Internet access is critical for disaster recovery. But is the solution broader than simply working to get underresourced areas better connected?
The Digital Divide and Climate Disasters
Internet access is critical for disaster recovery. But is the solution broader than simply working to get underresourced areas better connected?
The Trump administration views autism as a disease to be cured. Autism advocates reject this false framing—and call for research and policy that supports their community.
In the nonprofit sector, international partnerships can achieve great things. Yet without a strong sense of ethics, such partnerships can often cause more harm than good.
As millions of people in the United States struggle with medical debt, the potential passage of the GOP tax bill could worsen the crisis.
NPQ’s series on Liberatory Leadership as a practice continues with asking ourselves why liberatory leadership matters for racial justice.
Kensington, a neighborhood in North Philadelphia, is getting a fresh-produce corner store to tackle the lasting impacts of food apartheid.
As nonprofits, including climate groups, fall under attack, can a temporary restraining order be a solution to stall the Trump administration?
With two months’ notice, Microsoft is ending a program of free software products for hundreds of thousands of nonprofits.
The Buen Vivir Fund received global acclaim but closed unexpectedly. Two years after its closure, its learnings and ethos continue to live on as a new fund is formed.
In Atlanta, over 300 movement activists gathered to consider how to advance a solidarity economy movement through economy, politics, and culture.
Building real trust and equity during a collaborative merger starts with deep relationship-building, mutual accountability, and power-sharing.
A new NPQ column about organizations on the frontlines of the struggle for a multiracial and equitable democracy in the United States begins with a reflection on this year’s Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.