Invest in yourself and your organization when you join us at NMI 2024 and earn CFRE credits over two days of professional learning and development. Enjoy a series of thought-provoking plenary sessions, workshops, breakout sessions, and networking opportunities as you build deeper connections with a diverse group of colleagues from around the world. Claim your seat now: https://bit.ly/NMI_24
Stanford Social Innovation Review
Civic and Social Organizations
Stanford, CA 56,933 followers
Informing and inspiring leaders of social change
About us
Stanford Social Innovation Review (SSIR) informs and inspires millions of social change leaders from around the world and from all sectors of society—nonprofits, business, and government. With webinars, conferences, magazines, online articles, podcasts, and more, SSIR bridges research, theory, and practice on a wide range of topics, including human rights, impact investing, and nonprofit business models. SSIR is published by the Stanford Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society at Stanford University. Join the SSIR group for conversations with other leaders of social change at linkedin.com/groups/2730249/.
- Website
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http://www.ssir.org
External link for Stanford Social Innovation Review
- Industry
- Civic and Social Organizations
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- Stanford, CA
- Type
- Nonprofit
- Founded
- 2003
- Specialties
- social innovation, nonprofits, foundations, cross-sector solutions, impact investing, social entrepreneurship, fundraising, socially responsible business, ESG, climate solutions, nonprofit management, design thinking, collective impact, systems change, corporate social responsibility, grantmaking, leadership, government, social enterprise, measurement and evaluation, and measuring impact
Locations
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Primary
559 Nathan Abbott Way
Stanford, CA 94305, US
Employees at Stanford Social Innovation Review
Updates
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Stanford Social Innovation Review reposted this
Gig Economy Startups: Putting Workers First The gig economy has revolutionized the way we work, but can it provide meaningful opportunities for the workers and businesses behind the apps? I'd love to hear your thoughts on my latest article in the Stanford Social Innovation Review on what startups can do to build a more responsible and inclusive gig economy #gigeconomy #futureofwork #socialimpact Amee Parbhoo Chris Maclay Sabina Dewan Gayathri Vasudevan Rajesh A R Supriya Paul Ishan Mishra Matt Schaar Devraj Hom Roy Sophie Sirtaine Stella Klemperer Geeta Goel Samar Bajaj
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September is just around the corner, and time is running out to register for Nonprofit Management Institute. This year, we’ll provide you with the tools and tips necessary to navigate some of the biggest emerging challenges in the field, including a tumultuous US election cycle, the rapid proliferation of AI technology, and the evolving needs of the nonprofit workforce. Over two days of professional development, gather in community with fellow nonprofit and foundation executives, noted academics, and prominent public-sector leaders, while engaging in peer-to-peer learning opportunities and earning CFRE continuing education credits. Invest in yourself, your network, and your future impact: https://lnkd.in/grT2YHQV.
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Can the gig economy be good? Rahil Rangwala at Accion thinks so — and offers solutions to some of the gig economy’s pain points for workers in this new article: https://lnkd.in/eVPh4-nZ “Startup founders should feel a sense of responsibility toward workers as they create and roll out gig economy platforms to the developing world. They can help ensure that problems that exist in the brick-and-mortar economy do not extend into the tech-enabled gig economy—and they must take this on. Doing so won’t just help workers; it will give gig platforms a better chance at success.” #workers #gigeconomy #gigworkers #equity
Startups Are Making the Global Gig Economy Bigger. But Can They Make It Better? (SSIR)
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SSIR’s Fall ’24 Issue will be online next week! The magazine doesn’t usually have a theme, but this issue, one emerged: Education. Don’t miss two compelling cover stories that chart a path for progress in public education: One details the 20-year US effort to boost graduation rates and offers an example of transcending partisanship to solve social problems. The other articulates a civic-minded vision of education as a public good that serves democracy. Plus: Viewpoint articles on apprenticeship programs as an alternative pathway to college and an argument for deliberation, not debate, as a model of free speech in higher education. Must-reads in this issue: A case study highlighting the first private pay-for-success program in the South Korean impact ecosystem; guidance for business leaders looking to join climate alliances—and promising innovations in storytelling for Palestinian justice; crowdfunding education; AI medical diagnostics in Africa; closing the racial diversity gap in medicine, and more. This issue also includes two special supplements from PolicyLink (A Revolution of the Soul) and the Institute of Philanthropy (The Best of SSIR: Impactful Philanthropy in the Real World). ⏳There’s still time to subscribe and get your very own print copy of this stellar issue! https://lnkd.in/eTRxhPWe ✍ Sign up for our newsletter for updates on the new issue, new online stories, and more: https://lnkd.in/gYk49K9z ⏩ Share this post with someone you think will want to read the new issue of SSIR! (Cover story features from Bob Balfanz & John Bridgeland and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation)
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Whether within your own team, or in the communities you serve, overcoming the generational gap can be challenging. At this year’s Nonprofit Management Institute, discover new tips and strategies to support youth and young professionals. On Day One join us for "How to Recruit and Retain a New Generation of Nonprofit Leaders" with Joan Garry. Then on Day Two, enjoy our opening keynote with Cynthia Bissett Germanotta of Born This Way Foundation. Register now: https://bit.ly/NMI_24
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Stanford Social Innovation Review reposted this
It was a great privilege to lead GLAAD for a decade. Recently the organization has come under a great deal of scrutiny with a front page NYTimes expose about what was reported as lavish spending by the CEO. I believe that as a respected nonprofit leadership and governance expert, I could offer nonprofit leaders a number of important lessons the scandal unearths. Here are my reflections and the NYT piece is linked in the article.
Before the Exposé Hits the Front Page (SSIR)
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"When I do crisis management work, I encourage boards and staff to develop a list of the most devastating headlines that could appear on the front page of their local paper and to develop both a proactive and a reactive plan to navigate the fallout. The danger is real. Nonprofits for whom advocacy is a core strategy—for whom it is their business to speak truth to power—often experience backlash in the form of media exposés. Being ready for that kind of targeting should be a central responsibility of #leadership." In this new article, nonprofit leadership expert and former GLAAD CEO Joan Garry, responds to recent media coverage questioning the organization's spending. What can other #nonprofit leaders learn from the story? Garry unpacks four key rules for crisis readiness: 📰 The media loves scandals... 👀 All decisions have optics. Optics matter. ⛓ Building leadership is about more than one person. 🏢 Board members must understand their role, and be ready to play it. Read the full article here: https://lnkd.in/gBhFbaVF What other insights would you add?
Before the Exposé Hits the Front Page (SSIR)
ssir.org
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“I left the conference inspired, with a list of actionable strategies to begin implementing at my nonprofit immediately. Thank you for a very well-considered, useful conference.” — 2023 NMI Attendee Experience for yourself two days of dynamic speakers, engaging dialogue, and practical tools, with session topics including: artificial intelligence, diversity, equity, and inclusion, co-leadership, self-care, and more! Register now: https://bit.ly/NMI_24
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Stanford Social Innovation Review reposted this
Chief Executive Officer @ The Jed Foundation | Youth Mental Health and Suicide Prevention. Views expressed are mine.
Thank you Stanford Social Innovation Review for this case study on The Jed Foundation.
After their son’s suicide, Donna and Phil Satow founded the The Jed Foundation (JED) with a vision for promulgating a framework for suicide prevention on college campuses. For the past two decades, JED has led the fight to address the mental health crisis among American youth. Its story highlights the importance of confronting the cultural causes of the mental health crisis through systems change: “For the foundation, complete success requires shifting the perspectives and practices of students, staff, faculty, and administrators campus by campus, as well as transforming the systems in which they are embedded.” Learn more about the Air Force origins of the foundation’s comprehensive model for mental health, efforts to connect with students though MTV campaigns, and how it continues to innovate. Read the case study by Alison Badgett, Ed.D. >> https://lnkd.in/eGJAd8j7