In this installment of Ask Rhea, Rhea offers advice on working with major donors, emphasizing taking the time to build relationships.
Building Relationships with Major Donors, from Hot Shots to Cool Cucumbers
In this installment of Ask Rhea, Rhea offers advice on working with major donors, emphasizing taking the time to build relationships.
Accessing public benefits in the United States has never been easy. Often, digitalization makes it even harder. But advocates are organizing to respond.
False narratives are proliferating across Chinese-language media. Fortunately, new in-language nonprofit digital publications are helping to contain disinformation.
Programs meant to make it easier to prosecute domestic violence and trafficking cases are under threat. The safety of thousands of immigrant women is at risk.
Over 50 years ago, a lawyer’s memo helped set the tone for a corporate reaction to perceived growing civil rights and labor union power. Could nonprofit advocates for a more just society organize a memo of their own today?
As prices soar and family contributions shrink, America’s teachers are footing the bill, spending hundreds — sometimes thousands—of their own dollars on school supplies.
Language barriers make it challenging for people who don’t speak English to be involved in discussions about climate change. How do we ensure the majority of the world’s population isn’t left out at the very first step?
Rochelle Jerry, CFRM, answers a reader’s question about pivoting from relying on federal funding to mission-aligned private donors.
Belonging and bridging are sometimes dismissed as the tools of the meek. This is false. Expanding the scope of belonging requires courage and steely determination.
As LGBTQ+ people face escalating government persecution and efforts to pathologize and eradicate transgender people from public life, learning from the histories of queer resistance that came before is more important than ever.
Resilience has become a buzzword, but we can rescue its meaning with specific actions.
The legislation lets private citizens sue people who mail abortion medications to Texans. It offers a blueprint for state lawmakers trying to stop their residents from circumventing abortion bans.