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Discover how the W.K. Kellogg Foundation supports transformative initiatives in racial equity, health, education, and economic security, fostering thriving communities.
Discover how the W.K. Kellogg Foundation supports transformative initiatives in racial equity, health, education, and economic security, fostering thriving communities.
The when, where and how of informed disaster giving…
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…
Twenty years after Hurricane Katrina, learn how communities can build climate mobility infrastructure to support the millions of Americans displaced by climate disasters.
Exploring solutions to the mismatches with donor interests and funders’ reluctance to invest that keep the work of advocacy and systemic change chronically underfunded.
The 12 grants will provide archivists with greater capacity to organize, catalogue, and digitize materials….
As a Darfuri woman, immigrant and refugee, I know what it means to be displaced. I know the pain of losing your home, your safety, and the life you worked so hard to build.But ……
The when, where and how of informed disaster giving…
A new toolkit to reinforce and reinvent American research science in a time of crisis.
In today’s complex philanthropic landscape, traditional grantmaking often falls short of addressing deep-rooted societal challenges. Many funders devote most of their time to making grants rather than tackling the systems and structures that sustain these problems.
The Global South is leading on technological innovation for itself. Yet philanthropy continues to fund Global North ‘tech transfer models’ and ignore what’s already happening in the communities it resources.
We need participatory law-making, where farmers, women, youth, and other underrepresented voices are actually part of the process.
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