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An Invitation to Explore Indigenous Innovation
Indigenous traditions are key to building the relationships, reciprocity, and reconciliation that Canada needs for a strong future.
Innovative ways organizations can work together to increase their overall reach and efficacy (more)
Indigenous traditions are key to building the relationships, reciprocity, and reconciliation that Canada needs for a strong future.
How embracing uncertainty can help cultivate Canada’s social R&D ecosystem.
Canada’s Private Sponsorship of Refugees program offers an effective model for how to engage entire communities in welcoming newcomers.
NeighborWorks America, a 40-year-old congressionally chartered nonprofit, redefined its relationship with its grantees to build a learning lab for innovation.
NeighborWorks’ courses on homeownership and support services empowered these people to buy their own homes and transform their lives.
Addressing today’s most pressing challenges requires developing the capacity to lead collaboratively and to effectively work across sectors.
Becoming an effective cross-sector leader requires a set of skills built around three broad areas: building teams, solving problems, and achieving impact.
When collaboratives get intentional about culture, they can more quickly and more effectively tackle social problems at the magnitude at which they exist.
The James Irvine Foundation’s New Leadership Network provides lessons about how to foster civic innovation.
Emily May created the online platform Hollaback, where women subjected to sexual harassment can share their stories.