Collaboration
Lessons From Covax
Borderless threats require international cooperation and coordination, as well as attention to the needs of global majority countries.
Borderless threats require international cooperation and coordination, as well as attention to the needs of global majority countries.
This two-day open-access virtual conference we will bring together some of the sharpest minds in this field to explore the risks of tech innovation that fails to serve labor, and envision what is needed to build a better, more worker-centered digital economy.
Access this webinarIn this SSIR LIVE! 90-minute program (on-demand available later), we will empower social sector leaders with a purpose-driven three-step pathway that will enable organizations to integrate “sustainability ownership experience” into their business decisions and employee psychology.
Access this webinarHow five challenging realities are thwarting progress in public health, and how the sector can build strength to advance health equity, prepare for future pandemics, and face other emerging challenges.
Strategies like embracing urgency and putting egos aside are vital in a crisis. They might improve our day-to-day work as well.
Advice for nonprofit managers on playing the long game when the world turns upside down.
Four principles were key to the success of the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund, a joint effort of the UN Foundation and the World Health Organization to raise hundreds of millions of dollars to help nations around the world survive the pandemic.
Even before the pandemic, India’s public hospitals struggled with overcrowding and stretched resources. Noora Health is helping by training family caregivers on simple medical skills to help patients recover at home. This is the second episode of a two-part series about raising the quality of health care in the developing world. Listen to the first episode here: The Videos Saving Lives in the Developing World.
Amid a global pandemic, philanthropic organizations in emerging markets are finding their voice and challenging historical constructs.
Wealthy nations are making large purchases of approved coronavirus vaccines, leaving other countries to wait longer to acquire the vaccine.