Welcome to One Kind World Foundation
Our Mission At One Kind World Foundation, our mission is simple: to create a world where kindness, compassion, and social impact thrive. We are dedicated to empowering individuals and communities through sustainable initiatives that address critical global challenges. Our focus is on fostering positive change in areas such as food security, clean water, healthcare, education, animal welfare, and social ventures.
Championing Acts of Kindness
Melissa Pellicer is the Founder also serves as the Chief Steward of One Kind World Foundation. She guides its mission to create a kinder, more inclusive world. Her deep passion for empowering communities and nurturing positive change shines through in every initiative the foundation takes on. Melissa’s gentle leadership and unwavering dedication inspire those around her to work together for a brighter, more hopeful future, one act of kindness at a time.
Kindness is the simplest yet most powerful gift we can give—it's a spark that lights hope, heals hearts, and connects us all.
Lissa Pellicer
Chief Steward
Mission
One Kind World Foundation exists to protect life across species and generations by safeguarding the living systems upon which all beings depend, transforming the human institutions that govern how life is treated, and cultivating in children the responsibility to defend what they will inherit.
We bring into public view the suering of animals conned within food, fashion, research, and entertainment industries and work to end the norms and structures that permit their exploitation. We defend ecosystems essential to the continuity of life.
We stand with people subjected to environmental and industrial harm.We help form in the next generation an ethic of care toward animals, Earth, and one another.Our work rests on a single recognition: the crises facing animals, ecosystems, and human dignity arise from the same premise that some lives may be diminished or used for the benet of others.
Vision
We envision human societies that recognize themselves as participants in the living Earth and accept responsibility for the conditions they create for other beings. In such societies, animals are no longer bred, conned, and killed for human consumption, but recognized and protected as lives of their own. Forests remain standing.
Waters recover integrity. Oceans regain abundance. No child grows up breathing contaminated air or drinking unsafe water. No worker is treated as expendable within industries that convert living beings into commodities.
Care extends beyond the human circle to encompass all who live. People learn to regard one another and all other beings within the same moral horizon. What societies esteem shifts away from domination and extraction toward guardianship of life. The vulnerable are protected wherever power renders a being exposed or defenseless.
Education forms conscience early and sustains it through civic life. Public policy protects ecological continuity. Cultural norms no longer depend upon hidden suering. Consumption reects awareness of consequence.
Humanity matures into stewardship, and stewardship endures across generations.
Who We are
One Kind World Foundation is a nonprot organization working at the intersection of animal protection, environmental integrity, and
social justice.
We begin from evidence.
Who We are
One Kind World Foundation is a nonprot organization working at the intersection of animal protection, environmental integrity, and social justice.
We begin from evidence.
The Scale of Transformation
Wild mammals now constitute approximately 4 percent of global
mammal biomass. Humans account for roughly 36 percent. The remaining 60 percent are animals bred and raised within human systems[1][2].
Researchers estimate that all wild land mammals together weigh approximately 20 million metric tons, while humans weigh about 390 million metric tons, and the mammals conned in human
systems weigh more than 630 million metric tons[2][3]. In physical terms, free-living mammals are outweighed by those held in human systems by roughly 30 to 1[2][4].
The planet that appears, from a distance, rich with wildlife is, in material reality, an Earth reordered around human consumption.
The Industrial Logic
Each year, humanity kills more than 90 billion land animals for food alone. When aquatic beings are included, the most conservative global estimates exceed one trillion individuals killed annually[5][6][7].
Beyond food systems, more than 100 million animals are used in
experiments globally each year[8]. Over one billion animals are killed annually for fur and leather production[9]. Countless marine and terrestrial beings are captured for display in aquariums, zoos, and marine parks, removed from their families and habitats to live
behind glass and concrete[10].
The dairy industry depends upon continuous impregnation,
separation of mothers and calves, and slaughter once milk
production declines. Globally, hundreds of millions of cows cycle through this system at any given time[11]. Milk production is structurally inseparable from calf removal and herd culling.
Consumption of dairy therefore entails the killing of both males
designated as waste and females whose bodies no longer produce at protable rates.
Land, Water , and Hunger
This planetary transformation required land, water, and feed on
extraordinary scale.
Grazing and feed production for animals occupy approximately 77
percent of global agricultural land while providing only 18 percent of humanity’s calories and 37 percent of protein[12][13]. About 36 percent of cropland grows feed rather than food for people directly[14].
At the same time, 733 million people experience chronic hunger, and nearly 2.3 billion face some form of food insecurity[15][16].
Land cleared for animal agriculture displaces forests and wildlife.
Grain diverted to feed conned animals reduces food availability for
humans. Industrial facilities concentrate pollution and occupational
risk in regions with the least political power.
Environmental Justice and Systemic Harm
Industrial animal facilities are systematically sited where land costs less and political resistance remains weakest. According to EPA data, 74 percent of slaughterhouses that discharge pollution directly into waterways are located within one mile of under-resourced
communities, low-income communities, or communities of color[17][18].
Air contamination, water pollution, and occupational health burdens follow predictable patterns of economic and racial inequality.
Women and girls are disproportionately aected by environmental degradation. They bear primary responsibility for household water and food provision in many regions and face increased labor, health risk, and displacement when land and water systems are compromised[19]. The reproductive exploitation central to dairy production also mirrors broader patterns of control over female bodies across species, a linkage increasingly examined within feminist ethics and ecofeminist scholarship[20].
The Common Structure
Across these domains, the same structure appears:
- Life converted into commodity
- Land converted into yield
- Bodies converted into units
- People converted into labor
When value is measured primarily in profit, harm concentrates at the margins of power.
One Kind World Foundation works to interrupt that structure by linking animal protection, ecological restoration, and human justice within a single framework of care.
Who We are
What We Do

Humane Education

Policy and Institutional Reform

Cultural Transformation

Transparency and Public Awareness
What We Do

We Educate
We empower through education, providing the knowledge and skills needed to create lasting change in their communities.

We Help
We offer direct support to those in need, addressing urgent challenges with compassion and practical solutions.

We Build
We create sustainable programs and partnerships that strengthen communities and drive long-term development.

We Donate
We give back through generous donations, funding initiatives that promote well-being, equality, and opportunity for all.
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Our Board of Trustees
Andrew Larson

Amare Daliah

Lulu Kroifer

Bahati Imani

Sabra Kalifa

Josh Broiler













What People Think
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Dwayt Harder
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