Twelve
Concepts for World Service
1.
The final responsibility and the ultimate authority for A.A. World services
should always reside in the collective conscience of our whole Fellowship.
2.When, in 1955, the A.A. groups confirmed the permanent charter for their General
Service Conference, they thereby delegated to the Conference complete authority
for the active maintenance of our world services and thereby made the
Conference-excepting for any change in the Twelve Traditions or in Article 12 of
the Conference Charter-the actual voice and the effective conscience for our
whole Society.
3.As a traditional means of creating and maintaining a clearly defined working
relation between the groups, the Conference, the A.A. General Service Board and
its several service corporations, staffs, committees, and executives, and of
thus insuring their effective leadership, it is here suggested that we endow
each of these elements of world service with a traditional "Right of
Decision."
4.Throughout our Conference structure, we ought to maintain at all responsible
levels a traditional "Right of Participation, " taking care that each
classification or group of our world servants shall be allowed a voting
representation in reasonable proportion to the responsibility that each must
discharge.
5.Throughout our world service structure, a traditional "Right of
Appeal" ought to prevail, thus assuring us that minority opinion will be
heard and that petitions for the redress of personal grievances will be
carefully considered.
6.On behalf of A.A. as a whole, our General Service Conference has the principal
responsibility for the maintenance of our world services, and it traditionally
has the final decision respecting large matters of general policy and finance.
But the Conference also recognizes that the chief initiative and the active
responsibility in most of these matters should be exercised primarily by the
trustee members of the Conference when they act among themselves as the General
Service Board of Alcoholics Anonymous.
7.The Conference recognizes that the Charter and the Bylaws of the General Service
Board are legal instruments: that the trustees are thereby fully empowered to
manage and conduct all of the world service affairs of Alcoholics Anonymous.
8.The trustees of the General Service Board act in two primary capacities: (a)With
respect to the larger matters of over-all policy and finance, they and their
primary committee directly manage these affairs. (B)But with respect to our
separately incorporated and constantly active services, the relation of the
trustees is mainly that of full stock ownership and of custodial oversight which
they exercise through their ability to elect all directors of these entities.
9.Good service leaders, together with sound and appropriate methods of choosing
them, are at all levels indispensable for our future functioning and safety. The
primary world service leadership once exercised by the founders of A.A. must
necessarily be assumed by the trustees of the General Service Board of
Alcoholics Anonymous.
10.Every service responsibility should be matched by an equal service authority-the
scope of such authority to be always well defined whether by tradition, by
resolution, by specific job description, or by appropriate charters and bylaws.
11.While the trustees hold final responsibility for A.A.'s world service
administration, they should always have the assurance of the best possible
standing committees, corporate service directors, executives , staffs, and
consultants. Therefore, the composition of these underlying committees and
service boards, the personal qualifications of their members, the manner of
their induction into service, the systems of their rotation, the way in which
they are related to each other, the special rights and duties of their
executives, staffs, and consultants, together with a proper basis for the
financial compensation of these special workers, will always be matters for
serious care and concern.
12General Warranties of the Conference: In all the proceedings, the General
Service Conference shall observe the spirit of the A.A. Tradition, taking great
care that the Conference never becomes the seat of perilous wealth or power;
that sufficient operating funds plus an ample reserve , be its prudent financial
principle; that none of the Conference members shall ever be placed in a
position of unqualified authority over any of the others; that all important
decisions be reached by discussion, vote, and whenever possible, by substantial
unanimity; that no Conference action ever be personally punitive or an
incitement to public controversy; that, though the Conference may act for the
service of Alcoholics Anonymous, it shall never perform any acts of government;
and that, like the Society of Alcoholics Anonymous which it serves, the
Conference itself will always remain democratic in thought and action.
From the book, The AA Service Manual ©
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