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INSIGHT

Using Oral Reporting to Cultivate Trust, Care, and Possibility

When the Kataly Foundation reenvisioned reporting to uplift and unburden grantees, they discovered that their relationships within and outside of the organization were deeply enriched as a result. Danielle Royston-Lopez tells their story in the latest edition of PEAK Grantmaking Journal.

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REMINDER

Limited Friday Office Hours in April

As part of PEAK’s focus on staff wellness and being a next-level nonprofit, PEAK is transitioning to a Monday-to-Thursday workweek. In April, we will be working reduced Friday hours, and our offices will be completely closed on Fridays from May through August. We will resume a five-day workweek in September.

Join this week’s trending conversations:

Help a colleague! Do you have advice to share on the following topics? Not yet in CONNECT?
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Upcoming Events

April 23
CHAPTER MEETING
Knowledge Swap Meet: Collective Brain Power (PEAK Southwest)

April 25
PEER GROUP MEETING
SparkTalk Series: Artificial Intelligence (Grants Management Peer Experience)

April 30
CHAPTER MEETING
How Can Philanthropy Promote an Inclusive, Representative Democracy? (PEAK Minnesota)

May 9
CHAPTER MEETING
Salem In-Person Coffee Hour
(PEAK Pacific Northwest)

May 9
PEER GROUP MEETING
BTS: Bimonthly Tea Session
(PEAK AANHPI Caucus)

 

ALL EVENTS >

Weekly Reads

“As RWJF works to dismantle structural racism and counter the laws and policies created to deny health and opportunity to people based on their race, class, and gender, we want the people and communities facing the greatest barriers to be able to set policy agendas. We want them to create and implement solutions, whether related to housing security, financial stability, civil rights protections or other health interventions. To this end, RWJF is prioritizing two critical levers: ballot measures and race-conscious policies and programs.” [more]
Avenel Joseph and Elizabeth DiLauro, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

“If we want to understand how to build a society that celebrates difference — or at least doesn’t hold back individuals or communities because of it—we must interrogate the idea that people don’t want to talk about race or identity. ... It will not be easy for successive generations to shed all the sticky, icky, coded, embedded, underlying racialized gunk they’ve inherited from us. We adults should know that, because we are still choking on the racialized smog that has hung in the air since we ourselves were kids.” [more]
Michele Norris, The Washington Post

“Last April, through the leadership of three staff members leaning into possibility, the Justice Funders staff voted to increase our budget allocation for Indigenous Honor & Land Taxes. We committed to continue paying our Shuumi Land Tax [a voluntary annual contribution that non-Indigenous people living on the Confederated Villages of Lisjan’s territory can make] at the same percentage annually ...We know that philanthropic wealth has been accumulated through the theft of Indigenous lands and the exploitation of communities of color, and that philanthropic institutions have a particular responsibility to contribute to the healing of the lands they occupy and to enter into a restorative relationship with local Indigenous communities.” [more]
Justice Funders for Medium

“The Center on Community Philanthropy (The Center) at the Clinton School of Public Service welcomed Cohort II of the Racial Healing Certification Program to Little Rock for the start of its Racial Healing Tour. … [A] diverse group of leaders from a broad spectrum of organizations including, Asian American Federation, Association of Black Foundation Executives (ABFE), CHANGE Philanthropy, Community Foundation for Greater Buffalo, Hispanics in Philanthropy, Exponent Philanthropy, Foundation for Louisiana, Grantmakers for Effective Organizations, Michigan Transformation Collective, Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi, The Wilderness Society and Turning Points for the Soul. Their journey began with a visit to Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site. The cohort then had a virtual experience with the Emmett Till Interpretive Center… [and] concluded with a visit to the Equal Justice Initiative’s Legacy Museum, National Memorial for Peace and Justice and the newly unveiled Freedom Monument Sculpture Park in Montgomery, Alabama.” [more]
University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service

  

 
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