Partners launches a nationwide education campaign, Partners Reach Out, through a cooperative agreement with the Development Education Office of USAID.
“Citizen Participation: Towards a More Democratic Hemisphere,” supports projects in civic education such as conducting educational campaigns on how individuals can become more involved in their communities.
The members of the National Association of the Partners of the Americas vote at their 1993 annual meeting in San Jose, Costa Rica to merge their two boards—the U.S. board and the inter-American board—to create one unified hemispheric body.
In Mexico, Partners creates a Youth Conservation Corps to increase environmental stewardship and community development, which later expands to Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala.