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Human Services

  • Announcing the Winners of the 2026 J. Anthony Lukas Prize Project Awards for Journalism

    Nieman Foundation at Harvard Mar 20, 2026

    Columbia Journalism School and the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University are pleased to announce the four winners and two finalists of the 2026 J. Anthony Lukas Prize Project.…

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  • How Schools Are Saving Money by Reducing Their Carbon Emissions

    The Hechinger Report Mar 19, 2026

    In Warren County, Kentucky, the school district saved more than $2 million in utility costs since retrofitting five schools with solar panels and introducing other energy efficiencies. In Jamestown, Rhode…

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  • How the Student Loan System Disproportionately Constrains Women’s Financial Futures

    The 19th Mar 18, 2026

    Mary Modica tried to do everything right. When a rise in digital music signaled she should reconsider a radio career, Modica decided to become a teacher — with the understanding…

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    The Volunteer-Run Nonprofit Farm Reducing Food Insecurity in Virginia

    Food Tank Mar 18, 2026

    In Virginia, the volunteer-run nonprofit JK Community Farm is growing 100 percent of its food to donate to the state’s food-insecure population. This model aims to address nutritional and supply gaps…

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    ICE-Free Zones: How Cities and Counties Are Prohibiting ICE From Using City-Owned Property

    Vera Institute of JusticeIn early December, as the federal government began ramping up immigration enforcement operations in the Twin Cities, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey took a cue from Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, who had signed an executive order for what he called an “ICE Free Zone” during Operation Midway Blitz last year. Frey issued a similar executive order—later codified into city ordinance—barring United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) from using municipal parking lots, vacant lots, and garages as staging grounds for immigration enforcement. City leaders described the measure as a necessary step to protect the city’s Somali population and reject the administration’s “fear-based tactics.” Frey’s timing proved apt. Weeks later, thousands of federal agents descended on Minnesota under Operation Metro Surge—the largest immigration enforcement deployment of the second Trump administration—amid large-scale raids, courthouse arrests across the country, and the tragic killings of peaceful protesters Renée Nicole Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents. As these actions unfold in plain view, local officials nationwide are learning from leaders in cities like Minneapolis how to find ways to protect their residents while meaningfully limiting the scope and harms of federal immigration enforcement. What are ICE-free zones? A growing number of jurisdictions are responding to out-of-control immigration enforcement by adopting ICE-free zone policies. These are land-use and administrative policies that limit federal agencies from using city- or county-owned property as staging areas, processing sites for arrests, or operational bases for civil immigration enforcement. By doing so, localities can disrupt the infrastructure for large-scale raids, reassert local control over public property, protect residents from enforcement activity, and reinforce trust between immigrant communities and local government. Given localities’ limited means for resisting federal overreach, these policies have quickly sprung up across the country. In practice, they may be more symbolic than impactful against a supercharged, lawless immigration operation. But even throwing sand in the gears of federal operations matters, as their speed and force have enabled the trampling of due process and other legal protections. Moreover, these policies signal to immigrant communities that the local government is on their side. Alongside other emerging practices—like broader sanctuary policies, investments in deportation defense, and resistance to new detention facilities—they begin to amount to robust opposition. Crucially, ICE-free zone policies do not prohibit ICE or CBP from making arrests. They expressly avoid interfering with the legal rights of federal law enforcement while clarifying that federal authorities can conduct arrests on city property when supported by a judicial warrant. This framing matters for two reasons. It signals to courts that local governments are not attempting to illegally obstruct federal immigration enforcement. And, more significantly, warrant requirements reinforce lawful enforcement practices. Over the past year, ICE has increasingly relied on so-called “administrative warrants”—signed by ICE officials, not judges—to forcibly enter homes and arrest people despite long-standing Fourth Amendment protections and decades of agency guidance to the contrary. ICE also sometimes makes arrests with no warrant at all. By requiring judicial warrants, ICE-free zones attempt to push ICE back into targeted enforcement, as opposed to roving the streets looking for people to arrest. Mar 18, 2026

    In early December, as the federal government began ramping up immigration enforcement operations in the Twin Cities, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey took a cue from Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, who had signed an executive…

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    Facilitating Collaboration for Gun Violence Prevention Between a Health Foundation and a National Funder Collaborative

    Grantmakers In Health Mar 16, 2026

    Discussions about firearms in the US are often focused on urban gun violence and mass shootings. But firearm injury and death is a public health crisis that touches every community—urban…

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    Bipartisan Reforms to Higher Education Persist in the Face of Attacks on Institutions

    The Hechinger Report Mar 12, 2026

    It’s rare in an era of partisan division to hear a veteran of the Clinton and Obama presidencies agreeing with a right-leaning economist who worked for George W. Bush. Yet…

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  • Balancing Work and Life in the Nonprofit Sector

    Nonprofit AF Mar 12, 2026

    Hi everyone, this post is long, personal, and likely melancholy. One of the questions I get asked often is “What’s one piece of advice you would give to those of…

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  • Housing Security as Health and Community Care

    Stanford Social Innovation Review Mar 11, 2026

    The greatest form of love is healthy, safe, and thriving communities, achieved first through housing security. The best way to ensure that is to secure adequate, safe, and affordable housing…

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    The Challenges Facing a Sierra Leone Disability Housing Project

    Devex Mar 10, 2026

    A Sierra Leone disability housing project partially funded by the United Nations Development Programme is facing mounting scrutiny after police allegedly demolished part of a community compound and detained staff from a local…

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    The Organization Providing Women Farmers with Climate Resilience Tools in India

    Food Tank Mar 10, 2026

    The Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) is working to empower the women in India’s informal sector. Today, they organize roughly 3.8 million women workers across the country, providing women farmers with…

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  • Child Care Costs Increase Alongside Business Costs Nationwide

    The Hechinger Report Mar 10, 2026

    It’s becoming markedly more expensive to run a child care business. And as public funding fails to keep up with inflation, those costs are getting passed on to families that…

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