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Americans are ready to help: In 2022, nearly three out of every five American donors gave half or more of their total contributions to disasterrelief. Yet generosity alone isn’t enough when disaster strikes at scale. Nonprofits across the U.S. Fortunately, nonprofits don’t have to keep operating this way.
One major strategy to counter this fear lies in massive collaboration, a coming together of individuals, groups, and organizations at unprecedented scale to exert major influence on political and social events. Forms of Combined Power Mass mobilization to combat authoritarianism and demand social responsibility dates back millennia.
Community-based organizations and local governments are starting to recognize where such individuals may fall through the cracks and are creating policies and networks for more inclusive disaster response and recovery. At the same time, these policies siphoned resources away from their communities.
For a human rights charity, it increased donations to mention that it “works in countries that have recently passed laws that harshly restrict nonprofit organizations.”[9]. It might be opposing political groups,[11] natural disasters,[12] or even terrorist attacks.[13] Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly , 0899764020971045. [10]
Theyre all nonprofits. To say that many nonprofits would cease to exist without [federal] funding is putting it mildly. Recent executive orders by the Trump administration are touching off fear and uncertainty among nonprofits in Providence and other cities across the country. And theyre under attack.
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