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Category:

Organizing and Activism

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    Philanthropy’s Role in Building a Just Media Ecosystem

    Borealis Philanthropy Sep 10, 2025

    OLD NARRATIVES It must be remembered that the white group of laborers, while they received low wage, were compensated in part by a sort of public and psychological wage. They were given public deference and titles of courtesy because they were white. They were admitted freely with all classes of white people to public functions, public parks, and the best schools. The police were drawn from their ranks, and the courts, dependent upon their votes, treated them with such leniency as to encourage lawlessness. … The newspapers specialized on news that flattered [them] and almost utterly ignored the Negro except in crime and ridicule. Examining many parts of our country today, this quote from W. E. B. Du Bois, Black Reconstruction in America 1860-1880 might feel like a live reporting from our current political landscape. But the truth is–notwithstanding the immediately noticeable similarities in divisive strategy across race and class–we are just ten years shy of a full century since Du Bois wrote these words. And still, his warning of the weaponizing of media and public institutions to uphold white supremacy and distort reality feels eerily prescient in what many are experiencing as the violently oscillating forces of America’s Third Reconstruction. His analysis remains chillingly relevant in a time when media has grown into the primary weapon for reinforcing racial hierarchies, manipulate public opinion, and suppress movements for justice. Over the past few weeks, philanthropy and philanthropic media have been both staggering and rebounding, making sense of how and where to best intervene as the new administration pursues policies intended to harm the nonprofits and communities we serve. As we experience shock and confusion alongside the rest of the nation, new challenges continue to unfold. In under 90 days, the President has ordered a comprehensive freeze on federal funding—a decision…

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    7 Actions Donors and Funders Can Take to Protect Democracy

    Nonprofit AF Sep 10, 2025

    Hi everyone, quick announcement: If you’re free this Friday, September 12th, at 11am Pacific Time, please join me and Edgar Villanueva for an Instagram Live conversation. We’ll be talking about my new book and what our sector needs to do to fight fascism.

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  • Democracy and Economic Justice: Honoring the Legacy of the March on Washington

    Borealis Philanthropy Aug 27, 2025

    Sixty-two years ago, a quarter million people converged on Washington, D.C., to demand a nation worthy of its highest ideals. At the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, they pressed for urgent change: a living wage, the end of school segregation, and the expansion of life-saving civil and labor rights. These were not radical dreams—they were the bare minimum for dignity and democracy. Their vision was clear: a truly inclusive, multiracial democracy where no one could be locked out of social, political, or economic belonging. That vision remains unfinished. And the call they sounded still echoes today—asking us not only to remember, but to keep marching. Today, Borealis Philanthropy carries this vision forward by resourcing those who are working to ensure that all Americans have safety, voice, care, and power. Our grantee partners are defending our democracy by pursuing racial, gender, and disability justice; narrative change; community safety and well-being; and—like generations prior, who marched for access and opportunity—economic justice. At the March on Washington, Dr. King delivered his prominent and celebrated “I have a dream” speech, in which he identified economic justice as critical to the fight for civil rights. Speaking with power and conviction, he declared: “We will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.” As attacks on democratic principles intensify—and access to fundamental, life-affirming resources grow increasingly unequal—we want to be clear about naming and scaling our commitment to economic justice; to work to build cooperative, just, and regenerative economic systems; to work that allows justice, equity, and belonging to roll down like waters, like a mighty stream. Our grantee partners are approaching economic justice through an expansive and interconnected lens. They are organizing workers, advancing equitable economic governance, and building mutual aid networks. They are protecting and…

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    The Case for Funding Advocacy for Systemic Change

    Blue Avocado Aug 25, 2025

    Exploring solutions to the mismatches with donor interests and funders’ reluctance to invest that keep the work of advocacy and systemic change chronically underfunded.

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    How Can We Address the Root Causes of Climate Anxiety?

    Eco-Business Aug 18, 2025

    As temperature records are shattered, ice rapidly melts and extreme weather events worsen, many people around the world say they are feeling more worried about climate change.

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  • Indigenous Communities’ Fight for Solar Power in a Shifting Policy Landscape

    Grist Aug 12, 2025

    As federal programs are frozen or eliminated, Indigenous communities are seeking new ways to fund and finish urgently needed renewable energy plans.

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    Indigenous Communities Lead in Civic Engagement Across Latin America

    University of Colorado Boulder Institute of Behavioral Science Aug 5, 2025

    Some of the most consistently active and civically engaged communities in Latin America are among the smallest and most historically marginalized: Indigenous peoples. This is according to a new study led by Carew Boulding, director of the Program on International Development and fellow at the…

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    Federal Workers on the Front Lines: Building Power to Protect Democracy

    Shareable Jul 30, 2025

    Read the fifth piece of Nonprofit Quarterly’s State of the Movements series, which is dedicated to telling stories of the solidarity economy.

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    The Youth-Led Guerilla Campaign Fighting Prairie Extinction in Texas

    Grist Jul 28, 2025

    “This is a war between us and the developers, and nobody’s calling uncle or throwing up white flags.”…

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    Transformative Funding Partnerships Start with Accepting Complexity

    The Center for Effective Philanthropy Jul 24, 2025

    Nonprofit CEOs from around the globe offer examples of transformative change made through philanthropic partnerships free from hierarchy.

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    What Can Philanthropy Learn From Organizing to Build Worker Power?

    The Center for Effective Philanthropy Jul 23, 2025

    Contributors who represent a cross-section of philanthropy examine some of the common ‘myths’ by which philanthropy operates.

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    Exploring the Impact of Funding Cuts on Feminist Disability Advocates

    Alliance Magazine Jul 22, 2025

    Recent research has revealed the impact of U.S. and global funding rollbacks for gender and disability work.The findings paint a bleak picture, not only for women with disabilities, but for democracy, human rights, and ……

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