Communities Types
Community Structure
United Humankind is organized into three types of communities, each serving a distinct purpose.
1. Regional Hubs
Hubs are local communities of UH members in specific cities or regions. They serve as the project's grounding point in reality — not managed by a central office, but self-organizing under unified cultural and protocol rules.
Their role:
Creating a trustworthy offline environment
Mutual support in real-life situations
Organizing local meetings, initiatives, and events
Adapting UH's global principles to local context
Examples: UH Prague · UH Berlin · UH Almaty
2. Clubs
Clubs bring people together based on shared interests, lifestyles, or professional fields — regardless of geography. They build horizontal connections between members from different countries and offer a sense of identity rooted in passions and values rather than politics or nationality.
Their role:
Sharing knowledge, experience, and resources
Developing cultural, professional, and intellectual directions
Building community across borders
Examples: Scientific and educational clubs · Entrepreneur clubs · Clubs for art, technology, and health
3. Fractions
Fractions are action-driven communities focused on carrying out specific missions and projects that advance human development and deliver public value. A fraction exists only while actively pursuing its mission — it is not an identity, but a form of collective responsibility.
Their role:
Launching and implementing initiatives
Coordinating collective efforts
Creating tangible results: products, services, funds, research
Examples: Environmental missions · Educational programs · Humanitarian or technological initiatives
Important notice! New contributors may propose changes or additions to this section. Every member has the opportunity to shape what United Humankind becomes.
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