Explore Issue Areas

  • Aging
  • Agriculture and Food
  • Animal Welfare
  • Arts and Culture
  • Athletics and Sports
  • Children and Youth
  • Civil Society
  • Community and Economic Development
  • Computers and Technology
  • Consumer Protection
  • Crime and Safety
  • Disabilities
  • Education and Literacy
  • Employment and Labor
  • Energy and Environment
  • LGBTQI
  • Government Reform
  • Health
  • Housing and Homelessness
  • Human Rights and Civil Liberties
  • Humanitarian and Disaster Relief
  • Hunger
  • Immigration
  • International Development
  • Journalism and Media
  • Men
  • Nonprofits and Philanthropy
  • Parenting and Families
  • Peace and Conflict
  • Poverty
  • Prison and Judicial Reform
  • Race and Ethnicity
  • Religion
  • Science
  • Substance Abuse and Recovery
  • Transportation
  • Welfare and Public Assistance
  • Women

Explore Collections

Special Collections are curated collections of research that address a specific topic or research question.

  • IssueLab Results is #OpenForGood

  • Democracy Special Collection

  • Gun Violence Special Collection

  • Immigration Strategies Special Collection

  • Affordable Care Act Special Collection

  • Race and Policing Special Collection

View All

Knowledge Centers are a custom service of IssueLab providing organizations with a simple way to manage and share knowledge on their own websites.

  • New York Foundation Knowledge Center

  • European Foundation Centre Knowledge Center

  • TrustAfrica's African Giving Knowledge Center

View All
Get our monthly emails
  • Help
  • Sign in
  • Upload
  • Issue Areas
  • Collections
  • Services
  • About
  • News

Please login first to save in your collection.

LOGIN

SAVE TO MY LIBRARY

My Collection (0)


Visit My Library
GET EMAILS UPLOAD

Building Resident Power and Capacity for Change

by Kristin Senty; Timothy Saasta

Apr 1, 2009
  • Community and Economic Development
  • Nonprofits and Philanthropy
  • Poverty

  • DESCRIPTION

An "on the ground" reflection about what it takes for funders to work effective with low-income communities. This report is a set of reflections that began with conversations among fifty people who gathered in Chicago in September of 2008 for Grassroots Grantmakers first "on the ground" learning gathering, and extended over the following several months.

The idea for this report came from an interest in doing more than generating proceedings or a report on a meeting.  Our interest was in promoting and supporting reflection about what it takes to work effective in the grassroots grantmaking domain, and in sharing those reflections as a spark for further conversations.

More

Building Resident Power and Capacity for Change

Download via Publisher

Download via IssueLab (1.41 MB)

Save To Library

Share Via

Suggest an edit

WHAT TO READ NEXT

  • The GSBI Methodology for Social Entrepreneurship: Lessons from 12 Years of Capacity Development with 365 Social Enterprises
  • Creating Value for All: Strategies for Doing Business With the Poor
  • Oxfam Novib Strategy Paper on Corporate Accountability

Published By

  • Grassroots Grantmakers

Copyright

  • Copyright 2009 by Grassroots Grantmakers. All rights reserved.

Document Type

  • Report/Whitepaper
  • Conference Report

Language

  • English
Linked Data show/hide

This web page is marked up with Schema.org microdata and formatted for machine-reading. Here's why that matters. Have a peek at what a machine sees here .

Title: Building Resident Power and Capacity for Change
Publication date 2009-04-01
Publication Year 2009
Authors Kristin Senty , Timothy Saasta
Copyright holder(s) Grassroots Grantmakers
Keywords grantmakers , foundation , portillo , steans , community
Document type Report/Whitepaper , Conference Report
Language English
URL: https://www.issuelab.org/resource/building-resident-power-and-capacity-for-change.html
Resource provided by IssueLab

Get free, worthwhile monthly emails from IssueLab!

IssueLab
  • About
  • News
  • Services
Join Us
  • Add to Issuelab
  • Open Knowledge
  • Use Our Data
Support
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • ToS

Subscribe to our mailing list

There was an error with registration, please try again
Successfully registered!