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Tomorrow's Nonprofit Sector: 2016 and Beyond

Tomorrow’s Nonprofit Sector: 2016 and Beyond2pm - 3pm EST / 11am - 12pm PST

Presented by:

Lucy Bernholz, Senior Scholar, Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society, Stanford University; Cofounder, Digital Civil Society Lab

Moderated by:

Eric Nee, Managing Editor, Stanford Social Innovation Review

What do Uber, the Fight for $15, and robots have to do with the nonprofit sector? Each of these represents a defining force shaping the future of work in the United States, including work in the nonprofit sector. Join Lucy Bernholz, author of the annual Philanthropy and the Social Economy Blueprint Series, for a sneak peek at Blueprint 2016 and the future of work.

Targeted specifically toward managers and executive leaders, Bernholz will discuss the implications of the "gig economy," automation, and living wage battles for the social sector. The webinar will also be of interest to individuals concerned about their own career paths as well as at leaders involved with organizational change and planning processes.

This webinar will:

  • Introduce the external forces shaping tomorrow’s nonprofit sector
  • Identify the capacities that organizations need to thrive in the social economy
  • Provide leaders with tools to consider for their own professional development and trajectories
  • The future of work and the shape of civil society are two key themes of the forthcoming Blueprint 2016. Bernholz will focus on the changing nature of work in the social economy and provide a preview of other themes for the year ahead.
  • Lucy Bernholz, Senior Scholar at Stanford’s Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society and cofounder of the Digital Civil Society Lab will lead the discussion and take questions. 

Register for Tomorrow’s Nonprofit Sector: 2016 and Beyond

Price: $49, which includes access to the live webinar; unlimited access to the webinar as many times as you’d like for twelve months; and downloadable slides. Webinar registrants will receive “early bird” access to the Blueprint, including a pullout worksheet designed to help individuals and organizations plan for what lies ahead. Blueprint 2016 is written by Bernholz and published by GrantCraft, a service of the Foundation Center, with support from Stanford Social Innovation Review and the Stanford Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society. 


Speaker Bios

Lucy Bernholz, Senior Scholar, Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society, Stanford University; Cofounder, Digital Civil Society Lab
Twitter: @p2173

Lucy Bernholz is a philanthropy wonk trying to understand how we create, fund, and distribute shared social goods in the digital age—what she calls the future of good. She writes extensively on philanthropy, technology, information, and policy on her blog, philanthropy2173.com. Bernholz is a visiting scholar at Stanford University’s Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society, where she is helping to launch the Digital Civil Society Lab. She is also a visiting scholar at The David and Lucile Packard Foundation, where she is writing a book while also working with foundation colleagues to think about foundations in the digital age.

Eric Nee, Managing Editor, Stanford Social Innovation Review
Twitter: @SSIReview

Eric Nee is the managing editor of Stanford Social Innovation Review, published by the Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society at Stanford University, and co-host of the Social Innovation Conversations podcast channel. He has more than 30 years’ experience in the publishing industry, most of it covering the high-tech industry. Before joining Stanford, Nee was a senior writer for Fortune magazine in the Palo Alto, Calif., bureau. He also helped Time Inc. launch eCompany Now (where he was executive editor), which later merged with Business 2.0. Before joining Fortune, Nee launched Forbes magazine’s Silicon Valley bureau, where he was bureau manager. He also served as editor-in-chief of Upside magazine for close to five years.

IMPACT: Advocating with Empathy

Impact: Six Patterns to Spread Your Social Innovation11:55am-1:00 pm EST

Hosts: Al Etmanski & Sean Moore

Advocating with empathy proposes that we stop poisoning the political ecosystem, put aside tactics of blame and criticism and become solution-based advocates. These advocates have two mutually supportive objectives: they propose solutions and at the same time improve governments’ capacity to innovate. Regardless of their political stripe, today’s governments have shorter attention spans and are more risk-averse. It’s no wonder new policy ideas fight for a foothold. If we want government to have empathy for our issues, we must develop empathy for its issues as well.

In Al Etmanski's latest book: IMPACT: Six Patterns to Spread Your Social Innovation, he highlights the story of  Marian Tompson, who, in the late 1950s, began challenging doctors, hospitals and baby food giants about their role in fostering negative attitudes about breastfeeding. Marian, along with six other young mothers, ended up launching a movement that introduced the "womanly art of breastfeeding" into the global lexicon. She co-founded and served as the President of La Leche League for twenty-four years, which is now the world's foremost authority on breastfeeding.

Join Al for an intimate conversation with Marian as they explore how thinking and acting like a movement can lead to unexpected and spectacular results.

Register for IMPACT: Advocating with Empathy

Please note that this session is 1 part of a 6 Part Learning Journey Webinar Series for Social Innovators & Community Change Agents with Al Etmanski. Space is limited in all the sessions, and you must register for each session you wish to attend.


About Al Etmanski

Al Etmanski is a community organizer, social entrepreneur and author. He is a founding partner of Social Innovation Generation (SiG) and BC Partners for Social Impact. Previously he co-founded Planned Lifetime Advocacy Network (PLAN) with his wife Vickie Cammack and Jack Collins. Al is an Ashoka fellow, and a faculty member of John McKnight’s Asset Based Community Development Institute (ABCD).

Al has received numerous awards for his work with people with disabilities, including the Order of Canada (2014), Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal (2013), and Governor General’s Meritorious Service Medal (2005). He lives with his wife Vickie Cammack – who also received the Order of Canada – just outside of Vancouver and delight in the creative pursuits of their five children.

In his highly praised new book, Impact: Six Patterns To Spread Your Social Innovation, Etmanski provides an inspirational and practical roadmap for others wishing to transform our society. He is a thought-leader, researcher, and storyteller with the rare ability to both inspire audiences and leave them with actionable change strategies.

About Sean Moore

Sean is the Founder and Principal of Advocacy School and one of Canada’s most experienced practitioners, writers and teachers on public-policy advocacy. He has more than 30 years experience in public-policy and advocacy related to local, provincial/state and federal government affairs in Canada and the United States. He is a former Partner and Public-Policy Advisor withe national law firm Gowling Lafleur Henderson LLP, a former president of what was then then Canada's largest government relations consulting firm and a vice-president of a Washington, DC-based public-policy research and consulting company.

Today, he advises corporations, NGOs and associations on their compliance with federal and provincial "rules" of lobbying and advocacy. He also designs and conducts professional-development training in advocacy for industry and professional associations and NGOs. He has taught graduate courses on public-policy advocacy at Carleton University’s Graduate School of Public Policy and Administration and the University of Ottawa’s Telfer School of Management Executive MBA program. He has been a faculty member of the Maytree Foundation’s Public-Policy Training Institute and is an advocacy mentor to grantees and fellows of a number of Canadian foundations including the Social Innovation Generation (SiG) initiative, a collaboration of the J.W. McConnell Family Foundation of Montreal, the MaRS Discovery District of Toronto, the University of Waterloo and the PLAN Institute of Vancouver.

Sean is also the recipient of the 2013 Bissett Distinguished Alumni Award from Carleton University's School of Public Policy & Administration (SPPA).

IMPACT: Think & Act Like a Movement

Impact: Six Patterns to Spread Your Social Innovation12:00 - 1:00 p.m. EST

Hosts: Al Etmanski & Marian Tompson, Co-Founder of La Leche League

Thinking and acting like a movement is not about starting a movement, although your actions may be the spark that ignites one. Instead, it's about supporting the movement(s) you are already part of. That means paying attention to the key players and initiatives in your immediate field and beyond, and becoming more deliberate about aligning your efforts. When you think and act like a movement, you strengthen the specific work you are doing and expand general receptivity for the bold vision behind it.

In Al Etmanski's latest book: IMPACT: Six Patterns to Spread Your Social Innovation, he highlights the story of Marian Tompson, who, in the late 1950s, began challenging doctors, hospitals and baby food giants about their role in fostering negative attitudes about breastfeeding. Marian, along with six other young mothers, ended up launching a movement that introduced the "womanly art of breastfeeding" into the global lexicon. She co-founded and served as the President of La Leche League for twenty-four years, which is now the world's foremost authority on breastfeeding.

Join Al for an intimate conversation with Marian as they explore how thinking and acting like a movement can lead to unexpected and spectacular results.

Register for IMPACT: Think & Act Like a Movement

Please note that this session is 1 part of a 6 Part Learning Journey Webinar Series for Social Innovators & Community Change Agents with Al Etmanski. Space is limited in all the sessions, and you must register for each session you wish to attend. 


About Al Etmanski

Al Etmanski is a community organizer, social entrepreneur and author. He is a founding partner of Social Innovation Generation (SiG) and BC Partners for Social Impact. Previously he co-founded Planned Lifetime Advocacy Network (PLAN) with his wife Vickie Cammack and Jack Collins. Al is an Ashoka fellow, and a faculty member of John McKnight's Asset Based Community Development Institute (ABCD).

Al has received numerous awards for his work with people with disabilities, including the Order of Canada (2014), Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal (2013), and Governor General's Meritorious Service Medal (2005). He lives with his wife Vickie Cammack – who also received the Order of Canada – just outside of Vancouver and delight in the creative pursuits of their five children.

In his highly praised new book, Impact: Six Patterns To Spread Your Social Innovation, Etmanski provides an inspirational and practical roadmap for others wishing to transform our society. He is a thought-leader, researcher, and storyteller with the rare ability to both inspire audiences and leave them with actionable change strategies.


About Marian Tompson

Marian Tompson is one of the seven Founders of La Leche League International. She has worked to promote breastfeeding for 50 years and served as president of La Leche League for the first 24 years. Marian continues to speak at LLL Conferences around the world. She also currently serves on the International Advisory Council for WABA (World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action).

Marian spends every spare minute gathering information, raising critical questions and stimulating needed research about breastfeeding in the context of HIV/AIDS and is the founder, President and CEO of AnotherLook, a not-for-profit corporation.

In 1999, she received the Ethical Humanist Award from the New York Society for Ethical Culture and the Today’s Chicago Woman – 100 Women Making a Difference Award.

Evaluating Hamilton's Neighbourhood Action Strategy

tamarack12pm - 1pm Eastern Time

To address rising inequality, many Canadian municipalities have implemented neighborhood-level interventions to address poverty and other social ills. Using our work with Hamilton, Ontario’s Neighbourhood Action Strategy as a case example, this webinar will discuss ways of evaluating the planning, implementation, and ultimate outcomes of these kinds of interventions. In particular, we will focus on the lessons we have learned while evaluating large-scale, multi-stakeholder interventions that bundle together multiple projects, working with a variety of diverse stakeholders and communicating our findings to decision-makers.  

Register for Evaluating Hamilton's Neighbourhood Action Strategy

About Sarah Wakefield

sarah wakefield - university of torontoSarah Wakefield is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geography and Planning at the University of Toronto; she is also the Director of the Health Studies Program in University College.  Her research has two main themes: (1) food security policy and practice; and (2) improving neighbourhood health through participatory community development and community-based research. These areas are connected by an overarching interest in understanding how individuals and organizations work together to create just, healthy, and sustainable communities. She works closely with community organizations and health policy actors to enhance the relevance of her research. Her recent work in partnership with the City of Hamilton investigates the planning and implementation of the Neighbourhood Action Strategy, a multi-stakeholder partnership focused on helping residents develop local action plans, and implementing those plans to build healthier neighbourhoods.

Delivering Community Benefits through Economic Development

10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern

What Cities and Counties Can Do

Across the country, communities and local governments are leading efforts to ensure that economic development delivers real community benefits like good jobs for local residents, community stability and housing that people can afford, community amenities like grocery stores and health clinics and environmental mitigation. City and county officials and staff and their community partners have pioneered new tools for success. Come learn what strategies are most effective, what pitfalls to avoid and what are the latest success stories.

Register for Delivering Community Benefits through Economic Development

Advance registration is required

Presenters include:

  • Mike O’Brien, City Councilmember, City of Seattle. Councilmember O’Brien has led a number of efforts to establish community benefits in new economic development amidst an exploding real estate market.
  • Jahmese Myres, Planning Commissioner, City of Oakland and Campaign Director, EBASE. Commissioner Myres has both led coalition efforts to win community benefits and worked as a planning commissioner on land use measures that support community benefits.
  • Ben Beach, Director of the Community Benefits Law Center and a national expert on community benefits

Who should attend?

  • Elected and appointed officials 
  • City and County staff who work on economic development, workforce development, and planning 
  • City and County attorneys 
  • Organizations that work with local government on community benefits 

Local Progress is a national municipal policy network. 
For more information please visit localprogress.org

Local Governments and the Sharing Economy Roadmap Webinar

Local Governments and the Sharing Economy10:00am to 11:00am Pacific Time

Join Rosemary Cooper and Vanessa Timmer from One Earth, the lead authors of the Local Governments and the Sharing Economy Roadmap for a discussion about the role that cities can play in aligning sharing economy activities with their own objectives, including moving towards sustainability.

The roadmap describes a sustainability filter which we use to analyze shared mobility, spaces, and goods and community sharing, and to take a lighter look at shared food and energy.

  • Discover what cities including Montréal, Austin, Vancouver, Portland and Toronto are doing to lead the way and what roles local governments can play in the Sharing Economy.
  • Find out if car sharing, co-working spaces, clothing swaps and other Sharing Economy activities reduce our ecological footprints and increase social connection and resilience.
  • Explore our analysis of Sharing Economy actors from community innovators to for-profit players such as Airbnb and Uber to the public sector.

Register for the Local Governments and the Sharing Economy Roadmap Webinar

Read the Local Governments and the Sharing Economy report

This is a free and public webinar. We welcome you to invite your colleagues to register as well.

Thank you to the J.W. McConnell Family Foundation for supporting this roadmap and project as part of Cities for People.

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