This is the presentation I mainly gave to NGOs in Israel the week of May 30-June 3, 2011. Feel free to download and share it - with attribution! Thanks.
This presentation provides an overview and a few key concepts from The Networked Nonprofit, a book co-authored by Beth Kanter and Allison Fine (Wiley & Sons, 2010)
This presentation conducted for the Arts Council in Charlotte, NC on April 14, 2010. It provides an overview and a few key concepts from The Networked Nonprofit, a book co-authored by Beth Kanter and Allison Fine (Wiley & Sons, 2010)
Slides from Katya Andresen (Network for Good), Sarah Durham (Big Duck), and Jocelyn Harmon's (Care2) session at the 2011 Bridge Conference about online communications etiquette.
Presentation on how to use social media and what behaviors to avoid. Primarily for those working in government. This presentation was given at US Cellular field in Chicago on Aug. 12, 2009, for the Government College Relations Council
This presentation provides an overview and a few key concepts from The Networked Nonprofit, a book co-authored by Beth Kanter and Allison Fine (Wiley & Sons, 2010)
This presentation conducted for the Arts Council in Charlotte, NC on April 14, 2010. It provides an overview and a few key concepts from The Networked Nonprofit, a book co-authored by Beth Kanter and Allison Fine (Wiley & Sons, 2010)
Slides from Katya Andresen (Network for Good), Sarah Durham (Big Duck), and Jocelyn Harmon's (Care2) session at the 2011 Bridge Conference about online communications etiquette.
Presentation on how to use social media and what behaviors to avoid. Primarily for those working in government. This presentation was given at US Cellular field in Chicago on Aug. 12, 2009, for the Government College Relations Council
Communicating with social media to make corruption obsoleteBob Pickard
"Communicating with social media to make corruption obsolete: applying the technology of transparent times to inspire informed citizens" is the theme of this presentation which was delivered at Hong Kong to the 2015 Symposium of the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).
A presentation given by Nat Kendall-Taylor of the Frameworks Institute at JRF's Talking about Poverty event, which took place in London on the 30th January 2018. The presentation discusses how we can reframe the conversation on Poverty.
Watership Down: Memoirs of a Digital Humanitarian (Track Session - 15 min)
Heather Blanchard, a graduate candidate in Global Communications at the American University of Paris, will discuss her experiences and lessons learned on the digital frontlines of disaster response both within government at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and as a co-founder of CrisisCommons. Heather will share lessons learned from Haiti, Japan and New Zealand earthquakes, Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Isaac and outline opportunity, challenges, and best practices of open source software adoption for domestic emergency management and international humanitarian relief.
Major Gifts and Social Media with Jay FrostHubSpot
Would you be surprised to learn that your million dollar donor is on Twitter? Every day, those who love and support your mission--and those who could join them--are communicating with their peers on social media. Finding them, listening to them and engaging with them are just three of the steps we can and should take to make our social media and fundraising programs work better and closer together.
The Future We Want Radical Ideas for the New Century R·A..docxarnoldmeredith47041
The Future We Want: Radical Ideas for the New Century
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Sarah Leonard
The Future We Want: Radical Ideas for the New Century
CONTENTS
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Introduction
Sarah Leonard
Working for the Weekend
Chris Maisano
Imagining Socialist Education
Megan Erickson
How to Make Black Lives Really, Truly Matter
Jesse A. Myerson and Mychal Denzel Smith
Sex Class
Sarah Leonard
The Green and the Red
Alyssa Battistoni
Red Innovation
Tony Smith
The Cure for Bad Science
Llewellyn Hinkes-Jones
Finding the Future of Criminal Justice
Phillip Agnew, Dante Barry, Cherrell Carruthers, Mychal Denzel Smith,Ashley Yates
Sarah Leonard
The Future We Want: Radical Ideas for the New Century
After Gay Marriage
Kate Redburn
Small, Not Beautiful
Tim Barker
The Red and the Black
Seth Ackerman
Coda
Peter Frase and Bhaskar Sunkara
Notes
Contributors
About the Authors
Copyright
Sarah Leonard
The Future We Want: Radical Ideas for the New Century Sarah Leonard
INTRODUCTION
Sarah Leonard
Every election season is a time of bemoaning why millennials won't vote
for politicians boldly committed to picking at the edges of their prob
lems. Consider a snapshot of the situation young people face: the unem
ployment rate for workers under age twenty-five is 18.1 percent; unem
ployment for black people who have not graduated from high school is
82.5 percent; the people most likely to be shot by police are black twen
ty-five-to-thirty-four-year-olds; the national student loan debt has sur
passed $1 trillion; and the only jobs lucrative enough to pay off college
loans are in the financial industry that detonated our economy or Sili
con Valley companies deregulating working-class industries.
The future doesn't hold much hope either, with median household
income declining 12.4 percent between 2000 and 2011. Having a family
is simply harder to afford now. Meanwhile, each new year sets another
low record for union density, meaning we have few levers for turning
those income numbers around. Unlike most wealthy countries, the United
States lacks universal child care and maternity leave, so women are stuck
with the same old debates over an impossible work-life balance.
We were told that in the knowledge economy good jobs followed higher
education; there are few jobs, and we lock ourselves into miserable ones
as quickly as possible to feed the loan sharks. The magazine writers who
report on self-indulgent twenty-somethings (think Time's ''The Me Me Me
Generation'' cover), the well-meaning guidance counselors who coach
kids to ''invest in themselves''-they should save their breath. You don't
need a college course to know when you're getting screwed.
The most grotesque feature of the 2016 election is the ra.
The Future We Want Radical Ideas for the New Century R·A..docxrtodd194
The Future We Want: Radical Ideas for the New Century
R·A.Dl
lC.AL iDEAS, FO,R A NEW 1CEI
N
I
TIUIRY
ED
I
ITfD B'f
SAR,AH LED1N.Al
1
D
AND BHASKAR S.UNKARA
�I.ETROPOLI.TAN BOOKS iH[NR.'i H(JLT AND COMP.ANY NEW YORK
Sarah Leonard
The Future We Want: Radical Ideas for the New Century
CONTENTS
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Introduction
Sarah Leonard
Working for the Weekend
Chris Maisano
Imagining Socialist Education
Megan Erickson
How to Make Black Lives Really, Truly Matter
Jesse A. Myerson and Mychal Denzel Smith
Sex Class
Sarah Leonard
The Green and the Red
Alyssa Battistoni
Red Innovation
Tony Smith
The Cure for Bad Science
Llewellyn Hinkes-Jones
Finding the Future of Criminal Justice
Phillip Agnew, Dante Barry, Cherrell Carruthers, Mychal Denzel Smith,Ashley Yates
Sarah Leonard
The Future We Want: Radical Ideas for the New Century
After Gay Marriage
Kate Redburn
Small, Not Beautiful
Tim Barker
The Red and the Black
Seth Ackerman
Coda
Peter Frase and Bhaskar Sunkara
Notes
Contributors
About the Authors
Copyright
Sarah Leonard
The Future We Want: Radical Ideas for the New Century Sarah Leonard
INTRODUCTION
Sarah Leonard
Every election season is a time of bemoaning why millennials won't vote
for politicians boldly committed to picking at the edges of their prob
lems. Consider a snapshot of the situation young people face: the unem
ployment rate for workers under age twenty-five is 18.1 percent; unem
ployment for black people who have not graduated from high school is
82.5 percent; the people most likely to be shot by police are black twen
ty-five-to-thirty-four-year-olds; the national student loan debt has sur
passed $1 trillion; and the only jobs lucrative enough to pay off college
loans are in the financial industry that detonated our economy or Sili
con Valley companies deregulating working-class industries.
The future doesn't hold much hope either, with median household
income declining 12.4 percent between 2000 and 2011. Having a family
is simply harder to afford now. Meanwhile, each new year sets another
low record for union density, meaning we have few levers for turning
those income numbers around. Unlike most wealthy countries, the United
States lacks universal child care and maternity leave, so women are stuck
with the same old debates over an impossible work-life balance.
We were told that in the knowledge economy good jobs followed higher
education; there are few jobs, and we lock ourselves into miserable ones
as quickly as possible to feed the loan sharks. The magazine writers who
report on self-indulgent twenty-somethings (think Time's ''The Me Me Me
Generation'' cover), the well-meaning guidance counselors who coach
kids to ''invest in themselves''-they should save their breath. You don't
need a college course to know when you're getting screwed.
The most grotesque feature of the 2016 election is the ra.
11. 11 The Fears Loss of controlHearing negative commentsAddressing personality versus organizational voice (trusting employees)Mistakes will be made in publicSenior staff becomes too accessiblePerception of wasted of time and resources Information Overload
12. 12 Social Media Policies “Be professional, kind, discreet, authentic. Represent us well. Remember that you can’t control it once you hit update.” Disgruntled Employees Blog
18. Online/On Land MomsRising.org Over 700 stories delivered: Sometimes you can barely pay your mortgage and then when you get sick you have to choose between eating and paying the bills. That is not fair. -- Ruth