Although a devastating tsunami displaced or killed hundreds of thousands of Indonesians on the island of Sumatra, rebuilding still goes on.
10 Years after the Indian Ocean Tsunami, Work to Be Done
Although a devastating tsunami displaced or killed hundreds of thousands of Indonesians on the island of Sumatra, rebuilding still goes on.
Greenpeace’s unbelievably misguided protest at the UN climate change conference in Peru boggles the mind.
Yet another word has been added to the lexicon of nonprofits and foundations: “philanthropreneurship.”
This story of one hospital’s debt collection practices brings to mind indentured servitude. Is this what’s expected of nonprofit hospitals, given their tax breaks?
More patients with new private insurance and Medicaid doesn’t mean hospitals are making more money. Lower reimbursements, more uncompensated care, and increased costs are squeezing providers and affecting healthcare access.
When many observers think of racism, they think of acts of overt bigotry. But that’s the easy analysis; the real danger is subtle, or implicit, bias.
Reputations can go south fairly quickly once negative narratives gain traction, but in both cases below, the practices the narratives were about had longer standing.
Gone are the days when philanthropies could operate quietly below the radar. Technology and shifts in societal expectations have changed the game completely.
A Minnesota task force recommends spinning off a regional economic development agency to a private nonprofit to protect its huge trust fund from raids by lawmakers.
How are community health centers doing after gearing up for major expansion anticipated under the ACA? This one is scaling back its plans.
A McKinsey study indicates that nonprofit leaders are suffering from severe lack of self-esteem.
Could the ongoing investigation into the Red Cross have contributed to the new statewide restructuring efforts in PA?