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Twelve Concepts of Service
1. The ultimate responsibility and
authority for Al-Anon world services belongs to the Al-Anon groups.
2. The Al-Anon Family Groups have
delegated complete administrative and operational authority to their
Conference and its service arms.
3. The right of decision makes effective
leadership possible.
4. Participation is the key to harmony.
5. The rights of appeal and petition
protect minorities and insure that they be heard.
6. The Conference acknowledges the primary
administrative responsibility of the Trustees.
7. The Trustees have legal rights while
the rights of the Conference are traditional.
8. The Board of Trustees delegates full
authority for routine management of Al-Anon Headquarters to its executive
committees.
9. Good personal leadership at all service
levels is a necessity. In the field of world service the Board of Trustees
assumes the primary leadership.
10. Service responsibility is balanced by
carefully defined service authority and double-headed management is avoided.
11. The World Service Office is composed
of selected committees, executives and staff members.
12. The spiritual foundation for Al-Anon's
world service is contained in the General Warranties of the Conference,
Article 12 of the Charter.
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