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Healing Society through the Archaeology of Self™: A Racial Literacy Development Approach

NonProfit Quarterly

Imagine a civil society in which communities, individuals, and leaders (nonprofit, social movement, philanthropy, business, education, and more) regularly engage in the process of self-examination for the sake of improving our world.

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Food Is Her Fight and Her Freedom: Regaining Ground in Rural India

Stanford Social Innovation Review

This is instead an exercise in liberating the constructs of creativity from being the prerogative of the Western, masculine, or the allegedly educated, while reclaiming what rural women of India have championed for thousands of years. .” In India, many large-scale cooperatives have been thriving over time.

Food 122
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Betting on Migration for Impact

Stanford Social Innovation Review

While immigration policies have prioritized high levels of education or family ties—and the political conversation tends to presume a basic scarcity of jobs—critical jobs in construction, agriculture, hospitality, and the care economy, including elderly care, cannot be automated.

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Ensuring The Right To Free Association Online

The NonProfit Times

These spaces are the backbone of our democratic right to free association, and they are increasingly under threat. All of this will at the same time serve the broader goal of ensuring that our democratic right to free association remains intact. It is, importantly, also the right of free association. Fact-checking is not enough.

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What’s in a Name? The Ethics of Building Naming Gifts

Stanford Social Innovation Review

My research finds otherwise and implicates current legal constructs and fundraising practices that continue to privilege the self-interests of donors over beneficiaries and society. Such clauses enable organizations to terminate an agreement if a donor’s conduct causes scandal or brings disgrace by association to the institution.

Ethics 122
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Ensuring The Right To Online Free Association

The NonProfit Times

These spaces are the backbone of our democratic right to free association, and they are increasingly under threat. All of this will at the same time serve the broader goal of ensuring that our democratic right to free association remains intact. It is, importantly, also the right of free association. Fact-checking is not enough.

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The Digital Economy Is Broken—But It’s Not Too Late

Stanford Social Innovation Review

We spoke with more than 80 people, representing workers, scholars, unions, the private sector, civil society, philanthropies, and multilateral agencies. The tech industry likes to present itself as presiding over a new industrial revolution that will change the world forever.