Faced with a new California state law, Uber seeks to keep its drivers classified as contractors rather than employees by reforming its driver rules. Will this work?
Uber Tweaks Driver Rules in Response to New California Gig Economy Law
Faced with a new California state law, Uber seeks to keep its drivers classified as contractors rather than employees by reforming its driver rules. Will this work?
The district attorney’s office in Philadelphia is hosting the city’s first-ever artist-in-residence—an artist who spent nearly three decades in prison, and who now is working to advance criminal justice reform.
We know that for-profits and nonprofits are both enterprises in need of good strategic management, so what really is it that differentiates them?
Excluding Planned Parenthood from a Texas charitable campaign due to a new law could have a permanent cost.
It seems that many nonprofits, even very big ones, don’t know they need a gift acceptance strategy until it is too late.
If music is its own language, then libraries, by making musical instruments freely accessible, are actively promoting musical literacy.
“Othering” as a political policymaking tool has a long history. It reveals an ugly fault in our landscape, defying facts or evidence to reinforce economic divides.
Library of Congress ambassador Jason Reynolds wraps together several of our favorite trends as he embarks on a tour with a simple goal: listen to kids’ stories.
Kate Barr of Propel Nonprofits says attempting to balance your nonprofit budget year by year helps keep us all in a financial management rut.
A Treasury department agency details how 501c4 “social welfare” organizations are flouting federal laws.
While premium giveaways are on the rise, to be effective, they need to be congruent with a donor’s identity.
Grant funding is influencing the way some news nonprofits do their work. Is such influence inevitable?