Last week the Senate approved a $60.4 billion aid package for hurricane Sandy relief for the East Coast, legislation but House Republican Leadership failed to act on it before closing the legislative session.
House Adjourns With No Vote on Sandy Relief
If we were to look at a combination of the ROI and results for those being served is nonprofit health care a better deal for consumers than for-profit? Some disturbing recent findings suggest that this may be so.
Does philanthropy have an unbecoming and wasteful humility deficit? One analyst suggests that narcissism and hoarding abound amongst mega-givers.
Should direct advocacy groups worry about the FBI’s surveillance of Occupy as domestic terrorists?
The short message that should be taken away from the so-called “fiscal cliff” legislation passed last night is that it is no time to relax.
This article proposes that nonprofit leaders are increasingly focused on secondary issues, and asks, What does the sector stand to gain as a result of retraining our focus from structural concerns to the central questions and principles of nonprofit governance?
What is it that enables boards to be strong and effective, and why are we still using outdated models in an effort to improve board performance?
In this unique study, nonprofits report on their transactions with board members—some for the better and some for the worse.
A decade since the Sarbanes-Oxley Act first appeared, organizations still worry that aspects of the law will continue to seep into the sector. But doesn’t the sector actually have little to worry about and much to gain?