Let Communities Lead Research
Funders who care about justice should enable communities to lead their own research projects. | Open access to this article made possible by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Funders who care about justice should enable communities to lead their own research projects. | Open access to this article made possible by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
A grassroots effort in Silicon Valley addresses the needs of the working-class immigrant community.
Many public-private collaborations that address complex social problems flounder. We offer a new model to get such partnerships back on track.
Low-income white families in Los Angeles have easier time finding new rental housing than low-income Latino families because of access to greater resources and social networks.
Garden for Wildlife invites college students to design and plant gardens to create a greener future.
Daleela AI seeks to empower Arabic women with access to information about sexual and reproductive health.
How companies are responding to US policy changes and what they should do instead
Nonprofit board fellows programs can be mutually beneficial to students, business schools, and partner organizations.
Cross-sector collaboration can help cities tackle complex social and economic problems, but results are mixed. New research suggests that how a collaboration responds to setbacks plays a crucial role in its success. Rather than seeking the “perfect” governance model, collaborators should adopt five key actions enabling progress.
Lessons from 15 cities in Eastern Europe and Central Asia on addressing interconnected civic challenges.