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Race + Power Weekly

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In today’s Race + Power newsletter, we look at challenges to power. First, foundations often say they want transparency, but do they? A racial justice study on the origins of foundation wealth in Washington, DC, led to a wide range of reactions from the field. Next, foundations often ask for reports from nonprofits. What would it look like for foundations themselves to report on their own performance? Then, from the Nonprofit Quarterly magazine’s latest economic justice issue, how Black workers are organizing in the South. Finally, what is “corporate capture,” and how can people escape its effects—in our politics, our culture, our daily life, and in the nonprofit sector? Join the NPQ webinar “Remaking the Economy: Escaping Corporate Capture” on September 18 at 2:00 pm ET.


Cracks in the Foundation: What Are We Learning?

 
“[Our own] wealth origin story was contrary to what we believed.” Read more... 
 
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How to Flip the Script on Foundation Reporting

 
Good ideas abound from grassroots leaders, but examples of how funder accountability is put into practice are often harder to come by. Read more... 
 
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Organizing the South—How Black Workers Are Challenging Corporate Power

 
How many southern Black abolitionists, when campaigning to end forced labor, were told it was just too bold of an idea? How many were told to wait for some better-resourced organization to come and save them? Read more…
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Remaking the Economy: Escaping Corporate Capture

 
How do people build an actual everyday politics and economics of liberation? To address this question and expand upon their contributions, three authors from the Nonprofit Quarterly’s summer economic justice magazine will explore the concept of corporate capture and how movement-based groups can build viable escape routes to advance economic justice. Register here…
In case you missed it, here’s last week’s newsletter!
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