos. Soria Fundación de Cultura Ciudad de Cuenca Fundación de Desarrollo Sostenido. Barcelona Fundación de Iniciativas Locales. Sección Castilla. Salamanca Fundación de la Comunidad Valenciana Estudio y Cultura, ESYCU. Valencia Fundación del Apóstol Santiago. Comillas (Cantabria) Fundación Desarrollo y Asistencia. Madrid Fundación Diocesana San José Obrero. Orihuela (Alicante) Fundación Economistas Sin Fronteras. Madrid Fundación Érguete Integración. Vigo (Pontevedra) Fundación Escuela de Solidaridad. La Zubia (Granada) Fundación Española de Reumatología. Madrid Fundación Europea para la Cooperación Norte-Sur. Huelva Fundación Fuente Agria. Fundación para la Atención Integral a las Personas con Discapacidad Psíquica. Puertollano (Ciudad Real) Fundación Garcia Gil. Leganés (Madrid) Fundación Genus. Seville Fundación Götze. Madrid Fundación Hermanos Obreros de María. Centro Ciudad de los Niños. Granada Fundación Hombre Libre - Projecte Home. Sa Vileta. (Balearic Islands) Fundación Hospital Carlos Haya de Málaga Fundación Hospitalaria de la Orden de Malta en España. Barcelona Fundación Ilundain Haritz-Berri. Ilundain (Navarre) Fundación Intered. Red de Intercambio y Solidaridad. Madrid Fundación Juan Bonal. Zaragoza Fundación Kalathos. Alcorisa (Teruel) Fundación Leucemia y Linfoma. Madrid Fundación Marineland Palmitos. Calvià (Balearic Islands) Fundación Noray Proyecto Hombre. Alicante Fundación Oxígeno. Burgos Fundación Padre Leonardo Castillo. Seville Fundación Padre Miguel García Blanco. Seville Fundación para el Desarrollo Sostenible de Doñana. Almonte (Huelva) Fundación para la Cooperación y Salud Internacional Carlos III. Madrid Fundación para la Danza Víctor Ullate. Alcobendas (Madrid) Fundación para la Investigación Hospital de la Princesa. Madrid Fundación Particular Tienda Asilo de San Pedro. Lo Campano (Murcia) I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Fundación Paz y Tercer Mundo-Hirugarren Mundua Ta Bakea. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Fundación Privada Boscana. Barcelona Fundación Privada Madrid Contra la Esclerosis Múltiple. Madrid Fundación Privada Miguel de Montaigne. Logroño (La Rioja) Fundación Privada Wae. Barcelona Fundación Prolibertas. Antequera (Malaga) Fundación Promoción Claretiana de Desarrollo. Madrid Fundación Proyecto Don Bosco. Cordoba Fundación Puerta Abierta. Murcia Fundación San Andrés y la Magdalena. Cordoba Fundación San Carlos. Celanova (Ourense) Fundación San Ezequiel Moreno. Zaragoza Fundación Sanatorio Adaro. Langreo (Asturias) Fundación Santa Marta para el Fomento del Empleo. Seville Fundación Save the Children. Madrid Fundación Síndrome de Down de Cantabria. Santander (Cantabria) Fundación Solidaridad y Reinserción. Murcia Fundación Tierra de Hombres-España. Seville Fundación Tormes-EB. Zarapicos (Salamanca) Fundación Trébol. Las Rozas de Madrid (Madrid) Fundación Tutelar Tau. Seville Fundación Valdocco. Huelva Fundación Vicente Ferrer. Barcelona Gabinete de psicoterapia ESPIRAL, C.B. Benidorm (Alicante) . Gabinete Literario de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) GAEM, Grup d’Afectats d’Esclerosi Múltiple. Barcelona Galicia Terra de Acollida. Ourense GARA. Alcoy (Alicante) Generalitat de Catalunya. Barcelona Generalitat Valenciana. Castellón de la Plana Generalitat Valenciana. Valencia Gent Solidària. Terrassa (Barcelona) Gerencia la Caixa Huelva Germanor de la Gent Gran de Sant Jordi de Cercs (Barcelona) Germans Franciscans Creu Blanca. Valls (Tarragona) GES Consultores y Analistas de Recursos Humanos. A Coruña GESPOR NALON, S.L.L. Laviana (Asturias) Ginesta.Grup d’ Autoajuda per a Dones amb Càncer de Pit. Vilafranca del Penedès (Barcelona) Gobierno de Canarias. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Grup Colònies Ca n’Anglada. Terrassa (Barcelona) Grup d’Esplai la Fàbrica de Can Tusell. Terrassa (Barcelona) Grupo Corporativo FAMF, SL, Cenro Especial de Empleo. Malaga Grupo de Educadores de Calle y Trabajo con Menores. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) GUDAT, S.L. Donostia-San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Gus Marionetas. Pamplona/Iruña (Navarre) Hermanas de Jesús Paciente. Barcelona Hermanas Mercedarias de la Caridad. Centro Especial Padre Zegri. Valladolid Hermanas Oblatas del Santísimo Redentor. Almería Hermanas Oblatas del Santísimo Redentor. Barcelona Hermanas Oblatas del Santísimo Redentor. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Hermanitas de los Ancianos Desamparados. Alcázar de San Juan (Ciudad Real) Hermanitas de los Ancianos Desamparados. Montilla (Cordoba) Heura del Vallès, L’ . Fundació Privada. Terrassa (Barcelona) Hijas de la Caridad de San Vicente de Paúl. Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) Hijas de la Caridad de San Vicente de Paúl. Zaragoza Hogar la Esperanza. Madrid Hogar Provincial de la Diputación de Alicante. San Juan de Alicante Hogar San José de la Montaña. Seville Hogar Santa Isabel. Barcelona Homenatges a la Vellesa de Teia (Barcelona) Hora de Déu, L’ . Barcelona Hortojardín, S.L Unipersonal. Valladolid Hospes Amerigo. Alicante Hospital Arnau de Vilanova. Lleida Hospital Central de Asturias. Oviedo Hospital Ciudad de Jaén Hospital Clínico San Carlos. Madrid Hospital Clínico Universitario de Salamanca Hospital Clínico Universitario de Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Hospital Clínico Universitario Lozano Blesa. Zaragoza Hospital Clínico Universitario. Valladolid Hospital Comarcal de la Axarquía. VélezMálaga (Malaga) Hospital Comarcal de Riotinto. Minas de Riotinto (Huelva) Hospital Comarcal de Ronda (Malaga) Hospital Cristal-Piñor. Ourense Hospital de Basurto. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Hospital de Cabueñes. Gijón (Asturias) Hospital de Cruces. Barakaldo (Vizcaya) Hospital de Donostia-San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Hospital de la Linea de la Concepción (Cadiz) Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau. Barcelona Hospital de León Hospital de Poniente. El Ejido (Almería) Hospital de Sabadell (Barcelona) Hospital de San José. Teruel Hospital de Zumarraga (Guipúzcoa) Hospital del Mar. Barcelona Hospital del Rey. Melilla Hospital del S.A.S de Jerez de la Frontera (Cadiz) Hospital Doce de Octubre. Madrid Hospital Fundación de Alcorcón. Madrid Hospital General de Albacete Hospital General de Guadalajara Hospital General de Segovia Hospital General Yagüe. Burgos Hospital Gregorio Marañón. Madrid Hospital Infanta Cristina. Badajoz Hospital Infanta Elena. Huelva Hospital Infanta Margarita. Cabra (Cordoba) Hospital Infantil Universitario Niño Jesús. Madrid Hospital Josep Trueta. Girona Hospital Juan Canalejo. A Coruña Hospital Juan Ramón Jiménez. Huelva Hospital La Inmaculada. Huércal-Overa (Almería) Hospital La Paz. Madrid Hospital Materno Infantil de Badajoz Hospital Materno Infantil de Cáceres Hospital Materno Infantil de Las Palmas de Gran Canarias (Las Palmas) Hospital Materno Infantil Teresa Herrera. A Coruña Hospital Miguel Servet. Zaragoza Hospital Nacional de Parapléjicos. Toledo Hospital Ntra. Sra. de Alarcos. Ciudad Real Hospital Ntra. Sra. de Aranzazu. Astigarraga (Guipúzcoa) Hospital Ntra. Sra. de Candelaria. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Hospital Ntra. Sra. de Sonsoles. Ávila Hospital Princesa Sofía. Leon Hospital Puerta del Mar. Cádiz Hospital Punta Europa. Algeciras (Cadiz) Hospital Ramón y Cajal. Madrid Hospital Regional Universitario Carlos Haya. Malaga Hospital San Agustín. Linares (Jaén) Hospital San Juan de la Cruz. Úbeda (Jaén) Hospital San Millán. Logroño (La Rioja) Hospital Sant Joan de Déu. Esplugues de Llobregat (Barcelona) Hospital Santiago Apostol. Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Hospital Severo Ochoa. Leganés (Madrid) Hospital Torrecárdenas. Almería Hospital Txagorritxu. Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Hospital Universitari de Girona Doctor Josep Trueta Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol. Badalona (Barcelona) Hospital Universitari Son Dureta. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Hospital Universitario de Getafe (Madrid) Hospital Universitario de Móstoles (Madrid) Hospital Universitario de Tenerife. La Laguna (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Hospital Universitario La Fe. Valencia Hospital Universitario Marques de Valdecilla. Sandander (Cantabria) Hospital Universitario Miguel Servet. Zaragoza Hospital Universitario Ntra. Sra. de Candelaria. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Hospital Universitario Ntra. Sra. de Valme. Seville Hospital Universitario Pío del Río Ortega.Valladolid Hospital Universitario Reina Sofía. Cordoba Hospital Universitario San Cecilio. Granada Hospital Universitario Virgen de la Arrixaca. El Palmar o Lugar de Don Juan (Murcia) Hospital Universitario Virgen de la Macarena. Seville Hospital Universitario Virgen de las Nieves. Granada Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocío. Seville Hospital Universitario. Puerto Real (Cadiz) Hospital Vall d’Hebron. Barcelona Hospital Valle de los Pedroches. Pozoblanco (Cordoba) Hospital Virgen del Camino. Pamplona/ Iruña (Navarre) Hospital Xeral Cíes-Vigo. (Pontevedra) Hospital Xeral-Calde. Lugo Hospitalidad Sta. Teresa. Asociación Benéfica. Cartagena (Murcia) ICO Duran i Reynals. L’Hospitalet de Llobregat. (Barcelona) IES Algarb. Sant Josep de sa Talaia (Balearic Islands) IES Arguineguín. Mogán (Las Palmas) IES Biel Martí. Ferreries (Balearic Islands) IES Calvià. Santa Ponça (Balearic Islands) IES Celestí Bellera. Granollers (Barcelona) IES El Sui. Cardedeu (Barcelona) IES Escola Municipal del Treball. Granollers (Barcelona) IES Faro de Maspalomas. San Bartolomé de Tirajana (Las Palmas) IES Gili Gaia. Lleida IES Joan Ramis i Ramis. Maó (Balearic Islands) IES Josep Lladonosa. Lleida IES Josep Miquel Guàrdia. Alaior (Balearic Islands) IES Josep Puig i Cadafalch. Mataró (Barcelona) IES La Caparella. Lleida IES Leopoldo Alas Clarín. Oviedo (Asturias) IES Manuel Blancafort. La Garriga (Barcelona) IES Manuel de Montsuar. Lleida IES Marc Ferrer. Sant Francesc de Formentera (Balearic Islands) IES Maria Rúbies. Lleida IES Mariàngels Cardona. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) IES Marina. La Llagosta (Barcelona) IES Màrius Torres. Lleida IES Pasqual Calvó i Caldés. Maó (Balearic Islands) IES Pau Casesnoves. Inca (Balearic Islands) IES Pedro Espinosa. Antequera (Malaga) IES Sa Colomina. Eivissa (Balearic Islands) IES Santa Maria d’Eivissa (Balearic Islands) IES Thos i Codina. Mataró (Barcelona) IES Torrevicens. Lleida IES Vicenç Plantada. Mollet del Vallès (Barcelona) IES Vinyes Velles. Montornès del Vallès (Barcelona) IES Xarc. Santa Eulalia del Río (Balearic Islands) IFEVI - Recinto Ferial de Cotogrande. Vigo (Pontevedra Iglesia de San Miguel. Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Iglesia de San Pedro Mártir. Telde (Las Palmas) Iglesia de San Pedro. Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Indústria, Sa. Es Castell (Balearic Islands) Ingenieros para la CooperaciónLankidetzarako Ingeniariak. Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Institució Balmes, SCCL. Sant Boi de Llobregat (Barcelona) Institució Benèfica Amics dels Avis. Navarcles (Barcelona) Institució Neuro-Psico-Pedagógica Guru. Barcelona Institut ASPACE Fundació Privada. Barcelona Institut de Pedagogia Terapèutica Jeroni de Moraga. Barcelona Institut de Recerca Biomèdica de Barcelona Institut de Recerca de l’Hospital de la Santa Creu. Barcelona Institut del Teatre. Barcelona Institut d’Estudis Ilerdencs. Lleida Institut Germans Maristes, província de Catalunya. Barcelona Institut Tecnològic de Lleida Instituto Comunitario de la Tercera Edad. Irun (Guipúzcoa) Instituto de Adoratrices Esclavas del Stmo. Sacramento. Gijón (Asturias) Instituto de Canarias Cabrera Pinto. San Cristóbal de la Laguna (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Instituto de Estudios Políticos para América Latina. Madrid Instituto de Promoción y Apoyo al Desarrollo. Madrid Instituto de Técnicas Educativas de la CECE. Madrid Instituto Madrileño del Menor y la Familia. Madrid Instituto Secular Hogar de Nazaret. La Providencia. Ribera del Fresno (Badajoz) Instituto Viejo. Carboneras (Almería) Integración Laboral de Colectivos Desfavorecidos. Carmona (Seville) Integración Socio-Laboral de Minusválidos Psíquicos. Salamanca INTEGRO. Asociación de Minusválidos das Comarcas de Bergantiños, Fisterra. Cabana de Bergantiños (A Coruña) Intermon Oxfam. Barcelona Internetisimo S.L. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Itamar. Instituto Secular Obreras de la Cruz. Valencia Joves Ecologistes d’Oliva (Valencia) JPL Tsolució, S.L. Pego (Alicante) Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha. Toledo Junta de Extremadura. Mérida (Badajoz) Kale Dor Kayiko. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Katxalin - Asociación de Mujeres Afectadas de Cáncer de Mama. Donostia-San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Liceu Piaget. Barcelona Llano de Samper. Jaca (Huesca) Llar Club de Pensionistes i Jubilats de les Cases d’Alcanar (Tarragona) Llar de Jubilats i Pensionistes de Bordils (Girona) Llar de Jubilats Sant Miquel d’Amer (Girona) Llar de Jubilats Sant Pere de Torelló (Barcelona) Llar de Jublitats d’Arbúcies (Girona) Llar del Pensionista de Guardiola de Berguedà (Barcelona) Llar del Pensionista Lillet. La Pobla de Lillet (Barcelona) Llar Mercedària. Barcelona Llar Social del Jubilat de Golmés (Lleida) Lliga Catalana d’Ajuda al Malalt de Càncer. Girona Lliga Reumatològica de Menorca. Maó (Balearic Islands) Llonja, Sa. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Llotja del Blat. Vic (Barcelona) Lluïsa Bertomeu. Deltebre (Tarragona) Local de la Tercera Edat de Campanet (Balearic Islands) Local de la Tercera Edat de s’Horta. Santanyí (Balearic Islands) Local de l’As.de Persones Majors sa Cabana. Marratxí (Balearic Islands) Local Social de Fornells. Es Mercadal (Balearic Islands) Lonja, La. Zaragoza Mancha Acoge, La. Valdepeñas (Ciudad Real) Mancomunitat Pla de Mallorca. Petra (Balearic Islands) Manipulados Montevedado, S.L. Villamayor (Zaragoza) Medicus Mundi Guipúzkoa. Donostia-San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Meniños. Fundación para la Infancia. A Coruña Mens Sana. Asociación de Usuarios de Centros de Salud. Madrid Mercedarios Provincia de Castilla Comunidad. Madrid Metges del Món. Girona Ministerio de Medioambiente. Servicio Provincial de Costas de Alicante Minusvàlids Físics Associats. Girona Misioneras Cruzadas de la Iglesia. Almería Molí d’en Polit. Manacor (Balearic Islands) Moll de Ribera de Ponent. Eivissa (Balearic Islands) Món blau-verd. Barcelona Monasterio de San Juan. Burgos Monasterio de Santa Clara. Moguer (Huelva) Mondragon Unibertsitatea. Arrasate (Guipúzcoa) Monestir de Sant Pere de les Puel·les. Barcelona Montepio del Ram del Sucre de Previsió Social. Barcelona Mostre Teatre Reus Baix Camp. Reus (Tarragona) Moviment de Centres d’Esplai Cristians. Barcelona Moviment d’Esplai del Vallès. Sabadell (Barcelona) Moviment per la Pau. Barcelona Movimiento Juvenil Mercedario de Galicia. Ferrol (A Coruña) Movimiento por la Paz, el Desarme y la Libertad de la Región de Murcia. Murcia Multiocio. Granada Museo de Alcalá de Guadaira (Seville) Museo de Cáceres Museo de la Maturaleza y el Hombre. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Museo de Siyâsa. Cieza (Murcia) Museo Elder de la Ciencia y la Tecnología. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Museo Histórico Municipal. San Fernando (Cadiz) Museo Municipal de Albacete Museo Municipal de Arucas (Las Palmas) Museo Municipal de Ourense Museu Badalona (Barcelona) Museu Comarcal de Ciències Naturals. Tremp (Lleida) Museu Comarcal de l’Urgell. Tàrrega (Lleida) Museu de Gavà (Barcelona) Museu de la Ciutat de Benicarló. (Castellón) Museu de la Natura. Ferreries (Balearic Islands) Museu de la Noguera. Balaguer (Lleida) Museu de la Pell. Igualada (Barcelona) Museu de l’Art de la Pell. Vic (Barcelona) Museu de Pollença (Balearic Islands) Museu de Valls (Tarragona) Museu del Montsià. Amposta (Tarragona) Museu del Suro. Palafrugell (Girona) Museu d’Història de Sabadell (Barcelona) Museu Municipal de Caldes de Montbui, Thermalia (Barcelona) Museu Municipal de Nàutica. El Masnou (Barcelona) Música Pons Roselló. Lleida Naturhiscope. Oropesa del Mar (Castellón) Naves de Esperanza. Barcelona Noemí Vallespir. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Nueva Fundación Los Albares. Cieza (Murcia) Obra Mercedaria. Barcelona Obra Mercedaria. Valencia Obra Social Ascensión Sánchez. Residencia Materno. Coslada (Madrid) Obra Social d’Ajuda al Disminuït Psíquic. Barcelona Obra Social de Acogida y Desarrollo. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Obra Social La Milagrosa. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Òmnium Cultural. Associació Promotora de la Cultura. Barcelona Òmnium Cultural. Delegació de l’Alt Penedès. Vilafranca del Penedès (Barcelona) ONG Ecos do Sur. A Coruña ONG Ensenyants Solidaris. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) ONG Entreculturas-Fe y Alegría. Madrid ONG Fraternidad para todos. Socuéllamos (Ciudad Real) ONGD Aigua per al Sahel. Barcelona Orfeó Lleidatà. Lleida Orfeó Reusenc. (Tarragona) Organisme Autònom de Museus i Arxiu Històric de Sabadell (Barcelona) Organización no Gubernamental para la Cooperación. Burgos Organización para la Solidaridad con los pueblos de Asia, África y América Latina. Madrid Orgnització de Consumidors i Usuaris de Catalunya. Barcelona Pabellón de Ferias y Congresos de Ciudad Real Pabellón Polideportivo Municipal de Lucena (Cordoba) PACEYA. Asociación de Parálisis Cerebral y afines de Madrid Palacio de Aranburu. Tolosa. (Guipúzcoa) Palacio de Congresos de Valencia Palacio de Congresos del Recinto Ferial. Gijón (Asturias) Palacio de Congresos Kursaal. Donostia-San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Palacio de Congresos y Exposiciones de Córdoba Palacio de Congresos y Exposiciones. Cádiz Palacio de Congresos y Exposiciones. Santiago Compostela (A Coruña) Palacio de Exposiciones y Congresos. Granada Palacio de Ferias y Congresos. Malaga Palacio de Festivales y Congresos de Castilla y León. Salamanca Palacio de la Aceituna y del Vino. Almendralejo (Badajoz) Palacio de la Magdalena. Santander (Cantabria) Palacio de la Música. Torrevieja (Alicante) Palacio de los Niños de Don Gome. Andújar (Jaén) Palacio Erisana. Lucena (Cordoba) Palacio Municipal de Congressos. Madrid Palacio Municipal de Exposiciones Kiosco Alfonso. A Coruña Palacio Villa Suso. Vitoria-Gasteiz (Álava) Palau Centelles. Barcelona Palau de Congressos de Catalunya. Barcelona Palau de Congressos de la Fira de Barcelona Palau de Congressos de Peñiscola (Castellón) Palau de la Música Catalana. Barcelona Palau dels Barons de Santa Bàrbara. Ontinyent (Valencia) Palau Episcopal. Solsona (Lleida) Palau Falguera. Sant Feliu de Llobregat (Barcelona) Palau Recasens. Molins de Rei (Barcelona) Palmas Acoge, Las. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria PAPELCAR, SCCL. Gijón (Asturias) Parkinson Asturias. Oviedo Parkinson Bizkaia. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Parkinson Canarias Asociación Regional de Familiares y Enfermos. San Bartolomé (Las Palmas) Parkinson Ferrol. A Coruña Parkinson Guipúzcoa. Donostia-San Sebastián Parkinson Jovellanos del Principado de Asturias. Gijón Parkinson Monzón - Cinca Medio (Huesca) Parlamento de Canarias. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Parròquia de Ntra. Sra. de Robines. Binissalem (Balearic Islands) Parroquia de Ntra. Sra. del Carmen. Zaragoza Parroquia de Ntra. Sra. del Recuerdo. Madrid Parroquia de Purísima Concepción. Trebujena (Cadiz) Parròquia de Sant Andreu de Palomar. Barcelona Parròquia de Sant Bernat de Claravall. Barcelona Parròquia de Sant Francesc d’Assís. Barcelona Parròquia de Sant Magí. Palma de Mallorca. Balearic Islands Parròquia de Sant Martí de Maçanet de Cabrenys (Girona) Parròquia de Sant Martí de Puig - Reig (Barcelona) Parròquia de Sant Pere Apòstol. Esporles (Balearic Islands) Parròquia de Santa Eulàlia de Corró d’Avall. Les Franqueses del Vallès (Barcelona) Parròquia de Santa Maria de Llerona. Les Franqueses del Vallès (Barcelona) Parroquia de Santa María Magdalena. Olivenza (Badajoz) Parroquia del Pilar. Valencia Parròquia del Pont de Vilomara i Rocafort (Barcelona) Patronal Local de la Vellesa de La Selva del Camp (Tarragona) Patronal Local de la Vellesa. Taradell (Barcelona) Patronat d’Homenatge a la Vellesa de Cantallops (Girona) Patronat d’Homenatge a la Vellesa St. Antoni i Sta. Madrona. Barcelona Patronat d’Homenatges a la Vellesa de Capmany (Girona) Patronat d’Homenatges a la VellesaAjuntament de Pierola (Barcelona) Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 143 Patronat d’Homenatges a la Vellesa de Gombrèn (Girona) Patronat d’Homenatges a la Vellesa de Les Planes d’Hostoles (Girona) Patronat d’Homenatges a la Vellesa de Roquetes (Tarragona) Patronat d’Homenatges a la Vellesa de Santa Maria del Camí (Balearic Islands) Patronat d’Homenatges a la Vellesa d’Hostafrancs (Barcelona) Patronat d’Homenatges a la Vellesa i Asil de Banyoles (Girona) Patronat Gent Gran Montesquiu (Barcelona) Patronat local de la Vellesa de Mataró (Barcelona) Patronat local de la Vellesa de Sant Andreu de Llavaneres (Barcelona) Patronat local de la Vellesa del Pont Major (Girona) Patronat local dels Homenatges a la Vellesa de Castelló d’Empúries (Girona) Patronat local dels Homenatges a la Vellesa de La Cellera de Ter (Girona) Patronat local dels Homenatges a la Vellesa La Batllòria (Barcelona) Patronat local d’Homenatge a la Vellesa de Balenyà (Barcelona) Patronat Municipal de Cultura de Cardedeu (Barcelona) Per Envant, SL. Inca (Balearic Islands) Perualde. Getxo (Vizcaya) Pinet Playa. Sant Josep de sa Talaia (Balearic Islands) Plan Comunitario de Carabanchel Alto. Madrid Port de Sóller (Balearic Islands) Prevenció i Informació Cáncer Molins de Rei. PICAM (Barcelona) Productora, La. Gijón (Asturias) PROLAYA. Asociación Promotora Laboral y Asistencial. Alcalá de Guadaira (Seville) Promotora Social de l’Equip de Campaments. Lleida Proyecto Labor. Cabanillas del Campo (Guadalajara) Proyecto Vivir. Fundación de la Comunidad Valenciana. Valencia Puente Vida. San Morales (Salamanca) Real Colegiata de Santa María la Mayor. Antequera (Malaga) Real Conservatorio Superior de Música de Madrid Recinto Ferial de Castilla y León. Valladolid Recinto Ferial de INFECAR. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Recinto Ferial Santa Quiteria. Lorca (Murcia) Recinto Ferial. Ceuta Red Deporte y Cooperación ONGD. Madrid Red Española de Promoción e Inserción Sociolaboral. Barcelona Reial Acadèmia de les Bones Lletres. Barcelona Reial Acadèmia de Medicina de Catalunya. Barcelona Religiosas Adoratrices Esclavas del Santísimo Sacramento. Almería Religiosas Adoratrices Esclavas del Santísimo Sacramento. Huelva Religiosas Adoratrices Esclavas del Santísimo Sacramento. Madrid Religiosas de María Inmaculada. Cascante (Navarre) Religiosas de María Inmaculada. Malaga Residencia de Ancianos de Cáritas Interparroquial. Burriana (Castellón) Residencia de Ancianos de las Hermanitas de los Pobres. Jaén Residencia de Ancianos Fray Leopoldo. Granada Residencia de Ancianos Jesús Nazareno. Lopera (Jaén) Residencia de Ancianos Los Ángeles. Fuente Obejuna (Cordoba) Residencia de Apoyo a la Familia Fernando Arce. Torrelavega (Cantabria) Residencia de Atención al Menor Ntra. Sra. de la Merced. Fuentes de Andalucía (Seville) Residencia de Mayores San Martín de Porres. Miajadas (Cáceres) Residència Institució Benèfica Amics dels Avis. Navarcles (Barcelona) Residencia Montsacopa. Olot (Girona) Residencia San Ignacio. Barcelona Residencia Santo Domingo. Pollença (Balearic Islands) Residència Serafí Casanoves. Sort (Lleida) Retal, El. Compañía de Títeres. Madrid Ribera Asociación para Discapacitados Psíquicos, La. Alzira (Valencia) 144 Riojaforum. Logroño (La Rioja) Riquirraque Emaús SLU. Gijón (Asturias) Rueca, La. Asociación Social y Cultural. Madrid Sala Abat Senjust. Ripoll (Girona) Sala Àgora. Cambrils (Tarragona) Sala Ambigú. Valladolid Sala Cofradia de Sant Sebastià. Pont de Suert (Lleida) Sala Cultural Molí de l’Oli. La Pobla de Segur (Lleida) Sala d’Art Can Massallera. San Boi de Llobregat (Barcelona) Sala de Exposiciones Antigua Estación de Renfe. Torrevieja (Alicante) Sala de Exposiciones del Conventual de Sant Antonio. Almendralejo (Badajoz) Sala de Exposiciones del Mercado del Este. Santander (Cantabria) Sala de Exposiciones La Molina. Corralejo (Las Palmas) Sala de Exposiciones Plaza Conde de Rodezno. Pamplona/Iruña (Navarre) Sala de Exposiciones Puertas de Castilla. Murcia Sala de Exposiciones Santo Domingo. Salamanca Sala de Exposiciones Torrezabal Kultur Etxea. Galdakao (Vizcaya) Sala de Exposiciones VIMCORSA. Cordoba Sala d’Exposicions del Castell dels Comtes. Santa Coloma de Queralt (Tarragona) Sala d’Exposicions Centre Cultural de Alcoy (Alicante) Sala d’Exposicions Centre Cultural Jaume Muxart. Martorell (Barcelona) Sala d’Exposicions de les Dependències Municipals Sala d’Exposicions de les Oficines Municipals de Ca’n Picafort (Balearic Islands) Sala d’Exposicions del Centre Cívic. Les Borges Blanques (Lleida) Sala d’Exposicions l’Amistat. Cadaqués (Girona) Sala d’Exposicions Municipal-Espai Enric Granados. Cerdanyola del Vallès (Barcelona) Sala Gòtica de la Cúria Reial. Besalú (Girona) Sala Guadalquivir. Seville Sala La Planeta. Girona Sala Municipal de Exposiciones. Requena (Valencia) Sala Municipal d’Exposicions El Roser. Ciutadella de Menorca (Balearic Islands) Sala Municipal d’Exposicions l’Almodí. València Sala Municipal. Casa del Portal del Pardo. El Vendrell (Tarragona) Sala Palmanova. Calvià (Balearic Islands) Sala Polivalent del Centre Sanitari. Porreres (Balearic Islands) Sala Polivalent. Centelles (Barcelona) Sala Tindaya - Parlamento de Canarias. Santa Cruz de Tenerife Salamanca Acoge Sala-Museo San Juan de Dios. Orihuela (Alicante) SALGEIIS, S.A.L. Servicios Sociales. Elche (Alicante) Saló d’Actes Casal de Can Pere Ignasi. Campos (Balearic Islands) Saló d’Actes Unitat Sanitària. Es Mercadal (Balearic Islands) Saló Parroquial de Calonge (Balearic Islands) Saló Parroquial de Puigpunyent (Balearic Islands) Salón Cultural San Miguel. Arcos de la Frontera (Cadiz) Salón de Actos de los Padres Misioneros. Barbastro (Huesca) Salón de Actos del Auditorio de Logroño (La Rioja) Salón de Actos del Edificio de la O.N.C.E. Algeciras (Cadiz) Salón de la Caseta Municipal. Villamartín (Cadiz) Salon de Plenos del Cabildo de la Gomera. San Sebastián de la Gomera (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Salud Mental Sabadell. Associació de Familiars dels Malats. Sabadell (Barcelona) Salut Mental Ponent. Lleida Santa y Real Casa de Misericordia de Bilbao (Vizcaya) Santuari de Nostra Senyora de Cura. Algaida (Balearic Islands) Secció Balear de la Sociedad Española de Estudios Clásicos. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) I Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects Sede de AVIMA en Granada SEGI Recursos para Enfermos Mentales. Donostia-San Sebastián (Guipúzcoa) Segomeh. Asociación Socio-Cultural. Segovia SEHUPORDELCAR - Sede Humanitaria Portuense del Cáncer. El Puerto de Santa María (Cadiz) Seniors Españoles para la Cooperación Técnica. Madrid SERLICOOP. Elda (Alicante) Servei de Dol Ponent. Tàrrega (Lleida) Servei Solidari. Barcelona Serveis Socioculturals Tardor 2000, S.L. Servicio Histórico y Cultural del Ejército del Aire. Madrid Servicios de Limpieza APROS S.L. Ceuta Servicios Informáticos Aula 4. Cangas del Narcea (Asturias) Servifecamif, S.L. Santander (Cantabria) SETEM Catalunya (Servei Tercer Món). Barcelona Síntomas poco comunes en la enfermadad de Parkinson. Zaragoza Sociedad Castellano Manchega de Profesores de Matemáticas. Albacete Sociedad Cultural Casino de Monóvar (Alicante) Sociedad Española de Ornitologia. Madrid Sociedad San Vicente de Paúl. San Fernando (Cadiz) Sociedad San Vicente de Paúl. Valladolid Sol de Solsonès. Associació de Familiars de Malalts Mentals i Drogodependents. Solsona (Lleida) SOLC, Asociación para el Soporte y Ayuda en el Tratamiento del Cáncer de Alcoy (Alicante) Somontano Social, S.L. Barbastro (Huesca) Suminfor. Langreo (Asturias) Taller Auria, SCCL. Igualada (Barcelona) Taller Escola Arts Sumptuaris. Barcelona Tamaia. Associació de Dones contra la Violència Familiar. Barcelona TASCA, Serveis d’animació, S.L. Barcelona Teatre Ateneo. Tàrrega (Lleida) Teatre Auditori Felip Pedrell. Tortosa (Tarragona) Teatre Bartrina. Reus (Tarragona) Teatre de Búger (Balearic Islands) Teatre de Salt (Girona) Teatre Municipal. Artà (Balearic Islands) Teatre Municipal. Capdepera (Balearic Islands) Teatre Municipal. Llubí (Balearic Islands) Teatre Municipal. Manacor (Balearic Islands) Teatre Principal. Maó (Balearic Islands) Teatre Principal. València Teatre Zorrilla. Badalona (Barcelona) Teatro Auditorio. Cuenca Teatro Principal. Burgos Teatro Principal. Pontevedra Teatro Sierra de Aracena (Huelva) Tècniques i Recuperacions del Gironés, S.L. Celrà (Girona) Teléfono de la Esperanza.Seville Trans-Formando Soc. Coop. Madrid Tres Serveis Culturals, S.L. Palma de Mallorca (Balearic Islands) Unió de Botiguers de Cardedeu (Barcelona) Unió d’Entitats de la Marina. Barcelona Unión de Minusválidos de Asturias. Gijón (Asturias) Unión General de Policía. Comité Provincial de Valladolid Universidad Alfonso X el Sabio. Villanueva de la Cañada (Madrid) Universidad Autonoma de Madrid Universidad Carlos III. Getafe (Madrid) Universidad Complutense de Madrid Universidad de Alcalá de Henares (Madrid) Universidad de Alicante. San Vicente del Raspeig (Alicante) Universidad de Cantabria. Santander (Cantabria) Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha. Albacete Universidad de Córdoba Universidad de Deusto. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Universidad de Extremadura. Badajoz Universidad de Granada Universidad de Granada. Universidad de La Laguna. San Cristóbal de la Laguna (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) Universidad de las Palmas de Gran Canaria Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Las Palmas) Universidad de Málaga Universidad de Murcia Universidad de Navarra. Pamplona/Iruña Universidad de Oviedo (Asturias) Universidad de Salamanca Universidad de Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Universidad de Sevilla Universidad de Valladolid Universidad de Zaragoza Universidad del País Vasco. Bilbao (Vizcaya) Universidad Europea de Madrid CEES. Villaviciosa de Odón (Madrid) Universidad Miguel Hernández. Elche (Alicante) Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia Cantabria. Santander (Cantabria) Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena (Murcia) Universidad Politécnica de Madrid Universidad Politécnica de Valencia Universidad Pontificia Comillas. Madrid Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Cerdanyola del Vallès Universitat de Barcelona Universitat de Girona Universitat de les Illes Balears. Calvià (Balearic Islands) Universitat de Lleida Universitat de València Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Barcelona Universitat Pompeu Fabra. Barcelona Universitat Ramon LLull. Barcelona UPACE San Fernando (Cadiz) Urolalde, S.L. Azpeitia (Guipúzcoa) Valenciana de Servicios Socioculturales, S.L. Picassent (Valencia) Virgen del Lidon. Asociación de Padres de Niños Autistas.Castelló de la Plana Voluntariado Islámico Cristiano de Acción Social. Malaga Voluntariat de la Parròquia de Sant Andreu. Lleida Xop Centre Ocupacional. Barcelona Xunta de Galicia. Santiago de Compostela (A Coruña) Directory of ”la Caixa” Foundation Central Services: Av. Diagonal, 621 - 08028 Barcelona Centres BARCELONA T TARRAGONA CaixaForum Av. Marquès de Comillas, 6-8 08038 Barcelona Tel. 93 476 86 00 Fax 93 476 86 63 Centro Social y Cultural de la Fundación ”la Caixa” Colom, 2 43001 Tarragona Tel. 977 24 98 71 Fax 977 24 88 08 CosmoCaixa Teodor Roviralta, 47-51 Barcelona 08022 Tel. 93 212 60 50 Fax 93 253 74 73 Escuela Universitaria de Enfermería Santa Madrona Escorial, 177 08024 Barcelona Tel. 93 254 42 00 Fax 93 254 42 01 GRANOLLERS Centro Cultural de la Fundación ”la Caixa” Joan Camps, 1 08400 Granollers (Barcelona) Tel. 93 860 04 47 Fax 93 860 04 48 GIRONA Sala de Girona de la Fundación ”la Caixa” Sèquia, 5 17001 Girona Tel. 972 21 54 08 Fax 972 41 16 06 PALMA Sede de la Fundación ”la Caixa” en las Islas Baleares Plaça de Weyler, 3 07001 Palma (Mallorca) Tel. 971 17 85 00 Fax 971 72 21 20 MADRID Sala de Exposiciones de la Fundación ”la Caixa” Serrano, 60 28001 Madrid Tel. 91 426 02 02 Fax 91 426 02 44 CosmoCaixa Pintor Murillo, s/n 28100 Alcobendas (Madrid) Tel. 91 484 52 00 Fax 91 484 52 25 CentroCaixa Arapiles, 15 28001 Madrid Tel. 91 444 54 10 Fax 91 444 54 18 LLEIDA MURCIA Centro Social y Cultural de la Fundación ”la Caixa” Avinguda Blondel, 3 25002 Lleida Tel. 973 27 07 88 Fax 973 27 48 89 CentroCaixa Avda. del Río Segura, 6 30002 Murcia Tel. 968 22 63 13 Fax 968 22 63 19 Information Service of ”la Caixa” Foundation - Community Projects: 902 22 30 40 www.obrasocial.lacaixa.es Annual Report 2005 ”la Caixa” Welfare Projects I 145 Graphic design, page make-up and printing www.cege.es Ciutat d’Asunción, 42 08030 Barcelona Cover page design Triangle D.L.: B. 25806-2006 Photographies Age: page 52 Martí Artalejo: pages 76, 85 Ferran Borràs: pages 96, 97, 98, 101 Antoni Capilla: pages 50, 51, 54, 56, 57 Eva Corbacho: page 58 Cultural Sense: page 95 CEGE: page 65 Defoto. Serveis d’Imatge: page 32 Antonella Delussu: pages 8, 9, 10, 16, 18, 22, 28, 30, 43, 48, 49, 60, 66, 67, 72, 75, 77, 82, 88, 100, 102, 104, 105, 106, 112, 114 Anna Elías: page 13 Enfoc: pages 86, 87 Salvador Esparbé: page 12 Figueroa & Stallard: pages 107, 108 Cover page photography Raimon Solà Getty: pages 14, 19, 23, 45 Carlos González: page 55 J. González: pages 17, 73, 93 Herzog: pages 80, 81 César Lucadamo: page 74 Juan Medina: page 94 Jordi Nieva: pages 21, 36, 37, 39, 62, 78, 83, 89, 93 Carmen Ortega: page 82 Sergio Parra: pages 109, 110, 111 Raimon Solà: pages 15, 42 Ariadna Trias: page 34 Eva Tusquets: page 38 Jesús Ubera: page 20 The other photographies are copyrightprotected under the name of the authors 2005 Financial Year Real Expenditure by Programme THOUSAND EUROS Social programmes 119,478 Educational programmes 19,520 Cultural programmes 63,729 Science and Environment programmes 43,530 Total expenditure (1) 246,257 (1) Investment carried out during the financial year amount to 57,036 euros. Financing of activities and investments carried out in financial year 2005 THOUSAND EUROS ”la Caixa” savings bank allocation Income generated by own activities Total 246,257 18,370 264,627 Key figures Total participants / beneficiaries Total number of activities carried out Number of towns with Foundation presence 12,518,553 27,958 1,038 013-5310147-83 WELFARE