
Why are 63 million girls missing out on education?
In Zimbabwe, a diverse group of leaders (including CAMFED) are tackling the persistent barriers to quality education for girls. By
From Leanna First-Arai / Yes! Magazine: Soil collection ceremonies offer a meaningful way to help cope with and create institutional memory of racial violence across the United States. The Equal Justice Initiative is working to keep the victims of lynching and racial violence alive in America’s collective memory by promoting a practice common across cultures—the collection of soil. Communities collect soil from sites of racially motivated killings into jars, which are then displayed at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice and Legacy Museum in Montgomery, Alabama.
In Zimbabwe, a diverse group of leaders (including CAMFED) are tackling the persistent barriers to quality education for girls. By
By partnering with the Mayo Clinic, focusing on just two bachelor’s degree programs (in health sciences), and emphasizing the importance
The Invitation brings together and harnesses the power of trusted allies involved in the child welfare system. The organization empowers
The USC Shoah Foundation is a non-profit organization that enables Holocaust survivors to tell their own stories in their own
Learn how Indigenous social innovators and their communities are advancing climate action.