The desire to be of continued service is driving more than 80 U.S.
Maryland lawmakers passed a sweeping education package in the latest General Assembly session and recently identified a work group whose task will be to find a way to pay for it.
As we work to advance racial equity in philanthropy, four practices can help us find and stay with our learning edge—the boundaries of our comfort zones and competencies where changes are truly transformative and freeing.
In the past few months, there [has] been some critical feedback for philanthropy. The criticisms are not new.
The Baltimore Business Journal has selected two local companies to honor with its annual Corporate Citizen of the Year award.
Watergate never happened. Members of the British parliament never padded their expenses. Facebook is just for keeping up with friends.
Charitable giving in the U.S. topped $400 billion in 2017. And more than half of American households give annually—more than vote in presidential elections.
The affordable housing crisis isn’t new. It isn’t even an “emerging” crisis.
In an effort to maximize the state’s population count in the 2020 U.S.
[Women's Philanthropy Institute in partnership with the YWCA and Facebook] celebrated the official launch of the I Am A Philanthropist campaign with a series of stories on Refinery29.