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New Data on Racial Justice Grants Should Alarm—and Motivate—Education Philanthropy

Stanford Social Innovation Review

Like an earthquake is the sudden culmination of years of building tension, the dramatic shifts in America’s racial and education justice landscape over the last decade emerged from trends long preceding it. Second, the education justice movement has changed as well. First, the American classroom has changed from a generation ago.

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“Beyond Mere Survival”: A Conversation with Ajay Singh Chaudhary

NonProfit Quarterly

Truth to Power is a regular series of conversations with writers about the promises and pitfalls of movements for social justice. Can you tell us how the term works across the material, psychological, and political dimensions of the climate crisis across the book? But exhaustion is more specific to climate politics.

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What Does Tribal Land Stewardship Look Like?

NonProfit Quarterly

Editors’ note: This article is from the fall 2022 issue of the Nonprofit Quarterly , “The Face of Climate Change,” and was first published on May 1, 2022. The climate crisis brings new pressures. Today, these lands are often disproportionately affected by the climate crisis. million for the Lower Brule Sioux to $74.5

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Linking Our Fights to Win: On Combatting Elite Capture

NonProfit Quarterly

KA: Yes, who has the power to define social problems is critical—as are debates about the categories used to understand them. KA: Let’s talk about how elite capture relates to a popular approach to social justice movements today. And how does this relate to the task of “building a new house”? Do anything besides that. KA: Absolutely.

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Betting on Migration for Impact

Stanford Social Innovation Review

Throw in the disproportionate effects of climate change on subsistence livelihoods and the fact that workers are paid 10 or 20 times their current wages for equivalent jobs in high-income countries, and little wonder that hundreds of millions across the Global South aspire to migrate to the Global North.

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Recentering Philanthropy toward Social Justice

NonProfit Quarterly

In this conversation between Cyndi Suarez, NPQ ’s president and editor in chief, and Isabelle Leighton, executive director of Donors of Color Network and former founding director of Equality Fund, the two leaders discuss how to move the philanthropic sector toward racial and social justice. Does it come up? IL: Yes, it does.

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Rethinking Food Culture Might Save Us

NonProfit Quarterly

Editors’ note: This article is from the fall 2022 issue of the Nonprofit Quarterly, “The Face of Climate Change.” This work has the potential to shift our global trajectory away from escalating social and climate chaos. “HAWTHORNE IN THE CORNFIELD” BY CHIP THOMAS/JETSONORAMA.NET. food is life. Challenging White Supremacist Logic.

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