In Australia, social enterprise is widely perceived as being a movement, and federal support plays a key role. There may be lessons in that for US social enterprises.
Social Enterprise: Lessons from Down Under
In Australia, social enterprise is widely perceived as being a movement, and federal support plays a key role. There may be lessons in that for US social enterprises.
Across the country campaigns that meld community budget goals with participatory democratic practices have gained ground. Seattle and Nashville offer two examples.
Through city budgets, people make democratic governance meaningful. Across the country, people are cutting through technical barriers to make local budgets their own.
Often, the Global South has little say in where foundation resources go. A Brazilian fund and a Brazilian nonprofit, however, show that another path is possible.
Land and liberation go hand in hand, but the work in not easy. In western Massachusetts, a movement is gaining ground and connecting to a national network.
This November, on campuses and in communities across the globe, a set of “Next System” teach-ins asked hard questions of how to design more democratic systems.
What does advancing land justice require? In their responses, field leaders identify concrete ways to redefine the relationship between land, people, and the economy.
To tell stories that build power for real solutions, we need to develop broad understanding of how real solutions are already being envisioned and implemented. The Real Solutions podcast series is a rich resource for this learning and strategy.
Fiscal sponsorship enables movement nonprofits to focus on mission and not compliance. A coalition has formed to help nonprofits access the supports they need.
Staying true to your mission—in your language, your programs, and your public narrative—is not only an ethical imperative but often a crucial component to securing and maintaining long-term funding.
As a candidate, Zohran Mamdani lauded New York as a city “powered by immigrants.” Advocates are counting on Mamdani to convert sentiment into policy.
Can movement advocates imagine liberation in a time of mounting authoritarianism? Not only can we, but we must. To do so requires imagination, planning, and action.