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Using ‘Purple Glasses’ to Achieve Gender Equity in Mexico

Stanford Social Innovation Review

This involves collaborating with women leaders in business and academia around the world, which extends the impact of our work locally and creates valuable professional relationships and partnerships. Innovation thus becomes a powerful tool driven by the intellectual participation of women from diverse contexts.

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How Organizations Build Trust

Stanford Social Innovation Review

It is earned person by person, moving through large segments of society. American civil society institutions have an important role to play. For leaders of civil society organizations, earning, rebuilding, and maintaining trust is a complicated but doable and essential undertaking to achieve their mission.

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Why Organizers Need Mobilizers and Mobilizers Need Organizers

Stanford Social Innovation Review

The implication is that we need to approach social change not like we are seeking a silver bullet, but rather in search of collaborative principles that allow different people power strategies to coexist and stimulate productive change together. The principles created a methodology for shared leadership.

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Equity in Employment: A Vital Step Toward Dismantling Structural Racism in Brazil

Stanford Social Innovation Review

The collection and strategic use of internal data on the racial composition of the workforce, particularly concerning leadership positions, can assist organizations in promoting equity. Black individuals in leadership positions are a significant indicator of equity.

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Why Voting Rights Should Matter to Nonprofits

Momentum Nonprofit Partners

I was slightly scared, but I stepped up to assume my responsibility as a productive member of a civilized society. Fair voting rights mean our clients have access to making decisions for themselves medically, financially, and personally. Collaborate! Collaborate with other organizations to create networks of advocates.

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Paths from systems failure

Philanthropy 2173

Thanks to a small group of critical collaborators, there will be a Blueprint dropping in December. I have private insurance and access to best medical care - systems is barely able to meet my long Covid needs - can't be working for anyone. I'm pleased to say I'm working on the Blueprint 2023. This will be the 14th annual edition.

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What’s in a Name? The Ethics of Building Naming Gifts

Stanford Social Innovation Review

In response, I returned to school to study fundraising and nonprofit sector leadership and their relationship to normative ethics. The artist developed the work to address the immigration crisis and collaborated with 21 community members. Or are there certain moral and civic goods that markets do not honor and money cannot buy?”

Ethics 111